Christian History Timeline: Women in the Medieval Church
Women in the Medieval Church
450–523: Brigid of Ireland founds Ireland’s first nunnery and spreads Christianity there
475—545: Clotilde, Queen of the Franks, converts her husband, King Clovis, who lays the foundation of the French nation
500–547: Theodora I, co-empress of Byzantine Empire, helps bring moral reform
518–587: Radegunde, Queen of the Franks, maintains her faith despite King Clothaire’s adulteries and his murder of her brother; later she founds a key monastery
614–680: Hilda of Whitby founds an English monastery that trains five bishops; she hosts significant Synod of Whitby in 663
700–780: Lioba helps Boniface to convert the Saxons; founds abbey in Germany; invited to court of Charlemagne
fl. 840: Dhouda of Septimania writes a manual on feudal and religious conduct, urging her son to practice charity and serve the king and the church
932–1002: Hrotsvit composes the first known dramas in church history
1046–93: Queen Margaret of Scotland vigorously reforms the church
c. 1083–c. 1150: Anna Comnena writes an important history of the Byzantine Church and Empire of her day
c. 1097–c. 1161: Christina of Markyate overcomes obstacles to live life of prayer and poverty; influences abbot of St. Albans toward holiness
1122–1204: Eleanor of Aquitaine rules one—third of France; later co-rules, with Henry II, half of France and all England; joins crusade to Holy Land; financially supports Fontrevault Abbey
1188–1252: Blanche of Castile, Queen of Louis VIII of France, wins dispute with French bishops; performs acts of charity
1194—1253: Clare of Assisi renounces wealth; founds Order of Poor Clares; gains from pope right to maintain absolute poverty; helps save Assisi from being sacked
1207–1231: Elizabeth of Hungary, a noblewoman, ministers to the poor and establishes hospital
c. 1210–c. 1280: Mechthild of Magdeburg criticizes church corruption and writes Flowing Light of the Godhead
c. 1248–1309: Angela of Foligno devotes herself to prayer and austerity in Franciscan Third Order; writes Experience of the Truly Faithful
1256–1302: Gertrud the Great, after conversion at age 25, leads life of contemplation; writes Messenger of Divine Kindness
1303–1373: Bridget (Birgitta) of Sweden, widowed after 30 years of marriage and eight children, founds order, gives to poor, writes, and urges papal reform
1343–c. 1423: Julian of Norwich lives enclosed life of prayer; writes Revelations of Divine Love
1347–1380: Catherine of Siena devotes herself to prayer; helps lepers and prisoners; urges pope to return to Rome; writes Letters and Dialogue
1366–1394: Agnes of Bohemia, betrothed to Emperor Frederick II, founds monastery
1373–1439: Margery Kempe undertakes pilgrimages and writes first known autobiography in English
1412–1431: Joan of Arc, following supernatural “voices,” leads besieged French forces to victory; burned at stake on charges of heresy; later declared innocent
Church and World Events
455: Vandals sack Rome
476: Last Roman emperor in the West
529: Justinian codifies Roman law
540: Benedict writes monastic Rule
590–604: Pope Gregory I, the Great
596: Augustine sent to convert English
622: Mohammad’s hijra marks birth of Islam
711: Moslems cross into Spain
718: Boniface’s mission to the Saxons of Germany
731: Bede writes Ecclesiastical History of the English
732: Charles Martel limits Moslem expansion at Tours
800: Charlemagne Holy Roman Emperor
843: Treaty of Verdun divides Charlemagne’s kingdom
863: Cyril and Methodius lead mission to Slavs
885: Vikings besiege Paris
910: Monastery at Cluny founded
911: Vikings given land for settlement; leads to foundation of Normandy
962: Otto I crowned Holy Roman Emperor
988: Vladimir, Grand Prince of Kiev, baptized
995–1030: Olav brings Christianity to Norway
1001–28: Stephen, King of Hungary, converts this people to Christianity
1054: East—West Schism
1066: Battle of Hastings; William of Normandy King of England
1071: Battle of Manzikert marks ascendancy of new group of Moslems
1073–85: Pope Gregory VII reforms church
1093: Anselm becomes Archbishop of Canterbury
1095: Pope Urban II calls for crusade
1115: Bernard of Clairvaux founds monastery
1122: Concordat of Worms, compromise in church—state feuds
c. 1141: Gratian’s Decretum, basis for medieval church law
1142: Abelard dies
c. 1150: Medieval universities begin
1152–90: Frederick Barbarossa rules Holy Roman Empire (Germany)
1170: Thomas á Becket assassinated
1204: Fourth Crusade; sack of Constantinople
1208: Francis of Assissi renounces wealth
1215: Magna Carta confirmed by King John
Innocent III calls Fourth Lateran Council, which affirms transubstantiation, condemns Waldensians
1220: Dominic founds order
1271–1295: Marco Polo travels to China
1272: Aquinas’s Summa Theologiae
1291: Fall of last crusading territory in East
1302: Unam Sanctamproclaims no salvation outside the church
1309: Papacy “exiled” to Avignon
1321: Dante’s Divine Comedy
1337–1453: One Hundred Years’ War
1347: First wave of Black Death
1378: Great Papal Schism yields multiple popes
1380: Wyclif supervises English Bible translation
1414: Council of Constance ends Papal Schism; condemns Hus
1418: Thomas à Kempis’s Imitation of Christ
c. 1450: Gutenberg’s press
By Thomas O. Kay
[Christian History originally published this article in Christian History Issue #30 in 1991]
Dr. Thomas O. Kay is Chair of the Department of History at Wheaton College in Wheaton, Illinois.Next articles
Heloise and Abelard’s Tumultuous Affair
She became an acclaimed abbess; he was one of the greatest philosophers of the medieval world. Yet their fabled love deeply damaged them both.
Ruth A. TuckerThe Mystics
Why did mysticism flower in the medieval world—and why did women often lead in it?
Elizabeth Alvilda PetroffSupport us
Christian History Institute (CHI) is a non-profit Pennsylvania corporation founded in 1982. Your donations support the continuation of this ministry
Donate