Collaboration and Coercion: Marguerite Porete, mendicants and
Transcription
Collaboration and Coercion: Marguerite Porete, mendicants and
Copyright Notices Notice 1 Under the Copyright Act 1968, this thesis must be used only under the normal conditions of scholarly fair dealing. In particular no results or conclusions should be extracted from it, nor should it be copied or closely paraphrased in whole or in part without the written consent of the author. Proper written acknowledgement should be made for any assistance obtained from this thesis. Notice 2 I certify that I have made all reasonable efforts to secure copyright permissions for third-party content included in this thesis and have not knowingly added copyright content to my work without the owner's permission. Collaboration and Coercion: Marguerite Porete, mendicants and devout women in northern France in the late thirteenth century by Rina Lahav A thesis submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy School of Philosophical, Historical & International Studies Monash University 2011 6 Declaration This thesis contains no material that has been accepted for the award of any other degree or diploma in any university or other institution. This thesis, to the best of my knowledge, contains no material previously published or written by another person, except where due reference is made in the text. Signature …………………… Rina Lahav Date …………………… 7 Abstract In this thesis I explore the multi-layered interaction between the members of the mendicant orders, in particular the Franciscans, and women of various backgrounds in northern France in the late thirteenth century, with particular attention to the figure of Marguerite Porete. My starting point has been guided by the need to situate her activity and subsequent condemnation in 1310 in terms of two main areas of activity, the intellectual centre of Paris, and more creative and loosely controlled area of the southern Low Countries. In particular, Porete‘s career must be situated in terms of flourishing of networks of religious renewal in the first half of the thirteenth century, supported by the mendicant Orders. When the inquisition started delineating the boundaries of orthodoxy, there developed increasing tension between forces of constraint and of creative devotion. I reflect on the intriguing figure of Marguerite Porete, asking to what extent her theology was a reaction to this struggle. I argue that her turning away from individual will, articulated so beautifully in her treatise, was a statement, not of withdrawal from this combat, but an articulation of her contribution to it. This thesis examines a series of texts that illustrate this tension between dynamism and control, including Hadewijch‘s little studied ‗List of the Perfect‘, the writing of Gilbert of Tournai for Isabelle of France and the Speculum dominarum, written by Durand of Champagne, Franciscan chaplain to Jeanne of Navarre, wife of Philip IV of France. Jeanne‘s death in 1305 deprived the Franciscan movement of a significant female supporter. The support Porete gained from figures like master Godfrey of Fontaines, the unidentified Franciscan called John, and Franco, Cistercian monk of Villers (whose authority she claimed in her support) were unable to 8 prevent her being executed in a show trial in Paris in 1310, largely driven by inquisitors from the Dominican Order. By the beginning of the fourteenth century, I argue, it no longer mattered whether or not women‘s spirituality was in line with the accepted theology of their age. If their obedience was not absolutely certain, their way of life was banned. 9 Acknowledgments I would like to thank Prof. Constant J. Mews, who taught me to strive for greater things than I could ever imagine; I would not be the person that I am today without his guidance. Many thanks go to Dr Clare Monagle, for being my sounding board and encouraging me to proceed, and my friends and colleagues, whose belief in me illuminated my way, Dr Tomas Zahora, and Natasha Robin Amendola. I would also like to thank the staff of the School of Philosophical, Historical & International Studies for providing a remarkable space for learning and development. I have also been fortunate to be included in research projects, which have given me the opportunity to share my research in various conferences, resulting in various publications: ‗Marguerite Porete and the Predicament of her Preaching‘, in Gender and Catholicism in Europe, 1200-1900, ed. Laurence Lux-Sterritt and Carmen M. Mangion, London: Palgrave, 2010, pp. 38-50, ‗A mirror of Queenship: The Speculum dominarum and the demands of justice‘, in Virtue Ethics for Women, 1250-1550, ed. Karen Green and Constant J Mews, Leuven: Springer, 2011 (forthcoming), in 2011, resulting from an ARC funded project on virtue ethics for women led by Prof. Constant J. Mews, Associate Prof. Karen Green and Dr Janice Pinder; ‗Ambitions of faith: Mystical Instruction from Gilbert of Tournai to Isabelle of France‘, published within Interpreting Francis and Clare of Assisi. From the middle ages to the present, ed. Constant J. Mews and Claire Renkin, Melbourne, 2010, PAGES I am grateful to Dr Janice Pinder for allowing me to consult her draft text of La Sainte Abbaye, and to Associate Prof. Karen Green for her support. I would also like to acknowledge the wonderful opportunity 10 created by the collaboration between Prof. Constant J. Mews and Prof. Eva Schlotheuber, which enabled me to visit Paris and Germany and benefit from interaction with the best scholars in my field. These projects, conferences and seminars, that I was lucky enough to participate in, as well as conversations and debates inspired, challenged and contributed to this thesis. 11 Table of contents Introduction........................................................................... 13 Chapter one - Alternative Spiritual Networks in the Thirteenth Century ................................................................................. 23 Chapter two - Ambitions of Faith: Mystical Instruction from Gilbert of Tournai to Isabelle of France ................................................ 53 Chapter three - Dialogue of the Soul ......................................... 77 Chapter four - A mirror of Queenship: The Speculum dominarum and the demands of justice .................................................... 102 Chapter five – Closing Ranks ................................................. 126 Chapter six – Preaching Her Way............................................ 150 Conclusion - Enforced order ................................................... 178 Bibliography ........................................................................ 190 12 Introduction Around the feast of Pentecost a certain pseudo-woman from Hainault, named Marguerite Porete, was found guilty of producing a book filled with errors and heresies. Her ideas were exposed in the common field of La Grève through the deliberation of learned men who found them heretical and she was handed over to the secular court, to be executed on the next day by fire.1 Marguerite Porete was condemned by the inquisition under Philip the Fair and executed in Paris on 1 June 1310. Apart from very brief reports such as this, in the chronicle of Guillaume de Nangis, our main sources of knowledge concerning Marguerite Porete are the book she wrote, The Mirror of Simple Annihilated Souls, and the records of her trial made by the royal ministers of Philip the Fair, William of Nogaret and William of Plaisians.2 Marguerite‘s book and the records of her trial raise many questions. Was she an isolated individual or was she a part of a network of like minded individuals? Most studies of the Mirror are literary and theological rather than historical. They concentrate on what Marguerite conveys in her Mirror. I have chosen Marguerite Porete as the fulcrum of my thesis because she articulates a paradox that was developing in France towards the end of the thirteenth century 1 The continuator of the Chronicle of Guillaume de Nangis, in Paul Verdeyen, „Le Procès d‟inquisition contre Marguerite Porete et Guiard de Cressonessart (1309 – 1310)‟, Revue d’histoire ecclésiastique, 81 (1986), 47-94, pp. 88-9. 2 Margarite Porete, Speculum Simplicium Animarum, ed. Paul Verdeyen, in Corpus Christianorum. Continuatio Mediaeualis, 69, Turnhout, 1986. I have also used two translations of the texts: Marguerite Porete, The Mirror of Simple Souls, trans. Ellen L. Babinsky, New York, 1993, and Marguerite Porete, The Mirror of Simple Souls, trans. Edmund Colledge, J.C. Marler and Judith Grant, Notre Dame, 1999. 13 and into the fourteenth. The spiritual renewal of the beginning of the thirteenth century was morphing into discussions about boundaries, control and validity of religious lives. What started as the need for greater realization of personal desire to be closer to God and removed from temporal corruption, turned into an argument about practices, behavior and proper observance: all temporal issues, even if they are concerned with religion. I would like to examine these issues through the intriguing figure of Marguerite Porete and her tragic end. The Mirror was re-discovered in 1867 by Francesco Toldi, but the book was only attributed to Marguerite Porete by Romana Guarnieri in 1946.3 The only surviving copy of the original version of The Mirror in Old French was made in the fifteenth century for the nuns of the Madeleine Convent at Orleans.4 All the other medieval translations of The Mirror came from a Latin version, translated from Old French original sometime in the fourteenth century.5 Robert Lerner has presented a compelling argument for the Middle English translation as the closest to the original French Marguerite wrote.6 The records of Marguerite‘s trial are available in the original Latin and comprise the sentencing of Marguerite Porete and the consultation given by the Canon Lawyers and the masters of the University of Paris. Marguerite‘s first encounter with the law, related by her inquisitor, was her condemnation sometime during the episcopate of Guy, bishop of Cambrai. Guy had the book burned very publicly in her presence in Valenciennes, forbidding her to advocate her ideas and 3 Emilie Zum Brunn and Georgette Epiney-Burgard, Women Mystics in Medieval Europe, trans. Sheila Hughes, New York, 1989, p. 143. 4 Zum Brunn and Epiney-Burgard, Women Mystics in Medieval Europe, p. 150. 5 Robert E. Lerner, The Heresy of the Free Spirit in the Later Middle Ages, Berkeley, 1972, p. 73. 6 Robert E. Lerner, „New Light On the Mirror of Simple Souls‟, Speculum, 85 (2010), 91-116. 14 disseminate her book.7 This bishop, ‗Guy of Happy memory‘ or Guy of Colmieu, ruled the see of Cambrai between 1296 and 1306.8 Cambrai was a connecting point between the educational centres of Paris and the Low Countries. The Dominican, Thomas of Cantempré (1201-1272) and the Franciscan, Gilbert of Tournai (circa 12001284) studied there before moving to Paris to complete their studies. It was also an important seat politically and the bishops tended to be close to the government in Paris. The second time Marguerite was caught and brought before the bishop of Cambrai it was Philip of Marigny, half brother of Enguerrand de Marigny, chamberlain and minister of Philip IV, who apprehended her, accusing her of having sent her book to John, bishop of Châlons, and of propagating it among simple people. She was then arrested and handed over to William Humbert, the Dominican inquisitor of Paris, late in the year 1308 and brought to Paris to be imprisoned. For the bishop to become aware of the book and its writer they had to be widely known in his diocese. Assuming Marguerite was aware of the controversial character of her book she would have circulated it cautiously. The Mirror was probably made known in a small number of hand copied manuscripts, read aloud at private gatherings. It is reasonable to assume that if the bishop tried her around 1300 in Valenciennes, she had started to advance her book in the county of Hainault in the 1290s, having perhaps written it in the 1280s. Marguerite refused to speak to any of her inquisitors during her imprisonment and trial. In 1310 the Inquisitor, for want of direct testimony, extracted a list of articles from her book and presented them for examination to twenty-one theological masters of the 7 8 Verdeyen „Le Procès‟, p. 82 Conrad Eubel, Hierarchia Catholica Medii Aevi, , Editio Altera (Regensburg, 1968), vol. 1, p. 160. 15 University of Paris. On April 11 these examiners unanimously declared the articles to be heretical, and since Marguerite refused to recant, or even to make a formal statement to the inquisitors, she was condemned as a relapsed heretic and handed over for execution. On the following day, 1 June 1310, she was executed by fire at Place de La Grève.9 Marguerite‘s treatise, The Mirror of Simple Souls, is a guide to and an example of a soul who undergoes a transformation from a normal earthly existence to an empty vessel filled by God. The Mirror is essentially an attempt by the author to address an everlasting question of salvation. Since the intentions and the thoughts of men carry the same potential of sin as deeds, there is no assured salvation.10 Every day has the potential of endangering the salvation of even the most devout person. Marguerite‘s theology attempts to solve the problem entirely by replacing human ego with Divine Goodness. The Mirror encourages the listeners to surpass the regular Christian devotion and adopt a way of emptying oneself of all spiritual essence so that God might fill that void with His being. Since the rediscovery of the Mirror, modern scholarship has been fascinated with the case of Marguerite Porete, both as an historical figure and as a writer of an extraordinarily innovative theological treatise. 11 In 1969 Ernest McDonnell briefly discussed her case in 9 Lerner, The Heresy of the Free Spirit, pp. 71-2. For example Matthew 5, 27. 11 Bernard McGinn, The Flowering of Mysticism, Men and Women in the New Mysticism (1200-1350), The Presence of God: A History of Western Christian Mysticism, III , New York, 1998, pp. 246-65; Maria Lichtmann, „Marguerite Porete and Meister Eckhart: The Mirror for Simple Souls Mirrored‟; Amy Hollywood, „Suffering Transformed: Marguerite Porete, Meister Eckhart and the Problem of Women‟s Spirituality‟; Michael Sells, „The Pseudo-Woman and the Meister: “Unsaying” and Essentialism‟, in Meister Eckhart and the Beguine Mystics, Hadewijch of Brabant, Mechthild of Magdeburg and Marguerite Porete, ed. Bernard McGinn, New York, 1994, pp. 65-146; Ellen L., Babinsky, „Christological Transformation in the Mirror of Souls by Marguerite Porete‟, Theology Today, 60, 2003, 34-48. See also: Maria Lichtmann, „Marguerite Porete‟s Mirror for Simple Souls: Inverted Reflection of Self, Society and God, Studia Mystica, 16, No. 1, 1995, pp. 4-29, Emma Johnston, „Marguerite Porete: A 10 16 his comprehensive study. He accused her of discrediting the whole feminine movement and sharpening the antagonism of ecclesiastical and secular authorities to extraregular associations in general.12 In 1972 Robert Lerner claimed that the trial of Marguerite Porete and Guiard de Cressonesart, a self-appointed defender of Marguerite, was closely linked to the suppression of the Templars in 1308. The documents of both trials were found in the collected papers of William of Nogaret and William of Plaisians, who were confidants of the king and played a large role in the procedures against the Templars. The fact that these royal ministers had kept the documents pertaining to both processes, argued Lerner, allows the presumption that there is some connection between the trials of Marguerite and the actions against the Templars. With difficulties and doubts accumulating in the matter of the Templars, he further claimed, Philip and his officials wished to display their unwavering orthodoxy in a case against a controversial beguine in which no base motives could be suspected.13 In 1986 Paul Verdeyen offered a slightly different explanation for the great interest the Inquisitor took in the case of Marguerite. He maintains that her trial was a part of a political struggle between Philip the Fair and the Papacy. The King, through the Inquisitor, set out to demonstrate to the Papacy that the inquisition maintained tight control over the correct doctrine and ecclesiastical discipline in his Kingdom. In addition, Verdeyen asserts, the condemnation of Marguerite was ‗given‘ to the mendicant orders in order to obtain Post Mortem‟ and Melissa Brown, „Marie D‟Oignies, Marguerite Porete and „Authentic‟ Female Mystic Piety in the Middle Ages‟, in Worshipping Women, Misogyny and Mysticism in the Middle Ages, ed. John O. Ward and Francesca C. Bussey, Sidney, 1997, pp. 187-235. 12 Ernest W. McDonnell, The Beguines and Beghards In Medieval Culture with special emphasis on the Belgian Scene, New York, 1969, p. 490. 13 Lerner, The Heresy of the Free Spirit, p. 77. 17 their support in the actions taken against the Templars.14 Verdeyen attributes the presence of twenty-one of the best theologians in the trial of Marguerite to the approval Marguerite secured for her book from Godfrey of Fontaines, a very important theologian.15 Paul Verdeyen includes the complete registers of the trial of Marguerite and of Guiard in his article. He presents part after part of the records and discusses them. He gives much information about the judges, the masters and the inquisitors. Bernard McGinn (1998) agrees with Lerner and Verdeyen that the trial and execution of Marguerite Porete should be seen in the context of the tension between Philip IV of France and the papacy. The pursuit of Porete, he says, was engineered by the Capetian court as another expression of ‗the most Christian king‘s zeal for the defense of orthodoxy at the time of the highly controversial destruction of the Templar Order under the guise of their ‗heretical depravity‘. However, he implies that in the light of later condemnations of the Council of Vienne in 1311, her condemnation might have been due to the growing fear of heresy, especially mystical heresy, at the time.16 Kent Emery (1999) has concentrated on the social definition of Marguerite Porete. He has claimed that she was not a beguine in a strict sense of the term. He justifies his claim by saying that there are some broadly shared characteristics and themes in the writings of the late medieval religious women, which are completely missing or only faintly present in the Mirror.17 Kent Emery also agrees with Peter Dronke that Margaret‘s deepest inspiration was poetic: the 14 Verdeyen, „Le Procès‟, p. 85. Verdeyen, „Le Procès‟, pp. 52-3. 16 McGinn, The Flowering of Mysticism, , pp. 245-6. 17 Kent Emery, Jr, Forward to Margaret Porete, The Mirror of Simple Souls, trans. Edmund Colledge, O.S.A., J.C. Marler and Judith Grant, Notre Dame, 1999, p. xi. 15 18 literary ideals of ‗fin amor‘ were the ‗raison d'être‘ of her inner life, her hopes and despairs, fears and sorrows, moments of ecstatic fulfillment and aching emptiness.18 He identifies the main reason for the condemnation of Marguerite in her statements about the virtues and sacramental practices of the Church. The judges of Marguerite, he says, surely recoiled at the thought of her book falling into the hands of enthusiastic, unschooled lay-folk, and served to undermine the established popular dogma of the Church.19 Edmund Colledge, J.C. Marler and Judith Grant (1999) rationalize the detailed and accurate documentation of the trial of Marguerite by the proximity to the affair of the Templars. This process, they say, had been given so little semblance of legality that it had provoked general revulsion. The inquisition therefore, had decided to present its case concerning Marguerite with greater care than had been used in acting against the Knights.20 Like Kent Emery, these scholars do not accept Marguerite as a beguine. In addition to not finding the distinctive beguine piety in her work, they put forward the repeated claims of Marguerite that she and her kind belong to the few.21 Regarding the three approvals Marguerite Porete received and included in her book, they assert that she added them after her first trial in an attempt to avert the initial verdict.22 Amy Hollywood has offered an explanation for the way Marguerite Porete chose to present her narrative as a discussion between three major protagonists, The Soul, Love, and Reason. Hollywood claims that this way of telling the story represents the fluidity of these 18 Emery, Forward to Margaret Porete, The Mirror of Simple Souls p. xii. Ibid., p. xvii-xviii. 20 Colledge, Marler and Grant, Introduction to The Mirror of Simple Souls, p. xxxv. 21 Colledge,. Marler and Grant, Introduction to The Mirror of Simple Souls, p. il. 22 Ibid., , p. xlii. 19 19 three persons in the state of a transformed soul, in whom love operates and uses to tell the story in the only way possible, with no regards to human concepts of linear progress of narrative.23 Zan Kocher‘s study (2008) strips the Mirror‘s protagonist and object, the soul, from its temporal flesh, from gender and subjectivity, to claim that Marguerite‘s intention was to disengage from the wish to understand, to love, or to want anything at all.24 Marguerite Porete, Kocher argues, wanted to exemplify what happens when the soul abandons the social preconceptions and personal desires. This, he claims, retracts the soul to its precreational condition. Both Hollywood and Kocher mention the debate Marguerite conceivably alludes to by choosing Love and Reason as opposing parties in their dialogue with the Soul. This allusion echoes many lines in contemporary debate, mysticism and its communication to the general public, the debate on women‘s ability to comprehend and participate in general discussion on Scripture and dogma, the place of embodied visionary experience, just to mention a few. During the thirteenth century, when this process of religious exploration took place, the peripheral areas of northern France, southern France and the area of the Low Countries attracted some of the more radical spiritualities. These peripheries became centres of religious experimentation. In what follows I shall look at the large area of Northern France, from Paris to what can be called the southern Low Countries, in the thirteenth century. I shall look at the men and women who distinguished that area at that time, bringing forth examples of saintly women, to venerate. The counties of Hainaut and Cambrai, where the earlier part of Marguerite‘s story 23 Hollywood, The Soul as Virgin Wife, p. 119. Suzanne (Zan) Kocher, Allegories of Love in Marguerite Porete’s Mirror of Simple Souls, Turnhout, 2008, p. 183. 24 20 took place, were situated in the central south of the Low Countries. The southern Low Countries were largely multilingual, but predominantly French speaking. Most of the population lived in powerful and to some extent autonomous cities and was predominantly literate. The rough language divide skirted the northern border of Hainaut and Liège, with Hainaut and Cambrai being predominantly French speaking.25 This was the area Marguerite Porete lived and operated in, according to the documents. This was also the area James of Vitry described as brimming with saintly women, who loved God with exemplary zeal and who he thought ought to be encouraged by the authorities. When the inquisition started delineating the boundaries of orthodoxy, this area also became a battlefield between forces of constraint and forces of creative devotional energy. I shall reflect on the intriguing figure of Marguerite Porete and ask to what extent her theology was a reaction to this continuing tension. I shall ask whether her turning away from individual will, articulated so beautifully in her treatise, was a statement of withdrawal from this combat or an articulation of her contribution to it. Extending this question to a bigger issue, I shall follow the collaboration between scholasticism and the ‗common theology‘, as Anneke Mulder-Bakker puts it.26 I shall ask how two treatises written for royal women, Isabelle of France and Jeanne of Navarre, encouraged collaboration, blurring the lines between the route of purely logical progress of the human soul to God and the affective one. How far did this dialogue, taking place in court, between 25 Walter Simons, Cities of Ladies, Beguine Communities in the Medieval Low Countries, 1200 – 1565, Philadelphia, 2001, p. 3. 26 Anneke B. Mulder-Bakker, introduction to the volume she has edited, Seeing and Knowing, Women and Learning in Medieval Europe 1200-1500, Turnhout, 2004, p. 9. 21 mainly Franciscans and royal women, contributed to the broader exploration of religious expression. With the death of Jeanne of Navarre, Queen of France (1285-1305), the relative balance of power between the mendicant Orders within the royal court changed. The Franciscans lost their most ardent supporter, while and the Dominicans gained more influence by their association with the king in his struggle with the papacy. I shall look at Marguerite Porete and her book, from the perspective of the period of her trial, the early fourteenth century, for what it can tell us about the shift in clerical views on spirituality, lay religion and most of all creative input from women on matters of faith. Her arrest and execution, I would argue, marked a change of the political situation. The decrees of the Council of Vienne (1311-2) echoing Marguerite‘s theology as markers of heresy, will further demonstrate that the question was no longer about the right dogma, or theology. The new order of the day was obedience. Whoever failed to obey was crushed, regardless of their outlook on the union between the human soul and God. 22 Chapter one - Alternative Spiritual Networks in the Thirteenth Century You saw many bands of holy virgins in different places of the lily gardens of the Lord and you rejoiced. They had scorned carnal enticements for Christ, despised the riches of this world for the love of the heavenly kingdom, clung to their heavenly Bridegroom in poverty and humility, and earned a sparse meal with their hands, although their families abounded in great riches. Forgetful of their people and the home of their father, they preferred to endure distress and poverty than to abound in riches that had been wrongly acquired or to remain in danger among worldly pomps. You saw holy and God fearing matrons and you rejoiced. With what zeal did they preserve their maidenly modesty, arming themselves in their honorable resolve by salutary warnings, so that their only desire was the heavenly Bridegroom. Widows served the Lord in fasts and prayers, in vigils and in manual labor, in tears and entreaties. Just as they had previously tried to please their husbands in the flesh, so now the more did they attempt to please their heavenly Bridegroom in the spirit.27 27 „Vidisti enim (& gavisus es) in hortis liliorum Domini multas sanctarum Virginum in diversis locis catervas, quae spretis pro Christo carnalibus illecebris, contemptis etiam amore regni caelestis hujus mundi divitiis, in paupertate & humilitate Sponso caelesti adhaerentes, labore manuum tenuem victum quaerebant, licet parentes earum multis divitiis abundarent. Ipsae tamen obliviscentes populum suum & domum patris sui, malebant angustias & paupertatem sustinere, quam male acquisitis divitiis abundare, vel inter pomposos seculares cum periculo remanere. Vidisti (& gavisus es) sanctas & Deo servientes matronas, quanto zelo juvencularum pudicitiam conservarent, & eas in honesto proposito, ut solum caelestem Sponsum desiderarent, salutaribus monitis instruerent. Ipsae etiam viduae in jejuniis & orationibus, in vigiliis & labore manuum, in lacrymis & obsecrationibus, Domino servientes, sicut maritis suis prius placere nitebantur in carne, imo ita amplius Sponso caelesti placere studebant in spiritu.‟ Jacques de Vitry; Vita Mariae Oigniacensis ed. Daniel Papebroeck Acta Sanctorum Iunius 5 [June 23], Paris, 1867: 542-72. Trans. by Margot H. King, The life of Mary of Oignies by James of 23 In this manner James of Vitry (c. 1160/70 – 1240) described a phenomenon, of women in the early thirteenth century living lives of devotion and piety. Using the example of Mary of Oignies (1167 1213), he established a new devotional tradition and propagated its acceptance, describing it as a local activity taking place in the duchy of Brabant in the diocese of Liège. James of Vitry was the first prominent cleric to bring the phenomenon to papal attention. Later in life he became a bishop of Acre, and a cardinal in the Roman curia. 28 He made Mary of Oignies a living example of true religiosity, and dedicated a large portion of his life trying to structure acceptable forms of life, in which such women could pass on their insights.29 James of Vitry describes a meeting between two authorities as a non conflict. Mary received instruction from God, she did not push for acceptance of this instruction because of her humility, but coercion was not needed in any case, since these instructions perfectly coincided with the ones given to the male clerics in Holy Scriptures. Although she inwardly experienced the intimate counsel of the Holy Spirit and although she was sufficiently instructed in Holy Scriptures, yet from the extreme abundance of her humility, she did not disdain to subject herself willingly and devoutly to the counsels of others by renouncing her own will, lest she appear to be wise in their eyes.30 Vitry, 3, in Mary of Oignies Mother of Salvation, ed. Anneke B. Mulder Bakker, Turnhout, 2006, p. 42. Based on King‟s translation with small changes. 28 Thomas of Cantempré, Prologue to the supplement to the life of Mary of Oignies, trans. Hugh Feiss OSB, in Mary of Oignies Mother of Salvation, ed. Mulder Bakker, p. 137. 29 Anneke B. Mulder-Bakker, Ibid., pp. 27-8. 30 Vita Mariae Oignacensis 76, in Mary of Oignies, Mother of Salvation, p. 103: „Licet autem familiari Spiritus sancti consilio interius uteretur, licet divinis Scripturis sufficienter instrueretur; prae nimia tamen humilitatis abundantia, ne sapiens in oculis suis videretur, aliorum consiliis, propriae voluntati abrenuntiando, seipsam libenter & devote subjicere non dedignabatur‟. 24 Thomas of Cantimpré, James of Vitry‘s student and admirer, was responsible for three other Lives and a supplement to the Life of Mary of Oignies. Thomas was probably born in Bellingen, near Brussels, into the lower nobility. He studied in Cambrai before entering the Victorine abbey of Cantimpré. In 1237, five years after moving to the Dominican community in Leuven, he was sent to study further at St Jacques, in Paris. His best known works are Lives of devout women of Liège. In addition to the supplement to the Life of Mary of Oignies, he wrote the Lives of Christina Mirabilis ((1150 – 1224), Margaret of Ypres (1216-1237) and Lutgard of Tongeren or Aywières (1182- 1246).31 Christina the Astonishing died and came back to life at her funeral mass, levitated to the roof of the church, and would not come down until she was exorcized by the priest.32 In the course of her life she threw herself into baking ovens, boiling cauldrons, and icy rivers, just to mention a few of the miracles associated with her.33 But more importantly she presented herself as an authority to be reckoned with, but who ceded to the more appropriate primacy of male clerics: Although she had been completely illiterate from birth, yet she understood all Latin and fully knew the meaning of Holy Scripture. When she was asked very obscure questions by certain spiritual friends, she would explain them very openly. But she did this most unwillingly and rarely, for she said that 31 Barbara Newman, Introduction to Thomas of Cantimpré: The Collected Saints’ Lives, Abbot John of Cantimpré, Christina the Astonishing, Margaret of Ypres, and Lutgard of Aywières, ed., Barbara Newman, Turnhout, 2008, p. 8. 32 Life of Christina the Astonishing, in Newman, Thomas of Cantimpré: The Collected Saints’ Lives, p. 130. 33 Ibid., p. 133-4. 25 to expound Holy Scriptures belonged to the clergy and not to the ministry of such as her.34 Margaret of Ypres, had been sheltered and reclusive, and very attached to her confessor Zeger of Lille. She lived a short and tormented life, in which she practically starved herself to death, before her twenty-first birthday. Lutgard of Aywières became Thomas‘ spiritual mother. Lutgard became an exemplary num, celebrated for mystical gifts, which included the powers of healing, exorcism and releasing multitudes of souls from purgatory through prayers and fasts.35 These were not the only notable spiritual women operating in the area. Other women left their mark in the history of devotion. Juliana of Mont-Cornillon (1193 - 1258), Beatrice of Nazareth (d.1268) and many others were described as leading outstanding lives of devotion. As Barbara Newman puts it, ‗the new evangelical spirit fostered the growth of a supple but vulnerable network of mulieres religiosae and viri spiritualis, including secular clerics like James of Vitry, Dominicans such as Thomas of Cantimpré, and Cistercians such as Caesarius of Heisterbach and Goswin of Villers.‘36 Scholars are divided on the question of the perception of this phenomenon by the contemporaries. Dyan Elliot has argued that such stories, post mortem, were used by the church authorities as a strategy in the battle against the influence of heretical teachings. When the Church authorities found it difficult to sway the common folk from admiring 34 Ibid., p. 148: „Intelligebat autem ipsa omnem latinitatem, et sensum in Scriptura divina plenissime noverat, licet ipsa a nativitate litteras penitus ignoraret, et earum obscurissimas quaestiones spiritualibus quibusdam amicis, cum interrogaretur, enodatissime reserabat. Invitissime tamen [ac rarissime] facere voluit; dicens Scripturas sanctas exponere, proprium esse clericorum, nec ad se hujusmodi ministerium pertinere.‟ 35 Newman, Introduction to Thomas of Cantimpré: The Collected Saints’ Lives, pp. 9-10. 36 Ibid., p. 14. 26 extraordinary examples of devotion exhibited by heretics, they presented these stories of extraordinary women, who disregarded the risk to their health, and provided proof of unwavering faith.37 Veneration, and exemplification, rather than call for imitation, was their aim. Karras, concentrating more on the scholastic milieu, has argued that the masters of the University of Paris used women to think with, treating them as objects for their greater observations. Women themselves in that setting did not matter.38 By contrast, John Coakley has argued that when the friars came in contact with such visionaries, they became aware of the different authority they represented from their own, and therefore were not threatened by it. The friars, increasingly ordained to holy orders as the century progressed, acted from the privileged standing of their office. Women visionaries had more immediate access to authority, via their claimed direct connection to God, source of all things, but the friars felt confident in their own power, especially in view of women‘s ready submission to their authority.39 In this chapter I shall argue that these perceptions of the relative authority of men and women need to be nuanced, by exploring how these women categorized the religious men they came in contact with in the Northern France and Low Countries. I shall argue that encounters of religious men with devout women shaped a sense of commonality within certain circles, but not others, based on a different set of criteria from the normal church establishment. I shall look into several women mystics as to their perception of their 37 Dyan Elliot, Proving Woman, Female Spirituality and Inquisitional Culture in the Later Middle Ages, Princeton and Oxford, 2004, p. 65. 38 Ruth Mazo Karras, „Using Women to Think With in the Medieval University‟, in Seeing and Knowing, Women and Learning in Medieval Europe 1200-1500, ed. Anneke B. MulderBakker,Turnhout, 2004, pp. 21-33. 39 John Coakley, „Friars as Confidants of Holy Women in Medieval Dominican Hagiography‟, in Images of Sainthood in Medieval Europe, ed. Renate Blumenfeld-Kosinski and Timea Szell, London, 1991, pp. 222-246, and more fully John Coakley, Women, men, and spiritual power : female saints and their male collaborators, New York, 2006. 27 own authority in this social setting in the context of their religious experience and how they identified their difference and shaped their own sense of community with their supporters and against the ‗other‘. I use the term ‗alternative‘ to define that sense of different criteria of admittance to these groups. The region between Northern France and the southern Low Countries in the thirteenth century encouraged development of new ideas and forms of life. Highly educated and urbanized and lacking in institutions of organized religious expression, this region shared in a wider spiritual renewal during this period. David Nicholas has offered a very detailed description of Flanders that, although excluding the duchy of Brabant, helps elucidate the broader character of northern France and the southern Low Countries. He describes a society in which industrial interests were always stronger as a social navigator than the church establishment. This is not to say that people there were less religious, but that the impetus for their decisions was often based on trade rather than on considerations of the soul. The cities, where most of the population resided, had strong governments. Even monastic orders preferred the lay courts when official action was needed.40 The population of the region was highly literate, especially in the central Low Countries. Education was in principle an ecclesiastical monopoly, but it was being contested everywhere during the thirteenth century. By 1300 private instruction was available also in the vernacular.41 In Flanders, monastic life was mainly Benedictine and noble in character. The wealthy older abbeys increasingly became religious establishments controlled by wealthy local families and out of touch 40 41 David Nicholas, Medieval Flanders, London, 1992, p. 139. Ibid., p. 142. 28 with the spiritual needs of most believers.42 Even the mendicants made their impact mainly in the urban upper classes. Not only the Franciscans and Dominicans but also the Augustinians, the Brothers of the Sack, and the Carmelites, along with several smaller groups, found a strong reception in the Flemish cities. Most mendicant foundations were in urban locations and mainly in purely industrial environments. Of twenty-six convents founded before 1350 fifteen were in Bruges, Ghent and Ypres.43 However, most mendicants, just like most monks, came from the urban upper classes of society. There was never a question of absolute poverty in the Flemish mendicant orders. Even by the mid-century Franciscans were relaxing their practice of poverty, and by 1270 they were acquiring rents and other properties.44 Walter Simons has provided a survey on the condition of women in the Southern Low countries. Household structure, he argues, created a fertile ground for the flourishing of religious communities of women in the cities. As opposed to the south of Europe, women in the north did not marry young, nor join their husband‘s family arrangements. Couples usually married when they could support themselves, including the income the wife could generate for the household. This cultural difference, he very usefully points out, caused many women to move to the cities in search of employment and explore various religious options when they got there.45 Episcopal control of the land was not very tight in this period. Just as political influence was divided between France and Germany, so two archbishoprics, one French in Rheims, and the other German in Cologne, were responsible for all the area, from Liège to 42 Ibid., p. 140. Ibid., p. 141. 44 Ibid., p. 142. 45 Simons, Cities of Ladies, p. 9. 43 29 Thérouanne. Throughout the thirteenth century Flanders became more and more dependent on France, which the French kings very enthusiastically encouraged.46 They controlled royal marriages, gave money fiefs, and sometimes took by force control over specific situations. But on the ground neither royal nor bishopric control were very dominant. Women‘s spiritual needs were very poorly met by religious orders in Flanders of the thirteenth century. Nunneries were never strong in Flanders. Only four convents of Poor Clares and two Dominican nunneries were established in Flanders during the thirteenth century. They were patronized by the counts and were even more aristocratic than the male mendicant houses.47 By necessity, Walter Simons, tells us, women in northern France created networks in which the women could get help and support in their first steps toward their vocation, whether as beguines, anchorites or enclosed nuns.48 The desire of women to live a more religious life has been treated by Herbert Grundmann to be a powerful drive that affected multitudes of women in northern Europe in the thirteenth century and led them to actively realize their religious ambitions. Such women shared with the religious movement in general the goal of a Christian way of life in the sense of the gospels, which they believed could be achieved particularly through voluntary poverty and chastity.49 He claimed that this movement was gaining strength 46 Nicholas, Medieval Flanders, p. 150. Ibid., p. 141. 48 Simons, Cities of Ladies, p. 45. 49 Herbert Grundmann, Religious Movements in the Middle Ages, The Historical Links between Heresy, the Mendicant Orders, and the Women’s Religious Movement in the Twelfth and Thirteenth Century, with the Historical Foundations of German Mysticism, trans., Steven Rowan, Notre Dame, London, 1995, p. 82. 47 30 from the beginning of the thirteenth century, partly within orders and religious houses and partly in irregular heretical circles.50 It has been traditionally assumed that women who were unable to enter a cloister adopted instead the ‗semireligious‘ status of beguines. John B. Freed, however, has very successfully argued that it was not a lack of room in the nunnery that caused some women to become beguines rather than nuns. Rather, they became beguines for the same reason their male counterparts entered the Franciscan and Dominican orders. The life of a beguine, whose everyday activity combines the ideal of care for the poor and sick, with withdrawal from normal social constraints, came much closer to the ideal of evangelical perfection than the severely restricted and more traditional life of the cloistered nun.51 Contemporaries used the term ‗beguine‘ quite liberally to indicate all female religious practice outside of nunneries in the northern countries of the thirteenth century. However, the description of their lives often centered on what they were not, rather than what they were.52 Chastity and extraregular status were said to be unique to the diverse manifestation of the beguine movement and separated them from all other female categories of the thirteenthcentury: nuns and married women.53 Historiography has attempted to divide the beguine movement into two distinct groups. These groups correlate to the popular divisions made for all women at the time. One section of the beguinal movement is described as having been thoroughly orthodox and of impeccable morals, whereas the other part slipped into heresy and moral aberration. The orthodox 50 Grundmann, Religious Movements, p. 77. John B. Freed, „Urban Development and the „Cura Monialium‟ in the Thirteenth-Century Germany, in Viator, 3, (1972), 311-27, p. 324. 52 Carol Neel, „The Origins of the Beguines‟, in Signs, 14/2, Winter (1989), 321-41, Working together in the Middle Ages: Perspectives on Women’s Communities, p.323. 53 Neel, „Origins of the Beguines‟, p. 325. 51 31 beguines are not usually credited with the invention of new theological ideas, since most of them were simple uneducated women coming from modest backgrounds. These orthodox beguines were sharply distinguished from others, who did not achieve a tight organization but lived isolated in the world, scattered about the city, or roaming about the country, begging for their livelihood.54 The meaning of the word ‗beguine‘ does not hold a better clue to the different kinds of feminine religious devotion. James of Vitry, in his second sermon to virgins reported that the name was used in a derogatory manner: If a young maiden wishes to preserve her virginity and her parents offer her a wealthy suitor in marriage, she despises and rejects him… But secular prelates and other malicious men try to destroy her and convince her to give up her sacred purpose; they say: look, she wishes to be a beguina’ (because that is what they call them in Flanders and Brabant), or papelarda (that is what they call them in France), or humiliata (their name in Lombardy), or bizoke (their name in Italy), or coquennunne (as they are called in Germany). It is with such nicknames and insults that they intended to dissuade them from pursuing a life of purity.55 Indeed, in 1215 it still raised suspicion of heresy for a woman to be called a ‗beguine‘, since it hinted at the name of the heretics of Southern France, ‗Albigensis‘. Yet as early as 1223 the Cologne town council records spoke without hesitation of religious women as 54 Anke Passenier, „”Women on the Loose”: Stereotypes of Women in the Story of the Medieval Beguines‟, in Female Stereotypes in Religious Traditions, ed. Ria Kloppenborg and Wouter J. Hanegraaff, Leiden, 1995, pp. 62-3. 55 Simons, Cities of Ladies, p. 121, note 7, p. 213-4, cited from Greven, „Der Ursprung‟, 44, and Philippen, De Begijnhoven. 32 ‗beguines‘, and after 1245 the women called themselves that name. The old meaning of the word had been forgotten and its new use had lost all hint of heresy.56 Contrary to previous assumptions that the word was derived from ‗Albigensis‘, or indicated the undyed color of the women‘s habit, it is now accepted that these terms, beguina, paperlard and lollaert, originally stood for a person involved in a private prayer. So private, that his or her speech could not be understood. Therefore the individual could claim to be devout but the observer was never sure whether she was indeed praying, and could, therefore, conclude that she was a hypocrite.57 The term beguina did not, therefore, distinguish between the different groups of women and did not carry any specific characterization of a woman who was called that. The women described in the vitae, did anything but conform to specific criteria laid out by the church for women. They provided a fulcrum of alternative devotion. Not only did they attract to their circles people who were interested in experimenting with ways of life, but they went out to instruct people on their own volition. This is especially significant since such behavior is passed on to us by their clerical male admirers, which indicates the acceptance and even admiration of the said behavior. Mary of Oignies is reported as preaching: ‗resisting death, she would prick up her ears, prepare her heart, and speak a few words about the sermon to those standing around her‘58 and ‗many of her intimate friends who had frequently had experience of her divine prudence did not dare to do anything important without her counsel.‘59 Christina Mirabilis, a 56 Grundmann, Religious Movements, pp. 81-2. Simons, Cities of Ladies, p. 122. 58 The Life of Mary of Oignies 3, in Mulder Bakker, Mary of Oignies Mother of Salvation, p. 99: „aures invita morti erigebat, cor praeparabat, circumstantibus etiam de sermone aliqua verba referebat‟. Vita Mariae Oigniacensis, IV, 68. 59 „Multi etiam de familiaribus amicis ejus, qui divinam ejus prudentiam frequenter experti erant, sine ejus consilio nihil magnum facere audebant.‟, Vita Mariae Oigniacensis‟, IV, 77. 57 33 strong and opinionated woman, lived her life guided by her visions of Christ and nothing else. She must have seemed insane or at the very least very annoying to people around her. She offered her help and advice most willingly, ‗she assisted the dying most willingly and gladly and exhorted them to a confession of their sins, to the fruit of penance, to a hope of everlasting joy and to a fear of the destroying fire‘, ‗when she spoke in this way of Christ the Lord, she was filled with wondrous grace of speech‘.60 ‗When Louis, count of Loon and a most noble man, learned of her famous sanctity through hearsay, he began to love her in his heart and to follow sincerely her counsels and advice… she would go to him in his palace and reprimand him with a mother‘s confidence, and obtain from him whatever was owing for the satisfaction of justice.‘61 The approval of these women‘s actions is seen clearly in the way these male clerics describe their actions, which in other women could be seen as reprehensible. Hadewijch of Antwerp Positive and encouraging descriptions of the religious authority and leadership of these women are further demonstrated by writings of women themselves. It is interesting to examine how they saw their lives in relation to the various male religious, and how they saw their own network or community. No vita of Hadewijch was ever written. Her writings provide the only source of information about her life. They were originally written in Medieval Dutch and copied 60 Thomas of Cantempré, Prologue to the supplement to the life of Mary of Oignies, trans. Hugh Feiss OSB, in Mulder Bakker, Mary of Oignies Mother of Salvation, p. 142: „Libentissime ac benignissime morientibus assistebat, exhortans ad peccatorum confessionem, et poenitentiae fructum, ad spem perennis gaudii, et horrorem exitialis incendii … Et perfundebatur mira oris gratia, quando de Christo Domino hoc dicebat‟, Vita de Christina Mirabili III, 27’, Acta Sanctorum, Julius 5 [July 24], Paris, 1868, cols 650 – 656. 61 „Cujus sanctitatem vir nobilissimus Ludouicus scilicet comes de Loen celebri fama cognoscens, coepit eam ex corde diligere, et ejus consiliis ac colloquiis sinceriter inhaerere. Ubicumque vidisset eam, assurgebat, et occurrebat ei, matremque vocabat. Cum autem aliquid idem comes contra justitiam, vel ecclesiam Christi aut ministros ejus exercuisset, ipsa quasi mater de filio dolebat pro eo. Adienque eum, in palatio consistentem, materna illum fiducia arguebat, obtinebatque ab eo quidquid pro satisfactione et justitia debuisset‟, Vita de Christina Mirabili, IV, 41. 34 sometime in the fourteenth century. By the middle of the sixteenth century they were largely forgotten, until they were rediscovered by the three Belgian medievalists, J. F. Willems, F. J. Mone, and F. A. Snellaert in 1838.62 Her works include Letters, Poems in Stanzas, Visions and Poems in Couplets. Hadewijch lived a life of great social awareness and interest in theological developments of her day. She wrote her letters to a group of women, without mentioning a formal community, which invites an assumption that at some point of her life she was she evicted from her Beguine community and exiled. Her education can be glimpsed from her writings, which reflect familiarity with the Latin language, the rules of rhetoric, medieval numerology, Ptolemaic astronomy, the theory of music and the rules of letter writing and versification. She also uses a number of French words, which hints at French proficiency.63 Her knowledge of Scripture is profound, and underlies her whole writings, and her familiarity with the centeral figures and affairs of the church is astounding and allows a glimpse of her world especially through her list of the perfect. In the manuscript of her writing, the Visions are followed by a supplement known as ‗The List of the Perfect‘.64 This little studied account presents an opportunity to examine the sense of social hierarchy these women had, and how they saw themselves within it. Although the authenticity of the ‗The List‘ is not doubted, it has been largely ignored by scholars as insignificant for understanding her literary heritage or her mystical message.65 ‗The List‘ has been used only to offer conjectures about the dates of her life. In this 62 Columba Hart, Introduction to Hadewijch, The complete works, trans. Columba Hart, New York, 1980, p. 1. 63 Ibid., p. 5. 64 Hadewijch of Antwerp, De visioenen van Hadewijch, Middelnederlandse tekst, vertaling en kommentaar, ed. Paul Mommaers, Nijmegen, 1979, pp. 163-6; „The List of the Perfect‟, trans. Sr. Helen Rolfson, in Vox Benedictina: Women and Monastic Spirituality, 5 (1988), pp. 277-87. 65 Columba Hart, notes to introduction, n. 6, p. 360. 35 document, she presents to the reader a list of devout people from her own past and from the Christian past in general. Among the people of her personal past is ‗a beguine whom master Robbaert put to death on account of her true love‘.66 Master Robert has been identified by Bernard McGinn as Robert le Bougre, a Dominican who was the leader of the investigation of heresy in northern France and Flanders between 1234 and 1245 and condemned a beguine named Aeleis in Cambrai in 1236.67 A convert to Christianity from Chatharism and subsequently a Dominican, Robert was known for supporting mass executions. On 29 May, 1239, at Montwimer in Champagne, Robert burnt about a hundred and eighty persons, whose trial had begun and ended within one week.68 Later, when Rome found that the complaints against him were justified, he was first deposed and evicted to a remote abbey where his nature was soon known to everyone and he was ostracized for the rest of his life. Therefore it seems sensible that when she is writing about him she still refers to him as Master Robert, and not former master, or in otherwise derogatory terms. Hadewijch also speaks of certain hermits in Jerusalem, both male and female: ‗ among the still living [perfect] there dwell seven as hermits on the walls of Jerusalem, and three live in the city. The latter are women, two virgins and a third who was a sinful woman and had herself enclosed in a wall.69 Immuration was a western tradition. In the East hermits chose to withdraw to the desert, not a mile away from the walls of Jerusalem with its many natural caves 66 Hadewijch of Antwerp, „The List of the Perfect‟, p. 285. Bernard McGinn, The Flowering of Mysticism, Men and Women in the New Mysticism – 1200-1350, New York, 1998, p. 221. 68 Michael Lower, „The Burning at Mont-Aimé: Thibaut of Champagne‟s Preparations for the Barons‟ Crusade of 1239, in Medieval History, 29 (2003), 95-108, p. 105. 69 De visioenen van Hadewijch, ed. Mommaers, 166: „die xxixste Vanden levenden legherder. vij op die mure te jherusalem alse heremiten. ende iij woenter ni die stat. die sijn wilf .ij. Joncfrouwen ende die derde was een sonderse ende es vermaect in enen mure.‟ Translated by Rolfson, Hadewijch of Antwerp, „The List of the Perfect‟, p. 285. 67 36 and a long tradition of desert fathers. More than likely these hermits came from the West joining Frederick‘s crusade in 1228/29. She says that they are living on the city walls. As the walls were only there prior to the destruction of the city in 1244 by Khorasmian Turks, she must have received news about them during these years or slightly after.70 Among the fifty-six people she mentions in her list there are both men and women. She includes women about whom we know nothing, alongside well known figures such as St Augustine and St Bernard. She does not favor any particular group, and the reader gets the sense of a mixed gendered group of people valued for what can be best described as a life of Love. The only quality that they are measured against and which decided their inclusion in the list is their perfection in the life of the spirit. Heightening the profile of several women, she created a sense of a group in which all members were as valuable as the several high profile male saints she included. From the timeline of her writing she looks back as far as the scriptures, then moves to her immediate past, and finally to the present. In the past, she recounts and enumerates every person. When she reaches the present she starts to describe them in small groups of males and females living in a certain area. Starting from the twenty-third, Mina, she describes how she participates in their lives in a sense that she either 'sent' someone, talked to, or had a personal visit from the people mentioned, aside from Hildegard, ‘who saw all the visions being the twenty eight'. Then she moves to people who are still living when she writes her list. Therefore it seems that between twenty-two and twenty-nine had 70 Andrew Jotischky, Crusading and the Crusader states, Harlow, 2004, p. 231. 37 died before she wrote this list, but between thirty and fifty-seven are still alive. Many of the devout people Hadewijch knew personally and even assisted in their spiritual quest. She exchanged visits with them, both physical and spiritual, shared ideas and sent help when help was needed. Moreover, the relationship Hadewijch describes was not only between herself and these people, but existed as a network of connections between the members: ‗Mina, a recluse who dwells far away on craggy rocks and to whom I sent Master Henry of Breda, is the twenty-third.‘71 Not only did she have a connection with these people, including what seems to be a master of the schools, but she introduced them to others, creating a wider network of spiritual support. The way Hadewijch describes the people in her list shows that she did not see them as single individuals who live alone with large distances between them but a large community of similar minded people covering the known lands. She mentions places like Jerusalem, Thuringia, Brabant, England, Flanders, Zeeland, Holland, Friesland, Bohemia, Paris, and the Rhine. Not only were lay men and women part of this community, but also clerics. ‗In Zeeland, six: a priest, two beguines, a recluse in Middelburg and a very powerful widow. The sixth is an unknown man.‘ In fact the one person she says knows her better than anyone is a forgotten master of Paris. ‗In Paris there is a forgotten Master [of the schools], who lives alone in a little cell. He knows more about me than I know about myself, as far as goodness is concerned.‘72 Unfortunately, we are never told the identity of this Parisian master, but the remark implies that her teaching was known in Paris. Prior to Hadewijch‘s account this 71 72 Hadewijch of Antwerp, „The List of the Perfect‟, p. 285. Hadewijch of Antwerp, „The List of the Perfect‟, p. 286. Helen Rolfson adds „of the schools‟. 38 Master, having left the teaching career, immured himself, and before or after had contact with Hadewijch to the extent of her feeling he knows her very well. Among these perfect beings Hadewijch mentioned a defrocked priest and a priest, one after another, followed by a preacher. She describes nuns, beguines, virgins, widows and recluses. Their profession seems unimportant compared to their perfection in faith and their devotion to the contemplative way of life. They span a great region, including the kingdom of Jerusalem, which was (until 1244) an extension of Western Europe. In contrast to the great acceptance and inclusion Hadewijch shows all these diverse individuals, her feelings towards the official clerics of the church are of distrust at best. Much like Angelo Clareno, a ‗spiritual‘ Franciscan rebel about a century later, she refers to them as a group that does not meet with her approval. She criticizes the persecution and inquisition of the friars, as a general body of official church persecution. She thinks of them as the enemy of true God lovers and calls for resistance. ‗God knows‘, she says, ‗the greatest perfection of all is to suffer from false brethren who seem to be members of the household of the faith.‘73 The mendicants, who are supposed to share the ideology or the ‗faith‘ of the devout women, do something so appalling that they are described as false brethren. Their interference or persecution of others is the reason Hadewijch calls them false brethren. ‗Those we had chosen to rejoice with us in our Beloved are beginning to interfere with us here.‘ The ones that were supposed to share the women‘s devotions, suddenly to Hadewijch‘s chagrin, started enforcing their own concepts on the people Hadewijch sees as her community. The fact that the inflictors 73 Hadewijch, The complete works, Letters, p. 55. 39 of the misery are the ones supposed to share the same goal implicates the brethren in the gravest of sins: the sin of betrayal. After expressing her outrage at the controlling behaviour of the brethren, Hadewijch opens the subject of persecution and inquisition and discusses it: ‗I wish to put you on your guard this time against one thing from which much harm results… Everyone wishes to demand fidelity from others and to test his friend and continually complains on the subject of fidelity...the man who fails in fidelity or justice toward another is the one who suffers the greatest harm; and the worst of it is that he himself lacks the sweetness of fidelity‘.74 Hadewijch does the unimaginable and questions the legitimacy of religious persecution. She argues that demanding from another person to prove his or her faithfulness is unjust and proves the aggressor as unfaithful. In so saying Hadewijch launches a rigorous attack on an established church authority of inquisition into heretical depravity, which reflects not only on the executors but also on the originators and the planners of the persecution. A similar motif is repeated in a list of traits Hadewijch warns the recipients of her letters against. Of course, one could understand them literally as bad traits or habits the women in her group are warned against. However, another interpretation may be more accurate. ‗Many of them… creep in among your group disguised in fancy dress… baseness is dressed up as humility; anger as just zeal; hate as fidelity and reason…‘.75 False friars that come to investigate the devote individuals pretend to support their devotion when in fact they consumed with contempt and hatred towards them. They hide their true feeling behind false humility. These friars imply by 74 75 Hadewijch, Letters, p. 56. Hadewijch, Letters, p. 72. 40 that that the women lack humility and presume in their arrogance to have the right to travel to the divine. Their anger towards the women, who achieve connection which is denied to them, is then presented as justified a wish to protect the faith against these women, who contaminate it. The hatred the friars feel for these obstinate women who claim to know God intimately manifests itself in the punishment which is being presented as proof of fidelity and reason. Therefore Hadewijch claims that their anger is disguised as just zeal and hatred as fidelity and reason. The authority for their actions is then attacked: ‗They scorn the works of Love; they do so indeed with great worldly wisdom‘.76 The justification for their actions comes from the learned reasoning that originates in this world. The way of love on the other hand is a direct connection between a soul and God. She undermines the claimed authority for persecution as nothing more than a worldly wisdom, asserting her way of life as the only true way to God. The illegitimacy of their conduct is further enhanced by the use of the word ‗aliens‘. The Bible uses ‗aliens‘ to distinguish all the peoples from the people of Israel. As ‗aliens‘, they do not have an exclusive bond with God. Their authority and their actions are therefore unauthorized. After establishing the activity of the persecutors of the true Christians as illegitimate Hadewijch calls for quiet resistance: ‗…to neglect the commandments of Love, some issue contrary commands. But a noble person who wishes to keep his rule of life… does not fear the aliens‘ commands or counsels, no matter what torment befalls him in consequence, be it scandal, disgrace, indictments, insults, desertion, imprisonment, homelessness, nakedness…He is not afraid to be ready to show obedience to Love 76 Hadewijch, Letters, p. 87. 41 in all…‘.77 In times when obedience determines one‘s social status her call for a quiet resistance is very strong. Personal authenticity of devotion is considered more important than ordination in Hadewijch‘s mind. She feels that the church, as an official body, sends undeserving individuals whose love for God is not their strongest feature. Their earthly devotion to lust, jealousy and fear causes them to persecute these women, whose devotion irritates them. And it irritates them, Hadewijch implies, because in their heart of hearts they know these women are holy, but their earthly pride would not allow them to admit this. Hadewijch does not enjoy the support of a church officials. Her writings reflect an opinion of an outsider looking in for deficiencies in practice. Her criticism also identifies the enemy of the group of people, she feels she belongs to. Regardless of their gender, she sees them as the targets of the official church persecution. Beatrice of Nazareth Another option of dealing with uncompromising authority is evident in the case of Beatrice of Nazareth (1200-1268). She presents an opportunity to look at the mechanics of creating a saint, while changing the voice of the woman. Beatrice enjoyed collaboration while alive, and her vita was written after she died. She lived and wrote most of her life in the Dutch speaking part of the Low Countries in the middle of the thirteenth century.78 At some point the community moved to Nazareth, which is in the diocese of French speaking Cambrai. Beatrice‘s biographer used her diary or autobiography, some later notes, her treatise on the Seven Manieren or The Seven ways of Love, or Minne, and information gained from the nuns who lived with her, to write her vita, which 77 78 Hadewijch, Letters, p. 88. Roger De Ganck trans., The Life of Beatrice of Nazareth, 1200 – 1268, Kalamazoo, 1991. 42 thereafter was ‗lost‘.79 The treatise was critically edited in 1926 by Leonce Reypens and Joseph Van Mierlo. Her biography was edited in 1964 by Leonce Reypens as well.80 Therefore we have two versions of The Seven ways of Minne, one original and, and another which appears in the last part of her vita, used by her biographer and changed almost beyond recognition. The biographer, identified as a chaplain of the community of Nazareth, stripped the treatise of all theological components. All interaction between God and human soul, as an understanding of the mystic while still alive, was obliterated. And as part of Beatrice‘s vita it became a motivational piece on charity, love and the description of a devout and conforming nun. Her writing in The Seven ways of Minne contains some motifs that will be developed later by Marguerite Porete. When Beatrice‘s biographer composed her vita he changed her treatise so that it was no longer a treatise on spiritual development. Instead of an outline of the changes the soul undergoes to become united with God, losing on the way her will, becoming God, and loosing any need of the church establishment to help her communicate, it becomes instead a story of one woman‘s charity and devotion. All the burning fire is lost in translation, so to speak. Beatrice uses anima, soul, to describe the emptying the mystic undergoes to reach out for the Divine Love. She clearly identifies that part in herself that is God‘s and wants to return to God, by change, or spiritual development. This is not as clearly outlined as in The Mirror of Simple Souls of Marguerite Porete, but the elements are there. The soul that is consumed by love sees nothing that isn‘t God, wants nothing that isn‘t God, and God wants all that He wants 79 80 De Ganck, Introduction to The Life of Beatrice of Nazareth, p. xxi. De Ganck, Introduction to The Life of Beatrice of Nazareth, p. ix. 43 in her. This can be seen in various passages omitted or changed by the biographer. For example, Beatrice says: ‗… she acts and she refrains from acting, as she wills. So it is with such a soul. It is love, and love within it rules strongly and powerfully. The soul rests, acts and refrains from acting, without and within to Love‘s will.‘ 81 The biographer skipped this part entirely. In another part Beatrice writes: ‗… until the soul shall have mounted higher and been made wholly free from itself and until love reigns powerfully within it.‘ 82 And the biographer: ‗and established in a sublime summit of perfection, yet living in the body, she led an angelic life on earth and dwelt on the threshold of the future life, renewed by heavenly joys.‘83 Beatrice: ‗Then love makes the soul so bold and free that in all its actions and restraints at work and at rest it fears neither men nor the demon, neither angel nor saints, nor God himself.‘ 84 And the biographer: ‗in this state her holy mind had arrived at such liberty of spirit, constancy of heart and purity of conscience that she feared neither man nor demon, not the angelic or even the divine judgment, since that divine Love which dominates everything, expelled this fear and preserved her liberty of conscience.85 According to Roger DeGank the original version of the autobiography that Beatrice wrote was destroyed after it was used 81 „… et ut vult facit et omittit. Ita fit cum tali anima: amor est, et amor intra eam fortiter regnat et potenter; ad voluntatem eius quescens, faciens et omittens, ad extra et ad intra.‟ The Seven ways of Minne, in De Ganck, The Life of Beatrice of Nazareth, p. 314. 82 „attamen vehementiam suam animae celavit donec in altiora ascenderit et a seipsa penitus libera facta sit, et amor intra eam potenter regnet.‟ The Seven ways of Minne, in De Ganck, The Life of Beatrice of Nazareth, p. 316. 83 „ in sublimi quodam perfectionis vertice constituta, viuens in corpore vitam angelicam in terris ageret, et celestibus gaudijs innouata, in quodam future vite confinio arto resideret.‟ The Seven ways of Minne, in De Ganck., The Life of Beatrice of Nazareth, 258, lines, 449-55, p. 316. 84 „tunc amor tam audacem et liberam eam facit, ut in omni sua actione vel omissione, in opere et quiete, nec homines pertimescat nec daemonem, nec angelum, nec sanctos, neque ipsum Deum.‟ The Seven ways of Minne, in De Ganck, The Life of Beatrice of Nazareth, p. 316. 85 „ ad tantam quoque libertatem spiritus, cordis constantiam et conscientie puretatem in hoc statu mens sancta peruenerat. vt non hominem vereretur, non demonem, non angelicum etiam vel diuinum iudicium in omni facto siue cogitatu suo pertimesceret; presertim cum ipsa dominatrix omnium, diuina caritas, hunc timorem foras expelleret, et in omni quod patrabat opere, conscientie libertatem, immotam et stabilem in suo robore conseruaret.‟ The Seven ways of Minne, in De Ganck, The Life of Beatrice of Nazareth, 258, lines 456-71, pp. 316, 318. 44 by her biographer as one of his sources, complementing it with stories from her still living sisters and blood sisters. De Gank claims that this was probably done to protect the community from the threat of inquisition that was gaining force after the council of Lyon. Be that as it may, it does not explain the preservation of the treatise in the original vernacular that Reypens translated into Latin in 1926. it seems more likely that the nuns decided to preserve the original because the vita did not reflect the intent behind the mystical treatise, as written by Beatrice. They were happy enough to promote her cult, and encourage her vita to be written. But after the vita was completed, they realized that the last part, the part of the treatise was changed drastically. The nuns I believe were as aware as the chaplain of the dangers the original version presented, and agreed to release her vita as is, saving and preserving the original treatise at the same time. This interaction, I believe, exemplifies one method of presenting a relationship between a woman mystic and a male cleric to the general public. The woman‘s visions or teachings were modified to meet with the church expectations of proper dogma and behavior. Her community accepted that as a way to venerate the woman, while keeping the true legacy hidden in their attics. There were probably other interactions of this kind in the north during the thirteenth century. Cooperation between men and women was unavoidable. In some instances of collaboration women needed to sacrifice some of their understanding of the Divine truth. Even when the interaction was favorable to women, it was neither all accepting, nor always following where women wanted to lead. Mechthild of Magdeburg In Germany in the second half of the thirteenth century lived a woman mystic writer Mechthild of Magdeburg. There is no written 45 vita about her and the few facts we have about her life come from her own writings. In her writings the criticism is extremely subtle, yet discernable. She exemplifies, I believe, the feelings of a fully supported woman, who nevertheless harbored some resentment but dared not voice it clearly. Mechthild was born in 1208 and died in 1282 or 1294, starting to write after 1250 and completing her last book in the nineties.86 The original text of The Flowing Light of the Godhead in Middle Low German has been lost. Her first six books were translated into Latin shortly after her death and into German by a secular priest from Basel named Heinrich of Nordlingen.87 A superficial reading of the text provides a formal version of Mechthild on St Dominic and the Order of Preachers. It is consonant with the fact that the personal confessor and writing assistant of Mechthild was a Dominican and that her brother was accepted to the Dominican Order due to the excellence attributed to Mechthild by the Order of Preachers.88 Recent scholarship has even attributed to her a perception of herself and her book as a part of the mendicant mission against false Christians.89 Her outward glorification of the Order and its founder is thus not surprising. Among many other examples, Mechthild says from the lips of the Lord: ‗My son Dominic had four things about him while on earth that all priors should have about them…‘, and: ‗I love two things in the Order of Preachers so much that my divine heart unceasingly smiles upon it.‘90 Rich in such remarks, the book conveys a relaxed affection between the writer and the Dominican Order. A closer look, however, reveals a hidden, sometimes opposite, meaning. Mechthild 86 Frank Tobin, introduction to Mechthild of Magdeburg, The flowing light of the Godhead, trans. Frank Tobin, New York, 1998, p. 4-5. 87 Ibid., p. 7. 88 Ibid., p. 5. 89 Sara S. Poor, Mechthild of Magdeburg and Her Book, Gender and the Making of Textual Authority, Philadelphia, 2004, p. 43. 90 Mechthild of Magdeburg, The flowing light, p. 164-5. 46 criticises certain activities often associated with the Dominicans. She reflects on two distinctive functions of the Order, the persecution and learning. Mechthild of Magdeburg deals with the persecution of the Dominicans in a chapter named The Way to Suffer Pain Willingly for God’s Sake.91 The name of the chapter forwards the first clue of what will come next. Her intention is to teach how to endure pain that will be inflicted to the righteous students of her book. The righteousness is assumed as the reason for willingly enduring the pain: suffering for God‘s Sake is definitely good. The infliction of that pain presents the inflictors as necessary evil. She builds this idea in steps. First she describes the path. God‘s children did not choose their path; they were guided towards it by God, who set an example by choosing this path for himself. The path was one of suffering pain, though being free of sin and guilt. The Lord, she says, ‗was sent by his heavenly Father to be tormented by the heathens and martyred by the Jews despite his innocence.‘ After establishing that God‘s children were not only sent to this road by God himself, but also were repeating his path, she is ready for the next step. She repeats the motif of the persecution of the righteous, but this time not in the past but in the present: ‗Now the time has come when some people, who have the appearance of being religious, torment the bodies of God‘s children and martyr their spirits.‘ The religious people who torment the bodies and spirits are probably the ones who inquire after the deeds and thoughts of the people in order to determine whether their religious conduct is correct. They are no other than Inquisitors. If the victims, God‘s children, are necessarily good and their deeds are undisputedly appreciated by Him, then the wrongness of their persecutors is entrenched. Furthermore, if they persecute God‘s children, they cannot love God, for if they did, they 91 Ibid., p. 52. 47 would not have done so. Because of this she does not say that they are religious, but only have the appearance of being so. The final line of the paragraph closes this issue, proving her a true child and disciple of God, in her view. She accepts their suffering as desirable to God: ‗For He wants them to resemble his beloved Son who was tormented in body and soul.‘ Her acceptance does not diminish their wrongness. On the contrary, her forgiveness makes their vindictiveness even more prominent. In another instance Mechthild describes herself as a victim saying: ‗I have had to drain many a chalice of gall because, alas, the devil still has many a one among religious people willing to pour it out. They are so full of poison that they cannot drink it all up by themselves, but must pour it out maliciously for God‘s children.‘92 The ones to cause trouble for God‘s children are religious people. They can be either secular clergy or the mendicants. Her next paragraph, however, describes them as her closest supporters. ‗Those who appear to be good people stone me from the back and run away and do not want me to know anything about its having befallen me because of them: but God saw it.‘93 She next sets to denigrate some intellectual activity characteristic to the Order of Preachers as being undesirable in the eyes of God. Speaking about the book she says to the Lord that had he given the book to be written by ‗a learned religious man‘ he would have received ‗everlasting honor for it.‘ Who would listen, Mechthild laments, to ‗a filthy ooze‘, meaning herself. The question Mechthild asks creates polarity between herself and such learned men. If she would be proven valuable, then the other side would be intrinsically worthless. She then builds on this polarity saying from the lips of 92 93 Ibid., p. 90. Ibid., p. 90. 48 God that it honours him and strengthens Holy Christianity that ‗the unlearned mouth, aided by my Holy Spirit, teaches the learned tongue.‘ If the teachings of the unlearned to the professors, learned in scripture, are good in the eyes of God, then by implication the unmediated divine truth is more valuable than the scripture and lay preaching of the truth, which was received during unmitigated interaction with the divine, is better than the sermons of learned clerics. She does not leave the above understated. There is an explicit statement, from the lips of the Lord: ‗One finds many a professor learned in scripture who actually is a fool in my eyes.‘94 As the Dominicans were the most obvious students and preachers of scripture, this clearly hints their inferiority against the mystically inspired women. In one of her visions Mechthild saw a man suffering after death. He was not allowed to proceed to heaven because of his learning. He appeared to Mechthild pale and weeping while reading from a book. ‗All the words were screaming at him with all the books that he had ever read chiming in. He said: ‗In my life on earth I was too fond of ideas, words and deeds‘‘.95 Then in the next paragraph she continues, explaining: ‗since he for no reason wanted to live according to his own will rather than according to the determinations of his superiors.‘ The proximity of the two sentences suggests them to be an outcome and intent. The outcome of a decision to be a sole master of himself was overindulgence in learning. Therefore the practice of learning is depicted as the antithesis of obedience. The lack of obedience places the learned person in an intense suffering after death, and the practice of learning is presented as an impediment of entering heaven. He was known to Mechthild, not just in passing but throughout his life. 94 95 Ibid., p. 97. Ibid., p. 125. 49 ‗During his life I had a high opinion of him.‘96 In light of the close relationships Mechthild was known to have with several Dominicans, including her brother and her confessor, the one she knew ‗during his life‘ must have also been a Dominican. On top of that he says himself that he is of a religious order, ‗Because of the dignity of my order no devil was ever able to touch me.‘ More likely than not she described a Dominican, who was not allowed to heaven because of his learning. These subtle remarks are the most Mechthild dares to write. However, she trusts her intended reader, a religious intelligent person of the same area, to be able to understand her true meaning. The generalization of the negative traits of the large group suggests that it were the Orders that were being criticised, not the individual members of these orders. The network Distrust and alienation towards outsiders as defining elements of a group was not exclusive to devout women of northern France. Another group, more visible in the south of France as another centre of creative activity, had the same elements of definition. David Burr has demonstrated that one feature that distinguished the groups termed ‗Spiritual Franciscans‘ was their common distrust of the authorities in general and the leadership of their Order in particular. This loose group of people also resembled the group Hadewijch is talking about by its inclusion criteria. Just like devout people in the north of France, the ‗spiritual Franciscans‘ did not stress official church ranking as being high in their selection criteria. On the contrary, since the official church and the leaders of their orders seemed objectionable to them, counting a person as one of their group required extra proof of his worth. Many groups claiming 96 Ibid., p. 124. 50 to follow Francis shared a common a belief that the Franciscan vow bound friars not only to renouncing possession but also to observing usus pauper, even though they differed on other issues. These groups also believed that the leaders of the Order, in the words of David Burr, ‗were impeding observance rather than demanding it‘.97 Some people living lives of devotion in Northern France also felt that the clerics impeded their devotion. Theirs was not a poverty oriented religion; mystical union was more at the centre of their devotion. However, they felt that officials of the church not only did not share their intentions, they saw them as contradictory to accepted religion. Therefore choosing to live out their lives in their chosen manner, they either moderated their exposure and hid it to some extent, or withdrew and gathered around a different set of values, describing the non accepting church officials as erring outsiders. The positive images of female saints, initiated by James of Vitry and followed by Thomas of Cantimpré and others, may not represent necessarily a more positive attitude towards lay mysticism. The image of the female saint was used extensively in the early thirteenth century in the north by the clerics, but these images were of women who were already dead. Their life stories, as understood by the men who followed them, were used to counterbalance the evident devotion of the heretics. The stories of these experiences come from the lips of the clerics, who came in contact with these women, when they were still alive, or stories about them post mortem. Yet, they felt the need to tell their stories after the saintly woman was already dead. 97 David Burr, The Spiritual Franciscans: From Protest to Persecution in the Century After Saint Francis, Pennsylvania, 2001, p. 49. 51 This was the social background encountered by women wanting to enter a religious life in Northern France during the thirteenth century. There was a sense of community spread over great distance, with devotion rather than ordination as unifying factor. Its identity was powered also by opposition to the other. Sometimes official representatives of the church were considered as the other; their official ordination did not assure their religious leadership among these groups of people. Every person needed to earn her/his inclusion by example of his devotion or support of such devotion. Even though some clerics promoted examples of specific women as evidence of an extraordinary devotion among the Catholic Church they did not necessarily encourage the laity in general to take up creative outstanding lives. Such opposition, however, did not stop the network from developing and supporting new arrivals into their midst. Women as well as men could act as centers of piety, support and sanctity, especially in the first half of the century. From the assignment of the first inquisitor, Robert le Bougre, and the tightening of ranks of the clergy, the persecution became more and more insistent, however, distrust and alienation were present at the same time as individual women‘s examples were used to combat the heretics. There was a huge difference, however, between the fates of devout women from the royal families and that of women of unknown origins from the north of France. To understand what might have inspired Marguerite Porete to go public with her teachings I shall look first at the case of Isabelle of France sister of Louis IX. 52 Chapter two - Ambitions of Faith: Mystical Instruction from Gilbert of Tournai to Isabelle of France Sometime between 1253 and 1255 the Franciscan Gilbert of Tournai (circa 1200- 1284) wrote a letter to Isabelle of France, a sister of Louis IX and daughter of Blanche of Castile. 98 The letter directs the princess on a spiritual development journey alongside the admonition for virginity and rejection of the temporal world. Like Bonaventure‘s Itinerarium Mentis in Deum, Gilbert‘s letter to Isabelle combines a gradual climb through reason, with emphasis on the heart being necessary for the final leap to the Godhead.99 Involving both rational and affective approaches to divinity in the same way as the mystical treatise of Bonaventure, this letter also indicates a period of creative flexibility and the meeting point of men and women, love and reason, in the mainstream of the Franciscan order. This flexibility, I believe, was responsible for the eventual collaboration between the Franciscan order and the princess Isabelle of France, and resulted in the most accommodating rule for the Franciscan women that had ever been produced. Gilbert of Tournai was a preacher, scholar and moralist. He became a master of arts in the 1230s, before joining the Franciscan order around 1240 and he served as their regent master at Paris 1259-61, succeeding Bonaventure in this role. A prominent Franciscan in Paris in the 1250s and 1260s, Gilbert undoubtedly knew and cooperated with Bonaventure.100 He composed the Eruditio regum et principum 98 Sean Field, „Gilbert of Tournai‟s Letter to Isabelle of France: an Edition of the Complete Text‟, Mediaeval Studies, 65 (2003), 57-97, p. 59-60. 99 St. Bonaventure, Itinerarium Mentis in Deum, ed. Philotheus Boehner, O.F.M, trans. Zachary Hayes, O.F.M, in Works of St. Bonaventure, Saint Bonaventure, 2002. 100 Field, „Gilbert of Tournai‟s Letter to Isabelle of France‟, pp. 59-60. 53 for Louis IX, De pace et animi tranquillitate for Marie de Dampierre, daughter of William de Dampierre Count of Flanders and De modo addiscendi to Jean the son of Guy de Dampierre, also Count of Flanders. He also wrote the Collectio de Scandalis Ecclesiae, for the second council of Lyon held in 1274. The Collectio is an interesting document, very critical of the conduct of the church. Isabelle of France (1225 – 1270) was a devout and holy woman in her own right, with an evident attachment to Franciscans and Franciscan ideals. She rejected all attempts to arrange her marriage, choosing instead a life of virginity. Sean Field dates Gilbert‘s letter to her to 1253-5. She was then becoming increasingly known but had not yet founded Longchamp, established in 1259. Only subsequently would she compose its new rule with a team of Franciscan masters, Bonaventure, William of Meliton, William of Harcombourg and her confessor Eudes of Rosny.101 Isabelle‘s rule played an important part in the battle between the nuns and monks of the Franciscan order. Between 1261 and 1263 there was an attempt by the friars to shake off their obligation to the women‘s houses. They claimed that care for nuns interfered with their mission. The women fought against this with varying success during the years. One of the pinnacles of this struggle was in 1266, when they appeared before Clement IV with the demand to adopt Isabelle‘s rule. This move should have expressly attached them to the Franciscan friars, as part of a unified order.102 Knox has shown that Isabelle‘s rule was very inclusive of the women into the Franciscan order, as opposed to the rule composed by Urban IV in 1263. Sean Field has argued that she had a strong impact on the 101 Field, „Gilbert of Tournai‟s Letter to Isabelle of France‟, p. 61. Lezlie Knox, „Nuns: Institutionalizing the Franciscan Order of Saint Clare‟ in Church History, 69 (2000), 41-62, p. 58. 102 54 development of female Franciscanism.103 Her rule advanced women to the status of fellow Franciscans, as it now called them sorores minores, something no other rule offered. It was not restricted to Longchamp. Many female Franciscan houses adopted her rule in the ensuing centuries. I will argue in what follows, that Gilbert‘s letter initiated the collaboration between the princess and the Franciscan order, creating a place for her to feel a part of the male discourse of mystical spirituality. Instead of seeing them as her opponents, this letter offered a possibility of a common ground with them. In order to describe a union of the finite and the infinite, mystics were forced to employ ordinary language to create an awareness of what is by definition ineffable.104 Focusing on the senses to analyze the development of the mystical process and its description is a very useful tool. It can tell us how these mystics and their followers perceived their inner faculties in relation to God: what in them could strive to God and what could experience God. It can also tell us about the convention of mystical experience and expression and explain some of the reasons for acceptance of some mystical reports and rejection of others, as well as acceptance and rejection of the mystics themselves. In an article dealing with the friction between mysticism and magisterium McGinn argues that some elements of the mystical experience and description are mainly responsible for clashes with the establishment in Catholicism.105 He calls them pressure points. In other monotheistic religions, he further explains, such accounts and practices were more easily tolerated because in them orthopraxy is more important than orthodoxy. Therefore it is not a too far fetched a statement to make, 103 Sean L. Field, Isabelle of France, Capetian Sanctity and Franciscan Identity in the Thirteenth Century, Notre Dame, 2006, p. 168. 104 Michael D. McGuire and John H. Patton, „Preaching in the Mystic Mode: The Rhetorical Art of Meister Eckhart‟, in Communication Monographs, , 44 (1977), 263-72, pp. 264-5. 105 Bernard McGinn, „‟“Evil-Sounding, Rash, and suspect of Heresy”., Tensions Between Mysticism and Magisterium in the History of the Church‟, in The Catholic Historical Review, 90 (2004), 193-212, pp. 204-5. 55 that if one wants to belong to a certain social group one will use a certain way or form of discourse and promote a certain way of mystical experience, to express one‘s own social standing and to signal one‘s ambition to join those who share these particular conventions. Bernard McGinn has put forward a developmental framework in the descriptions of the mystical process throughout the Middle Ages.106 In early Christianity, he argues that there was a total separation between the physical and the spiritual senses. The goal, McGinn conveys, is described in terms of pure intellectual vision. Origen, Gregory of Nyssa, Augustine and Gregory the Great all felt the need, to a greater or lesser degree, to emphasize the distinction, between outer sensory experience and the inner workings of the spiritual senses dynamized in Bible study.107 The mystic turned away from the external feelings and sensations, turned inward and then up to God, every step of the way led by a very specific use of the Bible, which was considered the divine Word, understood by those who knew how to read it properly.108 According to McGinn, there is a distinction between the mystical language of this earlier period and that of later periods. In many later medieval mystics, the sharp distinction between the two sensorial, the outer and the inner lessened and sometimes even vanished so that transformational consciousness of God, although still a mystery beyond human comprehension, is described as being directly felt in what 106 Bernard McGinn, „The Language of Inner Experience in Christian Mysticism‟, in Minding the Spirit, The Study of Christian Spirituality, ed. Elizabeth A. Dreyer and Mark S. Burrows, Baltimore, 2005, pp. 135–51. 107 McGinn, „The Language of Inner Experience‟, p. 140. 108 Ibid., p. 137. 56 Bernard of Clairvaux called ―the book of experience‖ (liber experientiae).109 McGinn distinguishes between male and female mystical discourse in this latter stage. Men used their experience of external sensation, both the physical senses and the physical passions, to affirm their understanding of the Bible. The way to God was expressed as meditation on the experience afforded by senses. They used the sensation and the understanding of it to articulate a mental way to God, but ultimately, sensation was not the goal, but consideration and meditation on that sensation. Women, on the other hand, used the Bible sometimes to affirm spontaneous knowledge given to them by God, which they felt in their external senses and physical passions. They received God‘s message in their external senses and then the change in their bodies affected their understanding. The pinnacle of this development, from the beginning of the fourteenth century, was to turn away from any experience of God. Having arrived at an understanding that striving to grasp God either by feeling or by understanding is either inaccurate or presumptuous, the mystics turned to theologies of total annihilation of any sensual experience, McGinn argues.110 While the treatises I am examining in this chapter fit into the second stage of McGinn‘s developmental framework, I will argue that they stand on the border of male and female expression of the mystical union. I will isolate and highlight two aspects of the mystical journeys and their descriptions. The affective approach is one that uses feelings and sensations to experience and express the mystic‘s interaction with the divine and the rational approach that uses the spiritual senses of the mind, to contemplate the experiences afforded to them by their senses, as a way to reach 109 110 Ibid., p. 141. McGinn, „The Language of Inner Experience‟, p. 147. 57 God. Both use everything they can to reach God, but the focus varies. The affective approach will see the emotional fusion, intuitive gravitation of the mystic and God towards each other, and a change of the mystic her/himself, as the focus or the aim of the journey. The mystic will use her/his mind to start on the journey, or contemplate on their own condition and relationship with the world, but thinking is not the aim of the exercise, nor means of communication of the journey to others. In this instance the mystic will describe the emotional fusion and transformation as the goal that was reached and ascribed to others. In the rational approach, the intention of the mystic is to think his way to God, using feeling, experience and even love, just to the extent it helps the mind to understand its way to God. As the understanding happens and the mystic transcends closer to the divine the physical sense experience no longer holds any significance. Each way has roots in the traditional perceptions of gender, and in turn these perceptions created the distinct ways men and women expressed their mystical experiences. When both ways are present to some extent in a treatise it signifies a choice of the author. Assessing two prominent Franciscans, Bonaventure and his student and successor Gilbert of Tournai, and the relative significance of external sensation and reason in their treatises, will reveal the perception of the accepted mystical process in the Franciscan mainstream. Their relative focus on both thinking and feeling as a path to God, will indicate where in the spectrum of religious experience they were, or aimed to be. More importantly as these two Franciscan writers were very prominent and active within the French royal milieu, their place in the evolution of mystical thought will allow me to say something about the acceptable religious flexibility within the Franciscan official establishment, in the mid 58 thirteenth century Paris, and their social and political ambitions in this setting. The letter to Isabelle Gilbert opens with a conventional approach to female spirituality, the sense of enclosure, stasis, and preservation of virginity as internal innocence: ‗all the glory of the daughter of the king is within in golden fringes, clothed around with variety.‘ 111 This is a static condition of an honorable and glorious place where a woman is praised and symbolically adorned in beautiful garments. No one but God can see these beautiful garments and this is in itself a purpose and a reward. Only the one, who cares only for him, will keep her glory only for God. This part of the letter is conventional in praising enclosure and virginity. Barbara Newman has argued that advice to women concentrated mainly on preserving an existing state of physical purity and perfection, thus encouraging a static condition over spiritual growth.112 Even when a treatise dealt with celestial matters it just aimed at creating a picture for the woman to focus her mind on. She was not advised to strive or to accomplish any active deeds. A very good example of this approach would be the Speculum anime, written for Blanche of Castile, mother of both Louis IX and Isabelle of France (d. 1252).113 The treatise stresses the importance of keeping the mind fixed on the joys of heaven. It provides glittering images of the wonders of heaven, gruesome depictions of hell and 111 „Gilbert‟s Letter‟, ed. Field, 286r-rb, p. 80. „omnis gloria eius filie regis ab intus in fimbriis aureis circumamicta varietatibus‟. 112 Field, „Gilbert‟s Letter‟, p. 74. Barbara Newman, From Virile Woman to Woman Christ, Studies in Medieval Religion and Literature, Philadelphia, 1995, p. 29. 113 Sean L. Field, „Reflecting the Royal Soul: The Speculum Anime composed for Blanche of Castile‟, Mediaeval Studies 68, (2006), 1-42, p. 5. 59 the disgusting nature of the human body‘s origins, functions and ultimate end.114 Most of this treatise was taken, as Sean Field has noted, from the Meditationes piissimae de cognitione humanae conditionis, erroneously attributed to Bernard of Clairvaux, and written for monks. The selections, rejections and rearrangements of the original text in the Speculum anime show what the author believed was important and appropriate for a royal, lay and female readership.115 Field acknowledges the problematic nature of a piece about renunciation of the world written to a woman at the centre of government, a true domina, as he puts it.116 He hints that perhaps the Speculum anime indicated an early and important chapter in the articulation of royal piety at the Capetian court; part of the interplay between the circle of churchmen who acted as advisors and the royal family that wielded political power.117 Even though it was written for a particular active and prominent woman, the Speculum anime does not step out of a tradition of rejection of the world (contemptus mundi) traditional in the literature of the edification for women like the Speculum virginum, written in the first half of the twelfth century.118 Gilbert of Tournai‘s letter does include praise of virginity and preservation of purity, but its main part presents an interesting mystical spiritual journey of the soul in ten steps. The first three steps describe in great detail the condition of the soul before it attempts this spiritual growth, leaving only seven steps for the actual journey. As Field has noted these steps are not original. They are a compilation and rearrangement of earlier texts of mystical nature. The adaptation of these mystical treatises of assent to his 114 Ibid., p. 21. Ibid., p. 16. 116 Ibid., p. 22. 117 Ibid., p. 21. 118 Constant J. Mews ed., Listen, Daughter, The Speculum Virginum and the Formation of Religious Women in the Middle Ages, New York, 2001. 115 60 female recipient is what makes this treatise so special. Not only had Gilbert addressed a mystical development manual to a woman, he also did it using materials that were composed specifically for religious men. Gilbert of Tournai begins his journey with the description of the state of a person before the journey. Describing misery, labor and suffering of the fallen soul, Gilbert uses words like animus (spirit), or mens (mind). This is the state a mind can understand, because the mind of the reader has created and lives in this state. He insinuates that the rational approach to life leaves the human being in this world forever. A person who uses only his mental capabilities perceives this world as the only existing reality and lives only to battle constraints. Therefore we toil, we are miserable, and only think about accumulating wealth as a means of assuring our survival.119 Only when attention is shifted from the immediate physical reality to the divine inheritance does it become evident that this way of survival is not what we need. The vector of progress becomes love rather than intellect. Gilbert of Tournai switches to the term anima as the faculty that experiences the following stages. When anima becomes his protagonist in the dialogue he recruits another language. Let her not say that the kingdom of God is food and drink, but let her place the experience of the heavenly kingdom in justice with respect to rectitude of the will, both by the peace of serenity and by the holy spirit, and by the most excellent joy of the most vehement charity, and if she does this by tasting a little beforehand, she will be doing it by immersing 119 „Gilberti‟s Letter‟, ed. Field, 286va, l. 58, p. 82 and 286vb, l. 76, p. 83. 61 herself in that torrent from the inside. Oh when will come that time when we can be, with eternal joy, immersed internally in that very spring of divinity, so that a wave may be joined to wave without interpolation or interruption, so that that which cannot be grasped by space may glow, that which time cannot capture may sound, that which breath cannot scatter may smell, that which gluttony does not diminish may bring satisfaction, and that which satisfaction does not rend asunder may be had: namely our God the light, sound, smell, food and embrace of spiritual senses.120 Gilbert describes a feeling of bliss. The metaphors of sensual pleasure are used to stimulate a feeling of delight in a reader, not a better understanding of the divine. He or she may imagine themselves immersed in a pond of clear spring water and the feelings of joy it brings to the body. That person is then further fed by images involving his/her experience of delight when their physical senses are positively stimulated and their passions aroused. The connection with God is described as a sensual delight. Gilbert is using the spiritual senses as the faculty that experiences this, but the stimulus is one of sensual joy and the reader‘s physical senses and passions are employed to experience this joy of the elevated soul from memory and experience. 120 Ibid., 287ra, 96-105, pp. 83-4. „regnum Dei cibum et potum esse non dicat, sed regni celestis experienciam ponat in iusticia, quantum ad rectitudinem voluntatis, et pace serenitatis, et Spiritu Sancto, superexcellenti gaudio vehementissime caritatis, et si hoc facit tenuiter prelibando, quid se illi flumini penitus immergendo. O quando veniet tempus ut perhemnibus gaudiis in ipso divinitatis fonte penitus immergamur, ut unda unde sine interpolatione sine intercarpedine coniungatur, ut plenius anime fulgeat quod non capit locus, sonnet quod non rapit tempus, oleat quod non spargit flatus, sapiat quod edacitas non minuit, habeat quod sacietas non divellit, Deus noster scilicet sensibus spiritualibus lux, vox, odor, edulium et amplexus!‟ 62 Then when Gilbert shifts back to the mind it is not the same mind. It is a mind that is connected to the soul. It understands and accepts that the soul has other needs than just the immediate physical ones. ‗since the eyes of the heart are pure‘.121 This is a mind that is employed to the advantage of the soul. The mind is a portal through which messages to the soul are conveyed. In this respect Gilbert‘s treatise can be seen as in tune with the male mystical discourse that turns the anima (soul) into animus (spirit) by relinquishing the sensorial faculty of the soul. William of StThierry described it as: ‗when the soul begins to be not only capable but also in possession of perfect reason, it immediately renounces the feminine gender… for as long as it is anima it is quick to slip effeminately into the carnal; but the animus or spirit thinks only what is virile and spiritual.‘122 The physical senses are used to maintain the workings of the anima with her emotive functions. As soon as the mystic starts acquiring better understanding of the divine, the physical senses give way to the spiritual senses and then disappear completely to leave a mind or spirit alone. The aim there is to gain understanding, which is in a way a representation of God in the human mind. In Gilbert‘s treatise understanding is not the end but a means to move to further stages of closeness. In these last stages Gilbert stresses that the understanding the soul gains aids her to bear the separation from her creator for the years of her life: ‗at the ninth step all of creation seen to be nothing more or less than a sign of 121 Ibid., 287vb, 173, p. 87, „Si tamen puri sint oculi cordis‟. Barbara Newman, From Virile Woman to Woman Christ, Philadelphia, 1995, p. 22. William of St. Thierry, Epistola ad fratres de Monte Dei 198, ed., Jean Déchanet, Lettre aux frères du Mont-Dieu, Sources chrétiennes 223, Paris, 1975, p. 253: „Quae ubi perfectae rationis incipit esse, non tantum capax, sed et particeps, continuo abdicat a se notam generis femine, et efficitur animus particeps rationis, regendo corpori accommodatus, vel seipsum habens spiritus. Quamdiu enim anima est, cito in id quod carnale est effeminatur; animus vero, vel spiritus, non nisi quod virile est et spirituale meditatur‟. 122 63 and a path back to God…‘.123. This understanding is identified by Sean Field as taken from Hugh of Saint-Victor, ‗and thus the heat of love… brings abut a sharpening of knowledge‘.124 And had the treatise been all about gaining this understanding it would not have been different from any written in this period, by men to men. However, this treatise combines other approaches to God, as well. The embodiment Gilbert starts with the senses, but moves to understanding and then to embodiment. This can be best seen as a detour. The soul, on its way to God, stops to notice that it has changed. Gilbert of Tournai starts with desire, presents a physical change a person undergoes as a result of utilizing her/his spiritual senses and only then reaches understanding. Gilbert of Tournai uses the description of desire to move the reader emotionally. He reaches out with his descriptions to actually induce this feeling of delight in the mind of his reader. ‗when the mind longing for the sweetness of the fatherland is refreshed by its fruits… they are the select fruit that feed her inner burning storm and refreshes her and extends her inner self…‘125 the words themselves are transformational mechanism. He describes the feeling the reader should achieve: ‗it is light comparing to the strength of the whip… and nothing compares to this torment.‘ 126 123 „Gilbert‟s Letter‟, ed. Field, 287vb, 180, p. 87. Hugh of Saint-Victor, Expositio in Hierarchiam Coelestem S. Dionysii Areopagitae 6 (PL 175, col. 1037): „Significat enim acutum impetus quemdam amoris, et vehementiam desiderii ardentis,ferentis se in amatum, et intrantis, et penetrantis, ut ibi sit, ubi est ipsum, quod amatur, cum ipso, et in ipso, ut non solum ab ipso calidum sit, sed transeat acutum in ipsum‟. 125 „Gilbert‟s Letter‟, ed. Field, 287vb, 161-5, p. 86: „cum ad illius patrie dulcedinem suspiratur et ex illius terre fructu mens reficitur, ubertate lactatur… his enim fructibus electos ad ipsum ardencius conspirantes interim pascit et reficit, dilatat viscera, poerrigit ubera, sinum offert, gremium pandit.‟ 126 Ibid. 287ra, 109-11, p. 84 : „leves quia consideration premii minuit vim flagella… et nihil erit quod non equanimiter toleretur‟. 124 64 From there he moves to embodiment. Mary Magdalene is presented by Gilbert as an example of a lover who acquires great strength by the love she feels for Christ. She is portrayed requesting the body of Christ so that she can perform the ceremony of burial for him. She, a frail woman, wants to lift the heavy body single handedly, says Gilbert of Tournai, and carry it to its grave. In this example the love of Christ transformed the physical body of the lover. Moreover, this isn‘t just a metaphorical example. Gilbert assumes the princess is able to achieve such fits of strength. Therefore he stresses that although such transformation is possible the princess should not attempt it. ‗I do not write this to you so that you should exceed your bodily strength, but that you should know the force of divine love.‘127 Female sanctity was often described and tested in physical dimension. When a woman was exhibiting mystical experiences and revelations her sincerity was depicted as occurring in physical changes of the body. Usually female mystics were described as loosing sensation. Sometimes that loss of sensation was tested by infliction of injuries to the body in order to discern whether sensation loss was genuine. If the mystic suffered from these abuses later when she ‗woke up‘ it was an acceptable side effect.128 After embodiment comes understanding. This understanding is described by Gilbert as something both physical and spiritual. It is a change of the mind, felt acutely by the senses. ‗ it signifies a sort of sharp force of love and the fierceness of burning desire carrying one into the loved one, entering and penetrating and going over into the 127 Ibid., 287va, 137-9, p. 85. Dyan Elliott, Proving Woman, Female Spirituality and Inquisitional Culture in the Later Middle Ages, Princeton, 2004, pp. 1-3. 128 65 loved one itself.‘129 In Gilbert‘s letter the understanding is divine. The person gaining the understanding is transported into God. I think that irreversibility signifies the yoke and tireless excess of the mind, which according to the measure of its self giving and freedom of the spirit, breathing where it wills, the Lord seizes for himself the souls of the perfect; and perhaps this is not the state of pilgrims, but of those in the blessed fatherland. For the mind, accustomed to the shadows, weighed down by corruption and corpulence, constricted by the necessities of the body, falls away from that sweetness into physical bitterness and temporal distress.130 Therefore, this understanding is a form of embodiment too. The acuteness or the sharpening of the mind is a change in the body of the mystic. It is not what she/he sees, but what she/he is. She/he becomes this other, more perceptive person, as a result of her/his mystical progress and taken by God into the celestial fatherland. Journey of the mind and heart This hybrid of spiritual transformation of the mind acquired and experienced by the external senses and passions is very similar to another such journey prescribed by another prominent Franciscan, the seventh general of the Franciscan Order, Bonaventure. As much as his writings influenced the northern mystic Marguerite Porete, his influence is more immediate in this treatise and his personal collaboration with the princess. 129 „Gilbert‟s Letter‟, ed. Field of Tournai, 287va, 151, p. 86, „significat autem acutum impetum quemdam amoris et vehemenciam desiderii ardentis, ferentis se in amatum, intrantis et penetrantis et transeuntis in ipsum…‟ 130 Ibid. 287va, 154-60, p. 86, „puto quod significant illa irregressibilitas iugem et indefatigabilem mentis excessum, quo secundum mensuram donationis sue et libertatem spiritus spirantis ubi vult, in se rapit Dominus animas perfectorum; aut forte non est status viatorum, sed in patria beatorum. Mens enim hic suis assueta tenebris, aggravata corruptione et corpulencia, constricta necessitatibus corporis, ab illa dulcedine recidit in amaritudines corporales et molestias temporales.‟ 66 In his Itinerarium Mentis in Deum Bonaventure describes a journey to God as movement from the senses, physical and spiritual, to understanding. 131 This understanding takes the monk close to God; but does not in itself allow full understanding. The final step is described in terms of the burning desire. The beginning of the Itinerarium mistakenly leads us to believe that it is the anima that will be discussed in this book and her way to God through feeling. ‗Desires can be inflamed in us in two ways, namely through the cry of prayer which makes us cry aloud with groaning of the heart, and through the brightness of contemplation by which the mind turns most directly and intently to the rays of light‘.132 And ‗give more attention to … the stimulation of affect than to the instruction of the intellect.‘133 After such an opening the reader would expect this treatise to arouse the heart of the believer and help it soar to the spiritual heights. It is not so, however. This journey is declared to be one of the mind to God, Mentis in Deum. And indeed Bonaventure explains by which means he will reach his goal: ‗sense, imagination, reason, understanding, intelligence and the high point of the mind or the spark of conscience.‘134 He speaks of ‗triple illumination of the mind. Which relates to the three-fold existence of things, namely in matter, in understanding, and in eternal art… this also relates to the triple substance in Christ who is our ladder; namely the corporeal, the spiritual, and the divine.135 For him the journey is made by 131 New Catholic Encyclopedia, ed., Thomas Carson, Joann Cerrito, 2nd ed., Detroit, London 2003,VOLUME ?? p. 481. 132 Bonaventure, Itinerarium Mentis in Deum ed. Philotheus Boehner, O.F.M, trans. Zachary Hayes, O.F.M, in Works of Bonaventure, Saint Bonaventure, 2002, p. 39. 133 Ibid. p. 41. 134 Bonaventure p. 51. 135 Ibid., p. 46 and 47: „triplex illuminatio unius diei… haec respicit triplicem rerum existentiam, scilicet in material, in intelligentia et in arte aeterna… haec etiam respicit triplicem substantiam in Christo, qui est scala nostra, scilicet corporalem, spiritualem et divinam‟. 67 considering and contemplating things he gradually offers as the reader goes through the chapters. Bonaventure explains that seeing and thinking about things leads a person to see the creator of these things. No other way is open, he says, to a person who is of this world. If he can only hold on to the physical reality that is this world and only understand its rules then this is the way Bonaventure employs to lead him to God. ‗…all creatures of this world of sensible realities lead the spirit of the contemplative and wise person to the eternal God. For creatures are shadows, echoes, and pictures of that first, most powerful, most wise, and most perfect Principle, of that eternal source, light, and fullness; of that efficient, exemplary, and ordering Art. They are vestiges, images, and spectacles proposed to us for gazing at God. They are divinely given signs. These creatures are copies or rather illustrations proposed to the souls of those who are uneducated and immersed in sensible things, so that through sensible things which they do see they may be lifted to the intelligible things which they do not see, moving from signs to that which is signified.‘ 136 Even when discussing the vestiges that can potentially arouse feeling in the reader, Bonaventure remains in a strictly contemplative mood. It is always instructional and aims at the reason of the reader. Bonaventure does two things in his treatise. He argues for the usefulness of his way, and he directs the reader in the development of this train of contemplation in his mind. This is apparent in the most luminous part of his treatise. Even when discussing the vivid sensuality of the Song of Songs Bonaventure remains strictly rational. ‗it is at this level where the interior senses have been restored to see what is most beautiful, to hear what is most harmonious, to smell what is most fragrant, to taste what is 136 Ibid., p. 77. 68 most sweet, and to embrace what is most delightful, that the soul is disposed for spiritual ecstasies through devotion, admiration and exultation, in accordance with the three exclamations found in the Canticle of Canticles…. When these things have been accomplished, and our spirit has been brought into conformity with the heavenly Jerusalem, it is ordered hierarchically.‘137 This isn‘t about eliciting an emotional response of the reader. All this is described to argue one of the points on the way. It is used in a descriptive mode. This is what happens; you think this and this and this and so these boxes in your mind will be ordered in such a way; restored to its previous order from before the fall. Therefore it is safe to say that this treatise deals with rational ascent; the beginning and the end move away from this theme. Bonaventure‘s account of the climb to mount Alverna and of his vision there of the bound Seraph with six wings is very emotionally arousing. He does warn us at the outset that his proposed contemplation would not work without a suitable preparation first. ‗to those anointed with the oil of gladness, to those who are lovers of divine wisdom and are inflamed with desire for it; and to those who wish to give themselves to glorifying, admiring and even savoring God, I propose the following reflections.138 One would expect this to be just a warning against pride, so that the friar doesn‘t think he is the one in charge of his development and divine grace is ultimately responsible for the uplift of the human soul. One would also expect the ending to be somewhat different. Something along the lines of more warnings against pride, but ultimately an acknowledgment of the journey accomplished and the soul changed. 137 138 Ibid., p. 101. Ibid., pp. 39, 41. 69 Yet in his conclusion Bonaventure breaks with this pattern entirely. ‗If this passing over is to be perfect,‘ he says, ‗ all intellectual activities must be given up and our deepest and total affection must be directed to God and transformed into God… And no one receives it except one who desires it. And no one desires it but one who is penetrated to the very marrow with the fire of the Holy Spirit whom Christ has sent into the world.‘139 He finishes his thesis with an emotional outburst: ‗now if you ask how all these things are to come about, ask grace, not doctrine; desire, not intellect; the groaning of prayer and not studious reading; the Spouse, not the master; God, not a human being; darkness, not clarity; not light, but the fire that inflames totally and carries one into God through spiritual fervor and with the most burning affections. It is God alone who is this fire, and God‘s furnace is in Jerusalem. And it is Christ who starts the fire with the white flame of his most intense passion. Only that person who says: My soul chooses hanging, and my bones death can truly embrace this fire. Only one who loves this death can see God, for it is absolutely true that no one can see me and live‘.140 This is almost an antithesis of all that has preceded in the Itinerarium. There is no illumination in the darkness. The disciple, who diligently followed all Bonaventure‘s instructions, is left in the end with a feeling that the way of the mind will not allow him to finish the journey and cross the finish line into God. This treatise includes the movement from physical and spiritual senses to pure intellect of understanding. The last step of the journey, however, is done when the person, having suitably prepared his mind, lets go, turns his willing open heart towards 139 140 Ibid., p. 137. Ibid., p.139. 70 grace that will take him in, but Bonaventure does not explain how to make it. Regardless of the frustration Bonaventure exhibits in the end of his theology, his journey is of the mind, or understanding. It utilizes sensual experience as a vehicle to illumination. The method is most straightforward in the first leg of the journey when the memory of sense experience of the surrounding world is analyzed then transferred into a brick of understanding in the building of mental growth. The second part is contemplation on self. It starts with the examination of self and proceeds to contemplating an intellectual understanding of self as reflection of the trinity, thus transforming the physical sense experience into the spiritual sense understanding. The third part is purely intellectual, contemplation on God. But the last part shows the reader that this understanding is not the final step. After the preparation or development of the mind that Bonaventure treats, there is a specific moment of a willing heart opening itself to grace that was first articulated by Bernard of Clairvaux, in his On Grace and Free Choice. This part is not explained by Bonaventure. But it is presented by him as essential for successful completion of the journey. Combining theologies There is a prevailing notion of feminine and masculine writing, as Kocher puts it, of vision-narratives or descriptions of embodied religious expression, that mainly beguines have been credited with, or accused of, applying a secular discourse of human love to the subject of love for God, and the masculine writing of reason or training of the mind as a way to God. Marguerite Porete, he states, did not take the feminine side or the masculine. She disembodied her characters in order to better express Love‘s primacy over Reason.141 Gilbert in his letter tried to create a combined theology 141 Suzanne (Zan) Kocher, Allegories of Love in Marguerite Porete’s Mirror of Simple Souls, Turnhout, 2008, p. 183. 71 of reason and love, both conforming to accepted theology of mysticism and adjusting it to his female recipient. Sean Field mentions in his article that Gilbert included this mystical treatise to attract the attention of the princess. However he does not refer to the content of the treatise to explain its appeal to his recipient. I would like to offer an insight into his reasons as well as the significance of his offering to the overall idea of a spiritual/mystical connection between Franciscan leaders and the French princess. Usually women writing about their mystical journeys, or men instructing women did not stress an element of contemplation. They moved directly into an emotional reach towards God. Because of this uncontrolled and unsupervised connection the women attracted various responses from their male contemporaries. As the thirteenth century progressed, the reaction ranged from outright hostility to an adoring description by devout friars of holy women mystics. Some Franciscans and Dominicans saw these devout and holy women as having a different relationship with the divine, which the friars saw as privileged, unique and remote from their own experience.142 It was a well developed concept that women with their loving hearts could connect more easily with the divine, however they were also always suspect. On one hand there is appreciation of their ability to transcend and radiate that emotional richness onto their close followers; on the other, a suspicion and fear of being set aside, which John Coakley claims did not exist among the friars. Instead, Coakley observes, acting within the accepted feminine space, these women symbolized for the friars the boundary of their own logic and reason based authority. 143 142 John Coakley, „Gender and the Authority of the Friars: The Significance of Holy Woman for Thirteenth-Century Franciscans and Dominicans‟, Church History, 60 (1991), 45-60, p. 450. 143 John Coakley, „Gender and the Authority of the Friars‟, p. 459. 72 However, mere, observation and adoration was not enough to form a bridge between female mystical experiences and male perception of an appropriate way to ascend to God. Gilbert of Tournai included both the intellectual striving to understand God, and used this process of understanding for upward movement, and the feeling which transcended human intellect and moved the mystic by their affective outreach. Logic dynamizes the movement of Gilbert‘s way to God. The fear is mobilized as the moving factor. The initial movement towards God happens not by the fear itself but by meditation on that fear; not the actual feeling of fear or love, but the contemplation/understanding of that fear. Then when the person is convinced by his/her contemplation on the fear, the need for emotional connection is revealed. Dissolving into the greater being was articulated earlier by Bernard, and as pointed out by Sean Field, by Ps. Dionysius. Both have included the will in that process but not as the actual moving agent. Both understood the will as something man has, something that might get her/him to begin the journey, but not to significantly move her/him towards God. This element was later advanced by Marguerite Porete and already present in Gilbert‘s writing. When the person realizes he/she needs to start a journey to God, his/her will is what makes them to open up and allow emotion to flow towards God. In all journeys this essentially emotive element is achieved by contemplation and conscious navigation by the person him/herself. But contemplation was not the only element in Gilberts‘ journey. He included the sensual/emotive experience, the change the body undergoes as a result of understanding reached by the journey. Gilbert includes in his letter to the princess all the formative theologies that affected the Franciscan thought and were before only addressed to men. By doing so Gilbert (and his associates, as it is reasonable to assume he did not compose such an important 73 treatise by himself), allowed a place for a woman in a spiritual tradition that was essentially male. These theologies were reshaped and adjusted and the affective part enhanced. However the fact that Gilbert included this meditation practice indicated his intention to include the princess in a practice that was before that restricted to male monastic audience. This places Gilbert of Tournai‘s theology between the two parts of the second stage of development of McGinn‘s module, making it both affective and logic oriented. Compared to Bonaventure‘s Itinerarium, this treatise stands at the same place. Both combine the rational gradual climb, with a journey of the heart being necessary for the final leap. Neither Gilbert nor Bonaventure provides a recipe for that final step. However Gilbert does not present it in a negative manner. Bonaventure‘s emotive part is one of frustration; Gilbert‘s is one of love and a natural outcome of the journey. ‗and it is good, just as in the streams and brooks foot prints of animal are hurrying towards you, oh God, fountain of life‘144 ‗and the heart, the mind, the soul will be full, all the joy of man will be full, overjoyed, as in the Scripture: ‗in the joy of your God, and all joyful will enter in joy, and joy to no end‘ and this is the heritage that should be kept by the daughter of the king.‘ 145 Gilbert assumes that the final leap is there to be made and will be the natural outcome of his prescribed journey. Looking at the similarities between this letter and Bonaventure‘s Itinerarium, reveals the standpoint of the major Franciscan writers on the place of the affective and the rational elements in the 144 „Gilbert‟s Letter‟, ed. Field, 287vb, 193-5, p. 87, „Et bene illis, qui per tenues rivulos et cenosos, vestigia creaturarum scilicet, ad te properant, Domine, fontem vivum!‟ 145 Ibid. 287va, 205-9, p. 88, „Et hoc quidem erit cum pleno corde, plena mente, plena anima, pleno toto homine gaudio, supererit gaudium, sicut scriptum est: Intra in gaudium Domini tui, ut toti gaudentes intrent in gaudium, et non totum gaudium in gaudentes. Hec est hereditas que regis fillie conservatur.‟ 74 descriptions of the mystical journeys, and their views on women‘s spirituality in the general mystical discourse. The letter includes mental development in the search and climb to God, with the affective part that induces and shapes this development. The fact that Gilbert, a Franciscan in the centre of the French court milieu saw fit to send a princess, a woman on a spiritual journey, which before that was considered suitable only for monks, signifies his perceived liberty to do so. The affective part, so similar to Bonaventure‘s Itinerarium, provides an insight into the creative, flexible and inclusive environment, in which new theologies were more acceptable than later in history. In France Gilbert‘s treatise marks one of the first stages of Franciscan infiltration into the royal basis of power. I surmise that the Franciscans were looking for someone who could advance their interests. Advancing her spiritual education, pointing her in the direction of using her mind to progress on her spiritual journey afforded them an element of influence in her decisions and operations. Because she was a woman the treatise was adjusted to what he/they perceived as appropriate for her. Through its structure, the treatise afforded a possibility to consider women‘s passionate connection to God, experienced in their bodies, as different but equally valid. Acknowledging the usefulness of human passion as a way to God, also acknowledged women‘s mystical way as legitimate, and created a place for dialogue as to the inclusion of women into the general Franciscan mission. Evading real spiritual women as examples of embodiment, and using instead the venerated figure of Mary Magdalene as an example of the perfect lover, whose being was changed by her love, makes perfect sense in this setting. For many of these women the logical component was not essential for their journey, and it was not 75 described in their reports. Understanding, even if occurred, was not aimed at, nor was it emphasized. What constituted their mystical journey was feeling and the fall into the abyss. Using these women as exempla would have created a treatise appropriate for a woman who was not encouraged to step closer and participate in the general discussions of mystical experience within the Franciscan order. The success of these attempts to breach the divide is vividly evident in Isabelle‘s seeking the Franciscan advice in establishing a rule for the nuns with her team of Franciscan advisors. Instead of seeing them as her opponents, she consulted them and made progress in her rule to the extent of including the women in the Franciscan movement, advancing title minores in the community‘s name. This was something that only collaboration between mutually respecting sides could have accomplished. And this letter was the foundation for this respect. 76 Chapter three - Dialogue of the Soul Marguerite Porete was active in the region of Hainault, part of what can be called the Southern Low Countries. Unlike Isabelle of France, the story of her collaboration with both Franciscans and Cistercians is less documented. Her treatise, however, does echo their ideas. Scholars have often claimed that Marguerite Porete was executed to draw the attention of the public from the suspicious affair of the trial of the Templars that was held at the same time she was arrested146. From this perspective, it might be judged that her opinions were so extremely heretical that there would be popular support for her execution, as distinct from uncertainty about the condemnation of the Templars. This interpretation implies that Marguerite Porete was a solitary woman with no connections among the leading religious movements of her day. In this chapter I shall examine the theology of the Mirror of Simple Annihilated Souls of Marguerite Porete so as to detect the influence of the traditions debated in Paris in the end of the thirteenth century at the time of her writing the work.147 Relatively little research has been done into theological influences on the writings of Marguerite Porete. What little has been written has mainly been concerned with the resemblance of her Mirror to the writings of other women mystic writers like Mechthild and Hadewijch. A strong similarity was expected; after all they were women and wrote mystical treatises in the vernacular. The Mirror shares with Hadewijch and Mechthild a strong affinity for the 146 See mainly Robert E. Lerner, The Heresy of the Free Spirit in the Later Middle Ages, Berkeley, Los Angeles, London, 1972, p. 77, and Paul Verdeyen, „Le Procès d‟inquisition contre Marguerite Porete et Guiard de Cressonessart (1309 – 1310)‟, p. 85. 147 See Introduction, note 2. 77 language and themes of courtly love.148 Amy Hollywood has more cautiously claimed that although the theology of Marguerite shows some demonstrative origins from contemporary forms of devotion such as the ascetic, churchly, and contemplative practices advocated by the majority of thirteenth-century religious and semi religious, and promoted by many hagiographical accounts of holy women, she rejects those forms of ascetic, ecstatic and mystical piety particularly associated with women of her day. Hollywood argues that Porete viewed many of her contemporaries as being ‗stuck‘ on this level.149 She pities those who think that they have reached their target by these practices. She thinks of them as merchants, who believe that one can barter with Love (God) and as such are unable to merit her courtesy.150 Hollywood describes Mechthild and Hadewijch as embodying a style of ‗suffering female mysticism‘ to which Marguerite objects. Bernard McGinn contributes to the better understanding of the impetus of Marguerite‘s Christological theology by saying that she does not reflect on Christ‘s suffering for his ‗sweet humanity‘, nor fixates on the bloody wounds of the dying Lord, like in the writings of other women mystics. Rather than rejoicing and striving to stay in this state, McGinn says, understanding and mimicking the suffering of Christ pushes Marguerite to seek progress on her journey. 151 Bernard McGinn is unusual in offering another outlook on the possible influences on the theology of Marguerite. He points out that Marguerite Porete was deeply grounded in traditional Latin theology, especially Augustine, the Cistercians (Bernard and William of St- 148 Barbara Newman, From Virile Woman to Woman Christ. Studies in Medieval Religion and Literature, Philadelphia, 1995, p. 139. 149 Amy Hollywood, The Soul as Virgin Wife, Mechthild of Magdeburg, Marguerite Porete, and Meister Eckhart, Notre Dame, 1995, p. 98. 150 Hollywood The Soul as Virgin Wife, p. 99. 151 Bernard McGinn, The Flowering of Mysticism, Men and Women in the New Mysticism (1200 – 1350), The Presence of God: A History of Western Christian Mysticism, III, New York, 1998, p. 261. 78 Thierry) and Richard of St-Victor.152 Like William of St-Thierry, Marguerite saw the Holy Spirit, the Love uniting Father and Son in the Trinity, as the power drawing the soul to the deepest union with God. Her notion of pre-existence of the soul is found in the reflections of Augustine in his great treatise On the Trinity. Augustine had remarked on the pre-existence of the soul and its will in God, noting that in its created state the soul can either will to be converted to the source from which it came or to turn away from it and cease being a good will. Bernard McGinn claims, however, that on both accounts, the pre-creation of the soul and the movement to God by the power of Holy Spirit Marguerite Porete went beyond Augustine and previous Western theologians.153 Amy Hollywood has offered an explanation for the way Marguerite Porete chose to present her narrative as a discussion between three major protagonists, The Soul, Love, and Reason. Hollywood claims that this way of telling the story represents the fluidity of these three persons in the state of a transformed soul, in whom love operates and uses to tell the story in the only way possible, with no regards to human concepts of linear progress of narrative.154 Zan Kocher‘s study (2008) elaborates on this theme by stripping the Mirror‘s protagonist and object, the soul, from its temporal flesh, from gender and subjectivity, to claim that Marguerite‘s intention was to disengage from the wish to understand, to love, or to want anything at all.155 Marguerite Porete, Kocher argues, wanted to exemplify what happens when the soul abandons the social preconceptions and personal desires. This, he claims, retracts the soul to its precreational condition. 152 McGinn, The Flowering of Mysticism, p. 437, n. 240. McGinn, The Flowering of Mysticism, p. 262. 154 Hollywood The Soul as Virgin Wife, p. 119. 155 Suzanne (Zan) Kocher, Allegories of Love in Marguerite Porete’s Mirror of Simple Souls, Turnhout, 2008, p. 183. 153 79 I agree with Bernard McGinn that Marguerite Porete was aware of the theological currents of her day and went beyond them proposing an active annihilation of the will. I would also agree with Kocher that she deliberately moved away from any gender conventions when describing her journey. She did not repeat the description of the suffering of the women mystics before her. She also did not give a version of a logically structured argument of the logical or rational ascent of the created soul to the uncreated God, achieved by understanding and knowing God, like Thomas Aquinas did.156 As Jantzen has demonstrated, the purely scholastic way to God, by the way of interpreting Scripture and reaching understanding, was not available to women at all. If males had a choice of articulating their mysticism either in the way of loving or the way of thinking, women could only do the latter.157 Marguerite, however, used the theological, mystical and literal developments to create her unique piece of writing. In this chapter I shall look at the ways Marguerite Porete used the descriptions of the feelings of the former and the knowledge of the latter, echoing the debate about reason and affective theologies, to create her own treatise, using the contemporary theological concepts only as a starting point for her own arguments. The Franciscan connection Bonaventure‘s Itinerarium Mentis in Deum is a guide directed at Franciscan monks addressing the issue of the way of the human soul to God.158 Although he was elected in 1257 as seventh minister general of the Franciscan Orderin an attempt to soothe the distress 156 A. N. Williams, „Mystical Theology Redux: The Pattern of Aquinas‟ Summa Theologiae’, Modern Theology, 13 (1997), 53-74, p. 65. 157 Grace M. Jantzen, Power, Gender and Christian Mysticism, Cambridge, 1995, p. 133. 158 Bonaventure, Itinerarium Mentis in Deum, ed., Philotheus Boehner, O.F.M, and trans. Zachary Hayes, O.F.M, in Works of Bonaventure, Saint Bonaventure, 2002. 80 within the Order provoked by admirers of the radical book of Gerard of Borgo San Donnino the Eternal Gospel, Bonaventure‘s writings do not attest him to be a conventional pacifier. On the contrary, his first official encyclical letter to the Order admonished the brethren for their laxity in observing the practice of poverty. After two years in his generalate and much travelling throughout Europe, he changed the character of his writings from theological abstractions to motivational writing, to address the real needs of his brethren for uplifting spiritual guidance. While still a great scholar, he was particular concerned after 1259 to motivate his brethren more than to speculate on items of theology. His first masterpiece was Itinerarium Mentis in Deum or the Journey of the Mind into God.159 At its outset, Bonaventure describes his own mental journey on Mount Alverna when he realized that the way to God that St Francis had demonstrated in person to his followers, is not only a venerated occasion of a saint, but a way that can be attempted by others. The Itinerarium is therefore a guidebook aimed at leading man to God in six steps. Bonaventure outlines his plan in the beginning of his book after he explains that he arrived at this understanding at Mount Alverna following the experience that St Francis had there. The six winged Seraph that St Francis saw in his vision was the key for Bonaventure‘s proposed journey of the soul into God: ‗For those six wings can well be understood as symbols of six levels of uplifting illumination through which the soul is prepared as it were by certain stages or steps to pass over to peace…‘160 159 Bonaventure, New Catholic Encyclopedia, ed., Thomas Carson, Joann Cerrito, 2nd ed., Detroit, London, 2003, VOL? p. 481 160 „Nam per senas alas illas recte intelligi possunt sex illuminationum suspensions, quibus anima quasi quibusdam gradibus vel itineribus disponitur…‟ Bonaventure, Itinerarium Mentis in Deum, p. 37. The six winged seraph is also associated with the Apocalypse Commentry of Joachim of Fiore, by Olivi, in David Burr, Olivi’s Peaceable Kingdom. A Reading of the Apocalypse Commentary, Philadelphia, 1993, p. 52. 81 The final destination of a person following the directions of the Itinerarium is God. Bonaventure completes his treatise with the description of the place the soul arrives after completing the six stages of uplifting he described in his book. ‗leaving all things and freed from all things in a total and absolute ecstasy of a pure mind, transcending yourself and all things, you shall rise up to the superessential radiance of the divine darkness.‘161 Leaving all things the soul becomes empty and free and returns to the divine darkness, the state when God was alone before creation. Not only does Bonaventure describe freedom and emptiness as the final aspiration of the person undertaking his prescribed journey, he also completes his description with the analogy of death, or even more strongly the nothingness of the precreational state of non existence. The point of departure is the sixth winged seraph from Isaiah 6:2. Isaiah tells us that he had seen the Lord sitting on a throne and above him stood the seraphim. Each seraph had six wings: with two he covered his face, and with two he covered his feet, and with two he flew. Bonaventure tells us that when he retired to Mount Alverna he was thinking about St Francis and his vision of the Seraph. St Francis saw the seraph in the form of the Crucified. Bonaventure understood that to mean that St Francis had identified Christ with the Seraph as the means to reach God. As the Seraph was described directly with God in the Old Testament and St Francis had seen him with the stigmata, the symbolic meaning of the seraph shifted from angel of God, to the Crucified as Son of God. The closeness to God remained and Bonaventure understood it to mean that the person can come closer to God by coming closer to Christ and the road was the road of contemplation and understanding. ‗I saw immediately that this vision pointed not only to the uplifting of 161 Bonaventure, Itinerarium Mentis in Deum, p. 139. 82 our father himself in contemplation but also to the road by which one might arrive at this experience.‘162 After explaining the source of his idea for this book Bonaventure breaks the journey into six steps and takes his audience step by step of the journey. At each step he prescribes the precise subjects on which to contemplate, explaining that each will allow a different angle of understanding something of God‘s goodness. He breaks down for us the different aspects of the goodness of God, moving from his outer traits to closer, more profound ones. In essence the follower begins with contemplation about things that are more simple and approachable like the different parts of the world outside himself. These are the qualities of the world around him that he can easily see and contemplate on. Then the one on the journey proceeds to contemplation of inner human qualities, which are more complex and completes the journey with high corporeal contemplation which is God. Somehow during this journey the person sheds his human soul and is uplifted into God. Bonaventure does not explain how this happens or even explicitly say this is the goal. The only part of the work where this becomes evident is in the brief account of the end of the journey. By understanding God the followers are expected to be uplifted, and somehow emptied and die a mystical death that leads into God: ‗leaving all things and freed from all things …you shall rise …to the divine darkness.‘163 Bonaventure does not give an explanation of even a detailed description of this emptiness or the height to which one is uplifted. Similarities in the Mirror Very much like the Itinerarium, The Mirror of Simple Annihilated Souls is a guide addressed to the reader or the listener so as to 162 163 Ibid., p. 37. Ibid., p. 139. 83 direct them on their journey to God. In her Mirror Marguerite Porete argues that the soul must move through seven stages. These seven stages she sees as subdivided by three deaths; those of sin, nature and spirit. Subsequent to each death are two stages, one characterized by complacency and the other by a sense of dissatisfaction that leads to the next death.164 However, Marguerite describes only six stages or steps in her Mirror, saying that the seventh stage is only accessible after death. Therefore although Marguerite mentions that this is a seven steps journey, her Mirror deals with only six, after which the soul has arrived at her destination and she rests in the total happiness which is God.165 The nature of the state Marguerite describes as the destination of the journey of the soul is very similar to the state Bonaventure describes in his Itinerarium. The soul completing the journey Marguerite proposes has died three deaths, each removing from the soul more and more of her human attributes. Until at the sixth stage the soul has nothing of her own. In such a state the soul ceases to exist and is fully immerged in God, making this stage very close to natural death.166 ‗…the one who would have perfect charity must be mortified in the affections of the life of the spirit…‘ 167 The road to the final destination is a road of contemplation in both treatises. When Marguerite describes the movement of the soul from one state to another she uses thought or consideration as vector. ‗l‘Ame se regarde en affeccion d‘amour de oeuvre de perfection…‘168 or ‗Le quart estat ist que l‘Ame est tiree par 164 Hollywood The Soul as Virgin Wife, p. 98. Porete, Speculum, ed. Verdeyen, p. 331. 166 Amy Hollywood cautiously interprets it to mean that all of the creature‟s human nature - body, spirit and soul - is a burden and must be killed. Seen from this perspective, the soul in her entirety must be renounced insofar as she is created and other than God. Hollywood The Soul as Virgin Wife, p. 110. 167 Porete, Speculum, ed. Verdeyen, p. 19. 168 Ibid., p. 321. 165 84 haultesse d‘amour en delit de pensee par meditacion, et relinquie de tous labours de dehors et de obedience d‘aultruy par haultesse de contemplacion…‘.169 However, even if the initiating movement comes from a person himself, who desires to move towards God, the journey cannot be completed by himself alone. The one to actually lift him from one step to another is God. In The Mirror Marguerite describes Love as the power that lifts the soul from one stage to another. But in essence Love is God and therefore God is the one who lifts the soul that has prepared herself with Love. Bonaventure states that his way is the way of contemplation, however, he urges his potential readers not to rely too heavily on their intellectual strengths, but to allow themselves to experience desire and be inflamed in the love of God. ‗To those who are already disposed by divine grace… to those anointed with the oil of gladness, to those who are lovers of divine wisdom and are inflamed with desire for it; and to those who wish to give themselves to glorifying, admiring and even savoring God, I propose the following reflections.‘170 He says further, ‗we cannot be elevated above ourselves unless a superior power lifts us up. No matter how wellordered the steps of our interior life may be, nothing will happen if the divine aid does not accompany us‘.171 Therefore the power that lifts the person is God and not his own efforts, no matter how efficient they are. The agency of the movement or the concept of the reflection is very similar in both treatises. I agree with Zachary Hayes who says in the introduction to the Itinerarium that Bonaventure‘s ‗speculation‘ is not a mere synonym of ‗consideration‘ and ‗contemplation‘ or even ‗meditation‘. It is a higher degree of mystical contemplation, which ‗seizes the soul and raises it up beyond itself when beholding 169 Ibid., p. 323. Bonaventure, Itinerarium Mentis in Deum, p. 41. 171 Ibid., p. 45. 170 85 the inaccessible grandeur and splendour of the divine manifestation of eternal Truth‘. Therefore ‗speculation‘ in Itinerarium means gazing at God.172 It is not an untreated and untouched gazing, however. Bonaventure divides this gazing into carefully outlined steps which pull the reader or the follower to gaze from a closer distance each time he progresses in steps. Amy Hollywood has noted that the Mirror of Marguerite promises to project either a reflection of the souls or a representation of some other entity that has been given to these souls.173 Following the inner logic of the Mirror it is unnecessary to decide which object is represented. The soul progresses to God by increasingly letting go of its human attributes and by allowing God to replace them. Therefore at the end of the journey there is no soul to be reflected by the Mirror back to the reader or the listener, there is only the image of God. Therefore the Mirror becomes a reflection of a speculation on God offered to readers to follow. The advance of the Mirror The Mirror of Marguerite reflects a further development of a Franciscan ideology accepted in her day. The first two stages of the journey Marguerite advocates in her Mirror express the height of achievement of the suffering mystics before her. As Amy Hollywood has noted, Marguerite is unsatisfied with the level reached by the majority of the mystically inclined women of her period, who are happy with their misery and suffering.174 Hadewijch for example says that she expects the human lover of God, or the mystic, to suffer without relief. ‗What satisfies Love best of all is that we be wholly destitute of all repose, whether in aliens or in friends, or even in Love herself. And this is a frightening life Love wants, that we must do without the satisfaction of Love in order to satisfy 172 Hayes, Introduction to Bonaventure, Itinerarium Mentis in Deum, p. 27. Amy Hollywood, The Soul as Virgin Wife, p. 87. 174 Amy Hollywood, The Soul as Virgin Wife, p. 98. 173 86 Love… and that life is miserable beyond all that the human heart can bear.‘175 The state of suffering is the desired state for Hadewijch; not so for Marguerite. Indeed, her theology reaches this state at the second stage. ‗the second state or degree is that the Soul considers that God counsels His special lovers to go beyond what He commands... the creature abandons self and strains self above all to do the counsels of men, in the work of mortification of nature, in despising riches, delights and honours, in order to accomplish the perfection of the evangelical counsel of which Jesus Christ is the exemplar.‘176 The fifth stage proposes contemplation of God. At this stage the person is directed to examine the manifestation of the goodness of God in order to understand something of Him. Marguerite, too, speaks about closeness and understanding. But unlike Bonaventure she does not think there is a way to understand God. She uses the motions of the Seraph in the Old Testament but interprets them allegorically. For her the meaning of the Seraph covering his face means that he understood nothing about the divine Goodness of God compared to his understanding of Himself. When the Seraph covers his feet she understands it to mean the understanding of Christ‘s suffering while in this world. She realizes that there is no understanding compared to His understanding of Himself. After telling us what is unavailable to us she teaches us what is: ‗With the two others the Soul flies, and dwells in being and rest. Thus all that she understands and loves and praises of the divine goodness are the wings by which she flies.‘177 For Marguerite there is only the understanding of our own actions on our way to God, the image of which she gives in her Mirror. 175 Hadewijch, The Complete Works, trans. Columba Hart, O.S.B. New York, 1980, p. 75. Porete, Speculum, ed. Verdeyen, p. 319, 321. 177 Ibid.,, p. 23. 176 87 The sixth stage or the end of the journey accessible to the person in this life is very similar to the condition described by Bonaventure. In both theologies the soul described in the journey reaches the final stage of the journey, which is total nothingness for her. However in Marguerite‘s case the soul also experiences the total fullness, which is God. This is not to say that Bonaventure‘s theology does not allow the possibility for this experience; after all the Itinerarium puts the person in the end of the journey in the total darkness and emptiness that resembles death and being with God. He, however, does not speak about the feelings of a person at any of the stages, and the final stage is no different in this respect. The stages are covered in one chapter, which summarizes her theology, chapter 118 of the Mirror. Alongside the description of the suffering and consideration of the Goodness of God, there is an active change that the soul applies to itself. Step after step the soul empties itself from its essence becoming an empty vessel for God to fill: ‗now such a Soul is nothing, for she sees her nothingness by means of the abundance of divine Understanding, which makes her nothing and places her in nothingness.‘178 The last attribute of the soul, that symbolizes the soul‘s being, is the free will, used by the soul in the second part of the fifth stage. ‗And thus the Soul removes herself from this will, and the will is separated from Soul and dissolves itself, and [the will] gives and renders itself to God…‘ ‗such a gift accomplishes this perfection in her and so transforms her into the nature of Love…‘179 The largest part of her book deals, however, with a different material. In her theology Marguerite has created an alternative reality. She then takes some time to consider how this reality feels 178 179 Ibid., p. 327. Ibid.,p. 327. 88 for the actual participant before starting to write her book. She then describes the feelings in detail so that the follower can identify himself in her emotional state in each of the stages and draw strength from her leadership. The reality she offers is so vivid that there is no doubt left that she has lived this herself and has analysed each feeling and thought in each of the stages. Reading her book one has the feeling of being led by someone of great experience into an unknown territory. A major part of her book reads like a detailed description of each stage rather then a direction as how to get to it. Marguerite does not only depict the end purpose in detail, she also takes great care explaining and describing each stage and the feelings of the traveller in it. The Mirror is not a narration of a miserable romantic relationship with a lover. It is a guide that aims to tell people what to do in order to ease the suffering and not how to perpetuate it. Marguerite takes up most of the space of the Mirror to discuss the feelings she had in the process of achieving each stage, what the world looked like to her at each stage and what drove her to proceed. She addresses every discomfort and prescribes a specific contemplation to ease every distress. Marguerite tells her audience what she felt in order to support the followers who struggle with any of the stages and to motivate them to move forward. In this respect the Mirror, although a guide book, does not offer merely a prescription of steps as Bonaventure does. He directs the readers step by step in a circle of life that begins with God, moves with Christ to us and then with the directions he prescribes in the Itinerarium back to God through Christ. He directs them with no explanation of the benefit of his proposal and without giving much consideration to the feelings and thoughts of his readers. Bonaventure‘s Christology only sees God and mobilizes all senses to 89 come back to him. The Mirror of Marguerite still sees Christ as the centre and moves towards Him, but concentrates on the individual‘s pursuit of God. There is not much said in the Itinerarium about the experience of the person at each of the stages. The follower is prescribed a certain action at each stage. Bonaventure assumes that he will perform each stage of the contemplation perfectly and move forward to the next. He never questions the actual feelings of the person performing the mental work. However, although Bonaventure does not discuss the feelings of the person on the journey, this does not mean that he ignores the inner experience of the friar attempting the journey to God. He gives directions based on an understanding that there is a mental essence in the soul created by experience and preserved by memory: ‗therefore enter into yourself… it would not know itself unless it remembered itself, for we do not grasp anything with our understanding if it is not present to us in our memory.‘180 Bonaventure builds his instruction based on this assumption. He calls it memory but it is evident that he draws on another theology, which presupposes experience, too, for its instructions. The Cistercians In her understanding of the soul‘s journey, Marguerite Porete also draws on the notion of experience, central to the theology of Bernard of Clairvaux, the primary builder of the reforming Cistercian 180 „…nisi sui meminisset, quia nihil capimus per intelligentiam, quod non sit praesens apud nostram memoriam.‟ Bonaventure, Itinerarium Mentis in Deum, pp. 80-1. 90 monastic order. He was the abbot of the abbey of Clairvaux, which he founded with his twelve companions in a place called Clara Vallis, or Clairvaux at the age of 25 in 1115. He died there on August 20, 1153, not before Clairvaux became the most important Cistercian house, owing to the fame and influence of Bernard. Bernard‘s idea of experience acts in a similar way to the memory of Bonaventure. It promotes the travel of man towards God. It is this experience one meditates on in order to begin movement into God. There are three stages of experience, according to Bernard. The first is a reflection on our own misery and sin. Bernard trusts there will be no difficulty for the monks to recall their own suffering, resulting from the separation from God and the misery they feel from their own sins. Then he prescribes for them to experience Christ and after and through him to experience God.181 Bernard stresses, however, that although experience is necessary it is also misleading. In cases of contradiction between Faith, Scripture and experience, Faith and Scripture must be trusted.182 But even when Faith, Scripture and experience speak the same, man must not think he has initiated this marvellous occurrence, of reaching and learning from his experience, that brings him closer to God. Although man begins his movement into God by meditating on fragments of his own experience, Bernard tells us, this is not truly man who initiates and uses the experience. In his theology this is not man‘s movement to God, but the movement of God in him, that brings him to God.183 This notion of man‘s moving towards God, which is experienced by man as his initiative, but which is in fact done wholly by God, is more elaborately discussed in a treatise of Bernard, On Grace and Free Choice. 181 Kilian McDonnell, „Spirit and Experience in Bernard of Clairvaux‟, in Theological Studies, 58(1997), 3-13, p. 10. 182 Ibid., p. 14. 183 Ibid., p. 18. 91 The treatise On Grace and Free Choice was probably written about the year 1128 as an answer to the question of what part played by the decisions and actions in his salvation?184 Bernard begins his treatise, On Grace and Free Choice by presenting an active faculty of man in his effort to come to God: ‗God is the author of salvation and the free willing faculty is capable of receiving it.185 Only the freely chosen goodness is capable of receiving grace. Bernard speaks of three freedoms that were lost to man in the fall and they can be restored to him in salvation with an increase in intensity. Freedom from necessity, freedom from sin and freedom from sorrow will be twice as strong when they are restored.186 Freedom from necessity, which Bernard also calls freedom of choice, we all possess. It was not damaged by the fall. The other two freedoms, freedom from sin and from sorrow are given by God in heaven. Therefore we are able to will good but are unable to act upon our best intentions. Saving grace gives our will the ability of this achievement. As Bernard puts it, ‗we are God‘s by good will.‘187 Free choice is a necessary but not a sufficient condition for salvation: without the exercise of free choice we cannot be saved; by itself it is impotent and cannot achieve salvation. We can only achieve salvation if by grace God restores to us the freedom from sin and the freedom from suffering as well.188 184 Bernard of Clairvaux, Liber de gratia et libero arbitrio, ed. Jean Leclercq, Sancti Bernardi Opera, vol. 3, Rome, 1968, pp. 165-203; PL 182, cols. 1001-1030; Bernard of Claivaux, On Grace and Free Choice, trans. Daniel O‟Donovan OSCO, in The Works of Bernard of Claivaux, vol. 7, Cistercian Fathers Series, 19, Kalamazoo, 1997., pp. 3-111. 185 Bernard, De gratia et libero arbitrio, I.2, ed. Leclercq, p. 166, PL 182, col. 1002;On Grace and Free Choice, p. 54 186 Bernard, De gratia et libero arbitrio, III.7, ed. Leclercq, p. 171; PL 182, col. 1005; On Grace and Free Choice, p. 62. 187 Bernard, De gratia et libero arbitrio, VI.18, ed. Leclercq, p. 179; PL 182, col. 1011 ; On Grace and Free Choice, p. 73. 188 Vincent Brummer, „Calvin, Bernard and the Freedom of the Will‟, in Religious Studies, 30, (1994), 437-55, p. 442. 92 The concept of free choice or voluntary consent in the theology of Bernard is tightly connected to the free will and is described as the essence of the soul. ‗Voluntary consent is a self-determining habit of the soul.‘189 Bernard takes special care and dedicates a separate part of his thesis to the definition of the term ‗voluntary consent‘. After describing it as ‗a self-determining habit of the soul‘, he proceeds to a simpler explanation. The choice, he says, stems from the will and coerced by no other considerations but the desire of the will. Then he says: ‗where you have consent there is also is the will. But where the will is, there is freedom.‘190 The soul can therefore do the free willing if not the action that this willing entails. Bernard clearly states that the freedom of choice has not been damaged by the fall and it is the only true freedom left for us.191 However, later he states that man after the fall is incapable of actually doing good without grace.192 Therefore it is inherent in man that he lives in constant sin and suffering, the end of which is expected only after death. Bernard is not entirely averse to the concept of achieving the state of happiness and freeness from sin and suffering while still in this life. He says that a truly wise and powerful man is not merely able to will a thing from his free choice, but is able also, by the virtue of the remaining two freedoms, to do it.193 However Bernard feels that such a state is inaccessible to most people in this life. Only those caught up in the Spirit through excess of contemplation are able to 189 Bernard, De gratia et libero arbitrio, II.3, ed. Leclercq, p. 169; PL 182, col. 1003; On Grace and Free Choice, p. 77. 190 Bernard, De gratia et libero arbitrio, II.3, ed. Leclercq, p. 167, PL 182, col. 1003: „Non enim est consensus, nisi voluntarius. Ubi ergo consensus, ibi voluntas. Porro ubi voluntas, ibi libertas.‟ On Grace and Free Choice, p. 56. 191 Bernard, De gratia et libero arbitrio, VIII.24, ed. Leclercq, p. 183 ; PL 182, col. 1014 ; On Grace and Free Choice, p. 82. 192 Bernard, De gratia et libero arbitrio, VI.16, ed. Leclercq, p. 177 ; PL 182, col. 1010 ; On Grace and Free Choice, p. 72. 193 Bernard, De gratia et libero arbitrio, VI.20, ed. Leclercq, p. 181 ; PL 182, col. 1012 ; On Grace and Free Choice, p. 77. 93 savour something of the sweetness of the heavenly bliss, but only rarely and fleetingly.194 The way Bernard sees it, such an experience can be achieved by the means of accessing the two remaining freedoms, which were lost to all mankind in the fall. When trying to describe the happy state which this ‗wise and powerful‘ man will experience for just a short time he says: ‗He will then be incapable of willing what is evil and will also be perfectly content and nothing will be lacking to him.195 Similarities in the Mirror Marguerite Porete in her Mirror of Simple Souls enters the theological world of concepts Bernard has created but takes the reader in entirely different direction. Bernard claims in his theology that the free will is the only freedom that is left for man after the fall and that this freedom of choice is ‗a self-determining habit of the soul‘. He also claims that because we still possess our free will we can will good or evil. According to the direction of our will, the forces that give true movement to this will, take us. He allows that there are some extraordinary people that can be taken to this happiness while here in this life but only for short periods of time. Marguerite enters his theological world with all its rules and limitations but instead of only describing and accepting the miserable situation of man in this world, she proposes a solution. Her solution does not follow the direction that the theology of Bernard has prepared. It is original and daring and gives purpose where Bernard only offered a distant hope. Marguerite accepts that the free will is the only freedom man truly has and it is according to this will God dispenses grace and so gives the other freedoms. By doing so God embraces man and lets him into himself in salvation. 194 Bernard, De gratia et libero arbitrio, V.15, ed. Leclercq, p. 177 ; PL 182, 1010 ; On Grace and Free Choice, p. 71. 195 St. Bernard, De Gratia et Libero Arbitrio, 611, Caput VI, 20, f. 1012.„dum nec velle valeat quod malum sit, nec carere quod velit.‟ On Grace and Free Choice, p. 77. 94 Following this logic, Marguerite decided, for herself and for her followers, not to keep the free will and aim it time and again in the direction of God waiting with trepidation for the day when God will relieve the burden and collect this good free will into himself in salvation. She decided to relinquish this free will to Him immediately and without return, so that the will will not be able to waver and become bad will. It is not hers anymore and therefore only God‘s to will what He would. The movement of man and God in the direction of bringing the man into God is also treated by Marguerite according to the same understanding of the laws and boundaries articulated by Bernard, but in an original fashion. Bernard attributed to God alone the movement of man to Him in salvation. Even though he prescribed the free will of the man a certain part, it did not take anything from the role tha God has in this deed, which is everything. ‗God works these three things in us, namely thinking, willing and accomplishing the good.‘ 196 Therefore, Bernard, even in his most man empowering treatise, attributes to God the entire faculty of salvation. ‗He, therefore, accomplishes the salvation of those whose names are in the book of life, sometimes through the creature yet without it, sometimes through the creature but against it, and sometimes through the creature and with it.197 Man has the choice to will the good, but from this point God picks up all the tasks required for his salvation, replacing man in himself, sometimes even against his free will. Marguerite accepts the direction of the power of God as prescribed by Bernard. She, however, elaborates on its activity allowing man an active role. Marguerite claims that the faculty of Love is shared by man and God. When man chooses to live in his 196 St. Bernard, De Gratia et Libero Arbitrio, 621, Caput XIV, 46, f. 1026. On Grace and Free Choice, p. 105. 197 St. Bernard, De Gratia et Libero Arbitrio, 620, Caput XIII, 44, f. 1025. On Grace and Free Choice, p. 102. 95 loving capacity to the fullest, doing for Love everything and withholding nothing, Love alters from feeling of man to a power of God. In this capacity Love can pull man towards itself. This solution agrees with the theology of Bernard, who attributes the action of grace in the soul entirely to God. In Marguerite‘s theology Love, as God, pulls man into Himself. However in the theology of Bernard the performance of grace is depicted as a flow of divine power through a passive man. ‗The first he does without us, the second with us and the third through us. By suggesting the good thought he goes, one first step ahead of us; by also bringing about the change of our ill will, he joins it to himself by its consent; and by supplying consent with faculty and ability, the operator within makes his appearance outwardly through the external work that we perform.‘198 By supplying consent man allows God to act within him, but more importantly through him. The theology of Marguerite puts much more action into the hands of man than that of Bernard. Although he attributes to man the freeness of will, man is only free to decide within this will whether to choose good or evil. He cannot change anything by his will. He cannot even act on his will. He cannot even will completely on his own, because in essence God wills in him. All activity towards God is done by God alone. In the Mirror Marguerite attributes to the soul the crucial action that brings her completely into God. The will and the capability to decide to act upon this will are attributed completely to man (or soul) in the Mirror. And the soul wills and decides and accomplishes to hand over this will into God. ‗And thus the Soul removes herself from this will and [the will] gives and renders itself to God.‘199 198 St. Bernard, De Gratia et Libero Arbitrio, 621, Caput XIV, 46, f. 1026. On Grace and Free Choice, p. 105. 199 Porete, Speculum, ed. ? p. 327. 96 The end result in both treatises is death. However, in Bernard‘s case this is the natural death, which brings man to the happy state of freedom. In the case of Marguerite it is a mystical death which brings to man the same state of permanent joy. I agree with Amy Hollywood, who claims that Marguerite Porete experienced this stage as the third and final death after which the freedom of the soul was achieved. I believe that in this Marguerite acknowledged the concept of the will being ‗a self-determining habit of the soul‘. For her relinquishing the willing faculty of the soul meant exercising the free choice Bernard claimed we all had intact even after the fall. Loosing this faculty had therefore felt to Marguerite like loosing the last human essence and therefore experiencing the final death. The fact that this will was handed over to God meant that the freedom this soul experiences hence was in God. ‗When the spirit is perfectly dead, then he has lost the sense of his love and killed the will which gives life to [this sense], and in this loss the will is perfectly filled by the sufficiency of divine pleasure. And in such a death grows the supreme life, which is always unencumbered and glorious.‘200 For Marguerite, the state of the human soul after death is of total happiness and freedom: ‗Such a gift accomplishes this perfection in her and so transforms her into the nature of Love, who delights her with full peace and satisfies her with divine food.‘ 201 However, both Bernard and Marguerite greatly emphasize that such freedom does not interfere with what is considered good and virtuous behaviour. Both theologies emphasize the inability of the soul to do any harm ‗but such Nature is so well ordered through the transformation by unity of Love, to whom the will of this Soul is conjoined, that Nature demands nothing which is prohibited. Such a Soul has no anxiety 200 201 Porete, Speculum, ed. Verdeyen. p. 205. Porete, Speculum, ed. Verdeyen, p. 327. 97 about anything which she lacks…‘202 Bernard, too, when describing the state of man after his three freedoms are achieved says: ‗To the end that only fitting of permissible things may be found pleasing … and nothing of what is pleasing may any longer be found wanting‘.203 There is also nothing wanting to this soul, because everything is there within God. Advance of the Mirror Nothingness is another aspect of the relinquishment of the will after it has been transferred into God. And ‗now such a Soul is nothing, for she sees her nothingness by means of abundance of divine Understanding, which makes her nothing and places her in nothingness.‘204` Marguerite describes this nothingness of the soul in great detail. She wills her audience to understand this unique quality that the soul has reached after relinquishing the will. However just like the concept of ‗farnearness‘, a term Marguerite uses throughout the Mirror to explain the feeling of being at the same time very close and very far from God, the nothingness is both fullness and emptiness, in the Mirror.205 After the soul sheds her human essence and God resumes His being in her she is suddenly full. But this is not a fullness of a human being, filled with everyday worries, thoughts and feelings. It is a fullness of a vessel that has substance but it is not her substance. The substance God gives her gives the vessel a sense of being full and empty at the same time; full of God, and empty of her original substance of human being. ‗Thus this gift is given from the most High, into whom this creature is carried by the fertility of understanding… it is no longer her will which wills, but now the will of God wills in her…thus 202 Porete, Speculum, ed. Verdeyen, pp. 33,35. Bernard, De gratia et libero arbitrio, VI.19, ed. Leclercq, p. 180, PL 182, 1012; On Grace and Free Choice, p. 75. 204 Porete, Speculum, ed. Verdeyen, p. 327. 205 Bernard McGinn mentions the term Loingprés as the new name Marguerite has invented for the trinity. In McGinn, The Flowering of Mysticism, p. 256. 203 98 Love works in her without her…‘206 Marguerite claims that after the soul completes all the works within herself only God exists in her and does His work through her. Following this logic it is indeed irrelevant for the person who has completed the journey what is done to or with the vessel that has used to be him. In this sense the idea of passivity in Marguerite‘s theology seem credible. However, it is difficult to comprehend the happiness that Marguerite confesses to, since she has nothing to feel the happiness with. The story Marguerite tells in her Mirror begins where the story of Bernard ends. He begins with the description of man in this world. He depicts his state of suffering and explains it is detail. He then explores the origins of our suffering and concludes with a promise of this suffering ending after natural death in salvation. Shortly after leading man into salvation Bernard concludes his treatise. By contrast, Marguerite begins with a thorough examination and depiction of the soul after it has relinquished its will. She examines the state and condition of the soul and her attitude toward the outside world, both earthly and celestial. She dedicates most of her book to this analysis, coming to give directions to the followers and considerations to those who are on the way but distressed only towards the end. Her Mirror keeps with the structure and the direction of the Itinerarium, even if it is more caring and leading as opposed to the instructional direction of the Franciscan. She shares with the readers her concerns and feelings and gives encouragement as well as instruction. Bonaventure‘s Itinerarium, except for the introduction and conclusion, only gives instruction without any consideration as to the mental and emotional state of the friar following his instructions. Marguerite also adopts from St Bernard the prescribed direction of man to God and the power that lifts him, but elaborates on this theme and gives man a more active 206 Porete, Speculum, ed. Verdeyen, p. 27. 99 role and a more immediate outcome of his efforts. The Mirror, therefore, is written as an elaboration on the themes first introduced by the most orthodox of the Cistercian and Franciscan movements. It stands firmly within their rules and limitations but with enough development to attract an otherwise reluctant audience. The one thing none of the treatises offered was immediate hope. Both the Franciscan and the Cistercian treatises were written to encourage the friars and the monks to preserve their virtuous lives in face of the difficulties. Bonaventure started writing his motivational treatises when realizing the dire straits of the brethren he encountered on his travels. He tried to offer them a glimpse into what awaited them after death. Bernard of Clairvaux, too, attempted to revive in monks the will to suffer the hardships and try to do good, by offering them an explanation of the values of their behaviour for their salvation. In both cases the audience was requested to keep up good deeds and wait until the natural death will come and with it the possibility of salvation. The treatise of Marguerite offered action. She, too, claimed that only God was the author of salvation, but she gave the human person an active role in his or her destiny. The active initiative offered the follower to expedite and assure his or her salvation. Marguerite‘s theology combines the wish to appease the suffering of the soul in its isolation from God. This need is an emotional one. The person feels dissatisfied with his/her situation in life and frustrated with being attached to the terrestrial instead of celestial. This is not a theoretical state many speculative theologies treat. This is not an understanding of the human condition; this is a feeling of anguish. Therefore the state before the journey can be described as feelings, the heart, something shared by women mystics and described in their accounts. However, the ultimate 100 fusion is not of the mind, of understanding, but of the soul back to its creator; movement beyond human understanding. The fact that Marguerite, as Kocher contended, used disembodied, genderless soul, to describe such process, supports the notion that it is neither man nor woman, neither affection nor reason that remains, but something ineffable: a theosis, available to all souls. 101 Chapter four - A mirror of Queenship: The Speculum dominarum and the demands of justice At the same time as Marguerite Porete was evolving the ideas that matured in the Mirror of Simple Souls, a very different kind of treatise was being prepared, addressed not to the ‗simple soul‘, but to the Queen. Based on the literary genre of ‗Mirrors of Princes‘ about how a ruler should behave, a genre known as the ‗Mirrors of Princes‘. The Speculum dominarum, was written in Latin sometime during the reign of Jeanne of Navarre (1285 - 1305), wife of Philip the Fair (1285 – 1314), as such a manual by her Franciscan confessor, Durand of Champagne but for noble women, rather than for princes.207 It was subsequently translated into French as the Miroir des dames or Mirror of Ladies. This mirror is aimed at a different audience and has a different purpose to the Mirror of Simple Souls. Instead of fulfilment through emptiness it encourages participation and influence in the world. Alongside the traditional reflection on spurning the world and moral instruction for the queen one third of it is structured in a similar manner to the mirrors of princes, such as those written by Thomas Aquinas, Giles of Rome and others. Thematically and structurally the Speculum dominarum deals with the various ways of administration of justice to the people. It demonstrates how Franciscan influence had evolved in the royal court from offering literature of spiritual edification to outright political instruction of the queen. The Speculum dominarum combines moral and spiritual instruction with passages which teach the right way to govern a country and 207 Anne Dubrulle, ed., „Le Speculum Dominarum de Durand de Champagne’, 2 vols., Thèse prèsentee pour l‟obtention du diplome d‟archiviste-paleographe, 1987-1988. 102 the queen‘s place in it. It is structured in this manner, I would argue, because it is aimed at rearranging the place of the Franciscans in the French court; not at teaching the queen how to withdraw from the world and only advance her spiritual development. It teaches the queen that her place is to govern side by side with her husband; in effect it teaches her how to become a judge and to administer justice. By promoting the role of the Queen within the royal court, the Franciscans were aiming to increase their own participation and influence therein. Soon after the Speculum dominarum was written it was adapted by an unknown author for the instruction of a prince and named Liber de informatione principum, which was then translated by John Golein into French.208 The Speculum dominarum itself was translated into French either by Durand de Champagne or by another Franciscan, who did not leave his name. The French version was named Le Miroir des Dames.209 French princesses of the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries continued to possess copies of the vernacular version of Durand‘s treatise, of which ten copies have been preserved.210 The treatise of Durand was fairly widely disseminated in the royal and princely circles of fourteenth and fifteenth century France, but its influence did not extend beyond the confines of this milieu.211 In 1528, the Speculum dominarum was translated afresh for Margaret of Navarre, by Ysambert of St-Léger, a priest patronized by the court. However, unable to adjust his treatise to the changing values of the renaissance queen, Ysambert left his revision incomplete.212 208 Catherine Louise Mastny, Durand of Champagne and the ‘Mirror of the Queen’: a Study in Medieval Didactic Literature, Columbia University, Ph.D., 1969,p. 119. 209 Mastny, Durand of Champagne, p. 123. 210 Mastny, Durand of Champagne, p. 131. 211 Mastny, Durand of Champagne, p. 134. 212 Ysambert. de Saint-Léger, Le miroir des dames, C. Marazza éd., Milella-Lecce, 1978. and Élodie Lequain, La maison de Bourbon, „escolle de vertu et de perfection‟ Anne de France, Suzanne de Bourbon et Pierre Martin, Médiévales, 48, (2005) 39-54. 103 Only two theses have been dedicated to the Speculum dominarum. One was written as a Ph.D. dissertation by Catherine Louise Mastny in Columbia University in 1969. She dated the Speculum as written between 1285 and 1305 and firmly placed it as a manual written by Durand of Champagne to Jeanne of Navarre. The other was a critical edition of its Latin text within a thesis for the diploma of archivist – palaeographer by Anne Dubrulle in 1987-8. Dubrulle retraced its origins from earlier theological thought, in particular arguing that it was dependent on the Speculum Morale that circulated as part of the Speculum maius of Vincent of Beauvais, but in fact not written until the late thirteenth century.213 She reports the dubious authorship of the Speculum Morale, but continues to address the work as by Vincent of Beauvais in her ensuing discussion.214 When the Speculum dominarum was being written, the king and queen were very much divided in their support for mendicant orders. Philip the Fair preferred to surround himself with the Dominicans, as shown by his choice of confessors, Nicolas of Fréauville and Guillaume de Paris. His confessor before he became king, Lorens of Orléans, compiled Somme le Roi, an important treatise of moral edification for his father, Philip III, and kept in the royal library. It is a very personal spiritual manual, aimed more at perfecting oneself than discussing the right way to rule a country.215 Its beautiful imagery of trees being watered by divine founts was adopted by many artists.216 Due to the great influence of Lorens of Orléans on the young king, the heart of his father was transferred and buried 213 Anne Dubrulle, These, p. 83. Mastny, Introduction to Durand of Champagne , p. 84. 215 W. Nelson Francis, The Book of Vices and Virtues, A Fourteenth Century English Translation of the Somme Le Roi, of Lorens d’Orléans, London, New York, Toronto, 1942, 1968. 216 Ellen Kosmer, „Gardens of Virtue in the Middle Ages‟ in Journal of the Warburg and Courtauld Istitutes, 41, (1978), 302-7, p. 305. 214 104 at Saint Jacques, a Dominican monastery. Moreover, the king‘s commissioning of literary works and his gradual policy shift in favour of the Inquisition demonstrates an increasing support for the aims of the order. Philip‘s artistic patronage suggests an extensive Dominican influence in Paris in the generations following Aquinas.217 By the end of the century Philip put the Beguinage of Paris, which was an independent female religious institution established by his saintly grandfather, under Dominican influence. He also established the Dominican female house in Poissy as a memorial for his grandfather, when Louis IX was sainted. Jeanne‘s support for the aims of the Franciscan order is reflected in statements attributed to Bernard Délicieux, Franciscan lector of Narbonne and Carcassonne. Bernard had access to the queen through her confessor Durand de Champagne. He saw in Jeanne of Navarre a strong protector who could influence the king‘s policy. He referred to her as ‗Queen Esther who interceded for her people‘. Bernard visited Paris each year from 1301 to 1304, on behalf of the citizens of Albi and Carcassonne, in hopes that Jeanne could influence the royal policy against the excesses of the Dominican-led inquisition in the Languedoc. The citizens of the region reportedly saw the queen as their ―anchor‖.218 This image of the queen Jeanne of Navarre as Queen Esther is extensively used by Durand de 217 Dorothy Gillerman, Enguerran de Marigny, Pennsylvania, 1994, p. 13. Constant J Mews, „The The Speculum dominarum (Miroir des dames) and Transformations of the Literature of Instruction for Women in the Early Fourteenth Century‟, in ed. Karen Green and Constant J. Mews, Virtue Ethics for Women, 1250-1550, to be published by Springer, p. 33. referring to Processus Bernardi Delitiosi: The Trial of Fr. Bernard Délicieux, 2September-8December 1319, ed. Alan Friedlander, Philadelphia, 1996, 264r, 265r, p276, „Item dixit quod ipse audivit dictum fratrem Bernardum praedicantem publice apud Castras et Albiam et Corduam quando dominus rex Franciae debuit venire ad terram istam et post publicationem appellationis et quarumdam literarum vicedomini quae dirigebantur consulatibus huius terrae, dicentem in dictis sermonibus inter caetera, prout recordatur, quod dominus rex veniebat ad terram istam ad instigatum et preces dominae reginae, quae tanquam regina Hester intercesserat pro populo huius terrae, et , quod dictus dominus rex palparet veritatem negotii inquisitionis et quod de ipso negotio taliter ordinaret vel faceret ordinari quod negotium ipsum non male nec per corruptiones procederetur, ita quod neminem oporteret dubitari ulterius sine culpa. Et ista audivit, ut supra deposuit, sub anno Domini millesimo trecentesimo secundo vel tertio, de diebus tamen et de horis dixit se non recordari. Tenor vero literarum de quibus superius facta est mentio inferius est insertus. 218 105 Champagne in his Speculum dominarum.219 The image of a simple Jewish girl who influenced the Persian king to change his policy was a familiar one. This image enabled praise for a woman who promoted political interests without stepping out of the conventional female role. Such indirect influence, which aimed to move by persuasion, was praised, as opposed to negative descriptions of women who acted in their own right to bring change.220 Mentioning Esther is one of the ways Durand signals to the reader that this treatise will not step outside of the conventional concepts of women‘s conduct. Within this conventional framework, however, Durand will make some extraordinary advances. The Speculum dominarum is generally assumed to have been written as a manual for the queen‘s personal edification towards her salvation. Durand begins his treatise with a scriptural foundation for the articulate argument to follow. Sapiens mulier edificat domum suam (Prov. 14, 1) ‗A wise woman builds her home‘.221 Durand describes four houses where the queen reigns. In her ‗exterior house‘ the queen receives the world in surroundings which splendour and rich furnishings mirror her worldly position. The queen‘s ‗interior house‘ is her conscience, which she is urged to ‗decorate‘ with the same care as her palace. Her ‗inferior house‘ is the resting place of the damned, that is, hell, and her ‗superior house‘ is heaven. It has been argued that house imagery in Durand, like tree imagery in the work of Lull, is more than a convenient metaphor. The houses function as a system for organizing aspects of queenship, which are conceived as an ascending hierarchy. As in 219 For example Sd, I, 1,2, Dubrulle, p. 69: „Hoc decore fulgebat regina venerabilis Hester, cultum muliebrem contempnens, omne signum superbie et ornatum qui super caput ejus erat in die ostensionis ejus ad populum, quasi pannum menstruate, abhominans; de qua dicitur /Esth 2,15/: Erat Hester decora valde, et incredibili pulchritudine, omnium oculis graciosa et amabilis videbatur.‟ 220 Anke Passenier, „„Women on the loose‟: stereotypes of women in the story of the medieval beguines‟, in ed., Ria Kloppenborg, Wouter J. Hanegraaff, Female Stereotypes in Religious Traditions, Leiden, 1995, p. 88. 221 Sd, I, 1,1, Dubrulle, p. 4. 106 the work of Lull, there is an idea that human beings reach spiritual things through experiential things. Thus, the first two houses lead from the world of the senses to the inner world of morality, and the second two houses exist beyond earthly experience.222 The house imagery for female edification in virtuous behaviour is a traditional one. The praise of a modest and humble behaviour of a woman, ensconced in a house, hidden from the world is a well known paradigm that many medieval writers used when discussing women. Gilbert of Tournai addressing Isabelle of France half a century earlier similarly used the verse: ‗all the glory of the daughter of the king is within in golden fringes, clothed around with variety.‘ 223 Whether specifically talking about virginity or about humble modest female behaviour in general, the metaphors tend to be of an enclosed space where the woman quietly dwells. In the Speculum dominarum the queen is urged to decorate her home, which can be understood as her soul, or her physical home. Even if it is implied that the queen‘s home is her country, the author speaks in terms of home imagery. In contrast edifying sermons addressed to men usually use images of trees and open space as opposed to enclosure. Durand uses familiar and accepted terminology; however this is not a normal woman he is talking about. This woman is a queen of France and her house is a very public place, a court and ultimately the entire country. Therefore she is still in her rightful place, her home, when she enacts her life purpose. The home Durand speaks about is therefore twofold. Strengthening her inner house will prepare her character to become the object of admiration, not as a 222 Dorothy Gillerman, Enguerran de Marigny, p. 15. Gilbert of Tournai, 286r-rb, l. 18-9, Sean Field, „Gilbert of Tournai‟s Letter to Isabelle of France: an Edition of the Complete Text‟, Mediaeval Studies, 65,2003, pp. 57-97, p. 80. „omnis gloria eius filie regis ab intus in fimbriis aureis circumamicta varietatibus‟. 223 107 shallow self indulgent and spoilt woman, but as a virtuous, moral and loving queen. As such she will both become an example the people of the kingdom can strive for, and as such also wield authority people will respect. As long as he places her within the accepted paradigm of female behaviour, as a woman who only cares for her home, and only strengthens herself so that she can build her home, her active dominance in the country can be accepted as proper. These demands for perfection of the character of the leader resemble very much the demands from the king. Just as the king who needs to be an outstanding human being in order to be the monarch people will adore and respect, the queen should perfect her character, in the accepted female shere of managing her house. Before Durand‘s treatise the only demands from the queen were good political connections and children. In this treatise greater expectations are placed on the queen. She needs to pursue personal development and improvement in order to assist in strengthening her kingdom as an aide to her husband‘s rule. In this respect strengthening her inner house, her soul, will provide her with the right standing to strengthen her external house, her kingdom. From the moral point of view strengthening her kingdom, her exterior house, by aiding her husband the king to fight injustice and rule his kingdom better, will strengthen her interior house, help her avoid her inferior house, and achieve a smooth ascent to her superior house after her death. Durand‘s innovation lies within the traditional frame: the purpose of woman‘s life is to strengthen her home. When it is a noble woman‘s home it becomes public sphere. Going one step further from his predecessors, he argues for legitimacy of public action to achieve a traditionally acceptable woman‘s duty. 108 After presenting his theme, he explains how this theme should be treated. First, he says, her nature as a woman should be explored, then her acquired wisdom and lastly her practice of that wisdom for the building of her home.224 Durand begins by stressing the basic unworthiness and misery of man and especially woman.225 He then continues with the need for the queen to acquire knowledge and to become a sapiens mulier, or wise woman, meaning intuitive wisdom rather than knowledge acquired by learning.226 A detailed discussion follows of how the theological and cardinal virtues should be practiced, emotions controlled, good habits formed and bad habits eliminated.227 All these preparations should transfer the queen from a mere woman into an exemplum populi, or a reflection of an ideal image to the people in the kingdom.228 As such the queen was supposed to participate in her husband‘s rule aiding him in locating injustices and in pleading with him to amend them.229 The King’s justice When thinking about the place of Jeanne of Navarre in the French monarchy it is important to keep in mind that the image of his state and himself as king was a subject of great concern for Philip the Fair. From the start he was actively constructing this image. His propaganda engaged many thinkers and used Aristotle to bolster the image of the French monarchy.230 Renna has usefully pointed out that although the royal advisors were attracted to Aristotelian ideas of the common good and ‗best man‘, unlike later in history, in France between 1260 and 1320, when Politics was first known, it 224 Sd, I, 1,1, Dubrulle, p. 4. Mastny, Durand of Champagne, p. 95. 226 Mastny, Durand of Champagne, p. 97. 227 Mastny, Durand of Champagne, p. 99. 228 Mastny, Durand of Champagne, p. 104. 229 Mastny, Durand of Champagne, p. 114. 230 Thomas Renna, „Aristotle and the French Monarchy, 1260-1303‟, in Viator, 9 (1978), 309- 324, p. 309. . 225 109 was used to justify a monarchical government.231 The most evident use of Philip‘s new image was an attack on the Pope Boniface VIII, which Philip based on the propaganda he had had developed for himself as being the ‗most Christian‘ king and France being the ‗most Christian‘ kingdom.232 The masters in the Parisian Faculties of philosophy and theology presented their ideas on the right kind of kingship in the form of questiones on the Politics of Aristotle. They concluded that it was best for the common good to be ruled by a king of exceptional virtue. However, they believed such person does not exist. Therefore in practice they saw the best laws as a better alternative to the best king.233 By the 1290s the ideas of Aristotle‘s Politics as interpreted by Thomas Aquinas were becoming a key influence on political theory. He claimed that monarchy is the best form of government because it contained the most unity. Since monarchy is ‗natural‘, it is inherently good, irrespective of ecclesiastical sanction. The prince, Aquinas also said, leads his subjects to virtue both directly (by his laws) and indirectly (by his justice). In times of emergency the prince can dispense with the letter of the law and rule uninhibited for the common good. The king is morally obliged to obey the law, but no one has the right to compel him to do so.234 He trusted the king to be of exceptional virtue and therefore in his ruling to supplement the imperfect laws.235 231 Renna, „Aristotle and the French Monarchy‟ p. 324. William J. Courtenay, „Between Pope and King: The Parisian Letters of Adhesion of 1303‟, Speculum, 71/3, (1996), 577-605, , p. 604. 233 Renna, „Aristotle and the French Monarchy‟, p. 318. 234 Renna, „Aristotle and the French Monarchy‟ p. 312. 235 Renna, „Aristotle and the French Monarchy‟, p. 312. 232 110 Aquinas begins his discussion on kingship by considering the best form of rule for the people of the land. He states that the best way to create a human society is to copy nature. ‗whatever is in accord with nature is best, for in all things nature does what is best…among the bees there is one king bee and in the whole universe there is One God, Maker and Ruler of all things…every multitude is derived from unity.236 Durand echoes Aquinas‘s concern by stating that just as in nature animate overcomes inanimate so is the king is above the laws. Citing King Solomon, Thomas Aquinas says ‗. ‗a government becomes unjust by the fact that the ruler, paying no heed to the common good, seeks his own private good.‘237 Durand treats the distinction between a just king and a tyrant by citing Augustine who says that when justice is removed the kingdoms are just bands of robbers.238 Without applying justice kings are just thieves, or pirates but on a grander level than their criminal counterparts.239 Even thieves, Durand says, apparently have their own juridical system, without which even they cannot function. Therefore he concludes, nothing can exist, neither cities, nor countries or kingdoms without justice.240 On the question of how to assure that the kingdom does not fall into the hands of a tyrant, Aquinas answers, by proper education of a future king. He does not believe in restricting the power of the king. Therefore he says it is necessary that the man who is raised up to king should be of such condition that it is improbable that he should become a tyrant.241 If however he does become tyrannical, the people should not do anything to end his rulership; they should see it as their punishment for their evil ways.242 Durand says that the king must 236 St. Thomas Aquinas, On Kingship, to the King of Cyprus, Gerald B. Phelan trans., Toronto, 1982, first published 1949, chapter 2, 19, p. 12. 237 St. Thomas Aquinas, On Kingship , chapter 3, 24, p. 14. 238 Sd, I, 4, 22, Dubrulle, p. 281. 239 Sd, I, 4, 22, Dubrulle, p. 282. 240 Sd, I, 4, 22, Dubrulle, p. 282. 241 St. Thomas Aquinas, On Kingship, chapter 6, 42, p. 24. 242 St. Thomas Aquinas, On Kingship, chapter 6, 50, p. 28. 111 study to serve justice supremely because his injustice opens the way to all bad things, that will take away from him his royal majesty.243 And Aquinas, ‗…not a few rulers exercise tyranny under the cloak of royal dignity‘.244 To better illustrate the difference between good kingship that is concerned with the benefit of the people and tyranny that is illegitimate and only interested in robbery, Durand relates the example of the emperor Alexander that Augustine used to illustrate kingship without justice. The emperor Alexander came across a pirate on his journey. He asked him why he infects the sea with piracy, that is why he exercises robbery in the sea. The pirate replied: while I infest the sea, you infest the land. Because I do it from a small boat I am called a pirate; you do the same on a grander scale, therefore you are called emperor.245 Another big influence on Philip the Fair was the Augustinian Giles of Rome (1243–1316), who had been a student of Thomas Aquinas. Giles of Rome wrote a manual on correct rulership De Regimine Principum for the young Philip the Fair.246 Philip‘s posture as king embodied many of the ideal traits Giles described. Giles‘s admonition that a king should avoid familiarity with his subjects is particularly striking in light of Philip the Fair‘s stony and reserved attitude, which so impressed his contemporaries.247 Philip‘s satisfaction with the book Giles produced is shown by the French translation he commissioned soon after the original version was completed, as well as by the favours he bestowed on Giles in later years. 243 Sd, I, 4, 22, Dubrulle, p. 280, „Summe ergo debet rex studere servare justiciam, quia injusticia ejus dat occasionem et aperit viam obnibus malis in regno et aufert ab eo ragiam majestatem‟. 244 St. Thomas Aquinas, On Kingship, chapter 4, 30, p. 19. 245 Sd, I, 4, 22, Dubrulle, pp. 281-2. 246 D. Aegidii Romani, Archiepiscopi Bitvricensis, Ordinis Fratrum Eremitarum Sancti Augustini, De regimine principum libri III, Ad Francorum Regem Philip Pvm IIII, Cognomento Pulcrum, Romai, Apud Antonium Bladum Pont, Max. Excusorem, MDLVI. 247 Elizabeth A. R. Brown, „The Prince is Father of the King: The Character and Childhood of Philip the Fair of France‟, in Mediaeval Studies, 49, ( 1987), 282-334 , p. 330. 112 According to Giles, the ideal prince should be a person of aloofness, magnificence, liberality, and power, who dedicated himself to the people‘s common welfare and fought just wars in their defence, who inventoried and harboured the resources of his kingdom and restrained himself from greed and rapine.248 The De Regimine Principum demonstrates an extraordinary command of Giles of Rome of the classical sources, especially Aristotle‘s Politics, Ethics, and Rhetoric. Giles cites the Politics by name approximately 230 times, the Ethics 185 times, the Rhetoric 88 times and the De Re Militari of Vegetius 23 times. De Regimine’s studious avoidance of Scripture or patristic writing is unique among medieval mirrors.249 The narrative of De Regimine is patterned on the discourse of the schools; every subject is treated in the same disciplined, methodical, and closely reasoned manner that Giles as well as the universityeducated readers of the De Regimine would have expected in a university lecture or textbook.250 For Giles of Rome the perfect kingship is the rule of one man of exceptional virtue for the sake of the common good. A virtuous king was needed to correct defects in the law and to apply the law in concrete cases. The law is imperfect and too abstract; the king must have the authority to apply it to particular cases. The way to assure the virtue of the king was proper education of the young princes that will fix their gaze on the ideal of the common good.251 In other words in order to exercise perfect rulership the king should become an exemplary character or an exemplum populi. It is interesting therefore that Durand picks up this precise indication for the perfection of the queens‘ character. 248 D. Aegidii Romani, De regimine principum libri III, 1.1:12, 4:3, 3.2:9. Charles F. Briggs, Giles of Rome’s De Regimine Principum, Reading and Writing Politics at Court and University, c. 1275 – 1525, Cambridge, 1999, p. 11. 250 Charles F. Briggs, Giles of Rome’s De Regimine Principum, p. 12. 251 Renna, „Aristotle and the French Monarchy‟, p. 313. 249 113 Both are required to become perfected in their virtue in order to exercise justice to the greatest extent possible. A more practical publicist of Philip the Fair was John of Paris, a Dominican theologian, who summoned Aristotelian concepts of monarchy to serve in the deposition of Boniface VIII.252 John‘s De Potestate was the most formidable tract from the royalist side during the controversy. John is less concerned with what the king is than with what the king does. He takes the king‘s virtue for granted. John sanctifies the royal family more than any given king. Since God has blessed the Capetian dynasty, there is no need to justify the holiness of one of its members, Philip the Fair. John defines kingship in terms of how best to depose a useless pope. He argues that royal rule is the best kind of rule because it is the most effective in purging evil from the church. The king, who is normally bound by customary law, is temporarily released from the restraints of positive law in order to rectify the immediate disorder in either the realm or the church. He defends himself and his people from the unlawful intervention of a bad pope.253 Although the book of Giles of Rome De Regimine Principum, (c. 1280), was one of the most influential texts of scholastic political thought, it was not likely to be the only one the king knew about considering his connection with the Dominicans and the Parisian masters on the issues of his grandfather's commemoration and his dealings with Boniface VIII. 254 When Durand was writing his argument on the right rulership of the king he was addressing the 252 Renna, „Aristotle and the French Monarchy‟, p. 319. Renna, „Aristotle and the French Monarchy‟, p. 320. 254 Arthur Stephen McGrade, John Kilcullen and Matthew Kempshall, introduction to Giles of Rome, On the Rule of Princes (Selections), trans., and ed., Arthur Stephen McGrade, John Kilcullen and Matthew Kempshall, Cambridge, 2001, pp. 200-1. 253 114 whole discussion and not only the argument articulated in De Regimine Principum. Durand de Champagne dedicates a formidable part of his treatise to a discussion about justice. After describing the qualities the queen should posses and ways of acquiring them he provides a very detailed discussion about justice and its application by the king. In her unpublished edition of the Latin text, Anne Dubrulle argued that a large part of the Speculum dominarum was drawn from the Speculum Morale, which circulated as part of the Speculum Maius of Vincent of Beauvais, but was in fact not written until the late thirteenth century, by a Franciscan author.255 She did not explore in her edition how the discussion about justice in Durand‘s Speculum was inspired by the Speculum Morale. Indeed Durand did not copy this part; he took basic Aristotelian ideas and supplemented them with other authorities. Dubrulle did not consider differences in their treatment of the subject of justice. I would argue that describing justice Durand deliberately chose to include the subjects of justice discussed by his counterparts. Including them in his treatise was his way of nudging the queen in the direction of taking a more substantial role in the government and in doing so bringing her great supporters, the Franciscans to greater influence and closer to the power base of the kingdom. Addressing the subject of justice from all its conventions and articles of argument taking place at that time in Paris, the Franciscan aimed at convincing the king that there was a lacuna in the administration of justice by him that could be filled by his spouse. I shall present his discussion as compared to newly discovered Aristotelian notion that was widely applied by 255 Dubrulle, Le Speculum Dominarum, p. 83, the franciscan origins of Speculum Morale were presented by Tomas Zahora in his paper „Uncovering Franciscan Voices of the Speculum Morale‟ given at ANZAMEMES 2011. also Constant J. Mews, Tomas Zahora, Dmitri Nikulin and David Squire, „The Speculum morale (c.1300) and the study of textual transformations: a research project in progress‟, VIncent of Beauvais Newsletter 35 (2010), 5-15. 115 theologians at the time, as well as contemporary scholastics‘ dealings with the subject. Durand begins by describing what justice is: ‗virtue and nobility of the mind that gives each person what his due. ... And ‗amongst all virtues this is the most fitting virtue of the king, for other virtues perfect man in himself …justice perfects man for others‘.256 Aristotle not only says that justice is the greatest of virtues but that it is a sign of a great man. ‗And therefore justice is often thought to be the greatest of virtues… it is complete because he who possesses it can exercise his virtue not only in himself but towards his neighbour also.‘ He quotes Bias, ‗rule will show the man‘.257 ‗Further‘, Durand says, ‗according to the Philosopher justice is to be seen as the brightest of the virtues, neither Venus nor Lucifer is as admirable as it. The philosopher wanted to say the beauty of stars is less admired than the beauty of justice‘, explains Durand. And indeed Aristotle says: ‗and therefore justice is often thought to be the greatest of virtues, and ‗neither evening nor morning star is so wonderful‘.258 Following Aristotle, the Speculum Morale divides justice into two kinds, commutative and distributive. Commutative justice deals with all the things between people mutually. When it is a matter between a commune and a person it is a distributive justice.259 The Speculum Morale then proceeds to describe in detail how both kinds of justice should be administered. Durand considers what it means to restore the equality, and not only to restore what was stolen, but to do it to the satisfaction of the injured party, and to the 256 Sd I, 4, Dubrulle, p. 279, „Justicia secundum philosophos et sanctos est virtus et nobilitas mentis reddens unicuique quod suum est. Inter omnes virtutes hec potissime decet regem. Nam alie virtutes perficiunt hominem in se tantum – sicut patet autem de prudencia, temperancia, fortitudine et sic de aliis – justicia perficit hominem in ordine ad alios, sicut infra patebit.‟ 257 Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, in The Basic Works of Aristotle, Richard McKeon, ed,, Bk. V, Ch. 1, 1130a, p. 1004. 258 Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, Bk. V, Ch. 1, 1129a, p. 1003. 259 Speculum Morale, Lib. I, Pars III, Distincio LI, p. 332. 116 satisfaction of the state. He even discusses how to restore a good reputation, if this is what was harmed. It is a very special individual who can give justice, the Speculum Morale says. As the justice consists of different acts, the individual who successfully performs them is a diverse person.260 The subject of justice closes with the discussion whether the justice aides should be paid for their efforts. The Speculum Morale establishes that they are ‗personae communes‘ and as such should be paid.261 Throughout the treatment of the subject of justice the Speculum Morale does not mention kingship or queenship or any specific figure for the delivery of justice. The Speculum Morale uses the term persona communis to describe a person who applies the law and enacts justice. Durand uses this term but only to describe a king whose personality is worthy of the term. ‗Since the king is not a regular person, but a king, when he has dignity and excellence he is persona communis, a public person‘. In his general persona he is ordained to the rule of the whole kingdom, especially to hold justice through which he reins and through which he orders his underlings to minister.262 In this respect Durand‘s king corresponds with the justice aide, mentioned in the Speculum morale as a persona communis deserving payment. Durand expounds on this theme saying that the king embodies the law and becomes the law itself. 263 Aristotle puts the term judge instead of the king, but the meaning is very similar: ‗… the judge tries to equalize things by means of the penalty, taking away from the gain of the assailant. … this is why when people dispute, they take refuge in the judge; and to go to the judge is to go to justice; 260 Speculum Morale, Lib. I, Pars III, Distincio LIII, p. 341. Speculum Morale, Lib. I, Pars III, Distincio LVIII, p. 352. 262 Sd I, 4, 22, Dubrulle p. 279. 263 Sd I, 4, 22, Dubrulle, p. 279. 261 117 for the nature of the judge is to be a sort of animate justice…‘.264 Establishing and enforcing the rules is the king‘s main function. Durand‘s division of the kinds of justice is a little different from the Speculum morale but he treats the same activities that are also described in Aristotle. ‗It is known‘, Durand says, ‗that justice is: commutative – which consists of making agreements; vindicative – which consists of punishing criminals; distributive – which consists of bestowing offices; retributive – which consists of paying back rewards (salary).‘265 Commutative justice takes the same meaning in Durand‘s Speculum as it does in the Speculum Morale. The vindicative, distributive and retributive justices all deal with justice administered by the state to a person, in Durand‘s case from king to subject. The Speculum morale includes all these functions under the heading of distributive justice, but the essence is the same. The king needs to make sure that all the criminals are punished, all the goods returned and all the goods distributed appropriately, if not equally. Aristotle divides justices into distributive and rectifying. The distributive is according to merit. The rectifying justice is to equalize things by means of the penalty, ‗taking away from the gain of the assailant.‘266 This definition includes Durand‘s division into vindicative and retributive justice. Although Aristotle concludes his discussion about justice with the conclusion that it should not be a man who administers justice, it is not surprising that both the Speculum Morale and Durand ignored this conclusion, as did all the French Aristotelians of the time. After demonstrating his relationship to the great thinkers of the time, Durand lays out his distinctions using Ambrose as his authority this time. ‗Ambrose said that the first part of justice is in 264 Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, Bk. V, Ch. 4, 1132a, p. 1008-9. Sd I, 4, 26, Dubrulle, p. 288. 266 Aristotle, Nicomachean Ethics, Bk. V, Ch. 4, 1132a, p. 1008. 265 118 God, second is in himself, third in the fatherland, forth in parents, then in all the others.‘267 Consistent with the tradition he develops only three of these. The first part is divided into three. First part speaks about fear of God that should induce us to do justice, second is to choose to do goodness because God had chosen us the unworthy, unjust and ungrateful and gave us his blood for the salvation of our souls. The third is making one‘s subjects obey the Divine law.268 Under justice for the fatherland Durand discusses the commutative, vindictive, distributive and the retributive justice. Everyone participating in this discussion of right kingship debated the ways to administer justice to assure the common good. Some thought that the personality of the king was important others assumed the worse and stressed the importance of the laws. They all implied that there are two main sources of control: the will of the monarch and his laws. They each suggested different measures of the sources in the mix of the royal power over the people. There was never a question of whether both were needed or whether they might not be enough. Durand de Champagne adds his own, original outlook on the subject. Durand states that even when the man is perfect and the laws are perfect the common good is not assured. He argues that even when the king is perfect in virtue and does his best to rule in the best interests of his people, his government cannot cover all the land and all the people. He also thinks that laws cannot by themselves cover the entire kingdom and need to be applied by a strong and virtuous ruler. For Durand, however, there is no equilibrium to be gained from only the sum of king and laws. Sometimes these lacunae are so big that people‘s lives might be at risk. To illustrate 267 Sd I, 4, 22, Dubrulle, p. 283, „Ambrosius autem dicit quod prima pars justicie est in Deum secunda in seipsum, tercia in patriam, quarta in parentes, deinde in omnes.‟ 268 Sd I. 4, 23 Dubrulle, pp. 284-5. 119 his point Durand brings an example of an invalid widow who chased a noble man all her life. He owed her six pennies for her work but she died before she could reach him. When he himself was dying, punished by the saints Anthony and Gregory, he saw her in his mind‘s eye chasing his servants to no avail and felt her despair when she had no reply for her fervent prays and cries. With this example Durand pinpoints the inadequacy of the combination of good laws and a good man, who felt very bad about his inability to care for everybody in his domain. And to stress the point further he depicts in great detail the scene where the creditors unwilling to be pacified with any other offering drag the woman with them. Durand concludes with a pointed criticism. All this, he says, is done according to justice and reason.269 This is the crux of Durand‘s argument. In this example everyone is doing everything right, but no one is happy. To avoid such suffering of the innocents he suggests the queen as a supplement to the king‘s reign. When the power of the king does not reach everyone then the queen should step in and bolster the strength of the government. The Queenship When considering the exalted position of the queen, Durand is aware of the traditional view on the correct behaviour for women in his times. In the beginning of his treatise, after describing the wretched state of all men, Durand expounds on the inferiority of all women, the queen included. Moreover, he fears that because of her status she might be led to believe that she is above other women. He makes sure she, and everybody else reading his treatise, understands that the queen is obviously subjected to her husband the king.270 She should listen and learn meekly so that she might be 269 Sd, I, 4, 26, Dubrulle, p. 290, „juste et racionabiliter estimato‟. 270 Sd 1, 2, 15, Dubrulle, p. 90, „Item sit viro suo ex amore subdita‟. 120 taught the right behaviour.271 She should be so because it is pleasing to God and men, he says.272 And finally, she should best be quiet because when she speaks she does so vainly and frivolously.273 However, in between these categorical statements that correlate to typical statements concerning the desired female behaviour at the time, there are also quite opposite requirements. The queen should be able, for example, to discern truth from falsehood and justice from injustice. This quality, Durand emphasizes, is needed for the judgement of people. After reaching her decision the queen should remain firm and not change her mind, not allowing her mind to be easily changeable as is usual with women.‘274 The qualities that Durand demands of the queen as a woman and the ones he demands of her as a ruler are mutually exclusive. However, Durand sees fit to include both sets of qualities in his treatise; the conventional view on the correct behaviour of women alongside the unconventional demand for unwavering self assurance. I would suggest that such a presentation was deliberate and aimed at securing the attention of his intended audience. Scholars looking into the sources of authority for any Capetian queen are divided between those who claim that they had no power at all and those who speak about an unofficial authority. Blanche of Castile, who is described as the most active leader, could claim her motherhood of a son and the opportunity for regency as her best 271 Sd I, 2, 3, Dubrulle, p. 82, „Item sit docilis in suscepcione doctrine, sicut Apostolus docet: mulier in silencio discat‟. 272 Sd I, 2, 8, Dubrulle, p. 85, „Item sit mansueta, quia mansuetudo facit personam amabilem Deo et hominibus‟. 273 Sd I, 2, 14, Dubrulle, p. 90 „Et quia magis est vituperabile in ecclesiis divino cultui dedicatis in verbis vanis et frivolis effluere quam alibi‟. 274 Sd, I, 3-4, 12, Dubrulle, p. 88, „Valde commendabile est in domina quod sit constans in prosito suo. Prius quidem debet deliberare de opera, an liceat, deceat et expediat, an sit justum vel injustum, an utile vel inutile, an bonum vel malum. Sed postquam deliberaverit, debet stare immobilis in eo quod racionabiliter ordinavit‟. 121 claims for power.275 One recognizable and important basis of power for women like Blanche, for example, was patronage, in her case especially patronage of the Cistercian Order.276 Jeanne of Navarre was a renowned supporter of the Franciscan order. Yet counting on patronage as their only hope for actual influence was no longer sufficient for the Franciscans, as it had half a century earlier with the help of Isabelle of France. They did not have access to the king, as he surrounded himself with the Dominicans, so they set on a course of advancing the importance of their supporter to a greater role than just a royal wife. Convincing the queen that she needed to aid her husband in his rulership was not going to put her in this position of power, however. The king and his advisors were the ones who needed to be convinced to allow her to participate, in order for queen's role as his assistant to be considered seriously. If we shift the focus of the treatise to the king and his advisors as the intended audience, then the description of the qualities the queen should possess makes perfect sense. The meek and subordinate status of all women was presented in hopes of reassuring the audience of Durand that he himself was not a heretic. At this time active roles for women tended to be more pronounced in heretical movements. After assuring his audience that he was not promoting women's rulership or rulership of someone weakened by a woman, he proceeded to explain the usefulness of the queen to the rulership of the king. In this capacity Durand ascribed the queen the determination and judgment necessary for the role of a substitute ruler. The queen’s allies 275 Miriam Shadis, „Blanche of Castile and Facinger‟s „Medieval Queenship‟ Reassessing the Argument, in Kathleen Nolan, ed., Capetian Women, New York, 2003, p. 153. 276 Miriam Shadis, „Blanche of Castile and Facinger‟s „Medieval Queenship‟, p. 149. 122 In this atmosphere of creation and development of new concepts of kingship there were no purely theoretical writers; every position came with an agenda, almost always relating to other groups. More often than not it was concerned with each group‘s relative position in regards to the controversy with the Pope or the new and evolving image of the French monarchy. At this time at the court of the queen a manual was written with the expressed intention of educating the queen on the right behaviour. Looking at the declared intention of the manual in view of the political propaganda debates progressing in Paris, it seems to mean a great deal more than just the edification of one‘s character for the sake of salvation. This was not the only conversation on ethics the Franciscans took part in. Nor did they exhibit a uniform voice on any of the other subjects. Bonnie Kent has demonstrated that there was no clear dichotomy between the orders on questions of virtue ethics. Each order produced various approaches to questions of virtue, will, and Aristotelian ethics as basis for the Christian ones.277 The Speculum dominarum was however the only Franciscan treatise written on the subject of rulership. Moreover, it was not written as an independent, speculative and purely theoretical treatise; it was written for the queen by her confessor. Whether the queen needed an excuse to get involved in political matters, or the Franciscans pursued their interests using the queen‘s influence, the treatise afforded both. The queen‘s unusual involvement in state matters allows us to presume that there was an interest and it was manifested in this treatise. The objective of the treatise was both conventional and innovative. On one hand the treatise needed to address the major points on the 277 Bonnie Kent, Virtues of the Will, The Transformation of Ethics in the Late Thirteenth Century, Washingon, 1995. 123 correct government and the ideal person the king should be, on the other it needed to create a space for until then unimaginable inclusion of a woman in state affairs. Evaluating every ethical notion against the ethics of Aristotle and supporting it with all the eminent Christian authorities, treating the subject of just rulership, a subject that was widely addressed in France under Philip IV, structured as a thematic sermon and describing the inferiority of all females, it is highly conventional. Its only novelty is a radically new notion of queenship. The strengthening of the queen‘s house, ‗Sapiens mulier edificat domum suam‘, is formed as cause and effect. The four houses of the queen are strengthened when she treats her real house, her kingdom right. The queen, Durand claims, should become this wise judge and efficient substitute ruler in order to strengthen her home, the French kingdom. When the queen exercises her wisdom to benefit the kingdom she also adorns two of her metaphorical houses the external and the internal. The external is adorned by her actions and the internal by her intentions while performing these actions. Writing for the queen and stepping on the delicate line between accepted female roles and the aspired queen‘s activities at the court the Franciscans hoped to encourage her involvement in political matters and through her to advance their own interests in the court. I would propose that Jeanne of Navarre used her connection to the Franciscan order as a source of her power and influence in court. And in turn the Franciscan order created this opportunity for the inclusion of the queen in the government of France as a way of promoting the Franciscan ambition through the incorporation of the queen in the government. It was hoped that being the ardent supporter of the Franciscan order, and especially her Franciscan confessor, the queen would include them in her works. This however does not retract from the revolutionary character of the 124 Franciscan treatise. It shows their openness to a more active and central contribution of a female. Regardless of their own needs dictating this treatise as it was written, it shows that such an innovation was acceptable in their mind to a certain extent. The fact that Jeanne of Navarre was indeed included in the kings‘ government shows that they were successful in their appeal for his sense of duty as a ruler to assure that justice is administered to the best of his abilities. The Mirror of Ladies is very different from The Mirror of Simple Souls, yet both had a place in women‘s religious though encouraged and influenced by Franciscans. Both drew on the Franciscan tradition emphasising different parts of it. Marguerite Porete‘s Mirror was aiming at a removed existence of a stripped down to nothingness soul. Hers was a manual for a life of spiritual development, aimed at an individual and her journey back to her creator. Durand‘s Mirror aims at constructing a place in this world where the queen can embrace her spiritual development to extend her influence in the kingdom. Such an active role was created for her in hopes of her including the Franciscans in her works, and expanding their influence in the kingdom. Both treatises reflect a Franciscan ideology, but they do so in variance from each other. They addressed different aims and audiences. While royal women were being accorded attention by significant figures within the Franciscan Order, the situation was not so easy for those who lacked royal protection. 125 Chapter five – Closing Ranks But in the end we add one single thing, which can incline towards great danger. There are among us, women who are called Béguines, and certain of them thrive on subtleties and rejoice in novelties. They have translated mysteries of the Scriptures even in the general French idiom, which nonetheless are scarcely passable by experts as Sacred Scripture. They read them communally, irreverently, audaciously, in little assemblies, in cells, in the streets. I myself saw, read, and held a French Bible, of which the exemplar was put out publicly by Parisian stationers to compose heresies and errors, uncertain and clumsy interpretations. Which things they (vernacular Bibles) contain in such abundance, that brevity of writing/parchment, or even prolixity can scarcely capture, and the capacity of ears with sobriety having been defiled can scarcely hear. Should the sickness prevail, there will rise as many scandals as listeners, as many blasphemies as broad ways. Therefore so that, with the fountains having been stopped up, by which the invention of these vanities might more easily come to an end, the exemplars may be destroyed, the translators may be confined, that which is found to be false be consumed by fire, lest the divine sermon be defiled by vulgar diction, lest it be said in the recesses: ‗Lo! Here is Christ, Behold There he is!‘ lest that which is holy be given to the dogs, lest the 126 most precious pearl be exposed to the feet of swine to be trampled. Among foolish women of this kind there is one in particular and the report has already risen as if official, that she herself has been inscribed with the stigmata of Christ. Which, if it is true, should not foster subterfuge but this should be known more openly; if it is not true, hypocrisy and deceit should be confounded. For the glory of God is to conceal the word, and the glory of the king to seek out the speech. Even if it is good to conceal the secret of a king, nevertheless it is honourable to reveal and confess the works of God.278 This call to deal with women interpreting Scripture unsupervised was made by the same author as had addressed a treatise of spiritual edification for Isabelle of France (1253-55). It occurs in the last part of the very critical treatise About the Scandals of the Church, or Collectio De Scandalis Ecclesiae, written by Gilbert of Tournai (1200-1284) for the Second Council of Lyons in 1274. 278 Collectio De Scandalis Ecclesiae, ed. A. Stroik, Archivum historicum Franciscanum, „23 (1930), 341, 273-299, 433-466, with edition on 24 (1931), 33-62. esp. pp. 61-2: „sed in calce subnectimus unicum, quod vergere potest in magnum periculum. Sunt apud nos mulieres, quae Beghinae vocantur, et quaedam earum subtilitatibus vigent et novitatibus gaudent. Habent interpretata scripturarum mysteria et in communi idiomate gallicata, interpretata scripturarum mysteria et in communi idiomate gallicata quae tamen in sacra Scriptura exercitatis vix sunt pervia. Legunt ea communiter, irreverenter, audacter, in conventiculis, in ergastulis, in plateis. Vidi ego, legi et habui bibliam gallicatam, cuius exemplar Parisiis publice ponitur a stationariis ad scribendum haereses et errores, dubietates et inconcinnas interpretations. Quae continentur in talibus, chartae non capit exiguitas, immo vix prolixitas, et aurium capacitas inspurcata cum sobrietate vix audit. Si morbus invaluerit, tot surgent scandala quot auditores, tot blasphemiae quot plateae. Ut igitur, fontibus obturatis, quo facilius conquiescat huius adinventio vanitatis, exemplaria deleantur, interpretes arceantur, quae falsa inventa fuerint comburantur, ne sermo divinus a dictione vulgari vilescat, ne dicatur in angulis: Ecce hic est Christus, ecce illuc, ne sanctum detur canibus, ne pretiosissimae margaritae porcorum exponantur pedibus conculcandae. Inter huiusmodi mulierculas una est et fama surrexit iam quasi publica, quod ipsa est Christi stigmatibus insignita. Quod si verum est, non foveat latebras sed apertius hoc sciatur, si vero non est, hypocrisis et simulatio confundatur. Nam Gloria Dei est celare verbum, et Gloria regis investigare sermonem. Etsi enim sacramentum regis abscondere bonum sit, tamen honorificum est revelare et Dei opera confiteri.‟ 127 Although the Collectio as a whole is little known to the modern reader, its last part has been widely known and cited in every discussion about the beguines.279 I would argue that this text reflects the multifaceted approach to women‘s spirituality and devotion developing during the later part of the thirteenth century and into the early fourteenth. Gilbert of Tournai had earlier encouraged the French princess to develop into her very active role as a founder of a female Franciscan house of Longshamp and cowriter of its rule, through a spiritual journey he prescribed for her in his letter in 1253-5. Here we can see how Gilbert had come to reflect on a general phenomenon of women practicing their own exploration of the divine message, through both mystical and Scriptural ways. He represents, I believe, two aspects of dealing with female devotion: a differentiation of groups and individuals on the question of desirable access to God‘s word, and an increase of intolerance towards what was perceived as insubordination to clerical instruction. Barbara Newman has very usefully pointed out that the distinction between the supporters and the opponents of creative spiritual individuals and communities was neither between newer and older orders, nor between regulars and extraregulars, or men and women. The division was mainly between people who could and who could not tolerate ambiguities of profession.280 I would expand on this statement. As the century progressed and the inquisition gained momentum, the feeling increased of loss of control in general and over female devotion in particular, brought about demands for tighter affiliation. 279 Walter Simons, Cities of Ladies, Beguine Communities in the Medieval Low Countries, 1200-1565, Philadelphia, 2001, p. 126 for example. 280 Barbara Newman, introduction to her edition, Thomas of Cantimpré : the collected saints lives : Abbot John of Cantimpré, Christina the Astonishing, Margaret of pres, and Lutgard of Aywi res, trans. Margot H. King and Barbara Newman, Turnhout, 2008, p. 15. 128 The Collectio de Scandalis was written as one of the documents that were requested by the council to generate discussion. The letter is critical of all sectors of the Church. Gilbert does not write it as a plaintiff, or a lower servant, but a harsh critic of an equal standing. ‗They, who do not know how to navigate a boat, are given a boat to drive‘, for example.281 He starts with a lengthy criticism of the Roman curia, moves to the clerics, then to the orders in general, the mendicants, and then to the merchants and labourers and finishes with women that were called beguines. Although he specifically names them as beguines, he does not mean any specific form of life, whether enclosed communities, living together in beguinages or single women living religious lives at their home. When Gilbert talks about the beguines he means lay women, who live religious lives, outside of a recognized religious order. They are described as reading the Scriptures together and interpret them as they see fit. Women are accused of frivolity. The main danger, in Gilbert‘s mind, is the joy they exhibit in experiencing and adopting every novelty. Their rush to experience more intense religious connection is presented by Gilbert as something reprehensible. Susceptible to every new idea, right or wrong, they are not exhibiting, he claims, proper reverence to the Holy Scripture and tradition. Their drive to religious experiences threatens the control Gilbert feels must be exerted over them. Their activity, unlike the scholars who do not need the aid of translation, is made possible by the fact that the Holy Scripture was made accessible to them in the Gallic idiom. He states in a very precise manner that he saw, read and had held the 281 Collectio, ed. Stroik, p. 43: „Eis qui regere navem nesciunt, dant gubernaculum tempore naufragii‟,. 129 French Bible in many copies done by a stationary in Paris.282 They read it, including the many heresies and inaccuracies, in public and private, he says. The drive of women to independent exploration of the mysteries of God is presented as similar to the drive of new and inexperienced scholars to learn and teach Scripture independently embracing new ideas with no concern given to proper traditional learning and teaching conventions. Gilbert uses the same arguments against the women‘s zeal for unsupervised knowledge through their access to the scriptures, as he does when describing the students of scholars. Just like the masters of the university they investigate the text and draw their own conclusions from it with no regard to the proper, traditional way of interpreting the Bible. When describing the undignified rush of young students to acquire and spread knowledge, he treats young scholars and women in the same manner. Both are accused of chasing novelties and not taking the necessary precautions with the biblical text. ‗Having lapsed into confusion in almost all studies of books, the students applaud novelties and seek glory rather than teaching, they hold their listeners with perplexities of words that express subtleties without benefits, introduce daily novelties…‘283 They are accused of having the audacity to teach what they do not yet understand instead of staying in a state of learning for a sufficient time. Preferring secular texts in which truth cannot be found, according to Gilbert, to the text of the revelation, they rejoice in their discoveries and spread this nonsense from the position of authority, from which only accepted/pre-approved truth should be taught. ‗…shamelessly, demand their magisteria, also 282 Collectio,ed. Stroik, p. 62 : „vidi ego, legi et habui bibliam gallicatam, cuius exemplar Parisiis publice ponitur a stationariis ad scribendum haereses et errores, dubietates et inconcinnas interpretationes‟. 283 Collectio, ed. Stroik, p. 47: „lapsa sunt in confusionem fere omnium studia leterarum, dum discipuli solis novitatibus applaudunt, et magistri potius invigilant gloriae quam doctrinae, verborum perplexitatibus detinent auditors, subtilitates sine fructu excogitant, adinveniunt quotidie novitates…‟ . 130 unwisely demand their right to teach, the beardless ones sit on the throne of their elders, those who are disciples seek the right to be called masters. Having thrown away the rules and authentic books of arts, lying down in the web of spiders, with a sophistication of words, always learning and never arriving at the knowledge of truth…‘.284 Young scholars and women are presented as doing the same thing, learning what they choose and discussing ideas in public. However, scholars cannot be completely controlled; their knowledge of Latin makes it impossible to block their access to knowledge. Women‘s access depends on the translated Bible that Gilbert saw them using. The women are deemed so dangerous that Gilbert demands that their actions be stopped. To express the great danger Gilbert equates them to pigs, to whom (Matthew 7, 6) pearls should not be given because they might trample them. Pigs have no understanding of the value of the pearls. For them pearls and dirt hold the same significance. Therefore someone needs to supervise what the pigs have access to because they cannot be trusted to discern the valuable from invaluable. In Gilbert‘s mind, women are the same. They cannot decide for themselves what is valuable. Therefore their access to the Bible in French is dangerous. They cannot be trusted to discern the true significance of the revelation, which they cannot achieve anyway, because the translation is full of errors and heresies, he says. Their treatment of the holy of the holies can, therefore, harm them and others they preach to. 284 Collectio, ed. Stroik, p. 47 : „… et adolescentes comatuli iam earum magisteria vindicant impudenter et etiam imprudenter. Sedent imberbes in cathedra seniorum, et qui non noverunt esse discipuli, magistri appetunt nominari, abiectis atrium regulis et libris authenticis, aranearum tendiculis et verborum sophismatibus incumbentes, semper discentes et nunquam ad veritatis scientiam pervenientes‟. 131 Gilbert was not the first cleric to warn about the dangers of the translated Bible to the integrity of the teachings of the Church. The patterns of language he employs in his Scandalis are similar to these used by the bishop of Metz in his latter to Pope Innocent III in 1199. ‗It had been brought to the papal attention that there are many lay people and women in Metz who have a translation of the Bible and they discuss it among themselves in secret meetings and in their conventicles.‘285 The same motif of a group of people, including women, reading, interpreting and discussing the Bible among themselves, with no need or reverence for proper supervision or interpretation of clerics stands in the middle of this accusation. Had it just been a translation that was bothering the bishop, he would have said that he saw a translation, and it should be burnt. Yet he talks about secret meetings, with people who neither required nor deemed it appropriate to be supervised in their access to God‘s word. Innocent did not order the copies burnt, the people involved arrested. He simply asks to look into the matter further. And if the complainant/bishop had already punished the accused, he asked his legates/messengers to relax his punishment, or at least to convince him to relax it. Gilbert is much more aggressive in his approach. He requests the books extinguished and the women stopped. No doubt Gilbert wants to invoke the earlier conclusions of heterodoxy, but describes it as much more dangerous. Seeing women reading and interpreting the Bible was not the only concern of the official leaders of the church. Several reports were written in preparation for the Second Council of Lyons 1274. Three 285 Innocent III, Opera Omnia, in Patrologiae Latinae tomus 214, f. 112, epis 141, „…in urbe Metensi Laicorum et mulierum non modica multitudo Gallicae euidam translationi divinorum lilbrorum intnedens, secretis conventiculis etiam inter se invicem eructare preaesumerent…‟. See also Leonard E Boyle, „Innocent III and vernacular versions of Scripture, in ed. Katherine Walsh and Diana Wood, The Bible in the Medieval World, Essays in Memory of Beryl Smalley, Oxford, 1985, pp. 97-107. 132 of these reports survive: that of the Dominican Order, probably prepared by Humbert of Romans (1194? – 1277), on behalf of his successor as minister general, that of Gilbert of Tournai, and that of the bishop of Olmutz.286 The most striking fact in the Dominican report is that there is nothing positive mentioned about the lives of devout, uncloistered women. ‗There are certain religious pauper women that run around the villages and cities for the sake of seeking necessities, which is truly indecent and especially dangerous for women.‘287 In such a short and efficient manner the Dominican Humbert of Romans projects the formal sentiment of his order towards the mystically inspired women whom the Dominicans and the Franciscans had celebrated only a few decades before.288 Regardless of the criticism of their mendicancy one would expect even a small acknowledgement of their religious value. Humbert elects to ignore it or he sees none. The women are described in an undignified manner, as running around the cities and villages in their search for material support. Dignified women in his period did not run around the cities. There was only one other kind of women who wondered around in male territory, in search of financial benefit. These women were prostitutes. By describing the religious women as such, Humbert implies they were of the same ilk. His use of the term ‗religious women‘ is thus euphemism. Furthermore, Humbert of Romans does not bother distinguishing between the different lifestyles of uncloistered religious women; he speaks of the solitary wondering women as the only existing kind. He states that there should be no religious observance for women without enclosure. He does not mention unsupervised access to Scripture; 286 Herbert Grundmann, Religious Movements in the Middle Ages: The Historical Links Between Heresy, the Mendicant Orders, and The Women’s Religious Movement in The Twelfth and Thirteenth Century, with The Historical Foundations of German Mysticism, Notre Dame, 1995, p. 144. 287 E. Brown, Appendix ad Fasciculum rerum expetendarum et fugiendarum, London, 1690, p. 224. 288 John Coakley, „Friars as Confidants of Holy Women in Medieval Dominican Hagiography‟, in Images of Sainthood in Medieval Europe, ed. Renate Blumenfeld-Kosinski and Timea Szell, Ithaca and London, 1991, p. 245. 133 he is much more concerned with modesty. However, indirectly his criticism touches on the subject of supervision. If the women are roaming around the country, there is no knowing what they can be up to. The papal decree of the Second Council of Lyons from 1274, for which these treatises were written, echoes the feeling of loss of control, not only in women exploring lives of devotion, but spiritual diversity in general: ‗presumptuous rashness of some has produced an almost unlimited crowd of diverse orders, especially mendicant‘.289 Not only does it forbid all forms of new religious life, the ‗presumptuous rashness‘ sounds curiously familiar. The traits that were desirable in the male branches of the Dominican and Franciscan orders were seen as ‗presumptuous rashness‘ in women and were expressed as such by Humbert of Romans and Gilbert of Tournai. The Papal decree was aimed, therefore, at all the ‗presumptuous‘. Devout, mystically inspired and inquisitive women were definitely among them. The Beguinage of Paris The great Beguinage in Paris was founded in 1264 by Louis IX. Although the charter that we have was prepared many years later, it specifies that the Beguinage was founded by Louis IX but great changes in its organizational structure were made by Philip IV.290 Its new charter affirms the rules of conduct of the beguines, describes the roles of the Mistresses of the house and the role of those responsible for the Beguinage, the prior of the Dominicans of Paris. 289 Decrees of the Ecumenical Councils, trans. Norman P. Tanner, London, 1990, p. 326: „verum etiam aliquorum praesumptuosa temeritas diversorum ordinum, praecipue mendicantium, quorum nondum approbationes meruere principium, effrenatam quasi multitudinem adinvenit, repetita constitutione districtius inhibentes, ne aliquis de cetero novum ordinem aut religionem inveniat vel habitum novae religionis assumat…‟. 290 Statuts Du Béguinage De Paris (1341), in Mémoires de la Société de l’histoire de Paris et de l’ile– de–France, 20 (1893), 342-57. 134 In what follows I will examine the management of this Beguinage compared to the Beguinage of Ghent. Both were court beguinages, both favoured and endowed by Louis IX. I shall explore how the sea change towards the end of the thirteenth century, that demanded greater control to be put on all aspects of religion and especially on that of women‘s devotion, was reflected in the life of the Beguinage. The Beguinage of Saint Elisabeth of Ghent was established by the countesses of Flanders and Hainault, Joanna and her sister Margaret in view of providing a sanctuary for respectable but impoverished damsels who wished to live in chastity.291 Saint Louis visited this Beguinage and impressed by the zeal of the beguines arranged for a church to be built for them, and bestowed on them many privileges. He also established the Beguinage in Paris based on the example of the one in Ghent.292 The Beguinage of Ghent was run by one principal mistress who was elected each year by conventual mistresses. She appointed the conventual mistresses to their positions with the advice and consent of the convents and respectable men. It is not specified who these respectable men were. And her own appointment was not based on anyone‘s decision but the individual mistresses of the convents. The building and demolition of any houses within the Beguinage was under her control, as much as allocation of living quarters to each of the beguines. She was the one to install the rules of conduct in the Beguinage and the one to punish or remove transgressors.293 In this Beguinage the major characters were women. The Beguinage was founded for them and was run by them. The foundation of the institution answered a need to house women who wanted to lead 291 WHAT IS PRIMARY SOURCE? In Emilie Amt ed., Women’s Lives in Medieval Europe : a Sourcebook, New York, 1993, p. 263. 292 Amt, Women’s Lives in Medieval Europe, p. 267. 293 Amt, Women’s Lives in Medieval Europe, p. 266. 135 this life and indeed it answered this need in its structure. Undoubtedly there were visiting confessors, who also took the beguines‘ vows and gave mass. They were probably of the mendicant orders, as most beguine communities in the north preferred the mendicants as closest to them in their religious zeal. However, no priest of friar is mentioned as living with the beguines, nor is one mentioned as their supervisor. We do not know what the social structure of the Beguinage in Paris was when it was first established by Louis IX. The charter only reaffirms the statues that were established by Philip IV.294 However, if Louis IX structured it according to the model of the Beguinage of Ghent, it is probable it was similar. When we look at the charter, which reveals the situation after the changes installed by Philip the Fair the differences are striking. The Paris Beguinage was not autonomous. The management of the Beguinage was in the hands of the king. He ran it through his almoner, who had the final jurisdiction over the Beguinage. He was the one to install the mistress and was responsible for the proper running of the Beguinage to the king. Further, the role of the mistress was vastly different from the one of the Beguinage of Ghent. As soon as she was chosen she moved under the immediate supervision of the prior of the Dominicans of Paris. The mistress was not free to make any decisions. She was obliged to seek his advice in all matters; spiritual, organizational and financial. His approval was needed to built and demolish, to allocate new beguines and to decide on the 294 „Statuts du beguinage de Paris, Confimatio fundationis Beguynarum in villa Parisiensi in loco qui dicitur la Porte Barbel, in Appendice, Mémoires de la société de l’histoire de Paris et de l’ile-deFrance, 20 (1893), p. 342, „… et après ce noz très chiers seigneurs le roy Philippe le Bel, nostre oncle, et les roys Loys, Philippe et Charles derrenièrement trespassez, nos cousins et devanciers, roys de france, aient fait, ordené et confermé plusieurs ordenances es et statuz pour le bon estat et gouvernement dudit béguignage et des personnes demourans en ycelli, si comme ès letters et chartres sur ce faites est plus plainement contenu‟. 136 price of a property to be sold to a new beguine joining the Beguinage.295 The prior‘s management was not restricted to the financial matters; he was the one to approve the appointment of elder beguines who would serve as the council of the mistress. His title, I believe, signifies his role in the Beguinage best, ‗gardien et gouverneur‘, guardian and governor. As a guardian he took a patronizing role for the Beguinage, just like a father or a male relative would for a houseful of women. As a governor he took full responsibility for the management of the Beguinage, leaving only nominal power for the mistress. He is the one mentioned first on any issue that needs approval. For example, if there is a transgression of a beguine and she is expelled her house is to be sold. The price will be determined by the governor and the mistress and her council, in that order. By installing the Dominican prior as the guardian and governor of the Beguinage of Paris, Philip the Fair in effect changed the nature of the Beguinage from a semi-independent institution; a fruit of religious aspirations of women in the thirteenth century, into a quasi monastery under Dominican supervision. With the Dominicans being the governing force responsible for every significant decision, the women themselves were allowed lower management positions only. Moreover, the Dominican prior acted in the Beguinage as a general manager, ruling over secular matters. It seemsthat the spiritual guidance of the beguines was also entrusted to him. Although there is no mention of this in the charter, it stands to reason that there would not be another order or secular cleric to take the spiritual responsibilities while the Dominicans only supervised the secular maters. This position overrules the very 295 Statuts du beguinage de Paris, p. 347, „dudit gouverneur, de ladite matresse et de son conseil‟, mentioned four times for example. 137 specific compromise declared by the papacy, which the Dominicans achieved in 1267. They were not to be involved in the temporal affairs even in their own female houses. Yet in this ordinance Philip the Fair put them in full charge of a Beguinage. The case of the Beguinage of Paris does not refer to a sporadic gathering of women wanting to explore a more religious way of life, by expounding on the Scripture. However, it does present an image of a desired level of supervision of devout women. Philip‘s intervention in the Beguinage of Paris is very different from his grandfather‘s in the Beguinage of Ghent. Louis IX did what is considered to be an act of patronage; financial support with no actual influence on the spiritual nature of the community. Although the person in charge of the Beguinage of Paris was Philip the Fair‘s almoner, the king‘s interaction with the Beguinage was not a typical patronage. The patrons sometimes affected the daily lives of the communities they patronized by the instalment of new buildings, churches, or by the additional prayers the community added in return for the financial support. The patron however, did not drastically change the structure of the organization of the community. A good example for such an attempt and its results was the donation the countess of Flanders and Hainaut wished to bestow on the Franciscan community of Saint – Barthélemy in 1226. She built a new and refined monastery that was too luxurious in the eyes of the Friars. The papacy ruled in favour of the countess but after several years of conflict the Friars stayed in their original dwellings.296 Her actions were about to change the religious observance of the community therefore her patronage was rejected. The Beguines in Paris did not or could not reject the invasive patronage of Philip IV therefore their community changed greatly 296 Erin Jordan, „A Clash of Wills: Religious Patronage and the Vita Apostolica in Thirteenth – Century Flanders‟, in Religious and Laity in Western Europe 1000 – 1400., Interaction, Negotiation, and Power, ed., Emilia Jamroziak and Janet Burton, Turnhouts, 2006, pp. 241-62, esp. p. 245. 138 with his interference. It was no longer an institution founded by women for the women‘s spiritual needs. It became a royal establishment that answered the needs of the King more than anything else. The Dominican convent of Poissy The Dominican house at Poissy was very different from the Beguinage of Paris, as it involved professed nuns. However, I believe its remarkable creation can illuminate the way boundaries of desirable control, and the value of women‘s religious vocations in it, were being increasingly controlled by Philip IV in conjunction with the Dominican Order. Twenty three years after Gilbert wrote his letter to the council, Philip IV set out to commemorate the life of his grandfather, by founding a female Dominican monastery at Poissy. Pope Boniface VIII announced the canonisation of Louis IX on 11 August 1297.297 Already by November 1297, as soon as the canonisation had been secured, if not before, demolition of buildings had begun on the site in Poissy where the king planned to found a religious institution in honor of the saint. Louis had been reputedly born in Poissy and was certainly baptised there. He is also said to have referred to himself among his intimates as ‗Louis de Poissy‘. Philip the Fair intended the house to cater for Dominican nuns, and presumably had already approached the Order to ensure support for his scheme. Official approval, however, could not be granted until the next General Chapter, held at Metz in May 1298, the earliest opportunity after the canonisation.298 Among the accounts of the Royal Treasury are twelve entries with the king‘s payment to Dominican Friars for books for his new 297 Joan Margaret Naughton, „‟Manuscripts from the Dominican Monastery of Saint-Louis de Poissy‟, PhD thesis, Department of Fine Arts, The University of Melbourne, 1995, p. 37. 298 Ibid., pp. 38-9. 139 monastery. The king‘s initiation of book production for his foundation preceded the official approval given in May 1298.299 It also preceded the instalment of the first nuns. Philip the Fair had paid the Dominican friars for manuscript production for Poissy over a period between three and six years before the nuns‘ admission.300 One could imagine that spiritual education and promotion of creative theologies was the King‘s aim. However looking at the shaping of the community obliterates this notion. Bernard Gui tells us that Philip the Fair had began to establish the monastery of Poissy in 1297, immediately after hearing of the canonization of Saint Louis, his grandfather.301 Philip started building this monastery without having a specific community of nuns in mind. The reason he was founding this monastery was to preserve the memory of his glorious grandfather. After relating the main accomplishments of Louis‘ life Bernard Gui describes the way this monastery came under the care of the Dominicans. ‗The definitors of the order and the general chapter devoutly undertook the care of the monastery in the way in which other monasteries of such sisters are annexed to the Dominican Order.‘302 This, however, was not how communities of women usually came under the Dominican care. The Dominicans reluctantly annexed existing communities to their Order providing them with spiritual care only. This monastery was to become Dominican by Philip IV‘s will and funding. While other women‘s communities were pushing to get inside the order, this monastery was endowed first and then the 299 Ibid., p. 41. Ibid., p. 42. 301 Bernard Gui, E Notitia Provinciarum et Domorum, Ordinis Praedicatorum, in Rerum Gallicarum et Francicarum Scriptores, Recueil des Historiens des Gaules et de la France, vol. 23, Paris, 1876, pp. 190-1. 302 Bernard Gui, E Notitia Provinciarum et Domorum: „…precibus nostris humiliter annuens, devote suscepit eo modo quo alia monasteria talium sororum vestro ordini sunt annexa;‟ 300 140 Friars were entrusted with gathering nuns and creating a community. The way the king monitored the creation of this community also signifies how the nuns‘ reading was not restricted because the control was not in doubt. Philip IV asked the brothers of the Order to search for a hundred nuns who can read and sing, and who could continue the tradition in later generations of nuns to come. He instructed them to report back to him about every new candidate they found for his approval. Her spiritual condition was to be approved by the king personally before her inclusion in the community. Bernard Gui then says that Philip did not wait for the nuns to be found, but moved forward with the construction. The presence of nuns thus seems of the same importance as the other elements of the monastery created by the king. The nuns, unlike the books or the buildings, were not so easy to find, however. Bernard Gui reports that the King specified that the nuns who were to occupy the first generation of Poissy were expected not only to be able to read and sing but to teach the subsequently received nuns ‗by word and by example‘, specifying not only the accepted female way of instruction by example of their devout ways, but more direct instruction, as implied ‗by word‘, which actually implied preaching of the older nuns to the younger. He may have envisioned a community of nuns that absolutely did not need further efforts from him after the initial foundation. If the older nuns are capable to install in the hearts of younger nuns the proper behaviour and the proper skills of worship this community would be suitably ordered. The endowment of books was in this context an aide, approved for the already controlled situation, and closed the community to a greater extent by establishing routine of self sufficiency. It did not go exactly as the king planned, however. 141 In the year 1304 professed nuns were taken from other monasteries, Bernard Gui calmly reports, and taken and placed there, and also recluses, since the brothers could not find the right number of nuns. The nuns who were taken from existing communities of the Order did not need a place to practice their religion, nor did they initiate the creation of an institution so that they can realize their religious needs; they already had a place in other communities. The supplementation of these nuns with recluses, who chose to live another form of religious observance altogether is even more striking. Regardless of their affiliation or the form of their religious observance, these women were taken into the monastery of Poissy to build up the numbers specified by the king. The monastery was constructed by Philip IV and endowed the way it was to make the best memorial for his grandfather, and in this way to amplify his own prestige. All the elements of its construction indicate the wish of the king to create a competent, self supporting and sustainable organization that would magnify the name of the saint and by connection his own status as his descendant. The books that the king supplied should be seen as an element of centring and directing the religious service of these women in a way that enhanced the image of the perfect female community constructed by the king. They were not means for women‘s exploration of God‘s truths or their own spirituality, as they appear to be in the case of unsupervised reading mentioned by Gilbert of Tournai. Teaching supervision Supervision was also encouraged through treatises of moral education of women. Even when a treatise was speaking of 142 internalized devotion and development of inner strength through imagery of an abbey, it instructed that when encountered doubt the woman should seek intervention from outside of herself. Vernacular treatises, written as edification manuals for women, were widely diffused, especially in circles of noble women, like La sainte abbaye, the abbey of the Holy Spirit, during the early fourteenth century.303 Structured in the language of the courtly love they employed an imagery of an enclosed space where the virtues played the leading roles. I shall examine here how they encouraged the reader and practitioner to always turn outside of themselves when trouble arouse. But it sometimes happens, that when this abbey is thus well founded, guarded and ordained, and God is well served there as you have heard, that the doorkeeper by her fault and negligence lets in four ugly daughters of a wicked usurer of the region. This is the devil from hell, who is the biggest usurer there is, for just for a little honour, a little joy, a little delight that he lends in this world which is so fleeting, he wants us to repay him in the next, which will last forever, with such great usury that each of his debtors will pay him in endless and unrelieved shame and confusion, pain and torment. This same usurer, by his malice, and through the fault of the doorkeeper who fails to guard the doors, passages and windows, and all the ways in, is often able to get his four daughters, who are so ugly, into this abbey. One of them is called Envy, and she is cross-eyed and cannot look straight, but must always look sideways, as it seemed to Saul in relation to David. Another is called Presumption, and she has a swollen chest, for she thinks she knows more than others, 303 La sainte abbaye, draft edition and translation from MS British Library Yates Thompson 11, fols 2r7r by Janice Pinder. 143 and has a hunchback, for she thinks she is better. The third is called Murmuring and Detraction, and she stammers, for she cannot speak or say any good of another, but sows contention and dissension around the abbey. The fourth is called False Judgement and Suspicion, and she is lame, for she cannot go straight, nor believe others to be good, or true or loyal. Thus through these four ugly and wicked daughters of this wicked usurer, the whole abbey and order of the heart is troubled and disturbed. But my lady Charity the abbess, when she sees this, must straight away ring the bell for chapter, and assemble the whole convent, and lady Discretion will advise them all to go and pray to the Holy Ghost to come and visit them by his grace, for they have great need, and therefore they should sing with great reverence/devotion Veni…And when it gets to this verse, Hostem… he will throw them out of the order like wicked hoydens, these four daughters of that wicked usurer, the devil. And thus the abbey will be ordained and reformed as it was before. 304 304 La sainte abbaye, 5va: „Mais aucune foiz est avenu, et avient souvent que quant ceste abbaie est si bien fondee, gardee, et ordenee, et Dex i est si bien servis comme vous oez, que la portiere par negligence, et par sa defaute, i laisse entrer et demourer quatre filles a un mauvais userier du païs, que il a mout laides. C‟est li deables d‟enfer qui est le plus [5va] fort userier qui soit, car pour un pou d‟oneur, un pou de joie, un pou de delit qu‟il preste en cest monde qui si pou dure voudra que l‟en li rende en l‟autre qui touz jourz durra si grant usure que chascuns de ses deteurs li rendra honte et confusion, doleur et affliction, sanz fin et sanz consolacion. Icil meismes useriers par sa malice, et par la defaute de la portiere qui mauvaisement garde les portes, les huis et les fenestres, et toutes les entrees, met souvent en ceste abbaie ses quatre filles qui tant sunt laides. Dont l‟une a non Envie. et ceste est borgne, qu‟ele ne puet regarder droit, mais touz jorz de travers. si comme il parut de Saul contre David. L‟autre a non Presumption, et ceste est enflee ou piz, car ele cuide plus savoir que les autres, et est boçue seur les espaules, car ele cuide mielz valoir. La tierce a non Murmure et Detraction, et ceste est begue, qu‟ele ne set [5vb] paller, ne dire nul bien d‟autrui, ainçois met contenz et dissension par l‟abbaie. La quarte a non Faus Jugement et Soupeçon, et ceste est boiteuse, car ele ne puet aler droit, ne nul bien penser d‟autrui, ne verité ne leauté, si que par ces quatre filles a ce mauvais userier laides et mauvaises, est toute l‟abbaie et la religion du cuer troublee et destourbee. Mes ma dame Charitez l‟abbaesse, quant ele voit et aperçoit ceste chose, si doit tantost soner chapitre, et assambler tout le couvent, et damoisele Discrecion leur donra conseil, que eles aillent toutes en oroison, et prient le Saint Esperit que il par sa grace les viegne visiter, car granz mestiers leur est, et adonc doivent chanter en grant devocion: Veni creator spiritus et cetera, qui doucement et volentiers vendra et descendra. Et quant ce vendra a cest ver: Hostem repellas longius, il les getera hors de l‟ordre comme mauvaises garces, ces .iiii. filles a [7ra] ce mauvais userier, les filles au deable. Et einsi sera l‟abbaie ordenee et renformee comme devant.‟ 144 The author of the treatise creates an image of an abbey as the desired female conscience, furnishing it with virtues, using an image of a real abbey with its parts and inhabitants to create as close as possible a picture for the female mind. At some point the devil sends his four daughters, envy, presumption, murmuring and detraction, false judgement and suspicion to spoil the tranquillity of the abbey, or the female conscience and to bring everlasting ruination to the soul. When these intruders are identified as parts of the mind there is an interesting resolution. ‗But my lady Charity the abbess, when she sees this, must straight away ring the bell for chapter, and assemble the whole convent, and lady Discretion will advise them all to go and pray to the Holy Ghost to come and visit them by his grace, for they have great need, and therefore they should sing with great reverence/devotion Veni … And when it gets to this verse, Hostem … he will throw them out of the order like wicked hoydens, these four daughters of that wicked usurer, the devil. And thus the abbey will be ordained and reformed as it was before.‘ The lady is not encouraged to detect the intruders and acknowledge them as the messengers of the devil. She is not encouraged to chase them away as such. She is instructed to sound an alert and wait. The chasing away is done by an outsider. And then the tranquillity is restored until the next episode. I have discussed in an earlier chapter how Hadewijch identified such visitors with those friars who were unwanted intruders. When she describes ‗baseness, anger and hate‘, disguised as ‗humility, just zeal and reason‘ she infers that visitors come to harm the community and encourages other women to fight the intrusion. This is the only time she mentions an outside influence. In the Abbey of the Holy Spirit the visitation is described as the saving grace, which should chase away unknown forces that brought about ‗envy, 145 presumption, murmuring and detraction, false judgement and suspicion‘ to the community. In this treatise the women are encouraged to pray and sing and are promised a reward in a form of ordination of the abbey. If a woman sustains this proper enclosure, does not rebel even when threatened and quietly waits for help from outside, she will be considered ‗ordained‘ or approved. In Hadewijch‘s writings the women don‘t need help from the outside. They are however presented with unwanted visitation which introduces into the community these traits which the abbey of the Holy Spirit is trying to battle. Anke Passenier has noted that the dualistic view of the beguinal movement coincided with the dualistic view of women in general.305 Women who chose to live a religious life, wether in the cloister or in a less enclosed community could be seen either as good, orthodox, and enclosed, ether in the family home or a Beguinage, alternatively they are represented as inquisitive, and therefore disordered and heterodox. The former adopted the spirituality outlined in ‗La sainte abbaye‘, the latter, sought their own answers, gathering with others in public places and reading and deciphering the Bible together and in general seeking a more active religious experience. They are the ones who needed to be disciplined, in Gilbert‘s opinion, and the way to do so was to eliminate all public activity and to order the cloistered activity so that whatever was read and apprehended would fit in within the proper order of society instead of disturbing it. Ordering the women‘s communities, as well as controlling women‘s spirituality by the demand to stop the unsupervised reading supported the drive to curtail the spiritual consumption and output of the women. It would be articulated in 305 Anke Passenier, „Women on the loose‟: Stereotypes of Women in the Story of the Medieval Beguines‟, in Female Stereotypes on Religious Traditions, ed. Ria Kloppenborg and Wouter J. Hanegraaff, Leiden, 1995, p. 62. 146 1311-12 in the decrees issued by the council of Vienne, but in a sense it was always there, alongside the forces which supported and encouraged women‘s religious activity. The delicate shift that became more pronounced as the thirteenth century progressed was not in promoting devotion, but rather in preferring the structured supervised order, when the two conflicted. It is therefore not surprising that Gilbert of Tournai was so indignant about lay women‘s‘ reading of the translated Bible. Such activity seemed to put them on the same level with the university masters, inquiring independently and irreverently into the God‘s intentions in this world, taking them further away from the image of a ‗proper‘ women‘s behaviour of internal cloistered spirituality. But most of all it embodied their ability to become self-sufficient in their religious experiences. Reading and interpreting the bible, they did not need anyone to visit them to resolve their difficulties. They could in fact see such intervention the way Hadewijch perhaps would, as interference. The beguinal movement and the establishment of beguinages were created by the women wanting to experience life in the world, contributing to the poor and helping the needy. Their religion was based on that wish; chastity was preserved so that devout women were not burdened by a family and could lead a religious life in the world, while supporting themselves and doing public service. The main aim was to realize a religious life and it was their choice as to the precise way to do it. These women, who did so outside of an established order felt closest to the Franciscans who wished to live out ideals of care and exemplary life. Towards in the end of the thirteenth century Paris these ideals of the Franciscans took a step back allowing for closer involvement of the Franciscan leaders in the matters of the French monarchy. As such these Franciscans were 147 much more concerned with appearing as guarding the correct observance among the people, than with encouraging the right connection with God while still alive, when the two conflicted. Such a change brought about a shift in the equilibrium between spiritual development and spiritual supervision, towards the enclosing and regulating forces in the leadership of the Franciscan Order. The example of beguines‘ lives was lost in the change the Beguinage of Paris underwent. Instead of mirroring their zeal to the world such women were directed and organized to such an extent that their lives were no longer anything but an enclosed establishment that catered to preservation of chastity and order. They were funded, their financial affairs were supervised, and their spiritual care was so insignificant that it was not even included in the charter. The documents examined in this chapter point to a subtle shift in official attitudes towards devout women in Paris as the thirteenth century drew to a close. The Franciscan ideology as such did not change, but one part of it was favoured more than another. The treatise of Gilbert of Tournai on scandals within the Church reflects this shift. Instead of concentrating on the need to encourage the development of spirituality of certain ladies, he concentrated on two very specific radical cases: one of unsupervised Bible reading and interpretation and another of unsupervised beatification of a devout woman (who claimed to have experienced stignmata). Both cases were mentioned as dangerous and needing to be dealt with and stopped; both stressing the need for control rather than the need for expansion of spirituality and devotion. When describing Gilbert of Tournai‘s criticism of the beguines in his Collectio de Scandalis Ecclesiae, Walter Simons attributes the conflict to the sphere of clerical privileges.306 He claims that the attack on the beguines was a way for clerics to protect their monopoly against new claims from 306 Collectio, ed. Stroik, pp. 61-2; Simons, Cities of Ladies, p. 126. 148 the outside. I would argue that had this been the intent, Gilbert would have appended it to another part of his treatise, about the tension between preaching from papal authority and preaching as a calling, and the ways the latter was suppressed by the former.307 Instead he chose the two cases where women‘s transgressions were in not being subjected to supervision, rather than in any challenge to clerical authority. The new structures being imposed on religious women at the Beguinage of Paris and at Poissy reflect the increasing dominance of the Dominican Order in the regulation of religious women within Paris in the late thirteenth century. To nuance the assertion of Viennot, who has claimed that the clerics formed a group of their own and suppressed all the marginal groups who challenged their dominance, the Franciscans in Paris changed from being spearheads of creative spirituality to more cautious protectors of the proper order.308 In late thirteenth-century Paris, observing and supervising a perfect conduct of the various groups in the kingdom, be it religious groups or lay, and especially their own image in this setting became all important. Promoting a singular goal of a perfect union with God by means of the vita apostolica, became less important if it compromised the proper order of women in society. This was the situation in which Marguerite Porete, an enthusiast for Franciscan spirituality, found herself in after the death in 1305 of Jeanne of Navarre, Queen of France. 307 308 Collectio, ed, Stroik, p. 44. Éliane Viennot, La France, les femmes et le pouvoir, Paris, 2006, p. 293. 149 Chapter six – Preaching Her Way ‗You have communicated the above mentioned book after it was condemned and burnt to the reverend father lord John, bishop of Chalons and to other persons as if it were good and lawful …‘309 At the trial of Marguerite Porete in 1309, the Parisian masters of the schools were very clear on the question of whether women could teach doctrine, even when they accepted that they might have something to communicate to others. Thomas Aquinas wrote in his Summa Theologiae (1266 – 1272) that women were unsuited for preaching because preaching was a public activity suited more for prelates and not for subjects. Women, as such, were subordinate to men, and therefore it was not their place to teach men in public. Further, he claimed that women by their nature would lead men into sexual desire and thus harm men rather than benefit them. And finally, he said that women were not very smart and therefore could not be entrusted with public preaching.310 Henry of Ghent, who had lectured at the University of Paris 1276 – 1292, had claimed that women could not preach because they lacked consistency for teaching. They were changeable, he thought, easily led astray and could not endure long hours of strenuous public speaking, to which they could not freely arrive, since their movements were rightly controlled by men, and were more adept at promoting sin than destroying it.311 309 Paul Verdeyen, „Le Procès d‟inquisition contre Marguerite Porete et Guiard de Cressonessart (1309 – 1310)‟, Revue d’histoire ecclésiastique, 81, 1986, pp. 47-94, p. 82. 310 Thomas Aquinas, Summa Theologiae, 2a2ae, 177, 2, trans. Roland Potter O.P., vol. 45 (PLACE, YEAR?), pp. 132-3. 311 Henry of Ghent, Summa Quaestionum Ordinarium, Book 1, Article 11, Question 2, reprinted in Alcuin Blamires and C.W. Marx, „Woman Not to Preach: A Disputation in British Library MS Harley 31‟, in Journal of Medieval Latin: A Publication of the North American Association of Medieval Latin, 3 (1993), 34-63, p. 52. 150 The animosity towards women‘s preaching was never uniform, however. The need to convey messages as being received from the Holy Spirit was widely acknowledged even if the messengers were women and examples of female preachers from the past became known by the diffusion of hagiography.312 Moreover, regardless of the resolve of the theologians, there were examples of contemporary women preaching. In the middle of the thirteenth century Rose of Viterbo (1235-52) had presented a case of a very visible and public lay woman who was preaching on the streets of Viterbo. She was tolerated if not officially sanctioned.313 She was however not the only one. At about the same period, Hadewijch had written letters to the community of women she was chased away from, and perhaps to the people she mentioned in her list of the perfect. Recluses, of whom there have been hundreds in northern Europe, had operated as teachers and preachers even though they were never ordained or had any institutional power.314 By the late thirteenth century, however, the situation had changed. Marguerite Porete is different from these earlier women not only because she promotes an original well structured theology, but because she structures it in the form of philosophical dialogue, in which she debates whether stages the debate as taking place between Love and Reason. She is also the first woman to write such a treatise in the French language, and to become known beyond her native Hainault in Paris itself. In this chapter I would like to look at the ways her theology drew out the progressing intolerance to such an activity in the area, and ask what it was in Marguerite‘s Mirror that 312 Alcuin Blamires, „Women and Preaching in Medieval Orthodoxy, Heresy, and Saints‟ Lives‟, in Viator, 26, (1995), pp. 135-52, esp. p. 136. 313 Darleen Pryds, „Proclaiming Sanctity through Proscribed Acts, The Case of Rose of Viterbo‟, in Women Preachers and Prophets through Two Millennia of Christianity, ed. Kienzle and Walker, p. 166. 314 Anneke B. Mulder-Bakker, „Maria Doctrix: Anchoritic Women, the Mother of God, and the Transmission of Knowledge‟, in Seeing and Knowing, Women and Learning in Medieval Europe 12001550, ed. Anneke B. Mulder-Bakker, Turnhout, 2004, p. 199. 151 required such a violent response. I shall look at this question from the point of view of conventions of discourse, rather than conventions of belief. Marguerite wrote her book to be delivered as is to her audience. The Mirror is not a compressed version of a speech that was actually delivered. It is also not a guide to the preacher how to create a sermon from the given material. It presents itself as the complete text of a sermon, to be delivered as is to the listeners. Even if the Mirror was actually read to the audience and not spoken from memory it would still have been delivered aloud. Most reading during the twelfth and thirteenth century was oral. When people were depicted reading at this time they were depicted reading in groups, which by necessity would have been aloud.315 The literary genres, largely letters and sermons, were composed with oral composition in mind. Longer and more complex literary works, including biblical exegesis, were often composed as expanded letters and sermons and were primarily for oral group presentation.316 Although private silent reading became more pervasive in the fourteenth and fifteenth centuries, it did not replace the oral reading even at the university.317 Not only was The Mirror read to be heard by an audience, but it was directly addressed to them in second person plural. This is evident from the initial address of Marguerite to her audience. She does so for the first time when she explains the reason for her speech. She says in the character of Love that she wrote this book in order for them to hear how to become more worthy of the perfection of life and being of peace: ‗affin que vous oyez pour mieulx valoir la 315 Paul Saenger, „Silent Reading: Its Impact on Late Medieval Script and Society‟, in Viator, 13 (1982), 367-414, esp. p. 379. 316 Saenger, „Silent Reading‟, p. 382. 317 Saenger, „Silent Reading‟, p. 391. 152 perfection de vie et l‘estre de paix.‘318 In this direct speech, Marguerite addresses her hearers and explains to them the objective of her project. The sole concern of the Mirror, says Marguerite in the character of Love is to urge you, the listeners, to become more worthy and to reach the perfection of life and being of peace The Mirror speaks about. She explains to them that the way to this perfect being lies in the virtue of perfect charity, and that she has created this book in order to direct them, her audience, to that life. ‗…which gift you will hear explained in this book through the Intellect of Love and following the questions of Reason.‘319 The address is vocal and direct from the preacher to audience. Beverly Mayne Kienzle has claimed that ‗a sermon is an oral discourse, spoken in the voice of a preacher who addresses an audience to instruct and exhort them on a topic concerned with faith and morals and based on a sacred text.‘320. Scholars have investigated a host of disciplines, in order to reconstruct the actual act of a delivery of a sermon.321 The main obstacle is to determine the relationship between the actual preaching event and written text that we have. The preacher might have adjusted the written material to the different audiences and occasions.322 Further, sermons in the thirteenth century were usually recorded in Latin, either as a guide to the preacher or as minutes taken at the act of preaching. Its delivery, however, was almost always in the vernacular. Therefore, even when the preacher wanted to deliver a precise version of the written sermon there was still an issue of translation, which could not have always been exactly the same.323 318 Margarite Porete, ed. Verdeyen, p. 14 Ibid., p. 15. 320 Beverly Mayne Kienzle, Introduction to The Sermon, ed. Kienzle, Turnhout, 2000, p. 151. 321 John W. O‟Malley, Introduction to De Ore Domini, Preacher and World in the Middle Ages, ed. Thomas L. Amos, Eugene A. Green, Beverly Mayne Kienzle, Kalamazoo, 1989, p. 2. 322 Kienzle, The Sermon, p. 968. 323 Kienzle, The Sermon, pp. 973-4. 319 153 The one to actually utter this speech is the character of Love. The Mirror is indeed a conversation between multiple characters, Love, Reason and Soul being the main ones. One could actually question which of these characters actually represents Marguerite herself, if any. Amy Hollywood in her excellent study has argued against the tendency to view medieval women‘s religious writing as autobiographical. In the case of Marguerite it is even more complicated to make such a claim, when the book is written as a continuous conversation between the characters. However, I would like to argue that the different characters represent not just figures in a philosophical dialogue, but to a certain extent the various sides in Marguerite‘s psyche. They are the various urges, tendencies and beliefs that she considers in her mind and she allows them all freedom of speech. I believe she does that so that every hearer will relate to this dialogue that might play in his or her mind and so will believe that they could embark on the journey Marguerite urges them on. So when Marguerite says to the audience ‗you will hear explained in this book through the Intellect of Love and following the questions of Reason‘, she actually situates herself as the director of the following play. She stages the characters as her tools that will assist her at her task and not as opposed parties, and herself as one of the contestants.324 Therefore, even though the character of Love is actually the one to address the audience, it is nevertheless Marguerite who lays out the program of the event in front of an attentive audience. A closing address of Marguerite to her audience corroborates this image of there being a single narrator. Towards the end of her book, after explaining in great detail the merits of the souls and the methods of arriving to the prescribed state, Marguerite relinquishes 324 Porete, Speculum, ed. Verdeyen, p. 15. 154 the different characters in order to speak plainly and relate to her listeners some of the difficulties she faces and her ways to overcome them. She names this part as: ‗..some considerations for those who are in the stage of the sad ones and who ask the way to the land of freeness.‘325 In this she elects to speak to her audience in her own persona. She relates to them some of the thoughts that helped her to endure the suffering. In this single persona Marguerite acts in the same capacity as the previous character of Love. She addresses her audience in the same manner of answering questions. However this time the questions and the answers come from the same person, or narrator. She also addresses them in the second person plural as the previous character of love, in the manner of direct speech to an audience. ‗Now you might ask how this can be, that a work of goodness through true intent can be in the soul through the sin of deficiency.‘326 Therefore, when speaking as Love as well as when speaking as herself Marguerite stages her speech as a direct address to her listeners aiming to urge them and exhort them on a way directly connected to their faith, making her book an effective sermon. The three clerics, whose approvals Marguerite appended to her Mirror, approached the issue of the book from two aspects. First they examined whether the book was genuine then they discussed its dissemination. Brother John, the cleric Marguerite mentions first, said: ‗this book was truly made by the Holy Spirit‘ and asked that: ‗it is well guarded for the sake of God and few see it‘.327 The second cleric, a Cistercian monk Dom Franco said ‗that he proved through Scripture that truth is what this book speaks‘. The third cleric, Master of Theology, Godfrey of Fontaines acknowledged the theology of Marguerite as the only divine theology, claiming that all 325 Porete, Speculum, ed. Verdeyen, p. 349. Porete, Speculum, ed. Verdeyen, p. 356. 327 Porete, Speculum, ed. Verdeyen, p. 407. 326 155 the others were human. Godfrey of Fontaines was an important philosopher and theologian. Born near Liège within the first half of the thirteenth century, he became a canon of his native diocese, and also of Paris and Cologne, and was elected, in 1300, to the bishopric of Tournai, which he declined.328 Godfrey limited the numbers of people to whom this book should be taught and explained why: ‗they could set aside the life to which they were called in aspiring to the one at which they will never arrive.‘ He acknowledged this teaching as the true way to reach God and the only one at that, but he restricted it to the few, who could actually do it. In the end he doubted if there were any such people. A person, he claimed, must be of an exceptional spiritual strength to attain the heights described in the book and he did not believe there were many people like that and maybe none at all.329 The approvers discussed the distribution instantly after asserting that the material from the Mirror had been received from a divine source. The dissemination of such messages from God was assumed, since it was acknowledged by the Church that whatever was received from Him had to be offered for the salvation of souls. This conviction was so strong that some considered even women as valid messengers. In fact the same clerics, who opposed female preaching with all their might, discussed whether to allow women to deliver messages received from God, even though they could not think of an evil worse than women speaking in public instructing men.330 This underlying assumption is seen clearly by the fact that there was no discussion whether or not the knowledge revealed in the book should be taught, only that it should be taught to a few. 328 Godfrey of Fontaines, New Catholic Encyclopedia, ed., Thomas Carson, Joann Cerrito, 2nd ed., VOL. ? Detroit, London, 2003, PP. ?? http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/06626a.htmTHIS WEBSITE IS NOT TO THE 2003 EDITION. 329 Porete, Speculum, ed. Verdeyen, pp. 407,409. 330 Blamires, „Women and Preaching‟, p. 141. 156 Although there is a slight possibility that this limitation was raised because of the gender of the writer of the Mirror, it was not expressed by any of the approvers. What is set forth by the acknowledgement of the theology of the Mirror as divine and the approval for its distribution is the fact that they considered the Mirror to be a complete guide to the improvement of the soul. It was, therefore, written in such a way that would proclaim it as a mystical treatise or a written sermon. The Inquisitor and the canon lawyers consulted in the case of Marguerite have judged her status as a relapsed heretic based on continuous distribution of the Mirror even after it was condemned and publicly burned in Valenciennes. Underlying this accusation was the charge of preaching to the simple folk and to Church officials. Guy, the bishop of Cambrai, who condemned Marguerite, prohibited her from disseminating her book further. He stipulated that it should be circulated neither by speech nor by writing: verbo vel scripto.331 When finally she was accused the Inquisitor and the Canon Lawyers used the word communico to articulate her spreading her ideas to a host of recipients: communicavit ac necdum dicto domino sed et pluribus aliis personis simplicibus….332 And: communicasti reverendo patri domino Johanni, Cathalaunensi episcopo, et quibusdam personis aliis..333 Had they wanted to say that she had only sent the book, they would have used mitto or lego. They however used the form that indicates direct transfer of ideas. Marguerite therefore communicated her ideas written in a form of a book to multiple others, many of them public figures of the Church. There is little chance that she read the book to them in private. And as the reading was at this time mostly aloud, what the accusers of 331 Verdeyen „Le Procès‟, p. 82. Verdeyen „Le Procès‟, p. 78. 333 Verdeyen „Le Procès‟, p. 82. 332 157 Marguerite were actually saying is that she preached her ideas out aloud in public to many people including respected Church officials. In the prologue Marguerite explains the purpose of her book with an example of a distant relationship between lovers. She describes a young woman, who heard of the character of a far away King and fell deeply in love with him. In order to relieve some of her loneliness and suffering she created an exact image of him to help her to dream about him more easily. ‗In similar fashion‘, says Marguerite, ‗I heard tell of a King… and for the sake of my memory of Him, He gave me this book, which makes present in some fashion His love itself.‘334 The story of the princes outlines the tension between the two forces, the male and the female, Reason and Love, clerical and lay in Marguerite‘s mind. The princess in the exemplum does not love just any king. She loves Alexander the great.335 Alexander was not just considered to be great, but the Great. Alexander‘s achievements, after all, far exceeded those of any Christian dux, even those of Charlemagne and the Crusaders.336 The ones who appreciated the achievements of the great king the most were the scholars of the Universities, who received an influx of ideas both from the ancients and of the highly-civilized nonChristian cultures and learned to appreciate them.337 The princess in this exemplum, who loves Alexander, thus represents scholars who strive to better understanding through intellect in order to get closer to the ancient and foreign ideas which they see as very desirable. At the same time the rapidity of his fall and the frailty of his empire, shown by Walter of Chatillon in his Alexandreis, together with his 334 Porete, Speculum, ed. Verdeyen, p. 13. Amy Hollywood has already referred to the fact that Marguerite took the story of Alexander from the Roman d’Alexandre by Alexander of Bernay, The Soul as Virgin Wife, Mechthild of Magdeburg, Marguerite Porete and Meister Eckhart, Norte Dame and London, p. 88. 336 Maura K. Lafferty, Walter of Chatillon’s Alexandreis, Epic and the Problem of Historical Understanding, Publications of The Journal of Medieval Latin, Turnhout, 1998, p. 13.. 337 Lafferty Walter of Chatillon’s Alexandreis, p. 18. 335 158 moral failings, made him a useful exemplum for the vanity of human achievement.338 Throughout the Alexandreis, Walter of Chatillon interrogates the usefulness of ancient learning and literature in medieval society. He exposes the false promise of the path offered by ancient epic and by human science. Aristotelian logic and curiosity about Nature, lead the hero of the Alexandreis towards peripheral, rather any inner awareness.339 While there is no explicit reference by Marguerite Porete to the character of Alexander made by Walter of Chatillon, the way Marguerite uses the exemplum to make a moral statement shows that she knew the tale. Before narrating the exemplum Marguerite asks the listeners to listen humbly to a little example of worldly love: ‗Or entendez par humilité ung petit exemple de l‘amour du monde…‘.340 The words ‗humbly‘ and ‗worldly‘ encapsulate the criticism Walter of Chatillon compiled against the lovers of human science, who put their trust into the created temporal instead of the eternal. The use of these specific words show the familiarity of Marguerite with the character of Alexander as it was created by Walter of Chatillon. By comparing herself and her book to the princess Marguerite shows that not only the masters of the universities are on the opposite side to what she is trying to teach, but the approach of striving to achieve a better understanding of God and the world through intellect, or Reason is wrong. The story of the princess, therefore, presents, by an unequal comparison, a conflict between Love and Reason and asserts the superiority of Love, allowing Marguerite to show her advantage as a representative of those whose relationship with God is through Love. Moreover, using the figure of Alexander the Great and his dubious claim for fame and success she implies that the male cleric‘s claims for authority are 338 Walter of Chatillon, The Alexandreis, trans. R. Telfryn Pritchard, Toronto, 1986. Lafferty Walter of Chatillon’s Alexandreis, p. 172. 340 Porete, Speculum, ed. Verdeyen, p. 10. 339 159 inferior to the authority for her book, namely God. Notwithstanding the arguments Marguerite compiled in favor of the supremacy of her theology over the perceived way of the clerics, the story of the princess shows that she had profound understanding of their ways. Therefore she argues the benefits of her theology in the Mirror, but she does it in a textual framework that speaks to their sense of order. Thematic sermon The Mirror was, therefore, structured by Marguerite as a ‗thematic sermon‘, a form that became common towards the end of the thirteenth century. In addition to their having a single point of departure in a form of a single thema or quotation from Scripture, the thematic sermons were very structured and based on the Artes Praedicandi, or handbooks instructing clerics how to preach.341 The thematic method of preaching was closely related to the new methods of intellectual inquiry, especially disputation, a primary method of discovery and instruction in the universities, which appeared around the end of the twelfth century and developed during the thirteenth.342 It is disputed how much the true written sermons resembled the guidelines presented in the Artes, and still even more so the resemblance of the actual preached sermon to them. However most sermons that have survived in the published form from the later Middle Ages show at least some influence of the Artes.343 It is improbable that Marguerite had access to Artes Praedicandi. What is provable however is that she knew several Church officials, 341 O‟Malley, Introduction to De Ore Domini, p. 8. Marianne G. Briscoe, Artes Praedicandi, Turnhout, 1992, p. 30. 343 O‟Malley, Introduction to De Ore Domini, p. 9. 342 160 to whom she preached her book and who she probably had in mind as an image of the clerical approach which she disputed in her Mirror. Because we do not know what clerics or what sermons she heard it is fruitless to try and trace similarities to surviving sermons. If, however, some aspects of the guidelines provided in the Artes are present in her work, then it is probable that she heard actual sermons and learned from them, wanting to speak to the clerics in their language if only to encourage them to listen to her ideas. The measure of the resemblance to the guidelines of The Mirror will suggest the number and the quality of the preachers that she had heard, before or during the writing of her Mirror. In order to see exactly how The Mirror of Marguerite Porete correlates with these concepts of the sermon it is best to examine it compared to the directions for a good sermon in the Summa of Alan of Lille, fortified by the later additions, especially regarding the expansion of the sermon that Alan mentions but does not go into detail about. Although Alan of Lille does not use the words Artes Praedicandi, his is the first comprehensive preaching manual. Many of the manuals after that of Alan of Lille quote or paraphrase his Summa. The themes and the terminology set forth in his work became the standard for Artes praedicandi throughout the middle ages.344 Alan begins his guide for good preaching by discussing in general the point of departure of a good sermon. First he deals with the preparation of the preacher for the task, and then he presents the thematic source of the desirable sermon. The preparation for the preacher entails six steps, before being ready with the seventh. Alan uses the parable of Jacob‘s ladder to create the sense of climbing to the sky, or striving to reach God. 345 He names seven steps a man can make. The first three stages seem to be between a 344 345 Marianne G. Briscoe, Artes Praedicandi, Turnhout, 1992, p. 20. Alanus de Insulis, Summa De Arte Praedicatoria, in J.P. Migne, PL, 210, cols 111-98 161 man and God: confession, prayer and thanksgiving. Next three steps are gained by mastering the Scripture. Then in the seventh stage, or rung, the man teaches the knowledge he has acquired from learning the scripture in public: Septimum gradum ascendit, quando in manifesto praedicat quae ex Scriptura didicit. The learning from the Scripture comes as the more advanced level of learning. After he has established a basic relationship with God by acknowledging his sins, praying and thanks giving, he learns how to become even better, using the Scripture. In other words the means by which a man moves closer to God is a more profound understanding of Scripture. He then reaches the highest level of development not only by teaching others what he has learned himself, but teaching them in public. More precisely, he preaches to them, exhorting them to follow him on the right way to God, which he has discovered in the Scripture. Marguerite, too, embarks on her apostolate on the seventh step of her alternative development. The seven steps of Marguerite greatly differ from those of Alan, but the seventh stage seems to be the same. Marguerite describes, in her theology, the six steps that can be made while still alive and the seventh stage that can only be achieved after death.346 Nevertheless Marguerite Porete is at a stage which reaches beyond the six stages she prescribes for her followers. She believes that after reaching her destination, God has given her this book to be an evidence of His love itself. Therefore Marguerite preaches in public not what she has learned from Scripture, as Allan would recommend had she not been a woman, but what she believed she has learned directly from God. She does not prescribe preaching as the goal for her followers, the ones who reach the freedom of the soul or the sixth stage. However, she chooses to do so herself. The Mirror of Simple Souls then, according 346 Marguerite Porete, summary of the steps are in Speculum, ed. Verdeyen, pp. 189-194 162 to its author, is the fruit of Marguerite‘s learning, which brought her into constant connection with God. In addition, Marguerite perceives the Mirror as being on the same level with the Holy Scripture, because it was given to her by God. As such, she believes it to be an authority for preaching. Therefore, just as Allan prescribed, Marguerite preaches the fruits of her learning in public, for what is a book if not means of mass communication?347 After expounding the necessary preparations for the preacher Alan turns to the specifics of sermon writing. A sermon, he says, should develop from a text which is a theological authority, ‗ab auctoritate theologica‘.348 For him, theological authorities are primarily texts taken from the Evangelists, the Psalms, the Epistles of Paul or the book of Solomon. However, if other Holy texts might facilitate the preaching on a particular theme they should be included as well. Marguerite, too, deals with authority at the outset of her book. In the prologue Marguerite compares herself to a princess who has fallen in love with Alexander the Great and her book to the image the princess created to assuage her longings for him.349 Marguerite presents this comparison as an exemplum, but the two parts of an equation are not identical. Although in both cases the images are created to bring the lover and the object of love closer to each other, the creators of the images are different. The princess creates the image of her lover according to rumors about him. In the case of Marguerite, she believes that God created his own image in the form of this book to serve as a memory of himself to Marguerite. The princess created the relationship by herself and within herself. Marguerite is convinced that she was given this book as the image of love of the lover by the lover himself. The authority Marguerite 347 David L. D‟Avray, The Preaching of the Friars, Sermons Diffused from Paris Before 1300, Oxford, 1985, p. 163. 348 Summa De Arte Praedicatoria, p. 113. 349 Porete, Speculum, ed. Verdeyen, p. 13. 163 proclaims for her book is, therefore, God himself. Marguerite does so to conform to clerical male sensibilities of the proper way for women to acquire such knowledge. However, this in no way retracts from the fact that she deals with the matter of authority in the opening of her treatise. This said, Marguerite wanted her book to be considered as having been written in a proper form. She brings forward a scriptural quotation as a source of her elaborate argument. ‗One thing is necessary for you to do if you want to be perfect. It is: go and sell all the things which you possess and give them to the poor, and then follow me, and you will have treasure in the heavens.‘ 350 The second beginning Marguerite provides for her treatise allows her to begin with a traditional starting point to a thematic sermon. But Marguerite had a reason for choosing this particular verse and not any other. The two beginnings support each other even on a mystical level. The first beginning enables Marguerite to indicate that there was a communication with God, who has given her the book to demonstrate to the world what his divine love can do for a soul. The second beginning hints of a promise that was given a long time ago that Marguerite‘s treatise now came to fully explain and set into action. Jesus, Marguerite says, was asked what was necessary for perfection. The answer was: give up all material things. Marguerite chooses to understand this verse allegorically. In her mind the answer Jesus gave the young man was: neutralize all things inside yourself and then you will be able to follow me. The fact that this understanding underlies her choice of a verse is made abundantly clear in the following paragraph: ‗…the one who would have perfect charity must be mortified in the affections of the life of 350 Porete, Speculum, ed. Verdeyen, p. 82. 164 the spirit…‘351 This proves that Marguerite meant the mortification of one‘s spirit as the things one should give up in order to follow Jesus. The next mission of the preacher, according to Alan of Lille, is to capture the good will of the audience; ‗captare benevolentiam‘.352 In Alan‘s case this is accomplished through the humble demeanor of the preacher himself, an explanation of the usefulness of the matter to be discussed and the assumption that the preacher is merely the vehicle for the truth of his sermon. Marguerite invests much space and effort in her book for the explanation of the usefulness of her theology, because unlike orthodox preachers, who preached well known morals using the known texts, she needed to propagate something new. The sole purpose of Marguerite‘s theology is to benefit her listener or the follower. The happiness of the person is at the centre of her attention. The theology of the Mirror seems to be an attempt by the author to address an everlasting question of salvation. Since the intentions and the thoughts of men carry the same potential of sin as deeds, there is no assured salvation.353 Every day has the potential to endangering the salvation of even the most devout person. Marguerite‘s theology attempts to solve the problem entirely by replacing human sinfulness with the Divine Goodness of God. The solution, if achieved, provides the soul with a certainty that no other existing practice offered. Marguerite explains again and again the attributes of such a happy state after she lists them in the beginning: ‗A Soul who is saved by faith without works, who is only in love, who does nothing for God, who leaves nothing to do for God, to whom nothing can be taught, from whom nothing can be taken, nor given and who possesses no will‘.354 The comfort of salvation Marguerite offers to her listeners is permanent. Nothing 351 Porete, Speculum, ed. Verdeyen, p. 17. Summa De Arte Praedicatoria, p. 113. 353 For example Matthew 5, 27. 354 Porete, Speculum, ed. Verdeyen, pp. 19, 21. 352 165 can be taken from the soul that completed the journey Marguerite offers in her book. Nothing new can be taught to it that will change that. There is nothing required from the soul in terms of practice as well, so there is nothing that can be done wrong. From the point of view of the consumers of her theology, for whom life was a constant fear from the afterlife, the promise of static assurance must have been a prize worth every effort. When the benevolence of the audience was captured the preacher was to introduce the protheme, consisting of a second quotation relevant to the sermon‘s general message. This element is apparently discussed in most of the Artes Praedicandi , but rarely evident in any surviving sermons. 355 It is hardly surprising, therefore, that The Mirror does not have any identifiable protheme. As Marguerite has probably acquired her percept of proper sermon by listening to real sermons, and the multitude of surviving sermons does not include a protheme, it is therefore not very plausible that a demand for a protheme would have been known to her. After the protheme was presented, the preacher was supposed to restate the theme and to declare to the audience which divisions or dilations he has made in order to treat the subject in his sermon. The part of the expansion of a sermon was the most detailed part in most of the Artes Praedicandi, but unfortunately it was also the last part they treated and not fully at this. The guides were adamant that the topic of the sermon was to be expanded by three divisions which were in turn then subdivided, but apparently the actual texts were not keeping with these rigid instructions and usually the divisions blurred towards the end of the sermon. 356 Marguerite outlines her divisions very distinctly; enumerating them. The 355 356 Briscoe, Artes Praedicandi, p. 55. Briscoe, Artes Praedicandi, p. 57. 166 number of her divisions greatly conforms with the instructions for good sermons, not so, however, is the significance she gives each part. The Artes Praedicandi instruct the preacher to have three main parts and subdivide each in three. Marguerite does not indicate that any of the parts are inferior to others, but she does have nine divisions. 1. a soul 2. who is saved by faith without works 3. who is only in love 4. who does nothing for God 5. who leaves nothing to do for God 6. to whom nothing can be taught 7. from whom nothing can be taken 8. nor given 9. and who possesses no will.357 Marguerite then begins to develop the first part of her distinction. First she elaborates on the nature of the soul, using a triple subdistinction: ‗this soul, say love, has six wings like the Seraphim. … with two wings she covers her face from Jesus Christ our lord. That means that the more this soul has understanding of the divine goodness, the more perfectly she understands that she understands nothing about it …with two other wings she covers her feet, which means that the more she has understanding of what Jesus Christ suffered for us, the more perfectly she understands that she understands nothing about it …‗with the two others the Soul flies, and dwells in being and rest. Thus all that she understands and loves and praises of the divine goodness are the wings by which she flies. Dwelling in being she is always in the sight of God; and in rest she dwells forever in the divine will.‘ 358 357 358 Porete, Speculum, ed. Verdeyen, pp. 18, 20. Porete, Speculumr, ed. Verdeyen, pp. 19, 21. 167 This passage, as so many others throughout the Mirror also abounds with a kind of sermon expansion that was very commonly used in mystical sermons, to the extent that it has become prerequisite of the genre: the four part exegesis on the Scripture. Since the purpose of a mystical sermon is creation of a union between man and God, it usually presents a discourse in which the metaphysical or transcendent realm is made real.359 Michael D. McGuire and John H. Patton have studied the patterns of the mystical sermons of Meister Eckhart, who lived after Marguerite Porete and was greatly influenced by her work.360 They have arrived at a conclusion that there was a certain pattern which abounded in mystical sermons and thus distinguished them from all the other sermons. Mainly, Eckhart greatly magnified the role of amplification by the ‗sensus allegoricus‘ and ‗anagogicus‘ in order to bring the divine reality closer to the reader/listener. In essence he had opened for the listeners a new level of reality. In medieval exegesis the senses were considered to be multiplied by the use of four ways of interpretation of Scripture: 1. according to the sensus historicus or literalis. This interpretation of the Biblical text included only the simple explanation of the words; 2. according to the sensus tropologicus, which provided the meaning of the text that looked at instructing on the correction of morals. 3. according to the sensus allegoricus, which looked for a meaning other than literal. This interpretation assumed that the Biblical text had an additional mystical meaning that used exemplification by simile. 4. ‗sensus anagogicus‘, that was used mystically or openly, to stir and exhort the minds of the listeners to the contemplation of heavenly things. 359 Michael D. McGuire and John H. Patton, „Preaching in the Mystic Mode: The Rhetorical Art of Meister Eckhart, in Communication Monographs, 44/ 4 (1977), 263-72, p. 270. 360 Amy Hollywood, The Soul as Virgin Wife, Mechthild of Magdeburg, Marguerite Porete, and Meister Eckhart, Notre Dame, 1995, p. 121. 168 This interpretation gave an interpretation to the text which involved divine beings and their interactions.361 The Mirror of Marguerite Porete overflows not only with ‗sensus allegoricus‘ and ‗anagogicus‘, but also with the ‗sensus tropologicus‘, which seems at first glance out of place in a treatise so preoccupied with the abandonment of the virtues. I would like to consider this small portion of the text: ‗Christ was transfigured on Mount Tabor, where there were only three of his disciples. He told them that they must neither speak about it nor say anything about it until His resurrection.‘362 After citing Scripture Marguerite divides this small text into three sectiones. First, she explains why he only showed himself to three disciples: ‗He did it so that you might know that few folk will see the brightness of His transfiguration, and He shows this only to His special friends, and for this reason there were only three. And still this happens in this world when God gives Himself through the ardour of light into the heart of a creature. Now you know why there were three.‘ All senses are engaged in Marguerite‘s explanation of this single part of the Transfiguration. First she explains this bit in the literal sense: there were three of his followers so that everybody will know that God will not reveal his true nature to large masses. Then Marguerite moves to the sensus tropologicus. Who will be those who will gaze God‘s true nature, she asks? Only His special friends, those ones who engage His special favour by doing something above and beyond Christian duty, will see his true face: ‗It happens in this world when God gives himself through the ardour of light into the heart of a creature.‘ The sensus allegoricus is next with the meaning that takes the similar but uses it in an original way. Just as God gave the vision of his true self, as light, to his three special disciples, he will give himself as true 361 Harry Caplan, „The Four Senses of Scriptural Interpretation and the Mediaeval Theory of Preaching‟ in Speculum, 4 (1929), 282-90, p. 283. 362 Porete, Speculum, ed, Verdeyen, p. 209. 169 ardour of light that will flow into the properly prepared creature, who has become his special friend and deserves this. The sensus anagogicus is the essence of this discussion; God and the revelation of his true self. The characters Marguerite uses to progress through the treatise of the Mirror are another set of divisions. Marguerite progresses through the Mirror stating her arguments then dividing/discussing them by her created characters. The Mirror of Simple Souls is designed as a disputation of adversaries on every subject. Marguerite uses the character of Reason to pose the most difficult questions and challenges imaginable. Therefore the argument veers occasionally from the main flow, and then rejoins the main argument again just to be divided on the next point in question. Notwithstanding the argument of Peter Dronke that Marguerite‘s deepest inspiration was poetic borrowing its literary ideals from fine amor, I would point out that it does not contradict the argumentative nature the characters, or that the same three are pulling the argument forward throughout the treatise.363 Marguerite clearly states in the beginning of her book to her hearers: ‗you will hear explained in this book through the Intellect of Love and following the questions of Reason.‘364 The fact that she puts herself, the narrator, outside this disputation of her characters, pronounces them as her means of movement throughout the discourse in The Mirror. Exempla 363 Peter Dronke, Women Writers of the Middle Ages, A Critical Study of Texts from Perpetua (+203) to Marguerite Porete (+1310), London, 1984, pp. 218-221. 364 Porete, Speculum, ed. Verdeyen, p. 15. 170 The way to end a sermon was rarely treated in the Artes Praedicandi at all.365 Alan of Lille is one of the few who does include some sort of ending at all by concluding his treatment of the subject of the sermon with a recommendation that the preacher ‗should also use exempla to make his points, because people remember familiar things.‘366 Alan does not expound on this matter. Humbert of Romans on the other hand deals with the nature of the exemplum in the prologue to his collection of exempla. Incidentally he enumerates seven considerations for the selection and delivery of the exemplum. The seventh deals with the matter of authority. No exemplum, he says, should be invented by the preacher. They should be taken from the various sources of exempla and there are degrees of quality of the authorities, with the best being the ones taken from the Scripture.367 Marguerite Porete concludes her teachings with seven considerations. I would like to consider two of them which look very much like exempla. She does take her characters for the exempla from the Scripture but gives them an entirely different impetus for their actions than the conventional one. She claimed their actions were guided by the same aspirations that guided her and they entered our collective memory after completing the steps described in The Mirror. In other words Mary Magdalene and Saint John the Baptist were free annihilated souls when their actions were seen and recorded in the Holy Scripture. The soul of John the Baptist was filled with God without himself as well, according to Marguerite. John the Baptist showed Jesus Christ to two of his disciples so that they might follow him but he himself never left the desert to go see Jesus Christ in human nature. Moreover, he held a sermon in the 365 Briscoe, Artes Praedicandi, p. 57. Summa De Arte Praedicatoria, p. 114. 367 Humbert of Romans, TITLE? IN Early Dominicans: selected writings, ed. Simon Tugwell, New York, 1982, p. 376. 366 171 presence of Jesus without being distracted. Marguerite argues that these two actions were against the natural inclination of a follower. A person devoted to a teacher would not have elected to stay put and direct others to the teacher. He would have followed him wherever he went. Also the knowledge of the nature of Jesus Christ, as the truth itself, should have naturally filled the voice of the sternest of speakers with awe. John the Baptist, however, kept his calm and completed the sermon. The explanation Marguerite gives for such occurrences is that God had filled his soul instead of him, becoming solely responsible for his decisions and actions. ‗Divine Goodness accomplished her works in him…so much had the divinity taken over his intention.368‘ John the Baptist is a mere vehicle for the words of God on their way to the people, according to Marguerite. It is shown by his alleged inability to act the way he acted, had he not been replaced by God completely. Mary Magdalene is also portrayed as one of the freed souls: ‗After Mary had done what she could and had to do‘, ‗then Mary rested without doing any work of herself and God accomplished his part gently in Mary, for Mary‘s sake without Mary. For Mary had done her part and she held on to nothing more except the Master…‘. 369 What Marguerite is actually saying is that Mary accomplished the total annihilation of her human essence and God replaced her in her soul and thereupon He acted in the soul of Mary in her place. This is the explanation Marguerite gives for the actions of Mary Magdalene. It was not incidental that Marguerite chose the character of Mary Magdalene to illustrate her point. Using the character of Magdalene Marguerite was trying to argue for the validity of her book. She has written instructions for a theology which she hoped to make known to all Christian world if she could. She had an image of the male 368 369 Porete, Speculumr, pp. 361,363. Porete, Speculumr, p. 353. 172 clerics as the ones that could stop her from her desire. The reason she saw for their possible objection was the fact that she was a woman and women were not allowed to pronounce the word of God in the world. So she made her best to accommodate them at least on the external level of structuring her book in the required standard of the preaching. But in the end she wanted to make the strongest argument, therefore she brought in the figure of Mary Magdalene, praised as Apostolorum Apostola and considered in every discussion on the preaching of women.370 Although some clerics tried to diminish the effect of the apostolate of Mary Magdalene, they were never successful in eliminating it completely.371 Marguerite Porete does not explicitly point out the preaching of Mary Magdalene. However, using this particular protagonist enables Marguerite to bring out all the arguments for the preaching of women that were installed deeply in the hearts of the readers or the listeners of her book. The character of John the Baptist serves Marguerite to treat the idea of the right kind of preaching from the opposite side. Although he is a man and can, in theory, claim the right to preach without complete annihilation of self, he is nevertheless shown preaching in the accepted female space, of speaking the word of God with no participation of self. He is a mere vehicle for the words of God on their way to the people. It is shown by Marguerite in his alleged inability to act the way he acted, had he not been replaced by God completely. In her interpretation of the character of John the Baptist Marguerite insinuates that there are no rightful preachers, whether male or female, unless they serve only as vehicles for the words of God. 370 Alcuin Blamires, „Women and Preaching‟, p. 138. Katherine Ludwig Jansen, „Maria Magdalena: Apostolorum Apostola‟, in ed., Beverly Mayne Kienzle and Pamela J. Walker, Women Preachers and Prophets through Two Millennia of Christianity, Berkely and London, 1998, p. 79. 371 173 To continue the literary framework outlined by Zan Kocher, Marguerite strips her main character of the body, doing so by moving away from gender based descriptions of mystical journey. Body and mind are removed to allow the soul an easier journey back to its creator.372 When the soul reaches this state it can be ‗embodied‘, by either male or female characters in the Bible and can act freely without being burdened by human fears, desires or conventions. It is also not incidental that Marguerite chooses to close her argument with illustrations from Scripture. As exempla, these two stories are highly effective. Marguerite manages to convey to her listeners the benefits of her theology using familiar and highly admired characters. Additionally her unorthodox outlook provides her with the perfect opportunity to legitimize her theology in the eyes of her perceived judges. In the beginning of The Mirror she felt compelled to provide Scriptural authority in addition to her claimed divine authority for The Mirror. Now, in the conclusion of her book, she brings Scriptural authority to provide legitimacy and merit to her theology. It was generally accepted that the significant events recorded in the New Testament had already been prefigured in the Old. It was also believed that events and persons of the New Testament times could be seen as foreshadowing the still hidden mysteries of the kingdom of heaven and also of the life of Christian souls.373 Marguerite used this understanding to her benefit. She understood that if she could show in the closure of her book that her theology was foreseen in the New Testament then it will be seen 372 Zan Kocher, Allegories of Love in Marguerite Porete’s Mirror of Simple Souls, Turnhout, 2008, p. 183. 373 John Hilary Martin, „The Four Senses of Scripture: Lessons from the Thirteenth Century‟, in Pacifica, 2 (1989), p. 95. 174 as legitimate. What she did not know was the fact that there were rules which governed exegesis. The way Marguerite uses these well known figures of Mary Magdalene and John the Baptist for her exempla show that she only saw the living examples of sermons but not the actual rules for their creation. She witnessed how the preachers seemingly with ease and freedom interpreted the Scripture while providing examples for their sermons. However, when a medieval preacher decided to use a story from the Scripture for his exemplum, he needed to understand all the meanings of this story in order to either use it in the correct context or use all or part of its meanings to support his arguments. A medieval exegete was not free to create new allegorical meanings, or even to substantially extend the ones which were already in use. The spiritual meanings were considered to be chosen by the Lord just as much as the literal sense of the stories was.374 They were believed to be the Word of God, and as such needed to be observed carefully and according to the rules. Throughout the middle ages it was believed that Scripture contains all the revelation needed for human existence.375 Marguerite was imaginative in the way she approached exegesis, creating new meanings for the action of her stories. Had she realized that there are rules she might have chosen to let alone the Bible characters or to use them exactly as she has heard them used in the sermons. Instead she elected to alter the exegesis and create a new meaning for the actions of the protagonists of the stories. The officials that had heard the ending of her book saw it as proof why women should not preach. In their eyes the character of Mary Magdalene was a reminder of the ongoing argument for the 374 Martin, „The Four Senses of Scripture‟, p. 94. Henri de Lubac, S.J., Medieval exegesis, Vol 1 The four senses of Scripture, Mark Sebanc trans., Edinburg, 1959, English trans. 1998, p. 25. 375 175 apostolate of women. The authentic interpretation done by Marguerite for the actions of both Mary Magdalene and John the Baptist demonstrated their perceived fear from sermons that will have created and delivered by women. They were convinced that women would not or more precisely could not conform to the rules of the interpretation and preaching. In their eyes it proved that indeed women were incompetent, changeable and easily led astray. They lacked the consistency to invest enough effort actually to learn the proper use of the Bible and were fond of every new idea that came alone and swept them away. Furthermore, when discussing the character of a sermon in general Alan of Lille describes two kinds of negative preaching. One should be tolerated, Alan says, the other condemned. The first kind is bad because it is prepared in order to gain the adoration of people. Alan quotes St Paul in claiming that every pronunciation of Christ, however insufficient is still profitable. Such sermons may be suspect but they should be tolerated nonetheless. The other kind is done by heretics and the way to distinguish this kind from all the others is by the use it makes of the Scripture. ‗first they propound the truth and then they draw false conclusions from it‘.376 Heretical preaching was especially abhorrent because it made unconventional use of the Scripture or in other words used the Scripture to prove its points instead of using it in confirmative ways to prove accepted and preapproved points, as the church demanded. Marguerite‘s attempt at conforming to the literary genre of the sermon has in fact emphasised her difference in the eyes of her opponents. When the inquisitor said that her book contained heresy and errors these were the errors that were especially abhorrent to him and for which she was indeed condemned. This is why she was 376 Summa De Arte Praedicatoria, p. 113. 176 accused of an attempt at preaching, especially to Church officials, and not of creating her theology. What the Inquisitor wished burnt on the stake was a concept of uncontrollable wilful woman who manipulated the Scripture to meet her ideas. The beginning of the fourteenth century saw such theologies as disturbance of the order rather than proof of orthodoxy to the heretics. The focus shifted and the proper observance of the orders of society and church became more important than extraordinary fits of theological genius. Marguerite Porete was very visible in her attempt to promote her theology, especially in the new forming climate of constraint. For this reason she was made an example for the people, and especially women, and brought to Paris. There her ideas were very carefully and publically examined and found heretical. 177 Conclusion - Enforced order The women commonly known as Beguines, since they promise obedience to nobody, nor renounce possessions, nor profess any approved rule, are not religious at all, although they wear the special dress of Beguines and attach themselves to certain religious to whom they have a special attraction. We have heard from trustworthy sources that there are some Beguines who seem to be led by a particular insanity. They argue and preach on the holy Trinity and the divine essence, and express opinions contrary to the catholic faith with regard to the articles of faith and the sacraments of the church. These Beguines thus ensnare many simple people, leading them into various errors. They generate numerous other dangers to souls under the cloak of sanctity. We have frequently received unfavorable reports of their teaching and justly regard them with suspicion. With the approval of the sacred council, we perpetually forbid their mode of life and remove it completely from the church of God. We expressly enjoin on these and other women, under pain of excommunication to be incurred automatically, that they no longer follow this way of life under any form, even if they adopted it long ago, or take it up anew. We strictly forbid, under the same penalty, the religious mentioned above, who are said to have favored these women and persuaded them to adopt the Beguinage 178 way of life, to give in any way counsel, help or favor to women already following this way of life or taking it up anew; no privilege is to avail against the above. Of course we in no way intend by the foregoing to forbid any faithful women… wishing to live a life of penance and serving the Lord of hosts in a spirit of humility. This they may do, as the Lord inspires them. (Cum de quibus dam)377 … …we have therefore heard with great displeasure that an abominable sect of wicked men, commonly called Beghards, and of faithless women, commonly called Beguines, has sprung up in the realm of Germany. This sect, planted by the sower of evil deeds, holds and asserts in its sacrilegious and perverse doctrine the following errors. ( Ad nostrum)378 377 Decrees of the Ecumenical Councils, trans. Norman P. Tanner, London, 1990, no. 16, p. 374: „Cum de quibusdam mulieribus, Biguinabus vulgariter nuncupatis, (quae, cum nulli promittant oboedientiam nec propriis renuncient, neque profiteantur aliquam regulam approbatam, religiosae nequaquam exsistunt, quanquam habitum, qui Beguinarum dicitur, deferant et adhaereant religiosis aliguibus, ad quos specialiter trahitur affection earundem), nobis fide digna relatione insinuatum exstiterit, quod earum aliquae, quasi perductae in mentis insaniam, de summa Trinitate ac divina essentia desputent et praedicent ac circa fidei articulos et ecclesiastica sacramenta opiniones catholicae fidei contrarias introducant et, multos super his dicipientes simplices, eos in errores diversos inducant aliaque quam plura periculum animarum parientia sub quodam velamine sanctitatis faciant et committant, nos tam ex his quam ex aliis, de ipsarum opinione sinistra frequenter auditis, eas merito suspectas habentes, statum earundem sacro approbante concilio perpetuo duximus prohibedum et a Dei ecclesia penitus abolendum, eisdem et aliis mulieribus quibuscunque sub poena excommunicationis, quam in contrarium facientes incurrere volumus ipso facto, iniungentes expresse, ne statum huiusmodi, dudum forte ab ipsis assumptum, quoquo modo sectentur ulterius, vel ipsum aliquatenus de novo assumant. Praedictis vero religiosis, per quos eaedem mulieres in huiusmodi Beguinagii statu foveri et ad ipsum suscipiendum incuci dicuntur, sub simili excommunicationis poena, quam eo ipso, quod secus egerint, se noverint incursoros, districtium inhibemus, ne mulieres aliquas, praedictum statum, ut praemittitur, dudum assumptum sectantes, aut ipsum de novo forsitan assumentes quomodocunque admittant, ipsis super eo sectando vel assumendo praebentes ullo modo consilium, auxilium vel favorem, nullo contra praemissa privilegio valitoro. Sane per praedicta prohibere nequaquam intendimus quin, si fuerint fideles aliquae mulieres, quae promissa continentia vel etiam non, promissa, honeste in suis conversantes hospitiis, poenitentiam agree voluerint et virtutum Domino in humilitatis spiritu deservire, hoc eisdem liceat, prout Domino in humilitatis spiritu deservire, hoc eisdem leceat, prout Dominus ipsis inspirabit.‟ 378 Decree of the Council of Vienne 1311 – 1312, Decrees, no. 28, p. 383: „… non sine displicentia grandi pervenit auditum, quod secta quaedam abominabilis quorundam hominum malignorum, qui Beguardi, et quarundam infidelium mulierum, quae Beguinae vulgariter appellantur, in regno Alemanniae procurante satore malorum operum, damnabiliter insurrexit, tenens et asserens doctrina sua sacrilega et perversa inferius designatos errores.‟ 179 … Since the duty of the office committed to us obliges us to extirpate from the Catholic Church this detestable sect…. they are to be punished with canonical censure. The diocesans and the inquisitors of heresy … are to exercise their office with special care concerning them, making inquiries about their life and behavior and about their beliefs in relation to the articles of faith and the sacraments of the church. They are to impose due punishment on those whom they find guilty, unless there is voluntary abjuration of the above errors and repentance with fitting satisfaction. (Ad nostrum)379 The execution of Marguerite Porete in 1310 was followed by two decrees issued by the Council of Vienne in 1311-2, both mentioning uncloistered women, or beguines: Cum de quibusdam mulieribus (no. 16) and Ad nostrum (no. 28). Cum de quibusdam was not directed at any single itinerant beguine or even a few wondering women, as first claimed by Ernest McDonnell.380 Instead it appears to battle against a much bigger threat. Although the decree speaks of beguines, the term did not specify any particular kind of women. The women who are condemned are described as choosing their way of life without a proper approval of the church. They choose a distinct dress, their companions, and most importantly decide what 379 Decree of the Council of Vienne 1311 – 1312, Decrees, no. 28, p. 384: „Cum autem ex debito commissi nobis officii huiusmodi sectam detestabilem et praemissos ipsius exsecrandos errores, ne propagentur ulterius et per eos corda fidelium damnabiliter corrumpantur, exstirpare ab ecclesia catholica necessario habeamus, nos sacro approbante consilio sectam ipsam cum praemissis erroribus damnamus et reprobamus omnino, inhibentes destrictius, ne quis ipsos de cetero teneat, approbet vel defendat. Eos autem, qui secus egerint, animadversione canonica decernimus puniendos. Porro dioecesani et illarum partium inquisitores haereticae pravitatis, in quibus Beguardi et Beguinae huiusmodi commorantur, suum officium circa eos diligenter exerceant, inquirentes de vita et conversatione ipsorum, qualiterve sentient de articulis fidei et ecclesiae sacramentis. In illos vero, quos culpabiles repererint, nisi abiuratis sponte praedictis erroribus poenituerint et satisfactionem exhibuerint competentem, debitam exerceant ultionem.‟ 380 Ernest W. McDonnell, The Beguines and Beghards In Medieval Culture with special emphasis on the Belgian Scene, New York, 1969, p. 490. 180 religious men they associate with. They are described as being insane. Other devout women, who essentially live the same way, are described in a positive way: ‗Of course we in no way intend by the foregoing to forbid any faithful women, whether they promise chastity or not, from living uprightly in their hospices, wishing to live a life of penance and serving the Lord of hosts in a spirit of humility. This they may do, as the Lord inspires them.‘ This inconsistency in the decrees of the Council represents to a great extent the paradox of dealing with devotion of women in the second half of the thirteenth century and the beginning of the fourteenth that I examined in my thesis. While Ad nostrum speaks of errant women in Germany, the articles of faith listed further in this decree correspond directly to the articles used to convict Marguerite Porete, as Romana Guarneri has demonstrated. In northern France, as in Germany, a process of inquisitorial persecution sought to place controls over creative individual spirituality, when it seemed to threaten the social order. This process of defining and negotiating the differences between what were presented as two camps, has been at the centre of this thesis—the process of shifting the attention from right theology to right behavior. This is why the two groups of women look similar in their religious observance, with the only accusation and reason for condemnation being lack of obedience: ‗The women commonly known as Beguines, since they promise obedience to nobody… .‘381 Although obedience was one of the regular monastic vows, here it is invoked as an ideal ignored by groups not obedient to a norm or to the official church authorities. In other words in the beginning of the fourteenth century it no longer mattered whether or not women‘s spirituality was in line with the accepted theology of their age. If 381 Decree of the Council of Vienne 1311 – 1312, Decrees, no. 16, p. 374. 181 their obedience was not absolutely certain, their way of life was banned. My starting point has been guided by the need to situate the activity and subsequent condemnation of Marguerite Porete in terms of two main areas of activity around the middle of the thirteenth century, the intellectual centre of Paris, and more creative and loosely controlled area of the southern Low Countries. In particular, her career must be situated in terms of flourishing of networks of religious renewal in the first half of the thirteenth century, supported by the mendicant Orders. Yet forces of constraint developed alongside those of creativity. The support Porete gained from figures like master Godfrey of Fontaines, the unidentified Franciscan called John, and Franco, Cistercian monk of Villers (whose authority she claimed in her support) were unable to prevent her being executed in a show trial in Paris, largely driven by inquisitors from the Dominican Order. As David Burr has argued, the Franciscan Order cannot be boxed as having one mind and one heart. 382 Burr has demonstrated how, even in the later thirteenth century, many mainstream Franciscans exhibited extremely sensitive affective devotional attitudes in their writings, while Franciscans who can only be described as either spiritual or who would subsequently be considered spiritual, exhibited opinions in tune with the strictest orthodox ecclesiastics. By 1260, the Franciscans were becoming more and more influential. Burr has noted that the more prestigious the reputation of the 382 David Burr, The Spiritual Franciscans, From Protest to Persecution in the Century After Saint Francis, Pennsylvania, p. 8-10. 182 Franciscans became the higher quality of men it attracted to its ranks. This development stood in direct opposition to the aims of Francis to his Order. But the development was unavoidable. Its new members saw themselves as better fitted to tend to society from a position of strength. The more educated and influential they were, the more they felt they could be useful in teaching and in alleviating poverty.383 Burr asserts that before 1270 there were just isolated cases of dissatisfaction with this progress from within the Order. The tendency to assume there was already then a division between spirituals and conventuals is one that he explains as resulting from too much credit to being given to the history written by Angelo Clareno 1247-1337), a persecuted Franciscan zealot.. In the early fourteenth century, Angelo Clareno would described the history of the events of the century after Francis‘s death from the stand point, of having spent much of his life in hiding from institutional Franciscans and having associated with other zealots like himself. This gave the events he described a different color from the perspective of the years.384 In 1270, however, the spirituality of the Franciscans had not yet divided, however, into two clear cut sects of spirituals and conventuals. The main attribute that was common to spiritually inclined Franciscans, beguines and various other groups and individuals, was the recognition that people must make their own decisions about their religious observance. This was not restricted to the laity; clerics felt free to pursue and advise on spiritual transformation as they saw fit.385 383 Burr, The Spiritual Franciscans, p. 8-10. David Burr and E. Randolph Daniel, introduction to Angelo Clareno, A Chronicle or History of the Seven Tribulations of the Order of Brothers Minor, New York, 2005, xx. 385 Burr, The Spiritual Franciscans, p. 313. 384 183 By the mid thirteenth century the freedom of some Franciscans to offer theologies to women was facilitated by their own sense of belonging to an established religious Order and of having access to sources of power, in particular through their interaction with the royal women of the French court. Men who joined the Franciscan order were bound by a series of conventions that drew them to the order, but also drew them to the female religion in all its representations, whether within their Order or just sharing their evangelical ideals. These connections were sought after as conduits to Franciscan influence, so that they could pursue a more public realization of their ideals in court and thus in the kingdom of France. Where they hoped to promote the more devout/spiritual pursuit of religion, whether they were from within the Franciscan establishment, like Bonaventure and Gilbert of Tournai, or were relative outsiders— like Marguerite‘s supporters, the unidentified brother John, mentioned in her Mirror, and Guiard of Cressonessart, who risked his life to defend her. Franciscan interaction with devout women was not uniform across the order or supportive to all women. While some women struggled for a bond with the friars as their attempt to realize their spiritual connection to the ideas of Francis, the friars battled for their right not to be obliged to provide them with spiritual care. Their customary practice, however, did not suffer from the legal battle, and the friars continued to care for nuns of the Order of Saint Clare, for example. Bonaventure, the fifth Minister General, presented the decision of the papacy in favor of Franciscan ministry for these women as a triumph, stating that they were no longer obliged to do so, and celebrating their voluntary decision to care for the women.386 386 Lezlie Knox, „Audacious Nuns: Institutionalizing the Franciscan Order of Saint Clare‟ in Church History, 69 (2000), 41-62, p. 61. 184 I am not disputing the general direction that was first articulated by Herbert Grundmann that devout women in the course of thirteenth century, as much as their male counterparts, wished to experience a more immediate and intense form of religion. Such women who exercised that wish did so either individually or formed communities, of which some were orthodox; others were considered heretical. I am looking at the ways in which devout women‘s activity brought them into the ongoing discussion about authority, taking place especially in northern France as part of Philip the Fair‘s construction of his political agenda and negotiation of balance of power between the mendicant Orders. The Franciscan Order was not the only such group to experience this change, but it suffered more acutely as it was so much involved in supporting devout women To some extent this thesis has expanded on the division articulated by Zan Kocher in his monograph, Allegories of love in Marguerite Porete.387 He describes the Mirror as a story of an argument between two opposing forces, Love and Reason, which needs to be resolved in order to allow the soul to be empty. I expand on this notion, examining the interaction between individuals of both sexes and across religious professions, who favoured one over the other: observance, order and obedience as prerequisite for any love relationship or teachings. On one side, texts like Porete‘s Mirror can be seen as reflecting the desire and right of women to access divine authority. On the other side, women‘s observance of religion sometimes encouraged male clerics to manipulate their allegiances and enforce their own ambitions of authority. This thesis has examined a series of texts that illustrate this tension between dynamism and control. Dianne Elliot has described the creation the female saint as a tool in the papacy‘s battle against the 387 Kocher, Allegories of Love, p. 183. 185 heretics‘ teachings.388 On the other hand, John Coakley has written about how friars venerated these women for adding something to their experience of the divine, without taking away their sense of authority.389 I would argue that regardless of the way the lives of the saintly women were created and presented to the heretics, the interaction between them and the friars was very real and not at all without frictions. These frictions helped divide the male clerics into being sometimes supporters and sometimes adversaries of devout women. The main criteria for this division were the measure of control they needed to exert over devout women‘s lives. I have explored the multi-layered interaction between the members of the mendicant orders, Franciscans especially, and women of various backgrounds in northern France. Noble women attracted more attention from Franciscans, while those who were not noble were more vulnerable. Royal women enjoyed a special privilege. Their power was accepted as their birth right. They were, therefore, encouraged to greater creativity, which in turn has allowed the Franciscans in their lives some level of control. When Gilbert of Tournai wrote to Isabelle of France he encouraged her to develop her spirituality to the same extent and in the same way the friars did. When he wrote about devout women and their ‗uncontrolled‘ behavior to the council of Lyon, he appeared much less encouraging of creativity. Discussing the problem of women acting on their own authority, he was only concerned with questions of supervision. The Speculum dominarum, written for Jeanne of Navarre sometime before her death in 1305, also cultivates the Queen for an active role, using moral instruction to do so. The Mirror of Simple Souls, 388 Dyan Elliot, Proving Woman, Female Spirituality and Inquisitional Culture in the Later Middle Ages, Princeton and Oxford, 2004, p. 65. 389 John Coakley, „Friars as Confidants of Holy Women in Medieval Dominican Hagiography, in Images of Sainthood in Medieval Europe, ed. Renate Blumenfeld-Kosinski and Timea Szell, London, 1991, pp. 222-246, p. 245. 186 which similarly aims at creating a more active role within the spiritual life, but written outside of carefully supervised structure, is condemned. This thesis has explored not just the tension between support for and suspicion of religious women, but the decrease in tolerance and freedom to encourage spiritual and devout lives within northern France in the late thirteenth and early fourteenth centuries. With an advancing Inquisitorial apparatus, this balance between control and dynamism shifted towards control. Marguerite Porete‘s story stretches over that period of change and demonstrates it. When she was writing her Mirror, she evidently enjoyed certain freedom of movement and believed that there was a place for her thesis among not only her peers but also clerics. Even her criticism of some male religious is indicative of her perceived ability to do so. By the time she was tried, the balance between the need to be advised on the divine mysteries, and to be able to control religious observance shifted to the latter and was projected in the manner of her trial. These attempts at self-expression by devout women, both within and outside formal religious life, generated writings addressed to women that were different from those created only for men. These writings skirted the boundaries of logical, rational and contemplative reasoning. They engaged in detailed exegesis of Scripture as a way of asserting authority, and more affective interaction and communication, which produced treatises on loving as conduit to God‘s authority. These texts also differed in their need to compete with each other for primacy and authority. Theirs was God; the ultimate authority. However this public claim brought them into the ongoing dialogue of authority, with varying success. 187 Controlling the observance of such women took a form of asserting male clerical authority over them. It drove such women further away from exploration of the male territory of Scripture and towards internal devotion; back to love and away from the mind. It is not coincidental, that this took the form of disconnecting women from Franciscan influence, and putting them under Dominican control. The division of the Franciscan Order into more clearly defined groupings, resulted in withdrawal of the more spiritual wing from public life, diminishing their powerful support of for devout women, and sometimes bringing about their transfer to Dominican care (as at the Beguinage of Paris). The process of becoming more institutionalized and clericalized eventually brought about a greater divide between those Franciscans who supported alternative ways of life and those who supported order in observance. In France, the death of Jeanne of Navarre in 1305 deprived spiritually inclined Franciscans, like Bernard Délicieux, with an important patron. Conventual Franciscans moved closer to the monarchy and the establishment of the church; the more radically inclined withdrew from this activity and disappeared from the public eye. Those who remained in positions of influence became closer to the Dominicans, who at that stage identified with the political agendas of the King. In 1310 Marguerite Porete was marginalized and then executed, signaling an end to a period of development and creativity. Her execution also marked a temporary end to the relative freedom of religious devotion in the Low Countries. Her trial and execution in Paris brought that region under a tighter supervision and control of monarchical church. Decrees ordering clerics in all the northern area to remove their support and allow the women to be subjected to inquisitorial measures finalized these steps. Order was the new agenda, and these documents enable us to understand how it was applied. 188 With the election of John XXII in 1316 the Dominicans assumed a dominant influence in the French court. The king and the papacy were now working in mutual agreement and respect and the Dominicans in France embodied this collaboration. 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