Category Archives: Women’s history

Women's history

No, not that Chaucer, but Alice

Badly in need of a little rest and recreation, I’ve spent most of today pottering around with the potplants (the potatoes have finally taken off), cleaning the kitchen (badly overdue – and I’d recommend never, never getting the sort of benchtop that you have to oil), doing the ironing, and watching a bit of what I gather is BBC4’s medieval season on iPlayer. Through that I was introduced to Alice Chaucer, who’s certainly quite a character in her own right. That was her maiden name, but since she went through three husbands its rather hard to keep up with all of her titles.

She was the granddaughter of that other Chaucer, a rich woman in her own right by her maturity and a major political player at court. In short from the ODNB:

Alice Chaucer grew to be an extremely wealthy widow through her parents (from whom she inherited in 1437), her three valuable marriages, and her own policy of buying up land during her last long widowhood. By these means she accumulated estates in twenty-two counties, from three of which in 1454 she received an income of £1300. She was wealthy enough to be a crown creditor in 1450 and in the 1460s. That her lifestyle was fairly lavish and that she was something of a literary patron, notably of an old Chaucer friend, John Lydgate, are substantiated by the inventory of her goods and books made in 1466 when she left East Anglia and came home to Ewelme.

And the presenter was wandering around what I gather was this still surviving almshouse, (picture):

On 3 July 1437 the couple were licensed to found an almshouse at Ewelme, called God’s House, for two chaplains and thirteen poor men and by 1448, when the statutes were drawn up, they had added a grammar school.

A quick search suggests there isn’t a biography – definitely a subject that deserves an author, I’d suggest…

Books Women's history

Between the Black Death and the Reformation – women and the church

I’ve been reading in the odd spare moment The Good Women of the Parish: Gender and Religion After the Black Death, Katherine L French, Uni of Penn Press, 2008. It is delightfully lively for a serious academic text; there is a thesis and theory, but the book wears this lightly and recovers from church records and accounts snippets that give an insight into the lives of women in this difficult age.

In post-plague England as many as a third of women never married, and there was a preoccupation with controlling independent and mobile women, French finds. Studies on women and religion in this period have tended to focus on nuns and the elite, but at the local level churchgoing, and church activities, played a central role in women’s lives. Parochial activities were designed to promote lay support for the parish, but in their frequent gender segregation, women adapting their housekeeping roles and behaviours in the service of the parish, which fostered collective action and expanded their opportunities.

There’s not of course in this era the sort of spiritual diaries that start to occur, from relatively modest places on the social scale, after the Reformation, so French has to find hints, suggestions and draw conclusions from rather drier records. But her conclusions were, to this reader, solid.

So, she says, when in Tintinhull Somerset in 1449 and again in 1452, when the group of women who would have been paid six pennies for laundering the church linens declined payment, chosing instead to donate their labour, they were expressing not just devotion, but probably also drawing considerable satisfaction for doing so. (That would probably have been something like a week’s wages.) When in Bassingbourne, Cambridgeshire, the parish produced a St Margaret’s play to raise money for a new statue of St George, many women donated their brewing and baking labour for the refreshments.
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Women's history

Handwriting as high politics: Esther Ingles

The story of Esther Ingles is one of those that may never fully emerge from the mist of history – in part because her particularly skill, astonishingly neat, tiny handwriting is not a form that has real respect in the present day, but even more so if Tricia Bracher is right and her involvement in the messy politics of the end of the reign of Elizabeth I was so close.

The writer, in a chapter titled “Esther Ingles and the English Succession Crisis of 1599”, in the text detailed below (pp. 132-146) suggests that the book of psalms she had written which were carried from Scotland by her husband, Bartholomew Kello from the Scottish court to London was part of efforts to “promote a secret or not-so-secret alliance” between James VI of Scotland and the Essex faction of the English court.

From Women and Politics in Early Modern England, 1450-1700, James Daybell (ed) Ashgate 2004. (Other women covered include Lady Mary Sidney and Kat Ashley, Lady Ralegh, Elizabeth Talbot, countess of Shrewsbury (Bess of Hardwick”), Anne of Denmark, Mary Carleton and Aphra Behn.

Women's history

More on the bluestockings

Celebrating the Brilliant Women exhibition at the National Portrait Gallery, the Oxford Dictionary of Biography is providing for free a collection of their biographies.

Books Environmental politics Feminism Women's history

Women, nature and history: combining my interests

When I came across a description of Sylvia Bowerbanks’ Speaking for Nature: Women and Ecologies of Early Modern England, as a book combining women’s and ecological history, I had to lay hands on it. Which isn’t to say I didn’t have my doubts: would this be one of those books that seeks to imprint, wholly inappropriately, modern thoughts and approaches into history? But I needn’t have worried, for this is an impeccable well though-out, academic book, that examines its characters in the terms of their own time, while applying understanding and research of the following centuries.

Bowerbanks begins by explaining that she wants to go back into history to seek the origins of the apparent modern links between women and nature. If, as Ynestra King claimed in “The Eco-Feminist Imperative”, women are “the repository of a sensibility” that can save the planet, where does this begin, what does it go back to?

Of course in early modern times the talk was not of “environment”, but “nature”.

“In theory, woman remained the subordinate mediatrix between man and nature and yet, even this degraded placement afforded her compensatory powers. Insofar as woman was ‘man’ on the one hand, she could potentially lay claim to agency in the modern project to civilise nature. Insofar as she was ‘nature’, she could lay claim to a special capacity to speak for nature – especially as men began to pride themselves on their increasing detachment from nature. Furthermore, insofar as woman was both ‘nature’ and ‘man’, she could critique the modern project of mastery, even as she reached towards a distinctive knowledge of nature, based on the radicalized concept of compassion that might be termed the beginning of an ecological sensibility.” (p4-5)

Bowerbanks begins with Mary Wroth’s The Countess of Montgomeries Urania (1621), walking to the famed Penshurst (immortalised by Ben Jonson’s economium, which has the estate as a haven of balance of the human and natural orders. Yet, she explains, this was no such haven for the young Mary, who as a girl was whipped around England and the Continent, which marks Wroth’s work, which has “an extistential homelessness, together with a longing for a lost past”. (P.30) This nostalgia, Bowerbanks suggests, develops as a tool for early capitalism/consumer culture – the grieving for a lost green world can encourage the purchase of attempts to recover it.

And for Wroth, nature herself participates in this grieving, a labour mostly performed for Wroth by women, becomes at one with it. e.g. Liana lies “her head on the roote of a weeping willow, which dropped downe her teares into the Christalline streames…Shee lay betweene the body of that sad tree, and the river which passed close by it, running as if in haste to carry their sorroes from them” (p.34)

This was published in the same year as Robert Burton’s Anatomy of Melancholy, but Urania is profoundly modern – a symptom of malaise and scepticism, whereas for Burton it was medieval, rooted in sin.

For while Wroth often seems to wallow in the disappearing pleasures of the aristocratic hunt, the absolute powers granted to her class by the forest laws, which were gradually being eroded, she’s also, Bowerbanks finds, questioning, critical: “evokes an environment — so abundant, so various, so yielding and so flattering to a noble woman’s charms — she does so to expose the grim realities of rape, abuse, violence and alienation that, in every grove, threaten woman’s safety and well-being.”(p. 50)

For Margaret Cavendish, Duchess of Newcastle, recently recovered as a serious, original 17th-century thinker from the ridicule of centuries, there’s also this sense of loss, but also a clear desire to modernise, to reinvent, in line with the “male science” of the time from which she was firmly rebuffed. One of her interests was Sherwood Forest, which together with similar stretches of previous royal land by the Civil War was being steadily and indiscriminately used up. The great oaks of Welbeck Park were the particular focus.
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History Travel Women's history

Travelling with the galvachers

Notes from my trip in Anost, which I’ve only just managed to recover. (Won’t it be wonderful, when, one day, computers are truly plug and play, so when you get a new one you don’t spend weeks making it all work. And the wi-fi still isn’t…)

Well worth a visit is the Galvachers museum in Anost. If nothing else, you’ll have a sophisticated grasp of the different forms of ox-drivers in the 19th and early 20th-century.

In short:

* Les toucheurs drive cattle to abbatoirs. Often on journeys of 12 to 15 days

* Les boeutiers: young men who were effectively seasonal workers, taking cattle to work on cereal crops as far away as Picardie. The red cattle of the Morvan had a reputation for strength. The maquis de Dampierre considered best working cattle in the world.

*Les charretiers had carts suitable for lots of different jobs, including transporting wood, wine, stone, etc. Could be away from home for wide variations of time

* Les galvachers (the elite) migrated traditionally from May 1 to St Martin’s Day, specialising in moving wood, usually from the most difficult slopes.

In this poor area they were regarded as financial saviours, in memory were glorious, courageous adventurers.

That reputation helped to create the typical women’s industry, which was wetnursing “feminine des nourrices”. Since the region had a reputation for strength and good character, it was thought that the wet nurses would help their charges grow up appropriately.

The museum attendant is also the librarian and she and I had a fascinating discussion (more or less in French) about the women, looking at the wonderful pictures of them – all starched and proper overlay on faces that speak of poverty, with the belaced and pampered charges.

I also questioned (with the use of lots of sign language) why it was that every single ox yoke was for the horns, rather than across the shoulders, when you would think that the latter would be muchmore mechanically efficient and comfortable for the animals. The librarian consulted the books, but the only conclusion that we could draw was “tradition”.