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3 - The Musical Education of Young Girls in Medieval English Nunneries

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  12 September 2012

Susan Boynton
Affiliation:
Columbia University
Eric Rice
Affiliation:
University of Connecticut at Storrs
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Summary

It is requested that those who are to be received as nuns will be taught and instructed in reading and singing before they are admitted.

(From a nun's comment at the visitation to Burnham Priory, Diocese of Lincoln, 1520)

SOURCES from medieval England make it abundantly clear that the primary requisite skills for each nun are the ability to read and to sing. Nuns themselves, as evidenced in the above citation from visitation records, emphasized that new nuns should be able to participate fully in monastic life and do their share of the convent's work – matters of deep concern for them. Yet the processes through which nuns mastered these skills are considerably less clear. Evidence from a variety of primary and secondary source materials shows that throughout the Middle Ages, despite the increasing availability of written materials, instruction in liturgical music for English nuns continued to flourish within a culture of oral transmission, memorization of vast quantities of chant, and the gradual absorption of each young woman into the nunnery.

Reading in the medieval period was much more an oral/aural experience than a visual one and relied on the individual's development of great stores of memorized material. At a minimum, a nun was able to recognize the letters of the alphabet and sound out basic syllables, and had learned to read the Psalter – learning also implied reading aloud and memorizing.

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Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2008

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