The imposition of unwanted reform inspired numerous communities of women religious across the early modern West to express their concerns in chronicles and other works of historiography.Footnote 1 An often-cited influence on this activity was the Council of Trent's 1563 decree that all women pursuing the religious life were to observe a cloistered regime, make vows and wear a religious habit. However, studies from the last three decades have established that this was just one of a much wider range of reform interventions that began as early as the fifteenth century and aimed to subject groups of religious women to a strictly regulated observance and close juridical supervision by the clergy.Footnote 2 The scope, timing, methodology and even the precise objectives of these initiatives to a large extent answered to local factors and connections.Footnote 3 And so did the response by the women and their supporters, whose historiographical production was born out of a desire to legitimise present identities, behaviours and relations, and also to formulate strategies for either accepting or resisting reform. Alongside other interventions in archival, hagiographical, normative and even material memory, history-writing was designed to shape the members’ perception of the communal past and their understanding of self.Footnote 4 As such the texts deserve to be read and understood as ‘acts of performance, representation, and interpretation’.Footnote 5
There currently exists a broad consensus on the significance of this substantial body of historical narratives. However, at present its place in research on early modern memory cultures remains somewhat marginal. To an extent this is due to the fact that scholarly interest in the subject dates back only to the end of the twentieth century, and there are still many sides to the story that have yet to receive in-depth attention. But another reason is that specialist discussions until recently ‘locate[d] women as cultural memory's marginalized “other” in a dynamic which reflects and re-enacts a division between memory as technique and memory as affect’.Footnote 6 Scholars lacked interest in the historiographical production of groups of women religious because they saw this production as firmly anchored in pre-modern cultural memory, which put the study of the past at the service of present interests.Footnote 7 But beginning in the second half of the sixteenth century, they argued, that approach to the past had faced increasing competition from a new one that replaced legitimation with the new goals of erudition and truth-seeking. Taking their inspiration from philologists and jurists, proponents of this trend had insisted on the revolutionary nature of their approach, which consisted of methodically bringing together the documentary evidence for their work, critically reviewing its authenticity and assembling a dispassionate and above all truthful account of the past.Footnote 8 In France especially, prominent historians developed their craft through writing case studies on the history of religious institutions, including some of those where the members had been producing their own chronicles. Many of these authors implied to their readership that this local production was inferior, due to the fact that it was incompatible with the objectivity and methodological rigor that were central to this new trend in historical writing.Footnote 9
Perhaps the most well-known and prolific scholar in this latter cohort was Jean Mabillon (1632–1707) of the Benedictine Congregation of Saint-Maur (established 1615).Footnote 10 As a member of this religious movement, which was noted for its intense preoccupation with the religious past, he published on medieval hagiographies and the study of charters, including the art of verifying their authenticity and deciphering their paleography; issued a treatise for local authors on how to research and write about the history of monastic houses; and subsequently demonstrated his approach in a number of case studies. One of those case studies was published in 1687 and dealt with the origins of the abbey of Remiremont, a prestigious house of secular canonesses in France's eastern region of Vosges. Although Mabillon was aware that the chapter members insisted that they had never been bound to any rule, in his opinion study of the abbey's medieval archives and its liturgical documentation revealed the contrary. Papal charters from the middle of the eleventh century onwards had frequently reminded the women that their institution was part of the Benedictine cohort. And throughout the Middle Ages and the early modern period there had always been new recruits who chose to make regular vows on entering the community; until the beginning of the sixteenth century this had in fact been the standard practice on the installation of a new abbess. Even as Mabillon was writing about these things, the local liturgy of the office still bore many traces of the rite as it was practised in regular institutions. From this he inferred that Remiremont had never truly lost its Benedictine identity.Footnote 11 Due to Mabillon's towering reputation as one of the founders of modern historical scholarship and source criticism, his case study on the Vosges abbey has so far eluded analysis in light of a seventeenth-century polemic in which parties on both sides of the table looked into the medieval past of this institution to either reject or justify the secular status of its then-current inhabitants. Various commentators from the early eighteenth century onwards have noted the impressive scope of this polemic, which involved nearly two dozen authors and yielded hundreds of pages of published and unpublished text.Footnote 12 But until now neither its precise chronology nor its relationship to Mabillon's treatise have been properly established: presumably scholars thought that Mabillon's dispassionate approach made it pointless to consider his work within a debate in which local authors reasoned for or against a regular reform.
The current state of research on early modern memory cultures and historiographical practices indicates that this notion of a deep cognitive and methodological gap between Mabillon's work and that of other early modern commentators on Remiremont's past is now up for review. Studies from the last three decades have argued that like cultural memory (memoria), historical erudition (historia) was imbued with ‘political, religious, and medial claims and instructions’.Footnote 13 This has been shown to great effect for the historiographical output by members of the Maurist Congregation in general.Footnote 14 Mabillon's work in particular has also been reinterpreted in light of his movement's ideological and institutional pursuits, as well as in the context of the controversies in which he personally became involved. Famously he liked to present himself as a detached observer who relied on the unprejudiced pursuit of erudition as a way to uncover the truth and glorify God.Footnote 15 But in reality many of his key statements on hagiography, diplomatics and historical methods in general were issued either to criticise the historical and editorial work of his contemporaries or to rebuke those who criticised his own work and its obvious ideological subtext.Footnote 16 The case studies in which he applied his theoretical principles, too, were typically conceived in controversial circumstances. A prime example of this is his treatise on Remiremont Abbey which, as we shall see in this paper, must be brought into relationship with a campaign by the incumbent abbess, Dorothée de Salm, to impose a stricter, quasi-monastic regime on the canonesses.Footnote 17 And more broadly we must also understand the scholar's work in light of another campaign by the Maurists and other Catholic commentators in which historiographical propaganda was used to stop the ongoing ‘secularisation’ of a number of female communities that were said to have historically belonged to the regular strand of religious life.Footnote 18
If Mabillon's historical work was consistently informed by ideological and political motives, then surely it makes no sense to see it as being beyond meaningful comparison with that of local authors. And conversely, we should also be wary of a priori assumptions that these authors were out of step methodologically with contemporary trends in history-writing. In a recent study, Hilary Bernstein showed that local authors in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century France early on took notice of emerging methodological trends and adopted them in their work.Footnote 19 While the Maurists’ propagation of new methods for historical enquiry were chiefly directed to the members of their own congregation, their arguments and methodological propaganda surely also resonated in other places too. Presumably this resonance was especially great in circles that were targeted by these authors on political or ideological grounds, including in women's communities that were put under pressure to accept a reform of their institutions and lifestyle. And conceivably there were cases where local authors did not simply adopt the methods of historical enquiry that they encountered in these learned publications, but actually reviewed their soundness. Comparative analysis of the abundant testimonies on Remiremont's past presents itself as the ideal way to gain a more nuanced understanding of the memory culture of women religious and its relationship to contemporary trends in historical writing. At the same time, such an analysis also offers us an opportunity to better understand how the formulation of historical arguments by both local authors and prominent scholars was driven not simply by these trends, but also by political and personal contingencies.
In order to verify the above hypotheses, this paper will put all the known testimonies from the sixteenth to the early eighteenth century about Remiremont's origins on a double timeline of (a) the relations between successive abbesses and the chapter members, and (b) a concurrent polemical debate about the abbey's historical origins. In doing so, three key things become clear. The first is that the creation of this documentation ties in with key episodes in the broader (political, juridical, ideological and even personal) struggle between those who advocated a regular reform and those who resisted it. The second is that together these treatises and other statements form a cumulative dossier in which each item either built on or refuted a previous one, and that this process drove forward methodological change. And finally, we will see that there is cause to review the notion that reformist authors (including Mabillon) employed a method and a way of historical reasoning that was fundamentally more objective than that of the canonesses and their allies. As such this paper hopes to contribute to a more accurate view on how advanced the historical outlook of these leading scholars was compared to that of local archivists and historians. Furthermore, it will also yield a clearer view of the early modern memory culture of canonesses and by extension also of uncloistered women religious in general, which is a subject that has so far been barely touched upon in specialist scholarship.
The origins of a polemic
Beginning in the 1560s the duchy of Lorraine, a region wedged between the Catholic kingdom of France to the west and Protestant-leaning polities to the east, became a hotbed of religious reform.Footnote 20 Since the early sixteenth century the dukes had sought to stem the advance of Protestantism in the region, which turned into an aggressively expansionist campaign from 1563, following the closure of the Council of Trent. At the same time religious war had brought to prominence an apocalyptic spirituality that found expression in both personal and communal acts of atonement, which in turn hardened church leaders’ attitudes with respect to practices of piety and devotion.Footnote 21 This combination of political and spiritual ideals proved to be the perfect recipe for Lorraine to emerge as the keystone of what French scholars refer to as the dorsale catholique, a line of Catholic entrenchment stretching from central Italy over the Milan area, France-Comté and upwards to the southern Low Countries. Bishops at Toul, Verdun and Metz set out to reform the secular clergy, and then the regular in order to turn these communities into the vanguard of this reformist action. The members in the latter category were encouraged to follow their rules and statutes more strictly; insert their institutions into congregations; and actively engage in intellectual and pastoral action at the service of the Counter-Reformation. The Benedictine congregation of Saint-Vanne and Saint-Hydulphe played a significant role, as did the Norbertines and the Mendicants. And between 1560 and 1635 the Franciscans founded no less than sixty-two houses of Capucins, Cordeliers, Grey Sisters, Minimes, Tiercelins, Recollects and Annunciates, all of which belonged to the stricter strands of their movement.Footnote 22 One of the major proponents of religious reform in the area, Pierre Fourier (d. 1640), emblematised the movement's desire to work simultaneously on a number of fronts. These ranged over the reorganisation of the regular life reinforcing its ascetic appeal; the use of pastoral action to ignite a fervent penitential culture and Marian devotion amongst the laity; and active involvement with the dukes of Lorraine in their efforts to be good Christian rulers and defenders of the Catholic faith.Footnote 23 Fourier's ideals were relayed among other groups through the Franciscan Cordeliers of Nancy, who acted as a liaison with the ducal court.Footnote 24
This cocktail of penitential spirituality, ascetic fervour and commitment to enforcing the absolute authority of both Lorraine's ruling dukes and the region's bishops made communities of secular canonesses an easy target for the reformers. This small but prestigious cohort (of which there existed seven institutions in France and four in Lorraine) occupied a special place in the regional Church.Footnote 25 Unlike nuns and regular canonesses, these groups of uncloistered women did not observe a rule or make any vows. Rather, they received an allowance from the convent (also known as a prebend), and each lived in her own house. They also received visitors at will, were allowed to leave the convent for extended periods of time, and could even abandon their status altogether if they chose to get married. The fate of their institutions was largely controlled by a small number of aristocratic families from the region. As early as the twelfth and thirteenth centuries, houses of secular canonesses had imposed strict rules for admission, considering only those individuals who could submit proof of their noble ancestry; these rules only became more restrictive as time progressed.Footnote 26 The canonesses’ relatives also gained a tight grip on the allocation of prebends and the recruitment of new convent members, which only increased the elite character of these places and encouraged administrators to match the former aristocratic living standards of their recruits.Footnote 27 Reformers built on criticisms going back to the eleventh century that the lifestyle was religious only in name and that the houses only existed because of lay interference in church affairs.Footnote 28 At the same time the reformers also banked on the dukes’ wariness of these institutions as bulwarks of aristocratic power and wealth, and on the clergy's frustration that several of them were exempt from the local bishop's supervision.
Over the second half of the sixteenth and the early seventeenth century, all four houses of secular canonesses in Lorraine (Bouxières, Poussay, Epinal and finally Remiremont) were the subject of attempts to regularise the women's lifestyle and status.Footnote 29 Depending on the context, the reformers proposed either to implement a ‘soft’ reform (through putting an end to the most offensive practices in these places, introducing the Roman rite and reinforcing the authority of the abbess), or to outright abolish the women's secular status and turn their institution into one for vowed nuns. While previous reform attempts at Bouxières and Poussay had ended in failure, for Remiremont an aggressive course of action seemed realistically achievable when the post of coadjutrix (adjunct to the abbess and designated successor) became vacant in 1602. Remiremont's leading office was coveted not just because of the abbey's sheer size and prestige, but also because it was part of an ecclesiastical principality of the Holy Roman Empire, and so it seemed logical that Duke Charles iii would want to claim it for his daughter Catherine (b. 1573). At the time the circle around the duke was deeply infiltrated by reform agents, who included in their number Catherine's confessor Julien de Dombasle, a Franciscan Capucin based at Nancy.Footnote 30 By the time the incumbent abbess, Elisabeth de Salm, resigned in 1611, the duke's daughter (who had originally planned to become a cloistered nun herself) had been mentally primed to launch a reign of drastic reform. Besides a spiritual preparation that made her a staunch adversary of the canonesses’ lifestyle, over the previous decade she and her associates had also put together a hefty case file which contained arguments of a juridical, historical and moral nature to initiate exactly such a process.
Shortly after she was installed, Catherine set the wheels in motion. Her first step was to prepare and submit to Pope Paul v (who was the abbey's direct ecclesiastical superior due to its exempt status) a long list of objections to the way Remiremont was administered and to what she viewed as the canonesses’ inappropriate behaviour. Her litany referenced the chapter members’ lack of respect for the authority of the abbess, and the fact that both the appointment of new members and the distribution of prebends were controlled by the convent members’ noble families. Catherine also denounced the Remiremont women's absenteeism, disregard for the sanctity of Holy Office, inappropriate use of choir space, naïve and superstitious belief, frivolous clothing and penchant for dancing. All of this was unacceptable, she argued, since it clashed with the abbey's historical identity as a community of vowed nuns and with the remains of Benedictine tradition that were still part of the local liturgy. In order to address this dismal state of affairs she requested that the abbey be reformed.Footnote 31 At the pope's instruction a delegation of three senior clerics carried out a visitation of Remiremont Abbey in summer 1613. In a written statement to the chapter members they made a number of recommendations to improve the standard and serenity of religious practice, but at the same time reassured the canonesses that they would not be made to give up their secular status.Footnote 32 However, in their formal report to Paul v they struck a very different tone. The three men told the pope that the reassurances they had made to the canonesses by no means implied that the historical argument to bring these women back into the Benedictine fold was void. Remarkably, to make their point they did not submit juridical or moral arguments, but a historical one in which they distinguished three stages in the community's history. In the first, the women had adopted the Rule not long after their institution was founded as a double monastery in the Columbanian tradition. In the second, which lasted from the beginning of the tenth century until the end of the thirteenth, the Benedictine regime was continued, but towards the end of that period the resident monks had been replaced by clerics, regular discipline had become relaxed and rules had been tightened so that only women who could submit proof of nobility in four quarters were admitted. Finally, in the third and most recent era of the abbey's history, most of the women had adopted the status of canoness as well as its associated lifestyle: among other actions that were emblematic of this transition, they had stopped wearing the religious habit. Yet despite these relaxations, remnants of the abbey's Benedictine identity were still in evidence: newly appointed abbesses still took their vows; the Benedictine breviary was still being used in the office; various other regular-looking practices were still being pursued locally. There was no doubt, they added, that this institution truly still belonged to the Order of St Benedict.Footnote 33
Evidently the canonesses did not believe that the proposed changes at the abbey would end with a handful of suggested interventions in liturgical customs and the use of sacred space.Footnote 34 Even as the visitation was still ongoing, they relied on the chapter and its principal officers to make defiant statements in defence of their status, filibuster planned reform actions and bring legal challenges before a range of ecclesiastical and secular courts. By 22 September 1613 they submitted a counter-proposal for a reform that explicitly protected their secular status.Footnote 35 In response Abbess Catherine requested a second visitation from Paul v, who sent the nuntius and noted Tridentine reformer, Louis de Sareggi, to the abbey. De Sareggi's specific recommendations for reform were as moderate as those of his predecessors.Footnote 36 But at the same time he confirmed the canonesses’ fear of an ulterior motive on his and Abbess Catherine's part, when he told them ‘tradition establishes that the Rule of St Benedict was observed at Remiremont and this ought to be the case even today’.Footnote 37 From this they inferred (correctly, so it seems) that the proposed interventions in convent life were intended as a first step towards abolishing their institution's secular status. In the wake of de Sareggi's visitation the canonesses were also given to understand that the governing role of the chapter under the leadership of the deaconess was about to be dismantled. Catherine issued a statement saying that as abbess her authority over the convent members was equal to that which St Benedict described in his Rule: that is, absolute.Footnote 38 Even as the canonesses were appealing to the pope and the duke of Lorraine to prevent any further action,Footnote 39 she continued making provocative statements about her monarchic role as abbess.Footnote 40 And on 14 August 1616 she went one step further, taking her vows as a Benedictine nun and at the same time obtaining the bishop's confirmation of her status as a regular abbess.Footnote 41 Such actions explain why the canonesses relentlessly continued to argue their case for the next decade-and-a-half.Footnote 42
It is tempting to explain away the chapter members’ bristling reaction as self-interest: that they were merely looking to protect their individual liberties and the concerns of their aristocratic relatives. Yet a closer look at the canonesses’ memory culture at that point suggests that they also perceived these statements as a brutal assault on a specific identity narrative that had only recently been established. Following its foundation in the seventh century, Remiremont's status as a religious institution had never been precisely defined, with the result that the language of the sources had remained ambiguous.Footnote 43 Papal charters from the middle of the eleventh century onwards had referred to the Rule as a benchmark for how to organise the abbey.Footnote 44 But its archives also held documents by popes and lay rulers from the same period and later that referred to prebends, mentioned Remiremont's noble identity and spoke of the abbey as a capitulum (chapter), all of which suggested a distinctly non-Benedictine identity.Footnote 45 For many centuries this ambiguity had not resulted in major challenges to the way in which the community was run and its members organised themselves. But this status quo was disrupted in the second half of the sixteenth century, when groups of secular canonesses were starting to draw the negative attention of Tridentine reformers and outsiders began to tamper with their institutional memories to project onto the local past a story of Benedictine origins. A watershed moment in this respect was the publication in 1580 of a history of the dukes of Lorraine and Bar written by François de Rosières, a regional chronicler and notorious forger. One of the numerous pseudo-original sources in his book pretended to be Remiremont's foundation charter, in which St Romaric referred to himself as the creator of a monastery of nuns of the Order of St Benedict.Footnote 46 As far as we can tell this was the first time in Remiremont's history that someone claimed that, historically speaking, the community's identity was unambiguously Benedictine.
The canonesses’ response to this historiographical assault on their narrative of secular identity – an assault set within a broader background of impending reform – was swift. Beginning with the abbacy of Barbe de Salm (1580–1602), for the first time the Remiremont women dropped all references to the Rule from their official documentation.Footnote 47 And even though de Salm herself was a professed nun from the abbey of Lys, due to the controversial circumstances in which she had made her career at Remiremont she supported a secular view of her subjects’ identity.Footnote 48 In contrast with earlier such documents, the papal bull that confirmed her installation at Remiremont does not refer to Remiremont as a monastery (monasterium).Footnote 49 And it was also under her auspices that a cleric from the nearby priory of Hérival, Sébastien Valdenaire, wrote a history of Remiremont that emphatically considered the institutional past from the viewpoint of its current secular members.Footnote 50 His focus on hagiographical traditions as a source of information about the abbey's origins and its original identity also influenced that of the polygraph Nicolaus Serarius, who as a young man had studied in Remiremont and in 1605 published a Latin hagiography of St Romaric. Like the medieval versions of Romaric's vita, Serarius’ also lacked any reference to the abbey's apocryphal Benedictine identity.Footnote 51 The obscure 1605 edition of Serarius’ work was reissued six years later in a much more widely disseminated version, around the time Catherine of Lorraine was made abbess. In all likelihood her and her supporters’ subsequent assertion of the abbey's Benedictine origins and enduring identity was not just a reaction to the canonesses’ worldly conduct, but actually a response to this newly secularised narrative of the communal past. To make their point, she and her reformist allies completely ignored the hagiography of Romaric and focused exclusively on papal and other charters that referred explicitly to the Rule. It was this material that Abbess Catherine and the 1613 visitators worked with to make their case.
Catherine's rejection of the canonesses’ view of the institutional past in the early 1610s could not but have struck the Remiremont women as an act of rhetorical brutality. It did so again in 1628, when she successfully obtained the endorsement of scholars at the Sorbonne for her preferred account of the abbey's regular past.Footnote 52 In response, the canonesses solicited the aid of an archdeacon of Zagreb Cathedral named Johannes Marnavitius (d. 1637), who one year later, in 1629, published a pamphlet titled The holy dove of the chapter of canonesses of St Peter of Remiremont, claimed by impostors and restored to its (true) origins. Its original Latin title is a play on words, referencing the notion that the abbey had been founded in the Columbanian tradition (hence the use of the word columba, dove) instead of the Benedictine. And in the text itself Marnavitius relies on both the Rule of Columbanus and a detailed reading of early medieval hagiographies of local saints Romaric, Eustache of Luxeuil and Burgundofara, the first abbess of Faremoutiers, to declare that anyone who thought differently about Remiremont's origins was an imposter.Footnote 53 Understanding the stakes at play, Catherine's party promptly issued a rebuttal. Its author, a monk from the reformist Congregation of Saint-Vanne and Saint-Hydulphe named Ignace Philibert, did not attack Marnavitius for his approach to reading the hagiographical and normative evidence. Instead, he rejected the archdeacon's conclusions by arguing with the same charters that the 1613 visitators had used, drawing also on de Rosières's forged foundation charter.Footnote 54 Evidently neither of the two parties in the conflict was ready at this point to accept that the abbey's written memories in fact yielded a vision of a past that was neither entirely regular nor entirely secular. Instead, each side picked the sources that best suited their ideological agenda and constructed a narrative of religious identity around them, whilst at the same time ignoring the existence of any evidence that would have complicated their argument.
Even as Lorraine was being hit by devastating warfare and epidemics in the 1630s, the polemic raged on.Footnote 55 In 1634 a Metz printer reissued the early seventeenth-century History of the bishops of Metz, in which the Franciscan monk Martin Meurisse relied on de Rosières's forgery to postulate Remiremont's Benedictine origins.Footnote 56 And in the same year Jean Ruyr reprinted the forgery in his monumental religious history of the Vosges region.Footnote 57 Yet despite these publications that supported the abbess's viewpoint, the scales were now definitely tipping in the canonesses’ favour. As Abbess Catherine became increasingly distracted by her project to establish a new Benedictine nunnery in Nancy, the chapter members were able to take control of the abbey's governance without much opposition. To mark their victory they commissioned the cleric Charles Huchère to write a comprehensive description of Remiremont's history, its archives, the canonesses’ privileges and finally also convent life. In it, Huchère made no secret of the fact that the women's secular status was at the heart of his argument. He also tried to resolve the interpretive gap between that status and the story of the abbey's foundation, by arguing that the canonesses’ current state in life derived from St Columbanus’ wish that his followers (including those at Romaric's foundation of Remiremont) be active in secular society. To support his case he referenced hagiographies, liturgical traditions and Marnavitius’ printed pamphlet, as well as a range of Carolingian conciliar decrees, once again ignoring the evidence that the canonesses’ adversaries had relied on.Footnote 58
Neither Catherine's infant successor Elisabeth-Marguerite d'Orléans (b. 1646, r. 1648–55) nor the likewise juvenile abbess appointed after her, Anne-Marie-Thérèse de Lorraine (b. 1648, r. 1655–61), objected to this account of the institutional past. And when Dorothée de Salm ascended the abbatial throne as a ten-year-old in 1661, things remained the same for yet another half a decade. From later events we can infer, however, that de Salm's tutors told her that as an adult her principal mission as abbess would be to take control of her institution's affairs. To achieve that goal, they suggested, she and her allies might want to study Catherine of Lorraine's methods.
Mabillon's ‘pious fraud’
Still only a teenager, between 1665 and 1670 de Salm launched one juridical procedure after another to obtain her full powers as abbess and take other prerogatives away from the Remiremont chapter and its chair, the deaconess. These included her right to dispense justice and exercise policing powers, as well as preside over the chapter; make all its officers accountable to her; and have the final say in the admission of new members, the allocation of prebends and the appointment of clerical staff. In the meantime she sought the assistance of male reform agents from the Congregation of Saint-Vanne and Saint-Hydulphe to give a stronger ideological basis to her campaign. After a hiatus of nearly four decades, this association brought back to prominence arguments about Remiremont's Benedictine identity and the need to reintroduce key elements of that legacy to the convent's administration and the canonesses’ lifestyle. Furthermore it enabled de Salm to link up with the Congregation of Saint-Maur, whose members combined erudition with the strenuous pursuit of Benedictine reform. An early 1630s letter by Ignace Philibert to the Maurist Nicolas-Hugues Ménard shows that the dispute over Remiremont's origins had been common knowledge in these circles long before Jean Mabillon became involved.Footnote 59
With Mabillon's star now rapidly rising, it was him that de Salm called upon to support her cause. Shortly after the dispute between herself and the chapter members once again erupted in full force, he duly voiced his sympathies. The second volume of his six-part edition of the hagiographies of Benedictine saints, which was published in 1669, included a version of the Lives of Remiremont's founder Romaric and first abbot Amatus. As if the mere inclusion of those saints was not enough to signal to his readers that he considered Remiremont a Benedictine institution, Mabillon also included in the introduction to the Life of Romaric an explicit declaration to that effect. He stated that Marnavitius had been wrong about St Romaric's intentions and that since the mid-900s the abbey had definitely belonged to the Order of St Benedict. To make his point he provided his readers with a succinct demonstration of his historical method, by referring to a number of charters from the twelfth to sixteenth century in which there was a mention of the Benedictine order or Rule. Furthermore he asserted that the canonesses had used the Benedictine breviary until 1613 before he also noted that the feast of St Benedict was still being celebrated at the abbey church.Footnote 60 Mabillon's implied expression of support for de Salm's cause and rejection of the chapter members' historical narrative of self was a major coup for the embattled abbess.Footnote 61 But the persuasive force of his words was somewhat tempered by the fact that Mabillon admitted he had been unable to inspect the abbey's archives.Footnote 62 And those who were familiar with the debate about the abbey's past could easily have worked out that his argument was drawn almost entirely from the visitators’ report of 1613. A further factor that limited Mabillon's impact in the short term was the political context: in 1670 French troops invaded Lorraine, forcing de Salm (whose family had strong connections to the Empire) to flee to Aachen. For the next seven years she lived there as an exile, a personal predicament that insulated the canonesses from any further assaults.Footnote 63
Not coincidentally it was shortly after de Salm's return that the polemic between students of the abbey's past flared up again. In 1681 Mabillon repeated his arguments about Remiremont's Benedictine identity in his famous methodological handbook for the study of medieval charters titled De re diplomatica. Footnote 64 According to Charles George, the procureur-général of the Congregation of Saint-Vanne and Saint-Hydulphe, the Remiremont chapter members had vehemently objected to Mabillon's latest statement and pressured him several times to declare that their institution had never been of the Order of St Benedict. And although Mabillon had refused to comply on each occasion, he had subsequently been shocked to find that the canonesses had misquoted his findings.Footnote 65 Unfortunately, George did not refer to any specific statement or document issued by the canonesses and their allies. But we do have a likely candidate in the form of a treatise by a priest named du Heaume de l'Oratoire, which targets Meurisse's History of the bishops of Metz and Mabillon's De re diplomatica. Titled Discourse on the secular state of the ladies canonesses of Remiremont, du Heaume's text has so far eluded notice because it survives only among the papers of another house of secular canonesses in Lorraine, namely that of Bouxières.Footnote 66 However, its interest to the present discussion and to the development of historical methods in general is unmistakeable given that it reveals a major leap forward, both in how local authors worked with medieval documents and in how they constructed a historical argument.
The first four chapters of the Discourse make a general case for the existence of secular canonesses by tracing back the origins of their movement to the first centuries of the Church, explaining the etymology of their title with the aid of late antique and early medieval sources. Du Heaume concludes here that the majority of secular canonesses by far had never made the three vows of stability, chastity and obedience. But the meat of his argument is in the fifth and sixth chapters. In the former he pointedly notes that the 1613 report remains the key document on which all subsequent pro-reform accounts of Remiremont's past are based and that later commentators have offered no new evidence to support its argument.Footnote 67 In the latter chapter he focuses on methodological flaws in the work of Meurisse and Mabillon. Both of these authors had cited early and high medieval documents that referred to the abbey as a monasterium, to its leader as an abbatissa and to her subjects as sanctimoniales, all of which referred (in their interpretation at least) to a regular observance in the Benedictine tradition. But, as du Heaume correctly points out, there were two major objections to this approach. One was that several of the charters were forgeries. The other was that the meaning of these key terms had evolved over time, and that their use in early and high medieval documents could not be taken as proof that the Remiremont women at that time had been Benedictine nuns. These conclusions rendered invalid not just Mabillon and Meurisse's historical argument, but also their implied call for a reform. On these grounds it was from here a small step for du Heaume to denounce the recent attempts to change the canonesses’ status, saying that such attempts were based on ‘pious skullduggery’ (‘filouterie pieuse’). Despite their claims to erudition and objective enquiry, he also accused both Mabillon and Meurisse of supporting this campaign with fraudulent historical arguments.
Du Heaume's work gave the polemic over Remiremont's past a new dimension, by bringing to prominence arguments about forgery, methodological rigour and academic authority. These accusations riled the abbess's allies, in particular Charles George. In the mid-1680s he published his own views on the dispute in the provocatively titled Monastic history of Remiremont, in which he accused the canonesses of living a ‘deregulated’ life. He also blamed them for commissioning Marnavitius’ mendacious treatise about the abbey's origins, and attempting to corrupt Mabillon and falsifying his own research.Footnote 68 The rhetorical aggression that rises from these pages joined with de Salm's simultaneous war on the canonesses’ reputation. In July 1685 she had scholars at the Sorbonne confirm her absolute authority over the chapter members.Footnote 69 And around the same time she issued a memorandum in which she insisted on the full application of the 1614 reform decrees, and painted a picture of impending chaos: ‘it is easy to understand to what (dangers) is exposed a community where there are many young girls that have made no vows (and) of which the institution is situated in the middle of a region full of military troops, and that have no written regulations or authority that can keep them within the boundaries of decency’.Footnote 70 The chapter members now realised that they were being subjected to an intellectual and moral smear campaign. In a written statement they retorted that application of the 1614 decrees would not only run counter to the abbey's historical identity as a secular institution, but also sit awkwardly with Abbess de Salm's own worldly lifestyle.Footnote 71 When the news broke that Pope Innocent xi was on the canonesses’ side,Footnote 72 de Salm requested that King Louis xiv arbitrate, made her profession in private (a move that technically did not make her a Benedictine nun but still signalled her future plans), insisted that the chapter's principal officers do the same and gave new prominence in the liturgical calendar to the feast of St Benedict and his commemoration on All Saints. The canonesses issued an impressive deposition to the king that consisted of no less than 700 articles, in which they rejected all aspects of the abbess's campaign.Footnote 73
Desperate to bolster her case, de Salm now appealed directly to Mabillon. In response, he published his famous 1687 pamphlet.Footnote 74 Not long after that a member of the Third Order of St Francis named F. Vincent summarised its arguments in a treatise titled Explanation on the abbey of Remiremont.Footnote 75 On reading the commentaries by Mabillon and Vincent one is immediately struck by their authors’ refusal to acknowledge that the terminology they encountered in the primary evidence (monasterium, capitulum, and even regula) had to be interpreted differently depending on the chronology of the sources. The second element of note is the excessive reliance on charters to reconstruct real-life experiences at the abbey and to make statements on the observance of the members over the course of its history.Footnote 76 And the final, unmissable, point is that they add nothing of substance to the visitators’ 1613 report. Presumably this is because neither author had been able to inspect the abbey archives (access to which was controlled by the secrète, one of the chapter's five officers) and relied instead on notes made at Catherine de Lorraine's behest in the seventeenth century. However, the canonesses and their intellectual allies did not act on these methodological weaknesses, due to an intervention by the king himself. Between 1693 and 1697 his state council issued several decrees that endorsed de Salm's monarchic view of abbatial rule and imposed a number of new rules for convent life, yet retained the chapter's autonomy and confirmed the deaconess in her role as its head.Footnote 77
Although the state council's aim was to end once and for all the disruptive conflicts at the abbey, inadvertently it gave the chapter members a golden opportunity to attack Mabillon and other renowned scholars. One of the key rulings of the 1694 decree was that an inventory be made of the abbey archives: the person who ended up being tasked with this was Thierry, the archdeacon of the nearby collegial chapter of Saint-Dié. Having uncovered a mass of information that had been unavailable to those scholars who ranged themselves on the Benedictine side of the argument, Thierry was able to verify the authenticity of key documents in the debate. In the inventory he not only noted that the foundation charter edited by de Rosières was definitely a forgery, but also called into question the academic abilities of the apparently erudite figures who had previously used it, by stating that ‘all learned men believe that it is a forgery’.Footnote 78 His work on the archives also confirmed suspicions that Mabillon and others had presented a highly selective account of the abbey's written legacies and a very tendentious reading of the primary evidence. In a pamphlet titled Observations on a manuscript titled History of the abbey of Remiremont he sarcastically noted that it had taken a mere ten days for the three visitators of 1613 to verify that Remiremont had always been a Benedictine institution, despite the fact that this would normally require years of working on the abbey's charter evidence.Footnote 79 Not one to let his readers misunderstand the implied meaning of his words, Thierry added that the three papal legates and their intellectual epigones (George, Mabillon and Vincent) had not worked in the abbey's archives at all and instead had relied on second-hand sources that were informed by the abbesses’ agenda. Their statements about Remiremont's past painted a picture of linear moral decline from the abbey's monastic origins, yet Thierry knew that this erroneous picture had been misleadingly crafted almost exclusively from normative documents (charters in particular) that seemed to tell a straightforward story about the convent's enduring Benedictine identity.Footnote 80 In contrast, Thierry's own work as an archivist had revealed that regular and secular elements had been present in the abbey's organisation and the canonesses’ lifestyle throughout its long history. He advised the Remiremont women not to yield to those who called on them to acknowledge their Benedictine predecessors, for doing so would make them vulnerable to attempts at reform.Footnote 81 Not content with this initial commentary, he subsequently reiterated it in the more polished Treatise on the secular state of the abbey of Remiremont.Footnote 82 And he also found an ally in Saint-Dié's great provost François de Riguet. Beginning in 1695 the latter began preparing a critical analysis of the foundation charter, citing numerous problems with the charter's dating, style, vocabulary, spelling and content. In 1701 these findings were published in de Riguet's History of the bishops of Toul.Footnote 83
Embarrassed by Thierry's exposure of the flaws in the arguments of her intellectual allies, de Salm got back in touch with Mabillon and sent him a copy of Thierry's Treatise.Footnote 84 If she was hoping for a rebuttal she was destined for disappointment, for in a reply dated 8 February 1695 the Maurist scholar implicitly admitted defeat. He once again stated his view that Remiremont was a Benedictine institution, but now insisted that he held it more out of principle than on the basis of historical arguments.Footnote 85 This answer may have led to an invitation for him to return to Remiremont, which he did on 30 September and 1 October 1696.Footnote 86 Judging by his travel companion Thiery Ruinart's notes on that visit, the two monks did not look at any archives or manuscripts there. And perhaps because he was mindful of the 1694 decree, he did not mention the ongoing tensions between Abbess de Salm and her chapter. Nevertheless Ruinart did drop a strong hint that the matter was brought up at some point during their conversations with the abbess. Describing their visit to the abbey church, he notes that they saw a subterranean chapel in honour of St Benedict, the interior of which was ‘violated’ and the altar ‘destroyed’ by ‘recent people’, allegedly because ‘they feared that on account of the existence of that chapel an opportunity would be grasped to impose on them the Benedictine Rule’.Footnote 87
Whether Ruinart and Mabillon also heard the views of the chapter members on this occasion is unknown: not that it would have changed Mabillon's mind anyway. In a note dated 3 August 1698, he reiterated the key arguments that he had made in 1687, as well as his personal opinion that houses of secular canonesses ought to be reformed to their original regular state. But this time he brought an important nuance to the argument, in that he firmly expressed his resolve to refrain from any activism:
All that I have just said is not designed to shock anyone, but since I have been asked to give my opinion, I say it in good faith and without prejudice … I wish nothing else than that things at the abbey of Remiremont remain as they are in their present state and that peace, unity, and good order should reign there.Footnote 88
The reasons for Mabillon's caution are revealed in an undated letter written to him by a member of the reformist congregation of Saint-Vanne and Saint-Hydulphe, Dom Hilarion Monnier (1646–1707). In it Monnier declined to lend his support to de Salm's campaign, stating that it was no use becoming involved in a cause that was already lost and that risked damaging their own intellectual reputations. Behind the whole affair also lurked raison de politique, political interests, in which the two men did well not to interfere.Footnote 89
Mabillon's reluctance to make any firm statements in de Salm's favour strengthened de Salm and her associates’ resolve to take matters in their own hands. In an undated memorandum she and her sister Christine accused Thierry of lacking the necessary skills to establish the authenticity of the medieval evidence.Footnote 90 But neither their personality nor their arguments made much of an impression on Thierry, who stood by his views.Footnote 91 And a further blow to de Salm's confidence occurred shortly after the duke of Lorraine regained control of his ancestors’ territories. Eager to claim his predecessors’ influence over the selection of candidates for the office of abbess, Duke Leopold sought to have his infant daughter Charlotte-Isabelle appointed as coadjutrix (and automatic successor) to Abbess de Salm. Hesitating to accept the duke's proposal, de Salm found herself outmanoeuvred when the chapter members confirmed Charlotte-Isabelle in her new role.Footnote 92 The fifty-one-year-old abbess did not recover from this unexpected defeat. When she died soon afterwards, on 14 November 1702, her sister Christine became regent for Charlotte-Isabelle. In a memorandum dated 9 October 1703, specialists from the Sorbonne for one last time echoed the late abbess's objections to the chapter members’ secular presumptions.Footnote 93 But the reality was that the Remiremont women and their allies had firmly taken back control of their own lives. An apostolic visit by Cardinal de Rohan in 1727 confirmed Remiremont's status as a house of secular canonesses and consolidated the arrangement that had been proclaimed by the king's state council in 1694.Footnote 94 And from that point onwards until the end of the abbey's existence in the early 1790s, the position of both the abbesses and the chapter members was to maintain the status quo. Among other things that affirmed the convent's secular status, they quietly dropped the feast of St Benedict from the liturgical calendar.Footnote 95
The canonesses had won the battle internally, but in the outside world the damage to their reputation was considerable. For many decades to come, pro-reform commentaries shaped perceptions of the canonesses’ worldliness, rebelliousness and their refusal to face the historical arguments in favour of reform. These commentaries shaped modern perceptions of this cohort as a secular one that was only nominally religious and determined to protect their privileged lifestyle.Footnote 96 In the eighteenth century Philippe Hélyot (1660–1716) and Augustin Calmet blamed the chaos at Remiremont abbey on the canonesses’ superstitious stubbornness.Footnote 97 Their contemporary Matthieu Gesnel accused the women of having picked documents from their archives in order to burn them whenever the contents did not suit their preferred version of the past.Footnote 98 And in the nineteenth century, the historian A. Guinot stated that the canonesses had responded to the arguments of scholars like Mabillon and George with mere sarcasm.Footnote 99 Yet looking back at the evidence reviewed in these pages, it becomes clear that ‘sarcasm’ is hardly an accurate term to describe the contents of hundreds of pages of erudite arguments and trenchant rebuttals. Nor does it seem legitimate to dismiss the canonesses’ relationship with the past and its written legacies as ‘medieval’ or even backward, and to contrast that with the ‘modern’ and supposedly more objective outlook of their detractors.
Historians view the seventeenth-century research into the regular origins of institutions of secular canonesses in France as an early chapter in the rise to prominence of modern methods in the study of the religious past. True as this may be, this paper has demonstrated that the evidence that so far has been submitted to make this point is both incomplete and biased in favour of those who advocated a reform of these places. The reconstruction here of the polemic waged between authors writing for (on one side) the chapter members and (on the other) Abbesses Catherine de Lorraine and Dorothée de Salm tells us two things. One, we can only properly understand the arguments made by leading scholars such as Jean Mabillon and Charles George and the precise timing of their statements if we put these into a timeline of both the abbey's internal situation over the early modern period and the unfolding of the deep divisions over its supposed Benedictine past.
And secondly, former assumptions about a deep chasm between the ‘modern’ historical approach of highly regarded intellectuals and scholars and the ‘medieval’ one of the canonesses and their allies find no basis in the primary evidence. From the middle of the seventeenth century onwards, sympathisers of the canonesses who wrote about Remiremont's past drastically broadened the scope of their primary evidence. Thanks to the work of diligent archivists, they also gained a deep and surprisingly nuanced understanding of their institution's written legacies and the ambiguous ways in which the identity of its resident community had been described over the centuries. And finally, they also dismantled the arguments of their adversaries, who had been rehashing the same historically inaccurate claims for decades. The fact that the painful defeat of Mabillon and others has been all but forgotten is due in large measure to the overwhelming reputation of these individuals and their ability to widely publicise their views. Further research on other institutions of secular canonesses in France and other polities of the early modern period may well reveal that much is yet to be discovered about the complex ways in which the past of this cohort was negotiated.