Procurators, Priests and Clerics: Male Leadership of the Beguinage of St. Elizabeth of Valenciennes in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries
Abstract
1. Introduction
2. The Male Leadership of St. Elizabeth
2.1. Procurator
2.2. Parish Priest and Chaplains
2.3. Clerics
3. Their Distinctive Functions and Cooperation
4. Characteristics of the Male Leadership
5. Why Such Particularity?
6. Conclusions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
Appendix A. Chronological List of the Procurators of the Beguinage of St. Elizabeth of Valenciennes During the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries
Names | Titles | Dates | N° ADN and Others |
Gautier de Vicoigne/Haussy | canon of St. John and procurator of the hospital | October 1243 | 40 H 556/1343J |
abbot of St. John, general procurator and provisor of the hospital | June 1244 | 40 H 642, n°1; 40 H 640, B.B.B, n°1 | |
abbot of St. John | August 1244 | 40 H 556/1344 | |
abbot of St. John | December 1244 | (E. Le Glay 1841, pp. 136–38, 217–19). | |
abbot of St. John and provisor of the hospital | June 1251 | 40 H 637/1905 | |
December 1251 | 40 H 630/1841A | ||
March 1252 | 40 H 613/1651 | ||
November 1252 | 40 H 613/1650/A | ||
April 1254 | 40 H 613/1652 | ||
February 1255 | 40 H 613/1653 | ||
December 1258 | 40 H 557/1351 | ||
Jean de Famars | Joannes presbyter parochialis | December 1239 | 40 H 552/1333/bis |
frère de Richedis | May 1240 | 40 H 556/1343A | |
chaplain of the hospital | June 1251 | 40 H 637/1905 | |
priest and provisor of the hospital | July 1260 | 40 H 613/1655 | |
40 H 586/1554 | |||
brother | February 1265 | 40 H 613/1656 | |
priest of the hospital | October 1267 | 40 H 613/1657 | |
Guillaume de Lalaing | master, canon of Condé and procurator of the hospital | February 1263 | 40 H 637/1906 |
Guillaume de Werchin | abbot of Vicoigne and procurator of the hospital | February 1265 | 40 H 613/1656 |
July 1266 | (Le Boucq 1844, p. 74). | ||
October 1267 | 40 H 613/1657 | ||
August 1268 | 40 H 557/1359 | ||
June 1269 | 40 H 557/1361 (n°1) | ||
1270 | 40 H 557/1362 | ||
1272 | 40 H 558/1364 | ||
February 1273 | 40 H 558/1365 | ||
40 H 558/1366 | |||
abbot of Vicoigne | November 1273 | (Hautcoeur 1873, p. 206). | |
abbot of Vicoigne | June 1278 | 40 H 558/1374 | |
July 1278 | 40 H 557/1361 (n°2 and 3) | ||
Jean Gaufier | provisor of the hospital | February 1276 | 40 H 587/1557 |
40 H 587/1558 | |||
dean of Notre-Dame of the church of St. Géry of Valenciennes | February 1283 | (De Saint-Génois 1782, pp. 287, 717). | |
dean of Notre-Dame of the church of St. Géry of Valenciennes; master and sovereign of the hospital | May 1285 | 40 H 614/1659 | |
Pierre | dean of the church of Condé | 30 September 1302 | (De Saint-Génois 1782, p. 336). |
dean of the church of Notre-Dame of Condé; procurator of the hospital | May 1304 | 40 H 614/1661 | |
dean of Condé | September 1304 | (De Saint-Génois 1782, p. 235). | |
Godefroy de Bavay | frère Godefroy de Vicoigne, commissioner of the Count and Countess of Hainaut | 21 September 1309 | (De Saint-Génois 1782, p. 274). |
abbot of Vicoigne | July 1315 | 40 H 630/1845 | |
9 October 1316 | (De Saint-Génois 1782, p. 312). | ||
abbot of Vicoigne; master and procurator of the hospital | May 1318 | 40 H 560/1401 | |
abbot of Vicoigne | 24 June 1318 | (De Saint-Génois 1782, p. 365). | |
abbot of Vicoigne; master and procurator of the hospital | February 1321 | 40 H 560/1407 | |
abbot of Vicoigne | 4 August 1323 | 40 H 552/1336 | |
abbot of Vicoigne and procurator of the hospital | May 1324 | 40 H 560/1413 | |
abbot of Vicoigne | 27 January 1324 | (De Saint-Génois 1782, p. 340). | |
abbot of Vicoigne | 3 March 1325 | 59 H 11/68 | |
abbot of Vicoigne | August 1327 | (De Saint-Génois 1782, p. 340). | |
28 September 1327 | (De Saint-Génois 1782, p. 219). | ||
abbot of Vicoigne and procurator of the hospital | March 1328 | 40 H 561/1428 | |
abbot of Vicoigne; executor of Count William the Good | 22 February 1335 | (De Saint-Génois 1782, p. 237). | |
abbot of Vicoigne | 18 September 1335 | (De Saint-Génois 1782, p. 291). | |
advisor of the Count of Hainaut | 1337, the Thursday after Easter | (De Saint-Génois 1782, p. 379; Devillers 1881, p. 50, note 1). | |
abbot of Vicoigne | 4 March 1338 | (De Saint-Génois 1782, p. 29). | |
9 July 1338 | (De Saint-Génois 1782, p. 57). | ||
November 1338 | (De Saint-Génois 1782, p. 373; Devillers 1881, p. 694). | ||
6 December 1338 | (De Saint-Génois 1782, pp. 643–45). | ||
Jean de Thuin | canon of Thuin; master and provisor of the hospital | 20 June 1352 | 40 H 562/1451 |
pourvoyeur of the hospital and the beguinage | 15 August 1353 | 40 H 586/1556 | |
parish priest | 28 February 1361 | 40 H 636/1898A | |
parish priest | 7 April 1363 | 40 H 636/1899 | |
parish priest | 10 October 1364 | 40 H 562/1461 | |
Étienne Maulion | canon of St. Germain of Mons | 25 September 1338 | (Devillers 1881, pp. 67–68). |
8 October 1339 | (Académie Royale des Sciences, des Lettres et des Beaux-Arts de Belgique 1897, p. 98). | ||
cleric and advisor of William II of Avesnes | 1340 | (De Saint-Génois 1782, p. 293). | |
priest | 12 May 1341 | (Devillers 1881, pp. 132–38). | |
chaplain of William II of Avesnes | 30 June 1341 | (Devillers 1881, pp. 142–43). | |
monseigneur | 26 June 1344 | (Devillers 1881, pp. 237–42). | |
canon of York and Soignies | 10 July 1345 | (Devillers 1881, pp. 250–51). | |
advisor of the Empress Margaret of Avesnes | 1350–1353 | (Académie Royale des Sciences, des Lettres et des Beaux-Arts de Belgique 1897, p. 98). | |
monseigneur | 9 August 1353 | (Devillers 1881, p. 770). | |
provost of the churches of Mons | 23 April 1354 | (De Saint-Génois 1782, p. 394). | |
seigneur | 28 May 1354 | (Devillers 1881, pp. 406–7). | |
31 May 1354 | (Devillers 1881, p. 797). | ||
provost of the churches of Mons | 22 July 1355 | (Devillers 1881, p. 452). | |
provost of the churches of Mons; dean of St. Géry of Cambrai and master of the beguinage | 14 February 1357 | 40 H 636/1898 | |
provost of the churches of Mons | 25 October 1360 | (Devillers 1881, pp. 582–83; Académie Royale des Sciences, des Lettres et des Beaux-Arts de Belgique 1897, pp. 98–99). | |
provost of the churches of Mons; dean of St. Géry of Cambrai and master of the beguinage | 28 February 1361 | 40 H 636/1898A | |
dean of Cambrai, master and governor of the hospital | 25 January 1364 | 40 H 624/1788 | |
advisor of Duke Albert of Bavaria; dean of Cambrai | 25 January 1367 | (Devillers 1883, pp. 112–13; Académie Royale des Sciences, des Lettres et des Beaux-Arts de Belgique 1897, p. 99). | |
dean of Cambrai; master and governor of the hospital | 22 October 1367 | 40 H 615/1681 | |
monseigneur; dean of Cambrai | 23 November 1372 | 40 H 563/1470 | |
dean of Cambrai | 1373 | (De Saint-Génois 1782, p. 226). | |
dean of Cambrai; advisor of Duke Albert of Bavaria | 10 January 1374 | (Devillers 1883, p. 219; Académie Royale des Sciences, des Lettres et des Beaux-Arts de Belgique 1897, p. 99). | |
dean of Cambrai; advisor of Duke Albert of Bavaria | 5 March 1374 | (Devillers 1883, pp. 220–25; Académie Royale des Sciences, des Lettres et des Beaux-Arts de Belgique 1897, p. 99). | |
advisor of Duke Albert of Bavaria | 19 October 1376 | (Devillers 1883, pp. 249–50). | |
Gautier de Montrécourt | abbot of St. John; procurator of the beguinage | 21 December 1376 | 40 H 662, fol. 125r° |
Jacquemart d’Haspres | cleric of the hospital | 3 April 1372 | 40 H 563/1470 |
procurator of the hospital | 19 October 1380 | 40 H 607/1624 | |
custodia sancte Elisabet Valencenensis, quam tenet Jacobus de Haspri | (Longnon 1908, p. 298). | ||
Pierre de Tournai | prior des Écoliers de Mons; governor of the beguinage | About 1380–1384 | 40 H 662, fol. 121r° |
5 November 1388 | 40 H 635/1886/A | ||
18 November 1388 | 40 H 635/1886B/C | ||
Mathieu I Fievet | abbot of Crespin and procurator of the hospital and the beguinage | 21 August 1390 | 40 H 631/1850 |
15 May 1391 | 40 H 631/1851 | ||
abbot of Crespin, docteur en décrez | 5 August 1391 | (Devillers 1883, pp. 488–94). | |
abbot of the church of St. Landelin of Crespin | 6 November 1391 | (Devillers 1883, pp. 503–8). | |
abbot of the church of St. Landelin of Crespin; Doctor of Law; treasurer of Hainaut; master and governor of the hospital and the beguinage | 6 June 1394 | 62 H 15/237 | |
40 H 563/1475 | |||
7 July 1394 | 40 H 635/1887 | ||
Martin de Moustier | procurator of the hospital | 15 February 1394 | 40 H 607/1625 |
24 June 1394 | 40 H 601/1595 | ||
procurator of the hospital | 18 April 1396 | 40 H 564/1478 | |
9 May 1396 | 40 H 582/1540 | ||
cleric of the hospital | 29 June 1398 | 40 H 601/1596/A | |
26 September 1398 | 40 H 564/1480 |
1 | By the late thirteenth century, according to Walter Simons, a new type of beguines and beghards emerged, referred to as “swesteren” and “lollards” (not the English dissenting Lollards), differing from traditional ones in both form and doctrine. Nevertheless, they also received robust support from influential lay patrons (Simons 2023). |
2 | Recent scholarship by Huanan Lu identifies Marguerite (referred to as Marghoneta in the report of 1323) as a member of the beguinage of St. Elizabeth of Valenciennes (Lu 2021b). |
3 | Simons argues that the “beghards” and “beguines” targeted in Ad nostrum were, in fact, swesteren and lollards. However, contemporary documents, particularly episcopal decrees, often failed to clearly distinguish between swesteren/lollards and traditional beguines/beghards, leading to widespread confusion and disruption among the latter. This ambiguity prompted Pope John XXII to issue Cum de mulieribus in 1320, specifically aimed at examining the orthodoxy of traditional beguines (Simons 2023). |
4 | John’s letter is lost now, but the papal response survived in two versions (Von Mosheim 1790, pp. 630–32; Baluzius 1921, pp. 353–56). |
5 | This petition represents the only surviving document from this period of persecution that records a seigneurial defense of beguines (Simons 2014, p. 332). |
6 | This inquisitorial report has been published by Huanan Lu (Lu 2021b, pp. 480–85). |
7 | The investigators appointed by the bishop were typically protectors of beguinages, yet most communities faced multiple investigators, whereas Valenciennes had only one—Godefroy, the provisor of the beguinage itself, rather than an independent one. This unique arrangement positioned Godefroy as both an insider and an outsider: as one of St. Elizabeth’s internal male leaders, he originated from another diocese, allowing him to navigate the investigation with a dual perspective (Lu 2021b, p. 478 and note 149). |
8 | The convent of Dominicans and Franciscans in Valenciennes served as the primary burial sites for the Avesnse family (Lu 2021a, pp. 160–61). |
9 | Bishop Pierre, hailing from southern France, lacked entrenched roots in the diocese of Cambrai and was not known for religious zealotry. This detachment, combined with the beguines’ strong favor among secular lords, provided him with little incentive to oppose the community (Lu 2021b, pp. 476–77). |
10 | Such as Mary of Oignies and James of Vitry, Lutgard of Tongeren and Thomas of Cantimpré (Lauwers 1989; Delle Stelle 2012). |
11 | Jacques Marseille’s research also mentioned the spiritual direction of the Dominican friars to the beguines living in the parish of St. Andre in Lille (Marseille 1970, p. 82). |
12 | On the role of the magistrae (Lu 2024). |
13 | Lille, Archives Départementales du Nord [ADN] 40 H 552/1333 (December 1239): “…tam capellanus, quam rector, vel rectrix quociens instituentur de novo in loco eodem…Si vero contingat quod ex elemosinis fidelium ibidem collatis ad usus capellani perpetuus redditus assignetur, et institui contingat perpetuum capellanum, rector et consilium domus eum elegent idoneum secundum quod estimabunt et bone fame et electum priori Sancti Salvii qui pro tempore fuerit presentabunt, quem idem prior domino Cameracensi Episcopo tenebitur presentare, ut ab ipso more debito approbetur.” This act has already been published by Simon le Boucq (Le Boucq 1844, p. 72), but this version differs markedly from the original. |
14 | It is the so-called Beverege manse, donated to the hospital by Joan of Constantinople in 1243 and confirmed by her sister Margaret in January 1245 (ADN 40 H 630/1841A). According to the agreement concluded between Margaret and the prior of St. Sauveur, it was also allowed to celebrate masses in this house (Le Boucq 1844, p. 73). The béguines du Sac (women who wear the sack) were a distinct community of beguines in Valenciennes, adhering to a more austere religious discipline. In 1269, Countess Margaret granted them her residence near the Porte de Salle—a property originally bestowed upon the hospital of St. Elizabeth—founding what became known as the Couvent du Sac. |
15 | It remains uncertain whether the original chapel was one of the two later perpetual chapels, as it was not recorded by name. |
16 | (Carpentier 1959, pp. 121, 180). “Disans que de anchienne coustume et usauche et de tout temps ainsy en a esté fait par elle et leur predecesseres”. |
17 | (Carpentier 1959, pp. 180–81). “Lequel polra servir, aydier, assister et favoriser aux affaires et négoces dudit beghinaige autant et plus que nul aultre”. |
18 | Such as the abbot of St. John, the abbot of Vicoigne, the dean of the chapter of St. Géry of Valenciennes, the dean of the chapter of Cambrai, and the prior of the Val des Écoliers of Mons, see Appendix A. |
19 | Among the beguinages of the Low Countries, the monks of the abbey of Villers and St. Bernard often shared the spiritual charge of beguines. |
20 | Respectively ADN 40 H 560/1404; 40 H 552/1336; 40 H 660, fol. 41r°. For similar examples, see: 40 H 583/1544 and 40 H 562/1460. “personne vivante et mourante”, often abbreviated as personne. The legal fiction of “the mortal landowner” exists to provide equitable compensation to feudal lords for their hereditary losses, owing to the Church’s perpetual ownership of property. |
21 | ADN 40 H 563/1470; 40 H 607/1624. He has once been mentioned “custodia” of St. Elizabeth (Longnon 1908, p. 298). |
22 | ADN 40 H 607/1625; 40 H 601/1595; 40 H 564/1478; 40 H 582/1540; 40 H 601/1596/A and 40 H 564/1480. Martin de Moustier headed the beguinage until 1412 (Carpentier 1959, p. 172). |
23 | Curatus, capellanus, presbyter in Latin, and cures/curet/cureit, capellain/cappelain/capelain, clers/clercq/clerc in medieval French. The term “vicaire” was also once used to designate the priests of the beguinage (the case of Philippe Bordel de Caverone, ADN 40 H 588/1561; 40 H 555/1343; 40 H 662, fol. 100v°). |
24 | ADN 40 H 552/1333: “…ad instantiam partium presentium sigillo nostro cum sigillis dictorum prioris et ecclesie et virorum venerabilium Sancti Sepulcri, Sancti Auberti, et de Cantimprato abbatum…” |
25 | In 1251, Gautier and friar C., prior of the Friars Preachers, confirmed and approved the grant of the Countess’s house; ten years later, Guillaume witnessed the donation of a house near la porte de Salle by the same Countess to settle down the beguines du Sac (ADN 40 H 557/1361); Godfrey confirmed it in 1321 (ADN 40 H 560/1407). |
26 | (Le Boucq 1844, pp. 75–76). “par le conseil…li abbet de Sainct Jehan, en Valenchiennes, li Prieus des Preecheurs, li Gardien des Frères Meneurs, et moy signeur Jehan de Fanmars, adont curet de Sainct-Ezabiel”. |
27 | ADN 40 H 557/1361: “…et doivent vivre par le conseil dou curet et des maitresses …dou beghinages…” |
28 | Helène de Biausart and her daughters and sisters; Elekine de Biaufart and her two sisters; Agnès de Viesly and Élisabeth de Montreuil (ADN 40 H 613/1651–1653). |
29 | See Appendix A. |
30 | Jean de Saultain and Jacques de Courtrai (ADN 40 H 552/1336); Gillion Lorghilleu (ADN 40 H 586/1556); Simon d’Élouges (ADN 40 H 630/1848; 40 H 662, fol. 2v°; 40 H 586/1556; 40 H 636/1898; 59 H 12/69); certain N. (ADN 40 H 662, fol. 120v° and 121r°); Jacques de Cambrelent (ADN 40 H 634/1876). |
31 | On the Chastel family and Béatrice de Chastel (Lu 2024). |
32 | Taking into account that Pierre was designated by the Count, ADN 40 H 635/1885/A; (Le Boucq 1844, p. 74). |
33 | Several Dominicans, in particular friar Michel, Henry de Quesnoy, and Gilles de Barisel, played a consulting role during the first two decades of the hospital of St. Elizabeth (ADN 40 H 556/1345/A; 40 H 556/1344), perhaps at the request of the countess. The Friars Minor retained also a close link with St. Elizabeth, as evidenced by the participation of the guardian of St. Francis in the drafting of the regulations of 1262. |
34 | Despite the constant conflicts with the prior of St. Sauveur. Moreover, the abbot of St. John, keeping an ambiguous correlation with the beguinage, spared no effort over thirty years to help the beguinage recover their illegally alienated property during the censorship (Lu 2021a, Quatrième Partie, Chapitre III). |
35 | As recorded in the register of 1327, the hospital had to pay each year an annuity of 10 sous to the Friars Minor on the death anniversary of Marie de Roes (ADN 40 H 660, fol. 51r°; 40 H 661, fol. 42r°; 40 H 662, fol. 64r°). In 1348, Isabelle de Villers dite de Rombies, bequeathed two mencaudées of land to the convent of the Friars Minor, on the condition that the latter say each year her anniversary mass in the chapel of St. Agnes of the church of St. Francis (ADN 62 H 59/553A). |
36 | On her land donation to beguines in 1323, Jeanne Cokelete stipulated that after her death and that of her mother, the arrangement of the land should follow the advice of the guardian of St. Francis and the Friars Minor a qui li derrainne vivans de elles II confesseroit (ADN 40 H 561/1424). Eleven years later, the guardian of St. Francis appeared as executor of the same Jeanne for her bequest to Jeanne Lasuiere d’Avesnes-les-Sec (ADN 40 H 547/1286). |
37 | Gautier’s mandate would be the last time that an abbot of St. John assumed the direction of St. Elizabeth (Carpentier 1959, pp. 171–74). |
38 | He resigned from the priorship of the monastery of Val des Écoliers for an austerer life (Devillers 1886, pp. 51–57). |
39 | Carpentier’s argument that Martin de Moustier, also abbot of Crespin, was governor of St. Elizabeth from 1394 to 1412, is mistaken. The abbot of Crespin after Mathieu is Jean Ladourie (1407–1425), and there is no abbot of Crespin named Martin de Moustier. Moreover, no document qualified Martin as abbot of Crespin (De Crespin 1923, pp. 170–81). |
40 | Jean de Segry, canon and dean of Notre-Dame de la Salle (Carpentier 1959, pp. 172–73). |
41 | There was only one such document. On 18 July 1396, Jean de Louvignies, parish priest of Sebourg, donated four mencaudées three quartiers of arable land located in Saultain to the hospital of St. Elizabeth and the church of St. Paul, on the condition that Pierart de Fare became homme de loi for the church of St. Paul and the hospital of St. Elizabeth (ADN 40 H 564/1479). |
42 | In 1253, Countess Margaret sold Hainaut to Charles d’Anjou, who ruled it temporarily until the return of his brother Louis IX from the Holy Land. However, the occupation of Hainaut by the French Crown was ephemeral, and the actual ruler of Hainaut was always the Count. |
43 | It was through the prayers of the abbot of St. John that Countess Joan was born (E. Le Glay 1841, p. 2, note 1). |
44 | The statutes were confirmed by the bishop of Cambrai, the abbot of Cluny, the abbot of St. Jean, and the prior of the Friars Preachers of Valenciennes. |
45 | Béatrice’s success was due to her rare longevity, elite origins, and large social network. |
46 | See Appendix A. The extent to which the discontinuity during these two periods resulted from missing archival records remains uncertain. |
47 | Shortly before 7 August 1323, the prior of St. Sauveur presented a certain Jean d’Argent to Pierre, bishop of Cambrai, as parish priest of St. Elizabeth following the death of Adam (de Chastel). However, the master and the council of the beguinage opposed his candidature because they had already elected Alard d’Avesnes. Finally, the prior and the beguinage agreed to follow the agreement concluded by the Countess in 1245. (ADN 40 H 630/1846). The 27th abbot, Arnold de le Sauche (1388–1395), twice attempted to intervene in the election of priests of St. Elizabeth but was condemned by the bishop and Count Albert. Arnold’s predecessor, the Cardinal of Florence, was unable to assume the position due to the Western Schism, prompting Count Albert to recommend Arnold to the Bishop of Cambrai (Lu 2021a, pp. 241–44, 259–60, 309–10, 316). The Count of Hainaut sometimes decided directly on the appointment and dismissal of the abbot of St. Sauveur. The 22nd abbot, Guillaume de Canceris, an “unwise man”, dissipated so much of the convent’s property that Count William of Bavaria finally entrusted the governance of the monastery to the abbot of Crespin and the prévôt-le-Comte of Valenciennes (A. Le Glay 1849, p. 156). In contrast, the influence of the Bishop of Cambrai in Valenciennes was less pronounced, perhaps because the bishop was more concerned with the city of Cambrai or because Valenciennes was not entirely under his jurisdiction. |
References
- Académie Royale des Sciences, des Lettres et des Beaux-Arts de Belgique. 1897. Nouvelle Biographie Nationale. Brussels: Bruylant-Christophe, vol. 14. [Google Scholar]
- Baluzius, Stephanus. 1921. Vitae Paparum Avenionensium. Edited by Guillaume Mollat. Paris: Letouzey et Ainé, vol. 3. [Google Scholar]
- Bériou, Nicole. 1978. La prédication au béguinage de Paris pendant l’année liturgique. Recherches Augustiniennes et Patristiques 13: 105–229. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Brouwers, Dieudonné. 1906. Documents relatifs à l’administration du béguinage Saint-Christophe à Liège. Analectes pour Servir à l’Histoire Ecclésiastique de la Belgique 32: 266–76. [Google Scholar]
- Carpentier, Bernadette. 1959. Le béguinage Sainte-Élisabeth de Valenciennes, de sa fondation au XVIe siècle. Mémoires du Cercle Archéologique de Valenciennes 4: 97–182. [Google Scholar]
- De Crespin, E. Trelcat. 1923. Histoire de l’abbaye de Crespin: Ordre de Saint Benoît. Paris: Librairie Générale Catholique, vol. 1. [Google Scholar]
- Delle Stelle, Anne-Laure Méril-Bellini. 2012. Caritas et familiaritas à l’ombre du Seigneur: Les relations des mulieres religiosae des Pays-Bas méridionaux du 13ème siècle avec leur entourage. Ph.D. dissertation, Université Toulouse le Mirail-Toulouse II, Toulouse, France. [Google Scholar]
- Delmaire, Bernard. 1989. Les béguines dans le Nord de la France au premier siècle de leur histoire (vers 1230-vers 1350). In Les religieuses en France au XIIIe siècle. Edited by Michel Parisse. Nancy: Presses Universitaires de Nancy, pp. 121–62. [Google Scholar]
- Delmaire, Bernard. 2004. Le cartulaire bilingue du béguinage de Cantimpré à Cambrai. In Retour aux sources Textes, études et documents d’histoire médiévale offerts à Michel Parisse. Edited by Sylvain Gouguenheim. Paris: Picard, pp. 75–84. [Google Scholar]
- De Saint-Génois, Joseph, ed. 1782. Droits primitifs des anciennes terres et seigneuries du Pays et Comté de Haynaut autrichien et françois et connnoissance exacte de la mouvance des fiefs qui relevoient du comte de Hayanut en 1410 et 1473: Avec tous les arrieres-fiefs. Monuments anciens essentiellement utiles à la France, aux provinces de Hainaut, Flandre, Brabant, Namur, Artois, Liège, Hollande, Zélande, Frise, Cologne, et autres Pays limitrophes de l’Empire. Paris: Saillant, vol. 1. [Google Scholar]
- Devillers, Léopold, ed. 1865. Cartulaire du béguinage de Mons. In Annales du cercle archéologique de Mons. Mons: Imprimerie de Dequesne-Masquillier, vol. 6, pp. 118–258. [Google Scholar]
- Devillers, Léopold, ed. 1866. Description analytique de cartulaires et de chartriers, accompagnée du texte de documents utiles à l’histoire du Hainaut. Mons: Imprimerie de Dequesne-Masquillier, vol. 2. [Google Scholar]
- Devillers, Léopold, ed. 1875. Cartulaire du béguinage de Cantimpret à Mons—Supplément. In Annales du cercle archéologique de Mons. Mons: Dequesne-Masquillier, vol. 12, pp. 427–58. [Google Scholar]
- Devillers, Léopold. 1878. III. Sur la mort de Guillaume le Bon, comte de Hainaut, de Hollande, de Zélande, et seigneur de Frise. Compte-Rendu des Séances de la Commission Royale d’Histoire 5: 409–36. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Devillers, Léopold, ed. 1881. Cartulaire des comtes de Hainaut: De l’avènement de Guillaume II à la mort de Jacqueline de Bavière. Bruxelles: F. Hayez, vol. 1. [Google Scholar]
- Devillers, Léopold, ed. 1883. Cartulaire des comtes de Hainaut: De l’avènement de Guillaume II à la mort de Jacqueline de Bavière. Bruxelles: F. Hayez, vol. 2. [Google Scholar]
- Devillers, Léopold, ed. 1886. Annale de cercle archéologique de Mons. Mons: Dequesne-Masquillier, vol. 19. [Google Scholar]
- Galloway, Penelope. 2002. Neither Miraculous nor Astonishing: The Devotional Practice of Beguine Communities in French Flanders. In New Trends in Feminine Spirituality: The Holy Women of Liège and their Impact. Edited by Juliette Dor, Lesley Johnson and Jocelyn Wogan-Browne. Turnhout: Brepols, pp. 107–27. [Google Scholar]
- Gennevoise, M. Joseph. 1929. L’abbaye de Vicoigne de l’ordre des prémontrés. Lille: Société Saint-Augustin, Desclée, de Brouwer. [Google Scholar]
- Gérard, Alain. 1983. Une institution charitable méconnue: Le Béguinage de Lille (1245–1841). Histoire des Sciences Médicales 17: 223–30. [Google Scholar] [PubMed]
- Hautcoeur, Édouard. 1873. Cartulaire de l’abbaye de Flines. Lille: L. Quarré, vol. 1. [Google Scholar]
- Jennepin, A. 1889. Histoire de la ville de Maubeuge. Plan à vol d’oiseau de la ville de Maubeuge vers 1550. Maubeuge: Beugnies, vol. 1. [Google Scholar]
- Jennepin, A. 1909. Histoire de la ville de Maubeuge. Maubeuge: Delgorge, vol. 2. [Google Scholar]
- Jordan, Erin Lynn. 2000. ‘For the Safety of My Soul’: The Religious Patronage of Jeanne and Marguerite of Constantinople, Sisters and Successive Countesses of Flanders and Hainaut, 1206–1280. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Iowa, Iowa City, IA, USA. [Google Scholar]
- Lauwers, Michel. 1989. Expérience béguinale et récit hagiographique [À propos de la ‘Vita Mariae Oigniacencis’ de Jacques de Vitry (vers 1215)]. Journal des Savants 1: 61–103. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Le Boucq, Simon. 1844. Histoire ecclésiastique de la ville et comté de Valentienne. Valenciennes: Imprimerie typographique et lithographique de A. Prignet. [Google Scholar]
- Le Glay, André Joseph Ghislain. 1849. Cameracum Christianum ou histoire ecclésiastique du diocèse de Cambrai. Lille: L. Lefort. [Google Scholar]
- Le Glay, Edward. 1841. Histoire de Jeanne de Constantinople, comtesse de Flandre et de Hainaut. Lille: Vanackere. [Google Scholar]
- Le Grand, Léon. 1893. Les béguines de Paris. Mémoire de la société de l’histoire de Paris et de l’île-de-France 20: 295–357. [Google Scholar]
- Longnon, M. Auguste. 1908. Pouillés de la province de Reims. Paris: Imprimerie Nationale. [Google Scholar]
- Lu, Huanan. 2021a. Le béguinage Ste-Élisabeth à Valenciennes (XIIIe–XIVe siècles). Ph.D. dissertation, École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales (EHESS), Paris, France. [Google Scholar]
- Lu, Huanan. 2021b. Marguerite Porete et l’enquête de 1323 sur le béguinage Sainte-Élisabeth de Valenciennes. Revue du Nord 103: 451–85. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Lu, Huanan. 2024. Magistrae of the Beguines of Valenciennes and Their Social Networks. Journal of Medieval History 50: 455–76. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Marseille, Jacques. 1970. Le couvent des dominicains de Lille de sa fondation au milieu du XVe siècle. Archivum Fratrum Praedicatorum 40: 73–95. [Google Scholar]
- McDonnell, Ernest W. 1954. The Beguines and Beghards in Medieval Culture, with Special Emphasis on the Belgian Scene. New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press. [Google Scholar]
- Miller, Tanya Stabler. 2007. What’s in a Name? Clerical Representations of Parisian Beguines (1200–1328). Journal of Medieval History 33: 60–86. [Google Scholar] [CrossRef]
- Miller, Tanya Stabler. 2014. The Beguines of Medieval Paris: Gender, Patronage, and Spiritual Authority. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. [Google Scholar]
- Ministre de l’instruction publique. 1898. Inventaire sommaires des Archives hospitalières de Lille antérieures à 1790. Lille: Imprimerie Typographique et Lithographique le Bigot Frères, vol. 2. [Google Scholar]
- Panzer, Élisabeth Marie. 1994. Cistercian Women and the Beguines: Interaction, Cooperation and Interdependence. Ph.D. dissertation, University of Wisconsin-Madison, Madison, WI, USA. [Google Scholar]
- Philippen, Lodewijk Jozef Maria. 1918. De Begijnhoven—Oorsprong, Geschiedenis, Inrichting. Antwerpen: Veritas. [Google Scholar]
- Robert, Gaston. 1924. Les béguines de Reims et la maison de Sainte-Agnès. Travaux de l’Académie nationale de Reims 137: 235–85. [Google Scholar]
- Simons, Walter. 2001. Cities of Ladies: Beguine Communities in the Medieval Low Countries, 1200–1565. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press. [Google Scholar]
- Simons, Walter. 2014. In Praise of Faithful Women: Count Robert of Flanders’s Defense of Beguines Against the Clementine Decree Cum de quibusdam mulieribus (c. 1318–1320). In Christianity and Culture in the Middle Ages: Essays to Honor John Van Engen. Edited by David C. Mengel and Lisa Wolverton. Notre Dame: University of Notre Dame Press, pp. 331–57. [Google Scholar]
- Simons, Walter. 2023. Persecuted by the Unknowing. The Swesteren and Lollards of the Low Countries and Lower Rhine, c. 1290–c. 1350. Part one–four. Oliviana 7. [Google Scholar]
- Thys, Charles Marie Théophile. 1881. Histoire du béguinage de Ste Catherine à Tongres. Tongeren: Imprimerie de M. Collée. [Google Scholar]
- Van Wintershoven, Edm. 1892. Notes et documents concernant l’ancien beguinage de Saint-Christophe à Liège. Analectes pour Servir à l’Histoire Ecclésiastique de la Belgique 23: 61–115. [Google Scholar]
- Von Mosheim, Johann Lorenz. 1790. De beghardis et beguinabus commentaries. Lipsiae: Libraria Weidmannia. [Google Scholar]
Disclaimer/Publisher’s Note: The statements, opinions and data contained in all publications are solely those of the individual author(s) and contributor(s) and not of MDPI and/or the editor(s). MDPI and/or the editor(s) disclaim responsibility for any injury to people or property resulting from any ideas, methods, instructions or products referred to in the content. |
© 2025 by the author. Licensee MDPI, Basel, Switzerland. This article is an open access article distributed under the terms and conditions of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY) license (https://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/).
Share and Cite
Lu, H. Procurators, Priests and Clerics: Male Leadership of the Beguinage of St. Elizabeth of Valenciennes in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries. Religions 2025, 16, 907. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16070907
Lu H. Procurators, Priests and Clerics: Male Leadership of the Beguinage of St. Elizabeth of Valenciennes in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries. Religions. 2025; 16(7):907. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16070907
Chicago/Turabian StyleLu, Huanan. 2025. "Procurators, Priests and Clerics: Male Leadership of the Beguinage of St. Elizabeth of Valenciennes in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries" Religions 16, no. 7: 907. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16070907
APA StyleLu, H. (2025). Procurators, Priests and Clerics: Male Leadership of the Beguinage of St. Elizabeth of Valenciennes in the Thirteenth and Fourteenth Centuries. Religions, 16(7), 907. https://doi.org/10.3390/rel16070907