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Purity, Profanity, and Puritanism: the Churching of Women, 1500-17001

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  21 March 2016

William Coster*
Affiliation:
University of York

Extract

In the past the ceremony of churching was the only means by which, after childbirth, a woman could return to the community of the Church, and indeed to society in general. It is a subject that has received very scant scholarly attention, in spite of the existence of a considerable body of source material concerned with the ceremony, as well as with the ideas and circumstances surrounding it. This material includes the works and debates of theologians and reformers, the survivals of the Church administration, its courts and visitations, biographical material, particularly diaries, and, finally and more unusually, parish registers that record the dates on which churchings occurred. This neglect is all the more surprising in an era that has seen so much emphasis placed on investigations into the historical circumstances of women. This paper will attempt to rectify this situation by utilizing these and the focus point of this ceremony in order to determine the interconnection of religious ideas, with those about sex, motherhood, and women in the early modern period. The theological origins of churching lie ultimately in Leviticus 12, but more directly through the story of the purification of the Virgin in Luke 2. These biblical precedents led to the adoption of such ceremonies into western liturgy around the eleventh century. However, the fact that similar beliefs and rites seem almost universal, perhaps suggests that the introduction of this rite was a response to popular feelings, rather than the imposition of a new ceremony on an increasingly Christianized society. Equally it would seem that the survival of churching through the theological upheavals of the sixteenth century indicates that there continued to be, as Keith Thomas has suggested, within early modern English society, a widespread belief that a woman who had given birth was both unclean and unholy.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © Ecclesiastical History Society 1990

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Footnotes

1

I wish to thank Claire Cross, Jeremy Goldberg, and Guy Halsall for their helpful suggestions regarding this paper.

All spelling in extracts quoted has been modernized, except in the case of personal names.

References

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3 Crawford, A. et al., ed., The Europa Biographical Dictionary of British Women (London, 1983), p. 195 Google Scholar.

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15 It appears mat after the baptism of the child it was considered in a state of innocence quite separate from me mother’s impurity, as evidenced in the symbolism of the white chrism cloth. This was wrapped around the child at baptism and used as a burial shroud should the child die before the mother’s churching, or, in more happy circumstances, returned with the offerings at the later ceremony.

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20 The work of J. Boulton on near-contemporaneous suburban London, comparing parish clerk’s notebook and parish register, indicates that there the practice was almost universal, although, interestingly for Preston, known exceptions include one Catholic. See Boulton, J. P., Neighbourhood and Society. A London Suburb in the Seventeenth Century (Cambridge, 1987), pp. 2768 CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

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27 Ibid., p. 86.

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