The Beguines: The Intersection of Gender and Heresy in the Church
The Beguines may not be a household term, but this all-female religious movement of the thirteenth century left an indelible stamp on European and Church history. Beguine philosophy, theology, and religious practice are all quintessentially mystical, with an emphasis on personal encounters with God and overt displays of religious experience taking place outside of the dominant Church monastic order. The writings of key figures in the movement like Hadewijch and Marguerite Porète reveal the independent spirit that epitomizes the Beguine way of life. Arguably, the Beguine’s greatest contributions may be towards the illumination of gender roles and norms in European society. Because the Beguines eschewed neither asceticism nor family life entirely, their liminal status presented a threat to the rigid dogma that dominated Church discourse throughout the Middle Ages. The Beguines were primarily active in the Low Countries: mainly in what is now Belgium and the Netherlands, but also in parts of Germany and France.
Although they self-referred initially simply as holy, pious, or religious women, the term Beguine was applied in a derogatory manner to refer to the group of “mainly well-to-do women,” who sought alternatives to marriage or cloistered life.[footnoteRef:1] The women drawn to the Beguine movement were wealthy and privileged, but they were not of the nobility; who were favored for official Church cloisters in the Twelfth and Thirteenth centuries. Given their systematic exclusion from official Church nunneries and their inability to participate in public life due to their gender, Beguines carved out their own niche by forming communal cloisters with no hierarchical leadership or organizational structure other than a commitment to God. Because of a series of wars and religious crusades, there was actually a dearth of eligible men in the Low Countries. With women outnumbering men, and no meaningful role for women to play in the society other than to support men and raise their children, women of privilege gravitated towards Beguine life because of the independence and relative power it afforded them. Also because the supply of women outweighed the demand for wives and mothers, the Church and other prevailing social institutions did not initially take note of the Beguines or view them as a threat to the social order.[footnoteRef:2] [1: John A. Coleman, “When They Began the Beguines.” America: The Jesuit Review. 8 Nov, 2011. https://www.americamagazine.org/content/all-things/when-they-began-beguines, p. 1] [2: Elizabeth T. Knuth, “The Beguines.” Dec, 1992, http://www.users.csbsju.edu/~eknuth/xpxx/beguines.html]
What garnered attention for the Beguines was their mysticism and divergence from Church doctrine. As the Beguines made a mark through charitable...
Works Cited
“The Beguines.” https://www2.kenyon.edu/projects/margin/beguines.htm
Coleman, John A. “When They Began the Beguines.” America: The Jesuit Review. 8 Nov, 2011. https://www.americamagazine.org/content/all-things/when-they-began-beguines
Gui, Bernard. Inquisitor’s Manual. Burr, David (Trans.). https://www2.kenyon.edu/projects/margin/inquisit.htm
Hadewijch. “You Who Want...” Hirschfield, Jane (Trans.). https://www.poetryfoundation.org/poems/48704/you-who-want-
Knuth, Elizabeth T. “The Beguines.” Dec, 1992, http://www.users.csbsju.edu/~eknuth/xpxx/beguines.html
Porète, Marguerite. The Mirror of Simple Souls. Duncan, Bonnie (Trans.). Excerpt online: https://www2.kenyon.edu/projects/margin/porete8.htm
Raber, Jean Hughes. “The Wisdom of the Beguines.” Commonweal. 29 July, 2015, https://www.commonwealmagazine.org/wisdom-beguines
“Who Were the Beguines?” The Economist. 13 May, 2013, https://www.economist.com/the-economist-explains/2013/05/12/who-were-the-beguines
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