Furnished female burial in seventh-century England: Gender and authority in the Conversion Period

A new, refined chronology for seventh-century graves and grave goods in England has revealed a marked increase in well-furnished female burials beginning in the second quarter of the seventh century. The present study considers what gave rise to this phenomenon and concludes that the small number of...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hamerow, H
Format: Journal article
Published: Wiley 2016
Description
Summary:A new, refined chronology for seventh-century graves and grave goods in England has revealed a marked increase in well-furnished female burials beginning in the second quarter of the seventh century. The present study considers what gave rise to this phenomenon and concludes that the small number of royal nuns and abbesses who figure so prominently in written accounts of the Conversion were part of a wider, undocumented change in the role of women that began several decades before the founding of the first female houses. It is argued that these well-furnished graves reflect a new investment in the commemoration of females who came to represent their family’s interests in newly acquired estates and whose importance was enhanced by their ability to confer supernatural legitimacy onto dynastic claims.