Abbess
The female superior in spirituals and temporals of a community of
twelve or more nuns. With a few necessary exceptions, the position
of an Abbess in her convent corresponds generally with that of an
Abbot in his monastery. The title was originally the distinctive
appellation of Benedictine superiors, but in the course of time it
came to be a applied also to the conventual superior in other
orders, especially to these of the
Second Order of St. Francis (Poor Clares) and to these of certain
colleges of canonesses.
HISTORICAL ORIGIN
Monastic communities for women had sprung up in
the East at a very early period. After their introduction into
Europe, towards the close of the fourth century, they began to
flourish also in the West, particularly in Gaul, where tradition
ascribes the foundation of many
religious houses to St. Martin of Tours. Cassian the great
organizer of
monachishm in Gaul, founded a famous convent at Marseilles, at the
beginning of the fifth century, and from this convent at a later
period, St. Caesarius (d. 542) called his sister Caesaria, and
placed her over a religious house which he was then founding at
Arles. St. Benedict is also said to have founded a community of
virgins consecrated to God, and to have placed it under the
direction of his sister St. Scholastica, but whether or not the
great Patriarch established a nunnery, it is certain that in a
short time he was looked upon as a guide and father to the many
convents
already existing. His rule was almost universally adopted by them,
and with it the title Abbess came into general use to designate the
superior of a convent of nuns. Before this time the title Mater
Monasterii, Mater
Monacharum, and Praeposisa were more common. The name
Abbess
appears for the first time in a sepulchral inscription of the year
514, found in 1901 on the site of an ancient convent of virgines
sacræ which stood in Rome near the Basilica of St. Agnes extra
Muros. The inscription commemorates the Abbess Serena who presided
over this convent up to the time of her
death at the age of eighty-five years: "Hic requieescit in pace,
Serena Abbatissa S. V. quae vixzit annos P. M. LXXXV."
MODE OF ELECTION
The office of an Abbess is elective, the choice
being by the secret suffrages of the sister. By the common law of
the Church, all the nuns of a community, professed for the choir,
and free from censures, are entitled to vote; but by particular law
some constitutions extend the right of an active voice only to those
who have been professed for a certain number of years. Lay sister
are excluded by the constitutions of most orders, but in communities
where they have the right to vote their privilage is to be
respected. In nonexempt monasteries the election is
presided over by the ordinary of the diocese of his vicar; in exempt
houses, under the immediate jurisdiction of the Holy See, the Bishop
likewish presides, but only as the delegate of the Pope. In those
under the jurisdiction of a regular prelate the nuns are obliged to
inform the diocesan of the day and time of election, so that if he
wish, he or his representative may be present. The Bishop and the
regular prelate preside jointly, but in no instance have they aa
vote, not even a casting vote. And the Council of Trent prescribes,
further, that "he who preside at the election, whether it be the
Bishop or other superior, shall not enter the enclosure of the
monastery, but shall listen to or receive the vote of each at the
grille." (Cone. Trid., Sess. XXV, De regular, et monial., Cap.
Vii.) The voting must be strictly secret, and if secrecy be not
observed (whether through ignorance of the law or not), the election
is null and void. A simple majority of votes for one candidate is
sufficient for a valid election, unless the constitutions of an
order require more than the bare majority. The result is to be
proclaimed at once, by announcing the number of votes cast for each
nun, so that in case of a dispute an immediate opportunity may be
afforded for checking the vote. In case no candidate should receive
the require number of votes, the Bishop or the regular prelate
orders a new election, and for the time appoints a superior. If the
community again fails to agree upon any candidate, the Bishop or
other superior can nominate the one whom he judges to be the most
worthy and depute her as Abbess. The newly appointed Abbess enters
upon the duties of her office immediately after confirmation, which
is obtained for non-exempt convents from the diocesan, and for
exempt houses either from the regular prelate, if they be under his
jurisdiction, or from the Holy See directly. (Ferraris, Prompta
Bibliotheca; Abbatisa.-Cf. Taunton, The Law of the Church.)
ELIGIBILITY
Touching the age at which a nun becomes eligible for
the office, the discipline of the Church has varied at different
times. Pope Leo I prescribed forty years. St. Gregory the Great
insisted that the Abbesses chosen by the communities should be at
least sixty-women to whom years had given dignity, discretion, and
the power to withstand temptation.
He very strongly prohibited the appointment of young women as
Abbesses (Ep. 55 ch. xi). Popes Innocent IV and Boniface VIII, on
the other hand, were both content with thirty years. According to
the present legislation, which is that of the Council of Trent, no
nun "can be elected as Abbess unless she has completed the fortieth
year of her age, and the eighth
year of her religious profession. "But should no one be found in
any convent with these qualifications, one may be elected out of
another convent of the same order. But if the superior who presides
over the election shall deem even this an inconvenience, there may
be chosen, with the convent of the Bishop or other superior, one
from amongst those in the same convent who are beyond their
thirtieth year, and have since their profession passed at least five
of those years in an upright manner. . . In other particulars, the
constitution of each order or convent shall be observed." (Conc.
Trid., Sess, xxv, De regular. et monial., Cap. vii.) By various
decision of the Sacred Congregation of the Council and of the Sacred
Congregation of Bishops and Regulars, it is forbidden, without a
dispensation from the Holy See, to elect a nun of illegitimate
birth; one not of virginal integrity of body; or one who has had to
undergo a public penance
(unless it were only salutary); a widow; a blind or deaf nun; or one
of three sisters alive at the same time in the same convent. No nun
is permitted to vote for herself. (Ferraris, Prompta Bibliotheea;
Abbatissa.-Taunton, op, cit.) Abbesses are generally elected for
life. In Italy, however, and the adjacent islands, by the Bull of
Gregory XIII. "Exposcit debitum" (1 January, 1583), they are
elected for three years only, and then must vacate the office for a
period of three years, during which time they cannot act even as
vicars.
RITE OF BENEDIICTION
Abbesses elected for life can be solemnly
blessed according to the rite prescribeed in the Pontificale
Romanum. This benediction (also called ordination or consecration)
they must seek, under pain of deprivation, within a year of their
election, from the Bishop of the
diocese. The ceremony, which take place during the Holy Sacrifice
of the Mass, can be performed of any day of the week. No mention is
made in the Pontificale of a conferring of the staff, customary in
many places at the installation of an Abbess, but the rite is
prescribed in many monastic rituals, and as a rule the Abbess, like
the Abbot, bears the crosier as
a symbol of her office and of her rank; she has also a right to the
ring. The induction of an Abbess into office early assumed a
liturgical character. St. Redegundis, in one of her letters,
speaks of it, and informs
us that Agnes, the Abbess of Sainte-Croix, before entering on her
charge, received the solemn Rite of Benediction from St. Germain,
the Bishop of
Paris. Since the time of St. Gregory the Great, the blessing was
reserved to the bishop of the diocese. At present some Abbesses are
privileged to receive it from certain regular prelates.
AUTHORITY OF ABBESS
An Abbess can exercise supreme domestic
authority (potestas dominativa) over her monastery and all its
dependencies, but as a
female, she is debarred from exercising any power of spiritual
jurisdiction, such as belongs to an abbot. She is empowered
therefore to administer the temporal possessions of the convent; to
issue commands to her nuns
"in virtue of holy obedience", thus binding them in conscience,
provided
the obedience she demands be in accordance with the rule and
statutes of
the order; and to prescribe and ordain whatever may be necessary for
the
maintenance of discipline in the house, or conducive to the proper
observance of the rule, and the preservation of peace and order in
the community. She can also irritate directly, the vows of her
professed sisters, and indirectly, those of the novices, but she
cannot commute those vows, nor dispense from them. Neither can she
dispense her subjects from any regular and ecclesiastical
observances, without the leave of her prelate, though she can, in
particular instance declare that a certain precept ceases to bind.
She cannot publicly bless her nuns, as a priest or a prelate
blesses, but she can bless them in the way that a mother blesses her
children. She is not permitted to preach, though she may in
chapter, exhort
her nuns by conferences. An Abbess has, morever, a certain power of
coercion, which authorizes her to impose punishments of a lighter
nature, in
harmony with the provisions of the rule, but in no instance has she
a right to inflict the graver ecclesiastical penalties, such as
censures. By
the decree "Quemadmodum", 17 December, 1890, of Leo XIII, abbesses
and other superiors are absolutely inhibited "from endeavouring,
directly or indirectly, by command, counsel, fear, threats, or
blandishments, to induce their subjects to make to them the secret
manifestations of conscience in whatsoever manner or under what name
soever." The same decree declares that permission or prohibition as
to Holy Communion "belongs solely to the ordinary or extraordinary
confessor, the superiors having no right whatever to interfere in
the matter, save only the case in which any one of
their subjects had given scandal to the community since. . . her
last confession, or had been guilty of some grievous public fault,
and this only until the guilty one had once more received the
Sacrament of Penance." With regard to the administration of
monastic property it must be noted that in affairs of greater moment
an Abbess is always more or less dependent
on the Ordinary, if subject to him, or on the regular prelate if her
abbey is exempt. By the Constitution "Inscrutabili," 5 February,
1622, of Gregory XV, all Abbesses, exempt as well as non-exempt, are
furthermore obliged to present an annual statement of their
temporalities to the bishop of the diocese.
In medieval times the Abbesses of the larger and more important
houses were not uncommonly women of great power and distinction,
whose authority and influence rivalled, at times, that of the most
venerate bishops and abbots. In Saxon England, "they had often the
retinue and state of princesses, especially when they came of royal
blood. They treated with kings,
bishops, and the greatest lords on terms of perfect equality;. . .
they were present at all great religious and national solemnities,
at the dedication of churches, and even, like the queens, took part
in the deliberation of the national assemblies, and affixed their
signatures to the charters therein granted." (Montalembert, "The
Monks of the West," Bk. XV.) They appeared also at Church councils
in the midst of the bishops and abbots and priests, as did the
Abbess Hilda at the Synod of Whitby in 664, and
the Abbess Elfleda, who succeeded her, at that of the River Nith in
705.
Five Abbesses were present at the Council of Becanfield in 694,
where they signed the decrees before the presbyters. At a later
time the Abbess
"took titles from churches impropriated to her house, presented the
secular vicars to serve the parochia churches, and had all the
privileges of a landlord over the temporal estates attached to her
abbey. The Abbess of Shaftesbury, for instance, at one time, found
seven knights' fees for the King's service and held manor courts,
Wilton. Barking, and Nunnaminster, as well as Shaftesbury, 'held of
the king by an entire barony,' and by right of this tenure had, for
a period, the privilge of being summoned to Parliament." (Gasquet,
"English Monastic Life," 39.) In Germany the Abbesses of
Quedimburg, Gandersheim, Lindau, Buchau, Obermünster, etc., all
ranked among the independent princes of the Empire, and as such sat
and
voted in the Diet as members of the Rhenish bench of bishops. They
lived in princely state with a court of their own, ruled their
extensive conventual estates like temporal lords, and recognized no
ecclesiastic superior except the Pope. After the Reformation, their
Protestant successors continued to enjoy the same imperial
privileges up to comparatively recent times. In France, Italy, and
Spain, the female superiors of the great monastic houses were
likewise very powerful. But the external splendour and glory of
medieval days have now departed from all.
CONFESSION TO THE ABBESS
Abbesses have no spiritual jurisdiction,
and can excrcise no authority that is in any way connceted with the
power of the keys or of orders. During the Middle Ages, however,
attempts were not infrequently made to usurp this spiritual power of
the priesthood, and we read of Abbesses who besides being guilty of
many minor encroachments on the functions of the sacerdotal office,
presumed to interfere even in the administration of the sacrament of
penance and confessed their nuns.
Thus, in the Capitularics of Charlemagne, mention is made of
"certain Abbesses, who contrary to the established discipline of the
Church of God, presume to bless the people, impose their hands on
them, make the sign of
the cross on the foreheads of men, and confer the veil on virgins,
employing during that ceremony the blessing reserved exclusively to
the priest," all of which practice the bishops are urged to forbid
absolutely in their respective dioceses. (Thomassin, "Vetus et Nova
Ecclesae Disciplina," pars I, lib. II, xii, no. 17.) The
"Monastieum Cisterciense " records
the stern inhibition which Innocent III, in 1220, place upon
Cistercian Abbesses of Burgos and Palencia in Spain, "who blessed
their religious, heard the confession of their sins, and when
reading the Gospel, presumed publicly to preach." (Thomassin, op.
cit., pars I, lib. III. xlix, no. 4.) The Pope characterized the
intrusion of these women as a thing "unheard of, most indecorous,
and highly preposterous." Dom Martene, the Benedictine savant, in
his work "De Antiquis Ecclesiae Ritibus," speaks of other Abbesses
who likewish confessed their nuns, and adds, not without a touch of
humour, that "these Abbesses had evidently overated their spiritual
powers a trifle." And as late as 1658, the Sacred Congregation
Rites categorically condemned the acts of the Abbess of Fontevrault
in France, who of her own authority, obliged the monks and nuns of
her obedience to recite offices, say Masses, and observe rites and
ceremonies which had never been sanctioned or approved of by Rome.
(Analecta Juris Pontificii, VII, col. 348.) In this connection it
must, however, be observed, that when the older monastic rule
prescribe confession to the superor, they do not refer to
sacramental confession, but to the "chapter of faults" or the
culpa, at which the religious accuse themselves of ordinary external
fault patent to all, and of minor infractions of the rule. This
"confession" may be made either privately to the superior or
publicly in the chapter-house; no absolution is given and the
penance assigned is merely disciplinary. The "chapter of faults" is
a form of religious exercise still practised in all the monasteries
of the ancient orders.
But reference must be made to certain exceptional cases, where
Abbesses have been permitted, by Apstolical concession and
privilege, it is alleged, to exercise a most extraordinary power of
jurisdiction. Thus, the Abbess of the Cistercian Monastery of Santa
Maria la Real de las Huelgas,
near Burgos, in Spain, was, by the terms of her official protocol, a
"noble lady, the superior, prclate, and lawful administratrix in
spirituals and temporals of the said royal abbey, and of all the
conents, churches, and hermitages of its filiation, of the villages
and places under its jurisdiction, seigniory, and vassalage, in
virtue of Bulls and Apostolical concessions, with plenary
jurisdiction, privative, quasi-episopal, nullius
diacesis." (Florez, "España sagada," XXVII, Madrid 1772, col. 578.)
By
the favour of the king, she was, moreover, invested with almost
royal prerogatives, and exercised an unlimited secular authority
over more than fifty villages. Like the Lord Bishops, she held heer
own courts, in civil
and criminal cases, granted letters dismissorial for ordination, and
issued licenses authorizing priests, within the limits of her
abbatial jurisdicttion, to hear confessions, to preach, and to
engage in the cure of souls. She was privilege also to confirm
Abbesses, to impose censures, and
to convoke synods. ("España sagrada," XXVII, col. 581.) At a
General Chapter of the Cistercians held in 1189, she was made Abbess
General of the Order for the Kingdom of Leon and Castile, with the
privilege of convoking annually a general chapter at Burgos. The
Abbess of Las Huelgas retained her ancient prestige up to the time
of the Council of Trent.
A power of jurisdiction almost equal to that of the Abbess of Las
Huelgas was at one time exercised by the Cistercian Abbess of
Converano in Italy. Among the many privileges enjoyed by this
Abbess may be specially mentioned, that of appointing her own
vicar-general through whom she governed her abbatial territory; that
of selecting and approving confessors for the laity; and that of
authorizing clerics to have the cure of souls in the churches under
her jurisdiction. Every newly appointed Abbess of Converano was
likewise entitiled to receive the public "homage" of her clergy,--the
ceremony of which was sufficiently elaborate. On the appointed day,
the clergy, in a body repaired to the abbey; at the great gate of
her monastery, the Abbess, with mitre and corsier, sat enthroned
under a canopy, and as each member of the clergy passed before her,
he made his obeisance, and kissed her hand. The clergy, however,
wished to do away with the distasteful practice, and, in 1709,
appealed to Rome; the Sacred Congregatior of Bishops and Regulars
thereupon modified some of ceremonial
details, but recognized the right of the Abbess to the homage.
Finally,
in 1750, the practice was wholly abolished, and the Abbess deprived
of all her power of jurisdiction. (Cf. "Analecta Juris Pontificii,"
XXXVIII,
col. 723: and Bizzari, "Collectanea," 322.) among other Abbesses
said to have exercised like powers of jurisdiction, for aa period at
least, may
be mentioned the Abbess of Fontevrault in France, and of Quedlinburg
in Germany. (Ferraris, "Biblioth. Prompta; Abbatissa.")
PROTESTANT ABBESSES OF GERMANY
In some parts of Germany, notably in
Hanover, Wurtemberg, Brunswick, and Schleswig-Holstein, a number of
Protestant educational establishments, and certain Lutheran
sisterhoods are directed by superiors who style themselves Abbesses
even to the present day. All these establishments were, at one
time, Catholic convents and monasteries, and the "Abbesses" now
presiding over them, are, in every instance, the Protestant
successors of a former line of Catholic Abbesses. The
transformation into Protestant community houses and seminaries was
effected, of course, during the religious revolution of the
sixteenth century,
when the nuns who remained loyal to the Catholic faith were driven
from the cloister, and Lutheran sisterhoods put in possessing of
their abbeys.
In many religious communities, Protestantism was forcibly imposed
on the members, while in some few, particularly in North Germany, it
was voluntarily embraced. But in all these houses, where the
ancient monastic offices were continued the titles of the officials
were likewise retained. And thus there have been, since the
sixteenth century, both Catholic and Protestant Abbesses in Germany.
The Abbey of Quedinburg was one of the first to embrace the
Reformation. Its last Catholic Abbess, Magdalena, Princess of
Anhalt, died in 1514. As early as 1539, the Abbess Anna II of
Stolberg, who had been elected to the office when she was scarcely
thirteen years of age, introduced Lutheranism in all the houses
under her jurisdiction. The choir service in the abbey church was
abandoned, and the Catholic religion wholly abrogated. The monastic
offices were reduced to four, but the ancient official titles
retained. Thereafter the institution continued as a Lutheran
sisterhood till the secularization of the abbey
in 1803. The last two Abbesses were the Princess Anna Amelia (d.
1787),
sister of Frederick the Great, and the Princess Sophia Albertina (d.
1829), daughter of King Adolphus Frederick of Sweden. In 1542,
under the Abbess Clare of the house of Brunswick, the Sclamalkaldic
League forcibly imposed Protestantism on the members of the ancient
and venerable Benedictinre Abbey of Gandersheim; but though the
Lutheran intruders were driven out again in 1547 by Clare's father,
Duke Henry the Younger, a loyal Catholic, Lutheranism was
permanently introduced, a few years laater, by Julius, Duke of
Brunswick. Margaret, the last Catholic Abbess, diied in 1589, and
after that period Lutheran Abbesses were appointed to the founation.
These continued to enjoy the imperial privileges of their
predecessors
till 1802, when Gandersheim was incorporated with Brunswick. Among
the houses of minor importance still in existence, the Abbey of
Drubeck may be specially noticed. At one time a Catholic convent,
it fell into Protestant hands during the Reformation. In 1687, the
Elector Frederick William I of Brandenburg granted the revenues of
the house to the Counts of Stolberg, stipulating, however, that
women of noble birth and professing the
Evangelical faith, should always find a home in the convent, be
adequately provided for, and live there under the government of an
Abbess. The wish of the Elector is apparently still respected.
SECULAR Abbess IN AUSTRIA
In the Hradschin of Prague, there is a
noted Catholic Imperial Institute, whose directress always bears the
title Abbess. The institute, now the most exclusive and the best
endowed of its
kind in Austria, was founded in 1755 by the Empress Maria Theresa
for impoverished noblewomen of ancient lineage. The Abbess is
always an Austrian Archduchess, and must be at least eighteen years
of age before she can
assume the duties of her office. Her insignia are a pectoral cross,
the
ring, the staff, and a princely cornet. It was formerly an
exclusive privilege of this Abbess to crown the Queen of Bohemia -- a
ceremony last performed in 1808, for the Empress Maria Louisa.
Candidates for admission to the Institute must be twenty-nine years
of age, of irreproachable morals and able to trace back their noble
ancestry, paternal and maternal, for
eight generations. They make no vows, but live in community and are
obliged to assist twice daily at divine service in the Stifskirche,
and must
go to confession and receive Holy Communion four times a year on
appointed days. They are all Hoffähig.
NUMBER AND DISTRIBUTION, BY COUNTRIES, OF ABBESSES
The Abbesses of
the Black Benedictines number at present 120. Of these there are 71
in Italy, 15 in Spain, 12 in Austro-Hungary, 11 in France (before
the Associations Law), 4 in England, 3 in Belgium, 2 in Germany, and
2 in Switzerland. The Cisterecians of all Observances have a total
of 77 Abbesses. Of these 74 belong to the Cisterecians of the
Common Observance, who have most of their houses in Spain and in
Italy. The Cistercians of the Strict Observance have 2 Abbesses in
France and 1 in Germany. There are no Abbesses in the United
States. In England the superior of the following houses are
Abbesses: St. Mary's Abbey, Stanbrook, Worcesster: St. Mary's Abbey,
East Bergholt, Suffolk; St. Mary's Abbey, Oulton, Staffordshire; St.
Scholastica's Abbey, Teignmouth, Devon; St. Bridget's Abbey of Syon,
Chudleigh, Devon (Brigttine); St. Clare's Abbey, Darlington, Durham
(Poor Clares). In Ireland: Convent of Poor Clares, Ballyjamesduff.
MONTALEMBERT, The Monks of the West (GASQUET'S ed., in 6 vols., New
York, 1896), Bk. XV; GASQUET, English Monastic Life (London, 1808),
viii; TAUSTON, The English Black Monks of St. Benedict (London,
1808), I, vi; TAUNTON, The Law of the Church (St. Louis, 1906),
ECNENSTEIX, Women under Monasticism (London 1896), FERRAIS, Prompta
Bibliotheca Canonica (Rome 1885); BIZZARRI, Collectanea S. C. Episc.
Et Reg. (Rome 1885); PETRA, Comment. ad Constitut. Apostolicas
(Rome 1705); THOMASSINI, Vetus et Nova Ecclesia Disciplina (Mainz,
1787); FAGNANI, Jus Conon., s. Comment. in Decret, (Cologne, 1704);
TAMBURINI, De jure et privilegiis abbat.. pralat., abbatiss., et
monial (Cologne, 1691); LAURAIN, De Vinterrention des laiques, des
diacres et des abbesses dans Vadministration de lapcnitence (Paris,
1897); SAGULLER, Lehrbuch des katholischen Kirchenrechts (Freiburg
im Breisgau, 1904).
THOMAS OESTREICH
Transcribed by Isabel T. Montoya
The 1913 Catholic Encyclopedia