Below is a rather amusing recently discovered account of a young nun in York called Joan of Leeds, who escaped her convent in the early 15th c by pretending to be dead and leaving a fake body in her  place.

Many monks and nuns, especially those who had entered a monastic house at a very young age and not by their own free will found themselves unsuitable for the religious life as they grew older. Most of the escapees  would vanish to join a prospective lover.

Even royalty sometimes left monasteries under a cloud. Edith, later known as Matilda, the wife of Henry I was in Wilton Abbey for her education, not to become a nun. However, when it came time for her to marry, many insisted that she had taken vows while in the convent and hence was not eligible. Edith was having none of it. To show them she was truly not a nun, she flung her wimple to the ground–and trampled on it.

 

THE NAUGHTY NUN–JOAN, WHO FAKED HER OWN DEATH

 

 

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  1. I guess Edith didn’t have a calling! 😀

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  2. […] read of all the women who became nuns in the medieval period, and it is often imagined that they were willing—eager even—to […]

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  3. […] think this nun was a little more complacent than the unfortunate […]

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  4. […] Not all daughters placed in the abbey by their parents were happy about it. Once such was Mary Felton, whose father was Sir Thomas Felton, an early Knight of the Garter who died very shortly after his installation in 1381. That’s another story. Suffice it that Mary ended up at the Minories. But that was after three marriages. […]

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