Beguinage

A beguinage, from the French term béguinage, is an architectural complex which was created to house beguines: lay religious women who lived in community without taking vows or retiring from the world.

View of the Beguinage in Kortrijk

Originally the beguine institution was the convent, an association of beguines living together or in close proximity of each other under the guidance of a single superior, called a mistress or prioress. Although they were not usually referred to as "convents", in these houses dwelt a small number of women together: the houses small, informal, and often poor communities that emerged across Europe after the twelfth century. In most cases, beguines who lived in a convent agreed to obey certain regulations during their stay and contributed to a collective fund.[1]

In the first decades of the thirteenth century much larger and more stable types of community emerged in the region of the Low Countries: large court beguinages were formed which consisted of several houses for beguines built around a central chapel or church where their religious activities took place; these often included functional buildings such as a brewery, a bakery, a hospital, some farm buildings. Several of these beguinages are now listed by UNESCO as World Heritage sites. Around the mid-thirteenth century, the French king Louis IX founded a beguinage in Paris, which was modeled on the court beguinages of the Low Countries.[2]

Etymology

The Oxford English Dictionary, citing Du Cange, gives the origin of the word "beguine" in the name of Lambert le Bègue, "Lambert the Stammerer", an early supporter of the movement who died around 1180.

Description

View of the Groot Begijnhof in Leuven

While a small beguinage usually constituted just one house where women lived together, a Low Countries court beguinage typically comprised one or more courtyards surrounded by houses, and also included a church, an infirmary complex, and a number of communal houses or 'convents'. From the twelfth through eighteenth centuries, every city and large town in the Low Countries had at least one court beguinage: the communities dwindled and came to an end, over the course of the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. They were encircled by walls and separated from the town proper by several gates, closed at night, but through which during the day the beguines could come and go as they pleased. Beguines came from a wide range of social classes, though truly poor women were admitted only if they had a wealthy benefactor who pledged to provide for their needs.

Beguinage at Sint-Truiden with its chapel, left

The understanding of women's motivations for joining the beguinages has changed dramatically in recent decades. The development of these communities is clearly linked to a preponderance of women in urban centers in the Middle Ages, but while earlier scholars like the Belgian historian Henri Pirenne believed that this "surplus" of women was caused by men dying in war, that theory has been debunked. Since the groundbreaking work of John Hajnal, who demonstrated that, for much of Europe, marriage occurred later in life and at a lower frequency than had previously been believed, historians have established that single women moved to the newly developed cities because those cities offered them work opportunities. Simons (2001) has shown how the smaller beguinages as well as the court beguinages answered such women's social and economic needs, in addition to offering them a religious life coupled with personal independence, which was a difficult thing to have for a woman.

In Belgium

Flemish Béguinages
UNESCO World Heritage Site
Our-Lady Ter Hooyen, Small Béguinage of Ghent
LocationFlanders, Belgium
Includes
  1. Beguinage of Hoogstraten
  2. Beguinage of Lier
  3. Large Beguinage of Mechelen
  4. Beguinage of Turnhout
  5. Beguinage of Sint-Truiden
  6. Beguinage of Tongeren
  7. Beguinage of Dendermonde
  8. Small Beguinage of Gent
  9. Beguinage of Sint-Amandsberg / Gent
  10. Beguinage of Diest
  11. Large Beguinage of Leuven
  12. Beguinage of Bruges
  13. Beguinage of Kortrijk
CriteriaCultural: (ii)(iii)(iv)
Reference855
Inscription1998 (22nd session)
Area59.95 ha (148.1 acres)
Coordinates51°1′51.5″N 4°28′25.5″E
Location of Flemish Béguinages World Heritage Site in Europe

Thirteen Flemish beguinages have been listed by UNESCO as World Heritage Sites since 1998.[3]

Other beguinages

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See also

References

  1. Simons 2001.
  2. Miller 2014.
  3. UNESCO 1998.
  4. "Beguinage of the Grey Beguines of Leeuwarden". Institute for Collective Action.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  5. "Begijnhof, Haarlem, The Netherlands". Institutions for Collective Action. Retrieved 8 January 2016.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  6. "Case study: Begijnhof, Sittard, The Netherlands". Institutions for Collective Action.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  7. "Beguinages in Saint Quentin". Michelin Travel. Michelin. Archived from the original on January 11, 2016. Retrieved January 8, 2016.

Sources

  • Miller, Tanya Stabler (2014). Beguines of Medieval Paris: Gender, Patronage, and Spiritual Authority. Pennsylvania UP. ISBN 978-0812246070.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Simons, Walter (2001). Cities of Ladies: Beguine Communities in the Medieval Low Countries, 1200–1565. Pennsylvania UP. ISBN 978-0812236040.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • UNESCO (1998). "Flemish Béguinages". List of World Heritage.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)

Further reading

  • Swan, Laura (2014). The Wisdom of the Beguines: the Forgotten Story of a Medieval Women's Movement. BlueBridge. ISBN 978-1933346977.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • van Eck, Xander (2000). "Between Restraint and Excess: The Decoration of the Church of the Great Beguinage at Mechelen in the Seventeenth Century". Simiolus: Netherlands Quarterly for the History of Art. 28 (3): 129–162. doi:10.2307/3780941. JSTOR 3780941.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
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