Matilda de Bailleul explained

Matilda de Bailleul
Birth Date:c. 1132
Death Date:14 December
Death Place:Wherwell Abbey
Other Names:Maud[1]
Known For:a transforming abbess of Wherwell Abbey
Occupation:Abbess
Successor:Euphemia de Walliers

Matilda de Bailleul aka Maud[1] (c.1132 – 14 December, 1212) was a Flemish abbess of the English Wherwell Abbey. She arrived in 1173 and transformed the abbey that had few nuns following damage done by William of Ypres years before. She annotated and then gifted an illuminated psalter to her successors which is known as the Saint Bertin psalter.

Life

She was born in about 1132.[1] Matilda de Bailleul came from a noble family. Her father Baldwin and her brother also Baldwin were castellans of Bailleul, Ypres, and Oudenburg. Her mother Euphemia was a grand daughter of a Castellan of St Omer and her family had included the founding Knight Templar Godfrey de Saint-Omer.

In about 1173, Matilda de Bailleul arrived from Flanders at Wherwell. She made good on the damage done by William of Ypres during the Anarchy in 1141. The damage had been done despite the fortifications added by Empress Matilda. King Stephen's troops burnt the abbey after Matilda's men retreated into it.

de Bailleul organised a funding system for the abbey. Thomas a Beckett had been murdered in 1173 and after he died the abbey had a silver goblet and a gilded chalice that were noted because they had been used by Thomas a Beckett. As the abbey had no relics it is speculated that these drinking vessels were used to attract funding. Matilda is said to have installed lighting as well as ornaments in the abbey.

On 21 May 1194 the pope Celestine III wrote to de Bailleul and the nuns at the Abbey. He acknowledged the reversal in the abbey's fortunes and he required others to respect the achievement and the Abbey.[2]

By 1200, she had a psalter in her personal possession which is believed to have been made by scribes and an artist associated with St Albans Abbey in Hertfordshire. It is not clear how it came into her possession or who it was made for. It may have been made for her maternal great uncle, Osto of Saint-Omer. She added details to the psalter of her relatives obituaries and prayers.[3]

Death and legacy

She died in 1212 and by that time the number of nuns had grown from not many to forty. The psalter was passed down to her spiritual successors who also added annotations.[3] The psalter is now in the possession of St John's College, Cambridge.[3]

Matilda was succeeded by Euphemia de Walliers.[3] Euphemia was Matilda's niece and she also came from Flanders.[4] She would serve as Abbess until 26 April 1257.[5]

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Houses of Benedictine nuns: Abbey of Wherwell British History Online. 28 March 2021. www.british-history.ac.uk.
  2. Bugyis. Katie Ann-Marie. 14 September 2020. Made for a Templar, Fit for an Abbess: The Psalter, Cambridge, St. John’s College, MS C.18 (68). Speculum. 95. 4. 1010–1050. 10.1086/710346. 0038-7134.
  3. Web site: Seminar: “Made for a Templar, Fit for an Abbess: The Psalter, Cambridge, St John’s College, MS C.18 (68)” – Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies. 28 March 2021. en-CA.
  4. Web site: Bailleul, Matilda de (d. 1212), abbess of Wherwell. 27 March 2021. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. en. 10.1093/ref:odnb/105478.
  5. Web site: Walliers, Euphemia de [Euphemia of Wherwell] (d. 1257), abbess of Wherwell]. 28 March 2021. Oxford Dictionary of National Biography. en. 10.1093/ref:odnb/54451.