Category Archives: History

Early modern history Women's history

A few Bridewell unfortunates

Just been reading a history of Bridewell, the original “house of correction” in London. Arguably the first such attempt to “correct” prisoners, and also perhaps the only long-time such institution to be housed in an honest-to-goodness palace. (Royalty having found the site at the meeting of the Fleet and the Thames rather too smelly.)

The first surviving record of an inmate is that of “a certain woman named Morton” who was charged on December 16 1556 with having abandoned her child in the streets of Southwark. She was whipped at Bridewell, then pilloried at Cheapside, with a paper on her head explaining her “crime”.

1610 George and Agnes Sturton were living in a single room in the parish of St Martin, Ludgate Hill when a man called and asked to be taken in as a lodger. Plague sores had already broken out on his body, and he offered them 30 shillings if they would hide him, and save him from the pest house. They agreed, but he died, and they locked his body in their room and fled. Neighbours, however, broke down their door and sent for the constable. Punishment: whipping.

1639 – Elizabeth Pynfould, alias Squire … petitioned the council. She had been a prisoners for seven years in Bridewell, having been committed by a Council warrant, she knew not why, unless it was for petitioning the Lords to cause her husband to allow her means of livelihood. She prayed for liberty, and to be supplied with means.
W.G. Hinkle, A History of Bridewell Prison, 1553-1700, Edwin Mellen Press, 2006. (Not unfortunately very well organised, and heavily reliant on secondary sources.)

Women's history

Women ‘ruling’ the church

In the tenth century, roughly contemporary with some very powerful women in the Byzantine world, there were powerful women in Rome. The period is oh so delightfully known as the “pornocracy”, or the rule of the harlots.

“… two generations of aristocratic women managed to make or break the careers of several popes, some of whom they reportedly also bedded. The first of these women was Theodora (died ca. 926), who along with her husband, the Roman senator Theophylact (died ca. 920), led the dominant aristocratic faction in Rome and advanced several men to the papcy, including John X (reigning 914-28), her alleged lover, and Sergius III (reigning 904-11), who reportedly fathered a son with her teenaged daughter Marozia (ca. 892- ca.937). Later, assuming powers that her parents had exercised, Marozia orchestrated the deposing of John X and, after a brief interval, the elevation of her son John XI (reigning 931-36) to the papacy.”

From C.M. Rustici, The Afterlife of Pope Joan: Deploying the Popess Legend in Early Modern England Uni of Michigan Press, 2006, p. 2.

It follows what seems to be the generally accepted historical line, that Pope Joan didn’t actually exist, but arose as anti-papal satire or slander. One suggestion is that the “pornocracy” was at least part of the inspiration.

Rustici also suggests that it arose in the 12th and 13th century, when women were making “unprecedented demands” for participation in religious life.

“male orders such as the Premonstratensian canons and the Cistercian monks quickly felt overwhelmed by the number of nunneries that sought to affiliate with their foundations. … While the order had ignored them, Cistercian convents had developed extraordinarily autonomous practices. In 1210 Pope Innocent III noted with dismay that abbesses bestowed blessings, heard their nuns’ confessions, and preached from pulpits. Canon lawyers such as Bernard of Parlma found it necessary to argue that regardless of past practices women could not teach or preach, handle sacred vessels, or grant absolution. Women, however, resisted attempts to impose such restrictions. In 1243, for example, when the Cistercian abbess and sisters of Parc-Aux Dames learned of plans to curb their liberties, they shouted at official visitors and walked out of their chapter house in protest.” (p. 11)

There was also in the 13th and 14th century the beguine movement, communities of single women that “sought neither patrons nor papal authoization and functioned withour irreversible vows, a definite “rule” or disciplinary code … or a complex or hierarchical organisation”. … One bishop, Bruno of Olmutz, challenged the beguines apparent piety as a pretense for evading subjection to priest or husband”. (p.12)

Yes, it is in some ways anachronistic to describe all of this as feminist, yet in a broader sense it is not in the slightest bit anachronistic – women have always been fighting for autonomy and self-determination.

History London

Mapping London

Over on My London Your London I’ve an account of London: A Life In Maps, an exhibition continuing at the British Library until March 4. Really – see it if you can.

In that piece I cover the general history, but of course I couldn’t resist checking out all records of the area of Regent’s Park in which I now live (south-west of the park itself). In the 18th-century it was still open farmland, much of it owned by the Duke of Grafton. By 1794 there is a some settlement around the top of what is already called Tottenham Court Road, which extends north of its current end before turning into “Turnpike Lane” (now Hampstead Road) at the Hampstead Turnpike.

What is now the cluster of Indian restaurants in Drummond Street is roughly where there was a big dam, the “New River Reservoir”. What is now Stanhope St was called Brook St. The area now called Haymarket already had that title, probably for that practical purpose, I’d hazard a guess. And Munster Square and Clarence Gardens are arranged in their current form, probably I’d imagine with houses for the middle class with pretensions.

History

Advice – probably too late…

Don’t stir your mincemeat for your mince pies counterclockwise; it will bring back luck.

From a new blog/website: News for Medievalists.

But you should eat a mince pie a day over Christmas – something to remember next year, even if your doctor wouldn’t agree.

Early modern history

Matrimonial tangles

… are nothing new. From Ely in the early 17th century:

A Matthew Maye was presented to the church court

suspected to lyve in fornication in the house of John Lemon with Dorothye Sutton, & he hathe a wief and children in another place, & she hathe a husband & children alsoe in another place as it is reported, & theise woulde marrye togither.

Dorothye said in her defence “yt in ded she was & is married to another husband wch said husband she saythe was married before to another woman, & yt therefore she is not bound to tarrye with him”.

R. Adair, Courtship, Illegitimacy and Marriage in Early Modern England, Manchester Uni Press, 1996, p. 162-3

Early modern history

Early modern cookery, or the origins of chicken chasseur

A fascinating excerpt from Aguecheek’s Beef, Belch’s Hiccup, and Other Gastronomic Interjections: literature, culture, and food among the early moderns is online.

It begins with Europe’s “earliest post-Roman cookbook” – written, mostly in Danish, although with Latin headings and smatterings of other languages, in about 1300. Among its recipes is:

About a dish called Chickens Hunter Style
One should roast a hen and cut it apart; and grind garlic, and add hot broth and lard, and wine and salt and well beaten egg yolks, and livers and gizzards. And the hen should be well boiled in this. It is called “Chickens Hunter Style.”

Which apparently squares with a version of the dish still found in southern Italy.