For the Life of the World / Yale Center for Faith & Culture

Women Alone with God: Extraordinary Lives of Medieval Women / Hetta Howes (SOLO Part 4)

Nov 5, 2025
Medievalist Hetta Howes dives into the fascinating lives of medieval women mystics, including Julian of Norwich and Margery Kempe. She reveals how these women navigated profound solitude while still fostering connections through anchorage. Exploring the tension between enforced solitude and social duties, Howes illustrates how their experiences inform our understanding of loneliness today. She challenges our perceptions of community and devotion, emphasizing the delicate balance between solitude and companionship in both the past and present.
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INSIGHT

What An Anchorage Actually Was

  • An anchorage is a small cell, usually joined to a church, designed for lifelong enclosure and devotion.
  • The vocation demanded enclosure, chastity, orthodoxy, and severe discipline so one could turn wholly toward God.
INSIGHT

Solitude Meant Service, Not Total Isolation

  • Anchoritic life balanced solitude with duties to the community like prayer, confession, and counsel.
  • The window to the outside world served both sacramental and social functions, enabling visitors and support.
INSIGHT

Loneliness Is Largely Unspoken

  • Medieval guidebooks worried more about idleness and boredom than explicitly naming loneliness.
  • The sources rarely record emotional loneliness, suggesting different cultural language or suppressed expressions.
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