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Scope & Content

The Vocabularium is a working list of terms related to religious women and their communities, derived primarily from two published monographs:

(Johnson, Penelope. Equal in Monastic Profession: Religious Women in Medieval France. The University of Chicago Press, Chicago: 1991.

Gilchrist, Roberta. Contemplation and Action: The Other Monasticism. Leicester University Press, New York: 1995.)


*Bailiwick
the administrative unit of the English Province of the Templars,comprising a region, shire or group of villages
*Lavatorium
or laver,a washing place or basin in the cloister or infirmary supplied with piped water and distinguished architecturally due to its ritual significance
Abbess
the spiritual and administrative head of an abbey of nuns, elected by the community or nominated by the founding family of the house
Ad succurrendum
nun or monk: a person who took the habit in old age or illness to be cared for at a monastery until death
Advocate
person designated protector of a monastary
Alien priory
monastic cells owned by mother houses in France. In 1414 they were confiscated by the Crown, as enemy assets, pending a cessation of hostilities between England and France. After 1414 most were farmed out to individuals or to other monastic houses
Almoner
monastic official who dispensed a monastery's almsgiving
Almshouse
hospitals of the 12th to 14th centuries founded in order to shelter the aged or infirm, or hospitals of the 15th to 16th centuries which acted as residential homes for the poor
Alod
freehold land
Anchoress
woman living as an enclosed hermitess
Anchorite
man living as an enclosed hermit; also used for a woman instead of anchoress
Apse
the semicircular termination of the chancel, aisle or transept
Arcade
a series of arches supported on piers
Armarium
monastic library
Arpent
roughly an acre of land
Ascetic
the practice of self-denial as a way of religious life; from the Greek asketikos, meaning laborious
Assart
to form private farmland out of common land
Aumbries
recesses or cupboards used to hold sacred vessels
Bay
a unit of a building marked by vaulting or roof compartments
Bedesman/bedeswoman
the resident poor of almshouses
Beguinage
unenclosed communities of religious women common in the Low Countries from the 13th century. Originally, they supported themselves and their charitable activities by working or begging for alms
Camera
a term meaning either a subordinate chamber or suite within a medieval building, or, as it was used by the Military Orders, to refer to specialized farms or holdings without a resident preceptor
Canons regular
ordained canons living in community under a Rule, such as the Augustinian, Gilbertine or Premonstratensian. Historians use the tem beguinage to describe any informal or spontaneously founded community of religious women; some historians make a distinction between the Beguines as an Order and lay-religious or semi-monastic women in general. Georgraphically the terms beguine and beguinage (as just defined) are associated with the Low Countires, northern France and the Rhine Valley. Related or synonymous terms for beguinage include: maison, maison dieu, couvent, hopital, Beguinenhaus and begignhuis, grand beguinage, beguinenhof and begijnhof (Delmaire 1989: 126). Related words for semi-religious women in other regions of Europe include: pinzochera, bizoke, mantellata, papallarda
Cartulary
a book of collected documents usually dealing with legal and economic transactions of a monastery
Cellarage
the ground-floor space of a two-storey structure, generally vaulted
Cellaress
monastic official who procured and oversaw a monastery's food supplies
Cenobitic
a monastic vocation in which religious lived as part of an organized community; from the Greek koinobio~n, meaning community
Cens
annual rent on property paid by a landholder to a landowner
Chantress
monastic official in charge of choral service and production of books
Chantry
a mass for the dead, believed to hasten the passage of the soul through Purgatory
Chemin de ronde
a corbelled-out and crenellated passage below the top of a round tower
Clerestory
the upper storey of the nave above the aisle roof, pierced with windows to light the central body of the church
Clerg
commandery: a monastery of the Military Orders; used particularly to refer to establishments of the Hospitallers
Cloistering
(passive) barring of nonmonastics from the house; (active) prohibition of monastics from exiting the house
Close
an open space enclosed on two or more sides by buildings and serving as a central area
Cob
clay mixed with sand, straw or gravel
College
a community of secular clergy
Computation
periodic, formal accounting by a monastery's leaders
Confraternity
union of prayer and privileges between individuals and monasteries or between monasteries (also called societas)
Convent
a monastic community of men or women
Conversa (-ae)
lay sister
Conversus(i)
lay brother
Corrodian
lay people who paid, or were sponsored, to lodge in private accommodation within a monastic precinct. Often this arrangement was permanent and served as a form of pension
Corvee
work days owed by a peasant to a lord or lordship
Cura monialium
overseeing of and clerical support for a nunnery by male clergy
Curtilage
a piece of ground within the limits or boundary of a property
Decana (-ae)
monastic official who served as vice abbess
Dedication
Dedication refers to the saint or saints to which a community is dedicated. Often communties, especially the many dedicated to the Virgin Mary, were commonly referred to by other names. However, the dedication is noted in the foundation document and usually other official documents generated or addressed to the community. The holy person or persons to which a community is dedicated often plays a prominent role in the iconography of works of art produced for or by a community. (author: k gill)
Demesne
land owned and administered directly by a monastery; in the case of a secular estate, the portion of land reserved for the lord's own use
Desert fathers
hermits of the 3rd and 4th century who withdrew to the deserts of Egypt, Palestine and Syria
Diocesan
bishop of a diocese
Documents of practice
pragmatic legal, economic, and institutional records that reflect the world as it was
Documents of theory
prescriptive and hortatory records that show the world as the writer thought it should be
Donationes altaris
parishioners' offerings to priest who performed sacraments and officiated on feast days
Double monestary
a monastery which consisted of separate communities of religious men and women, generally presided over by the abbess
Dowry
for monastics,entry gift given monastery when a nun or monk joined an order
Eremitic
a monastic vocation in which individuals withdrew from the world to live as solitary religious; from the Greek eremos, meaning desert
Exemption
freedom for a monastery from episcopal control and oversight
Familia
Group of people who answered to a monastery's orders and depended on it for their livelihood
Filiation
the act of belonging to a particular monastic order, such as the Cistercian
Geometric tracery
dating to the second half of the l4th century, and consisting of simple symmetrical shapes such as circles and trefoils
Gradual
hymn sung between the reading of the Epistle and the Gospel
Grange
farms or subsidiary residences of a monastery
Hagiography
writing of saints' lives
Hermit
individuals following a religious vocation which involved isolation and the practice of asceticism
Hospes (-itis)
free peasant
Hospice
a hospital established primarily in order to provide hospitality for travellers and pilgrims
Indulgence
remission of punishment granted a penitent for acts such as going on crusade or on pilgrimage
Infirmarian
monastic official in charge of the infirmary
Intercessory
prayers made on behalf of the soul of another
Keel moulding
a carved moulding with a sharp edge, resembling the keel of a ship
King-post
the vertical member of an internal roof structure placed on the center of a tie-beam to carry the ridge
Lavra (recluse)
a community of hermits or recluses and their cells
Lectio divina
monastics' regular daily reading and meditation on sacred texts
Leprosaria
a hospital dedicated to the care of lepers, where the administrators and caretakers live a semi-religious kind of life; the structure of the lepers' life in such an institution was also designed according to a semi-monastic plan or vision
Lus patronatus
right to name a priest to a benefice
Mandatum
ceremony of washing the feet of twelve people in memory of Christ's washing his apostles' feet
Manor
a unit of lordship in which land is divided between that of the lord (demesne) and that held by tenants, for which cash rents and labour services were owed to the lord
Martvrology
calendar of saints' feast days,to which were added the death dates of people to be remembered in monastics' daily prayers
Misericordia
from the Latin misericordia, meaning pity or mercy. The term is used to refer either to the meat-kitchen of the monastic infirmary, where a special diet was prepared for the infirm, or for the hinged seats in the stalls of the monastic choir, which were provided in order to support the nuns or monks in their long religious offices
Monastery
Monastic Houses,a community or house of a religious order or congregation
Muid
measure of grain
Novice
woman or man who has entered a monastery but has not yet taken final vows
Obedience
small, dependent monastic community with fewer than eight monastics
Obedientaries
the officers of a monastic house who held special responsibility for a particular area or function, such as the cellarer, sacristan, infirmarer and hosteller
Obits
religious services conducted on the anniversary of a death
Oblation
offering oneself or a child to serve God as a nun or monk
Opus Dei
divine offices, or the hours; eight services of prayers and psalms celebrated throughout each day by nuns and monks
Ordinary
bishop with ordinary jurisdiction over a diocese
Panchart
document containing a collection of related documents
Patristic
a term referring to the church fathers or their writings
Penitetial
the religious expression of poverty and self-denial as repentance for sin
Pentice
a passage way along the side of a building formed by a single-pitch roof supported on corbels
Phlebotomy
the letting or taking of blood, carried out in the belief that regular blood-letting was necessary to maintain good health
Pinzochera
the vernacular Italian word for an uncloistered religious woman; see beguinage and beguine
Piscina
a ritual basin set generally in the south wall of a church or chapel adjacent to an altar, in which communion vessels were washed and holy water was disposed
Pittance
extra serving of food,money, or wine, received by each monastic to celebrate a festive occasion
Preceptor
the resident knight or sergeant in charge of a preceptory of the Military Orders. preceptory a monastery of the Military Orders; used particularly to refer to establishments of the Templars
Prioress
the spiritual and administrative head of a priory of nuns, elected by the community or nominated by the founding family of the monastery
Procuration
customary fee paid by a monastery to the official visitor
Pulpitum
the stone or wooden screen that divided the west end of the monastic choir from the ritual nave
Regular clergy
ecclesiastics who follow a rule
Reredorter
a name sometimes given to the latrines attached to monastic houses
Rogation Days
three days before Ascension Day
Rotulus (-i)
monastic chain-letter scroll, circulated among religious institutions to announce the death of an abbess or abbot
Sacristan
monastic official with responsibility for care of altar and vestments and care and repair of church
Sacristy
a room attached to the church in which communion vessels, and altar furnishings and other valuables were stored
Secular clergy
ecclesiastics who take holy orders but do not follow a rule
Sedilia (sing. sedile)
a series of seats for the clergy placed on the south side of the chancel
Sester
measure of grain
Taille
an arbitrary seigneurial levy on serfs
Tithe
tax assessment of one-tenth income due to local parish
Titulus (tituli)
the administrative unit of the English Province of the Hospitallers, based on a region with a preceptory at its centre
Toft
the site of a house and its outbuildings; from the Latin tofta
Triforium
a band of arcading sometimes incorporating a wall passage, above the main arcade and below the clerestory of a church
Visitor
cleric who makes periodic official visitations to secular and regular clergy in his diocese
Vowess
a widow who took vows to live an unenclosed, celibate religious life

Editors:  Lisa BitelMarie Kelleher