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Godly Women in Early Modern England: Puritanism and Gender

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 February 2009

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This paper argues that Puritanism and gender interacted in dialectic fashion in seventeenth-century England and changed one another significantly as a result of that interaction.1 Such Puritan strategies as reliance on the experience of the individual, extensive use of literacy, and infusion of spiritual issues into all activities deeply affected women's spirituality and their conventional roles in the community. At the same time, changes in the traditional practices of gender altered the Puritan experience. Gender gave new reality to the Puritan emphasis on spiritual egalitarianism, the Puritan practice of godly communion and counsel, and the development of lay–clerical relationships. From the interaction between Puritanism and gender, new forms of reciprocity and alternative sources of authority emerged among the godly.

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Articles
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Copyright © Cambridge University Press 1992

References

Research for this article has been funded by the American Philosophical Society, the American Historical Association (Bernadotte E. Schmitt grant for research in European history), and Georgia State University. I am grateful to these three institutions for their support.

1 I am much indebted to the theoretical arguments of Scott, Joan Wallach, ‘ On language, gender, and working-class history’, in her Gender and the Politics of History, New York 1988, ch. iii. Scott sees gender ‘in the construction of social and political meaning’: p. 55. See also Susan Cahn, Industry of Devotion: the transformation of women's work in England, 1500–1600, New York 1987, 9. Although I have serious qualifications about Cahn's study, I find her notion of a ‘dialectical interaction of ideology and material conditions’ a useful model.Google Scholar

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8 BL, Add. MS 53,726, fos 59r, 71r. Whitelocke puts forward their grandmother as a model for his own daughters.

9 Quoted from Jacqueline, Eales, ‘Sir Robert Harley, K.B., (1579–1656) and the “character” of a Puritan’, The British Library Journal 15 (1989), 150. Eales provides an edited version of the document (pp. 150–2) and points out that with his sympathetic portrait, Harley was inverting the popular literary form of satirical characterisation (p. 136). For discussion of‘character literature’ in relationship to Puritanism, see Collinson, ‘A comment’, 486–7.Google Scholar

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18 Gouge, Ofdomesticall duties, 236. To appease irate female parishioners, Gouge sought to emphasise mutual responsibilities and duties for husband and wife. Rather than extract full superiority, the husband ought to make his wife ’a ioynt Governor of the family with himselfe’: ‘The epistle dedicatory’, Ibid..

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21 Patrick, Collinson, The Birthpangs of Protestant England, New York 1988, ch. iii, surveys the current state of the historiography.Google Scholar See also Diane, Willen, ‘Women and religion in early modern England’, in Sherrin Marshall (ed.), Women in Reformation and Counter– Reformation Europe: private and public worlds, Bloomington 1989, 148 and nn. 55–8. For a recent analysis of the complexities and ambiguities of gender relations,Google Scholar see Linda, Pollock, ‘“Teach her to live under obedience”: the making of women in the upper ranks of early modern England’, Continuity and Change 4 (1989), 231–58.Google Scholar

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23 Hampshire Record Office, Sherfield Papers, 44M69, L 31/3.

24 BL, Loan 29/172, fo. 172V.

25 Letters of Brilliana Harley, 85; BL, Loan 29/72, letter of 17 May 1641 and subsequent letters.

26 Willen, ‘Women and religion’, 140 esp. n. 2 for bibliography on this issue. For recent discussions which show how women used religion in a liberating way to assert control over their lives, see Ellen, Macek, ‘The emergence of feminine spirituality in The Book of Martyr’, the Sixteenth Century Journal xix (1988), 6380;Google ScholarWarnicke, Retha M., ‘Lady Mildmay's journal: a study in autobiography and meditation in Reformation England’,Google ScholarIbid., xx (1989), 68; Westerkamp, Marilyn J., ‘Anne Hutchinson, sectarian mysticism, and the Puritan order’, Church History 9 (1990), 482–96.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

27 Lake, ‘Feminine piety’, 155, 157.

28 Thomas, Gataker, Pauls Desire of Dissolution, and Deaths Advantage. A Sermon Preached at the Funerall of that right vertuous and religious Gentlewoman Mrs Rebekka Crisp, London 1620 [sig.A4 r ].Google Scholar

29 Stephen, Geree, The Ornament of Women, Or, A description of the true excellency of Women, London 1639, 2, 20.Google Scholar See also Samuel, Torshell, The woman's glory. A treatise asserting the due honour of that sexe, London 1645, ii 210ff.Google Scholar

30 Gataker, , Pauls Desire of Dissolution, sig. B1V.Google Scholar

31 In a funeral sermon for Lady Frances Roberts, Hannibal Gamon argued the case both ways. On the one hand, sin was universal: ‘By nature then both sexes are alike faultie’. On the other, since women were the weaker vessel ‘ by so much the combate she hath, is more difficult, and the victory she gets, more commendable’: Hannibal, Gamon, The Praise of a Godly Woman, London 1627, 3–4.Google Scholar

32 Gataker, , Pauls Desire of Dissolution [sig. A4r].Google Scholar

33 Lake, ‘Feminine piety’, 158–9.

34 Collinson, , The Birthpangs of Protestant England, 75. Collinson here is speaking of Protestant women but the phenomenon he describes is most prevalent in the godly community.Google Scholar

35 For the ‘female style of piety’ practised by convent nuns, see Lyndal, Roper, The Holy Household: women and morals in Reformation Augsburg, Oxford 1989, ch. vi, esp. pp. 240–2. Roper argues that the early Reformation ‘ ruptured’ this form of religiosity but leaves open the question of whether Protestant women may subsequently have been able to reconstruct ‘ a female–centred piety’: p. 265. I intend to discuss the whole question of religious self–imagery in a forthcoming study. Puritan clergy were especially fond of using bridal imagery. For a striking example, see Letters of Samuel Rutherford, ed. Andrew A. Bonar, Edinburgh 1891. Rutherford applied the image to males as well, but used it most consistently throughout his extensive correspondence with women. Margaret Clifford explained to her daughter that they would suffer discontent, with or without a husband, ‘ontille we injoy that most blesset howsbant Jesus Christ’: Kendal Record Office, WD/Hot/Box 44, letter of 29jan. [1616], fo. 3. For medieval use of bridal imagery,Google Scholar see Carolyn, Bynum, Holy Feast and Holy Fast: the religious significance of food to medieval women, Berkeley 1987, 28, 290–1;Google ScholarIbid.. Jesus as Mother: studies in the spirituality of the High Middle Ages, Berkeley 1982, ch. iv; Roper, , The Holy Household, 206.Google Scholar

36 Greenham, , Workes, 689.Google Scholar

37 Ibid.. 357, 341, 352, 344–5, 877, 349, 353. For a discussion of the pastoral side of Puritanism, see Morgan, Godly Learning, 10, 13, 81–6, 94, 305; Claire Cross, Church and People 1450–1660: the triumph of the laity in the English Church, London 1976, 1961. For the position of the minister, see Lake, Moderate Puritans, 89–90, 156.

38 Seaver, , Wallington's World, 187–8.Google Scholar

39 Greaves, Richard L., ‘Foundation builders: the role of women in early English nonconformity’, in Richard L. Greaves (ed.) Triumph over Silence: women in Protestant history, Westport 1985, 70–81; Cross, Church and People, 160.Google Scholar

40 Greaves, , ‘ Foundation builders’, 81; Patrick Collinson, The Elizabethan Puritan Movement, London 1967, 443.Google Scholar

41 Goldsmith, Joan B., ‘ All the Queen's Women: the changing place and perception of aristocratic women in Elizabethan England, 1558–1620’, unpubl. PhD diss., Northwestern 1987, 129; Calendar of Slate Papers, Domestic (hereinafter CSPD), ii. 609.Google Scholar

42 Greaves, ‘Foundation builders’, 79–81. For Barrington, see Essex Record Office, D/DBa, A 15 and Barrington Family Letters, 220–1. For Barnardiston and Waller, see PRO, SP 16/351/100, fo. 260r, SP 16/463/67 (CSPD, 1640, 568–70). Lady Vere also promoted the appointment of James Ussher as archbishop of Armagh; see his letter of thanks: BL, Add. MS 4274, fo. 32r.

43 Hampshire Record Office, Jervoise MS of Herriard Park, 44M69, Box E 76, letter to Mr William Wilde, dated only 24 April.

44 Folger Library, V.a, 166, fo. 7.

45 Richardson, R. C., Puritanism in North–West England: a regional study of the diocese of Chester to 1642, Manchester 1972, iii. Also Patrick Collinson, ‘The role of women in the English Reformation illustrated by the life and friendships of Anne Locke’, in Godly People: essays on English Protestantism and Puritanism, London 1983, 275. Cf. Willen, ‘Women and religion’, 151.Google Scholar

46 Diary of Lady Margaret Hoby 1599–1605, ed. Dorothy M. Meads, Boston 1930, 63, 66, 154, 159, 166, 243 n. 180; East Sussex Record Office, Dunn MS 51/58, Simon Moore to Anne Busbridge, 26 Nov. 1632.

47 John, Ley, A pattern of piety or the religious life and death of that grave and gracious matron Mrs Jane Ratcliffe, London 1640, 65 and Lake, ‘Feminine piety’, 149–50.Google Scholar

48 Geree, , The Ornament of Women, 86–91.Google Scholar

49 Hunt, , The Puritan Moment, 220. Hunt pVovides a perceptive psychological portrait of Joan Barrington. See also Barrington Family Letters, introduction.Google Scholar

50 Ibid.. 13, 255–8. For Harrison, see also Mary, Bohannon, ‘A London bookseller's bill: 1635–1639’, The Library, 4th ser. 18 (1938), 424 and PRO, SP 16/351/100, fo. 262V.Google Scholar

51 BL, Egerton MS 2644, fo. 196.

52 Ibid.. fo. 203r.

53 Ibid.. fo. 240r.

54 Ibid.. fo. 251 r.

55 Barrington Family Letters, 128–30, 167, 225–6. See also Hunt, The Puritan Moment, 221–2. Rogers also urged Lady Barrington to find inspiration from other saints and complained that charity was too meagre during his days at Hatfield Broadoak.

56 BL, Egerton MS 2648, fo. 133r. This sum was apparently never given to Rogers as, increasingly during the 1630s, Rogers's relationship with Sir Thomas Barrington, deteriorated: Cliffe, J. T., The Puritan Gentry: the great Puritan families of early Stuart England, London 1984, 136Google Scholar and Marchant, Ronald A., The Puritans and the Church Courts in the Diocese of York 1560–1642, London 1960, 100–2.Google Scholar

57 BL, Egerton MS 2644, fo. 230r. I am grateful to Alasdair Hawkyard for the transcription of this letter.

58 Ibid., fos 26ir, 262r.

59 Barrington Family Letters, 71, 74–5, 86, 108, 85, 160.

60 Essex Record Office, D/DBa, A 15, passim.

61 Barrington Family Letters, 168.

62 Daniel, Rogers, Treatise of the Two Sacraments of the Gospell: baptisme and the supper of the Lord, 2nd edn., London 1635, sig. A2[r]. Like so many of her clerical friends, Daniel Rogers wanted to help Lady Barrington reach assurance.Google Scholar

63 Barrington Family Letters, 61–2, 161; Essex Record Office, D/DBa, A 15, fo. 51r.

64 Ibid.. fos. 2Ov, 26r, 28r, 35f; Barrington Family Letters, 14, 100.

65 BL, Loan 29/173, fo. 260r; Jacqueline Levy, ‘Perceptions and Beliefs: the Harleys of Brampton Bryan and the outbreak of the First Civil War’, unpubl. PhD diss., London 1983, 61.

66 Clarke, , The Lives of Sundry Eminent Persons, ii. 144ff.; Dictionary of National Biography, xx. 238.Google Scholar

67 Sprunger, Keith L., The Learned Doctor William Ames: Dutch backgrounds of English and American Puritanism, Urbana 1972, 30.Google Scholar

68 BL, Add. MS 4275, fos 60r, 62r.

69 Ibid., fos 68–69V. I again thank Alasdair Hawkyard for transcribing this letter.

70 Greaves, , ‘Foundation builders’, 81. Davenport was admitted to the vicarage and lectureship at St Stephen, Coleman Street, London; Eales calls him ‘Lady Vere's protege’ there: Eales, Puritan and Roundheads, 62.Google Scholar

71 BL, Add. MS 4275, fo. 160r. Davenport had consulted with Dr Sibbes, and both clerics agreed that Lady Vere should remain in the Hague.

72 Ibid.. fo. i66v. For Davenport's intercessions on behalf of other clerics, see also PRO, SP 16/13/15.

73 BL, Add. MS 4275, fo. 173r.

74 Levy, ‘Perceptions and beliefs’, 160 n. 160. Correspondence is found in BL, Add. MS 4275, 4276; unfortunately, Vere's letters to the clergy do not survive.

75 Clarke, , The Lives 0f Sundry Eminent Persons, ii. 147.Google Scholar

76 BL, Add. MS 4275, fos 64r, 160r.

77 Letters of Samuel Rutherford, 214.

78 Gataker, , Paul's Desire of Dissolution, sig. B2r.Google Scholar

79 Williams served as chaplain to Barrington's daugher and son-in-law, Sir William and Lady Masham. In 1629 Lady Joan felt he twice insulted her, first by contemplating marriage with a Barrington niece, his social superior, then by warning Lady Barrington that her fear and anxiety were messages from God, ‘loud alarums to awaken you Certainely (madame) the lord hath a quarrell against you’. So offended was Lady Barrington that to the Mashams’ dismay and Roger's sorrow, she refused to see him for a number of months: Barrington Family Letters, 64–8, 79, 91; Hunt, The Puritan Moment, 221, 223.

80 CSPD, 1633–1634, 324.

81 Letters of Brilliana Harley, 65–6.

82 Levy, , ‘Perceptions and beliefs’, 148–52, 170–1;Google ScholarCliffe, , The Puritan Gentry, 77–8; Letters of Brilliana Harley, 26.Google Scholar

83 Eales, , Puritan and Roundheads, 106.Google Scholar

84 Ibid.. 109–10.

85 See her letters to Sir Robert on 19 May and 27 June 1642:BL, Loan 29/173, fo. 250r, 26ir.

86 Letters of Brilliana Harley, 174, letter of 27 June 1642.

87 BL, Loan 29/72, letter of 2 Sept. 1643.

88 In the mid sixteenth century, Mrs Elizabeth Bowes established a ‘spiritual and ideological relationship’ with John Knox, who became her son-in-law, and the recusant Margaret Clitherow became emotionally tied to priests whom she hid in her home. The degree of reciprocity in these relationships, however, is not clear. See Willen, ‘Women and religion’, 150–5. On the spirituality of English female recusants, see Rowlands, Marie B., ‘Recusant women 1560–1640’, in Mary Prior (ed.) Women in English Society 1500–1800, London 1985, 149–80;Google ScholarHanlon, J. D., ‘These be but women’, in Charles Carter (ed.), From The Renaissance to the Counter–Reformation: essays in honor of Garrett Mattingly, New York 1965, 371–400.Google Scholar

89 I am grateful to Dr Miriam U. Chrisman for discussing this issue with me.

90 Essex Record Office, D/DBa, A 15, fos 6, 2ir, 23V, 27r, 56V; Barrington Family Letters, e.g. 38–9, 50–1, 203, 210, 214–15, 226–7; Hunt, , The Puritan Moment, 226.Google Scholar

91 Letters 0f Brilliana Harley, 32. Even Lady Harley's ten–year old daughter followed and wrote about continental battles: Eales, Puritans and Roundheads, 94.

92 Hunt, , The Puritan Moment, 16gff. and Seaver, Wallington's World, 178. Cf. Lake's concept of active citizenship:Google ScholarPeter, Lake, Anglicans and Puritans? Presbyterianism and English conformist thought from Whitgift to Hooker, London 1988, 242.Google Scholar

93 Barrington Family Letters, 56. See also Joan Barrington's attitude to fasting in 1636 to combat plague: BL, Egerton MS 2646, fo. 1O2r.

94 Barrington Family Letters, 49, 61, 176. For this phenomenon among a different network of the godly, see Anthony, Fletcher, A County Community in Peace and War: Sussex 1600–1660, London 1975, 64.Google Scholar

95 Hampshire Record Office, Jervoise MS of Herriard Park, 44M69, Box E 77, 20 Apr. 1633. I am grateful to Professor Conrad Russell for drawing my attention to this letter.

96 BL, Harleian MS 387, fo. 8r.

97 Gamon, , The Praise of a Godly Woman, 28.Google Scholar

98 Ley, , A pattern of piety, 62.Google Scholar

99 Samuel, Ainsworth, A Sermon Preached at the Funerall of that religious Gentle–woman Mrs Dorothy Hanbury, London 1645, 31.Google Scholar Cf. Nathaniel, Parkhurst, The Faithful and Diligent Christian described… Preached at the Funeral of the Lady Elizabeth Brooke, London 1684, 37.Google Scholar

100 Barrington Family Letters, 122.

101 Richard, Sibbes, ‘ The epistle dedicatory’, in The Bruised Reed, and Smoaking Flax, London 1630.Google Scholar

102 John, Collings, Faith and Experience or, A short Narration of the holy life and death of Mary Simpson, London 1649, 72, 66. Collings explains that during the three years of her sickness, Simpson ‘ did more good, to poore soules… by telling them her experiences, directing, quickning, exhorting, strengthening, satisfying them, than God hath honoured any of us who have been preachers of his word, to doe in much more time’: pp. 66–7.Google Scholar

103 Patrick, Collinson, ‘“A Magazine of Religious Patterns”: an Erasmian topic transposed in English Protestantism’, in Godly People, 516. For other remarks on the use of funeral sermons, see Lake, ‘Feminine piety’, 143–5; Owen Watkins, The Puritan Experience: studies in spiritual autobiography, New York 1977, 24–5. Lake notes that‘ Idealized such portraits might be, but they had also to be recognizable’: p. 160.Google Scholar

104 The phrase is used by Morgan, , Godly Learning, 39.Google Scholar

106 Collings, , Faith and Experience, 72.Google Scholar

106 John, Barlow, ‘The epistle dedicatory’, in The True guide to glory. A sermon preached at… the funeral of the Lady Strode of Mewingham, London 1619.Google Scholar

107 Gamon, , The Praise of a Godly Woman, 34–6.Google Scholar

108 Earlier versions of this paper were presented at a seminar directed by Professor Esther Cope at the Folger Institute Center for the History of British Political Thought, Washington, DC, June 1990 and at the joint meeting of the North American Conference on British Studies and the Southern Conference on British Studies, New Orleans, 1990. I thank Professor Cope, Professor Barbara Harris and Professor Arthur Slavin for discussing the paper with me.