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Richard G. Williams, ed. Mannock Strickland 1683–1744. Agent to English Convents in Flanders. Letters and Accounts from Exile, Catholic Record Society Record Series 86, Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, 2016, pp. lxxxi+341, £50.00, ISBN: 978-0-902832-30-5

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Richard G. Williams, ed. Mannock Strickland 1683–1744. Agent to English Convents in Flanders. Letters and Accounts from Exile, Catholic Record Society Record Series 86, Woodbridge: The Boydell Press, 2016, pp. lxxxi+341, £50.00, ISBN: 978-0-902832-30-5

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  06 September 2017

Laurence Lux-Sterritt*
Affiliation:
Aix Marseille Univ, LERMA, Aix-en-Provence, France
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Abstract

Type
Book Reviews
Copyright
© Trustees of the Catholic Record Society 2017. Published by Cambridge University Press 

In 1905, the Catholic Record Society embarked upon a monumental enterprise: the publication of edited primary sources documenting the lives of English Catholics, lay and religious, from the early modern era onwards. In 1968, the Records Series was completed with a Monograph Series, which now boasts a strong back catalogue of specialist monograph publications.

Richard G. Williams’s edition of Mannock Strickland’s papers, like all CRS publications, is a high-quality production and a beautiful book; it even contains a few illustrations, an increasing rarity considering the costs involved. The volume falls into three main sections: a lengthy and detailed introduction; the primary sources themselves, with annotations; and the appendices, which provide very useful complementary elements including biographical details of the people mentioned in the text.

In his 81-page introduction, the editor retraces the relevant elements pertaining to the biography of Mannock John Strickland (1683–1744), a counsellor-at-law and one of a small and select group of English Catholic lawyers who worked to secure the finances and estates of their fellow co-religionists. Because of his faith and of his Jacobite affiliations, Strickland was never called to the Bar despite having the highest form of legal training as a barrister; he was, however, a respected member of Gray’s Inn from 1704 to 1732, when he moved to Lincoln’s Inn, which was known as a base of support for Catholics in London. Williams notes that, like that of some of his close associations, Strickland’s clientèle indicates that the vital strength of the recusant community in England was no longer the nobility but rather the gentry, as Gabriel Glickman’s recent monograph has suggested. He also points out that female clients accounted for a very high proportion of Strickland’s clientele, and underlines this female predominance as a ‘striking aspect’ of the archive (p. xxii), echoing the now widely-accepted notion that women, both lay and religious, played a particularly important part in the life, organisation and survival of the English Catholic community.

After a brief evocation of the religious, political and economic contexts in which the English Catholic community organised its continued existence in spite of stringent penal laws, the editor presents the primary sources which form his corpus. Eight years after Strickland’s death, his son-in-law Michael Blount II (1719–92) transferred his papers from London to his country home at Mapledurham House, where the editor is librarian and archivist. Here they are transcribed as a complete set, without any omissions, offering a timely and most welcome contribution to the growing interest in the history of the English convents in exile.

This edition compiles the letters, the account books and miscellaneous papers documenting the affairs between Strickland and four English convents in exile on the Continent—the Augustinian Canonesses of St Monica at Louvain, the Dominicans of the Spellikens at Brussels, and the Benedictines of Dunkirk and Brussels, for whom he also acted as a banker. The variety of letters, and of legal and financial documents add nuance and detail to the picture presented by the publication of the six volumes of edited primary sources compiled and edited by Caroline Bowden and her project team for the Who Were the Nuns? project.

Most of the letters reproduced in this volume pertain to the convent of St Monica’s and were written by Cecily Tunstall, the community’s Procuratrix; there are also several documents from the Spellikens; those concerned with the Benedictines, however, form only a very small proportion of the edition. As a body of text, the letters show the staunch Jacobitism of the houses, strengthening the case for the political activism of English nuns, traced by Caroline Bowden and Claire Walker. Arguably however, what they illustrate most clearly is the distress of communities who appear to have lived in a constant state of financial crisis. Strickland’s major role with them was that of a debt collector, since convents often did not manage to secure the payments of sums due either for boarding, for portions and dowries or for the return of sums invested.

In his description of Cecily Tunstall, the Augustinian Procuratrix, Williams is at times quite harsh: repeatedly, he describes her as demanding and impatient (pp. xxxv, xlix, l, lv, lvi), ‘unforgiving’ (p. xxxvi) and ‘blunt’ (p. xxxvii), but surely her attitude belied her genuine anxiety regarding the financial stability of her house. When debts ran for several years, as the documents show, it can be no surprise that communities were plunged in such distress that they became quite pressing with the agent in charge of their affairs. For these women, as Williams points out, it was a matter of survival, since their situation meant that they were entirely dependent upon Strickland; English nuns were ‘doubly dead’ to the world (p. lxxi), isolated legally both as women and as Catholic, and geographically because of their exile and their vow of enclosure. Moreover, communication with their relatives and networks in England was problematic, since letters at times miscarried or remained unanswered, thereby exacerbating the nuns’ sense of alienation.

The letters and account books edited here therefore testify that to be an English religious woman in the eighteenth century was to experience a constant sense of urgency and of worry regarding an uncertain future. As such they also reveal a lot more than the financial contours of the houses concerned: they tell us about how it felt to be an English nun in exile. They also tell readers about the nuns’ reading habits, their medical needs and their personal, physical experience of religious life on the Continent. Clearly, they provide a highly valuable source for future research, and this volume will be a mine of information to those interested in the lives of early modern Catholic nuns.