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‘Leave my Virginity Alone’: The cult of St Margaret of Antioch in Norwich: In pursuit of a pragmatic piety

from RELIGION

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 October 2017

Christopher Harper-Bill
Affiliation:
Christopher Harper-Bill is Professor of Medieval History at the University of East Anglia.
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Summary

THE LATE MEDIEVAL period was a dangerous time, physically and spiritually, for women in childbirth. Naturally, they took this risk very seriously and the time of confinement was approached with some trepidation and spiritual preparedness. That is, they confessed their sins and were absolved, and they invoked suitable spiritual intercessors, the better to ensure the physical safety of their child and their own survival; or if the worst should happen, they at least died shriven.

Wemen that here wyt chyld al-so,

Thu mot teche how thai sall do,

Wen ther tyme es nere to comme.

Byd tham do thus all & summe.

Teche tham to cumme & schryfe tham clene,

And housyll tham all be dene …

For drede of paryll that may be-fall,

In ther trawallyng that cumme schall.

Even that was not quite sufficient, because a woman dying in childbed was still considered spiritually at risk if she died with a dead or moribund infant, or any part of it, still in utero. John Mirk's early fifteenth-century instructions for parish priests make clear the teaching to be conveyed to local midwives:

And yf the woman than dye

Byd the mydwyf scho that hye

For to vndo hyre wyt a knyf,

And so to sawe the chyldys lyfe.

In extremis, the child was to be baptised by the midwife:

And if the chyld be half bore

Hede and nec and no more

Byd hyre spare, neuer the latter,

To crysten yt and cast on water.

While the imperative here focused, if any flicker of life remained, on the infant's baptism and consequent salvation, the secondary objective was removal of the baby, dead or alive, from the mother's pelvis, so that she, too, all contaminants voided, was released from the burden of Original Sin, and fit for burial in sanctified ground.

For greater assurance, a mother needed to survive beyond her baby's baptism until her churching some weeks later, when she would be restored to her community ‘cleansed’ and ready for action. As Mirk advised in his sermon for the feast of the Purification,

when a woman cometh to the chyrche-dyrre tell the pryst come and cast holy watyr on hyr, and clansuth hur, and so takyth hyr by the hond, and bryngyth her to the chyrche, _euyng hur leue to come to the chyrch, and to goo to hur husbandys bed.

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Medieval East Anglia , pp. 225 - 245
Publisher: Boydell & Brewer
Print publication year: 2005

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