Frances Bedingfeld

Frances Bedingfeld, I.B.V.M. (1616–1704) led the first foundation in England of the Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary, better known as the Sisters of Loreto, which had been founded by the Venerable Mary Ward.

Life

Frances was the daughter of Francis and Katherine Fortescue Bedingfeld. [1] Born in Norfolk, England, in 1616, she came from a recusant family which had remained Roman Catholic through the Reformation. She and her 11 sisters all entered religious orders.[2] Sent to the continent for her education due to the Penal Laws then in effect, Bedingfeld enrolled at the school run by the Institute in Munich, then in the Electorate of Bavaria, known there as the "English Ladies". She later entered the Institute herself in Rome and was professed in September 1633 in the church of Santa Maria Maggiore.[2] She later became the superior of the mother house of the order in Munich.

After spending a number of years teaching at the school, due to a request of Queen Catherine of Braganza in 1669 Bedingfeld was sent back to England to found a school of the Institute in London. With a group of other English Sisters, she set up a school for young women, first at St. Martin's Lane, with the support of the Queen. Once back in England, due to continued persecution, she wore a plain gray dress and used the alias of "Mrs Long".Upon the death of Charles II, finding their tenure so near to the court to be rather unsecure, Frances Bedington secured, with the help of the Queen Dowager, a large house at Hammersmith with a spacious garden.[2]

Bar Convent

Bar Convent Exterior

From this community, she founded Bar Convent in York in 1677, at the invitation of Sir Thomas Gascoigne. This was the first Convent to be opened in England after the dissolution of Monasteries in 1536 by Henry VIII.[3] First they set up a boarding school for Catholic girls, and this was followed in 1699 by a free day school.[1] Although the convent school was closed in 1985, Bar remains the oldest surviving Roman Catholic convent in England. Both houses continued despite frequent harassment by local authorities for their ties to the Catholic Church, being suspected of harboring Catholic priests.[4] Bedingfeld supervised both communities until 1686, when she settled in York.[2]

Bedingfeld's family connections often helped her to avoid major punishment, even though the community endured repeated searches and destruction of their house. Bedington was arrested three times: London (1674), York (1679), and in 1694, she and her great-niece, Mother Dorothy Pastor Bedingfeld, were summoned before a magistrate and briefly committed to the gaol at Ouse Bridge in York.[5] The community was attacked in 1695, at which time the house was almost destroyed. In 1699 she resigned as Superior in favor of her niece and moved back to Munich, where she died on 4 May 1704.[2] A house at St Mary's School, Ascot, which her successors founded in 1885, was named in honour of her.[6]

According to William Shiels, the Bedingfeld women "provided spiritual leadership to religious communities spread across five European states and stretching from York to Munich, as well as an enduring network of contacts for English Catholics abroad. ...and the importance of these women in sustaining English Catholicism by providing education for gentry children and hospitality to travellers cannot be overestimated."[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 Sheils, William Joseph. ‘Bedingfield family (per. 1476–1760)’, Oxford Dictionary of National Biography, Oxford University Press, 2004; online edn, May 2009
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Crowne, J. Vincent. "Frances Bedingfeld." The Catholic Encyclopedia. Vol. 2. New York: Robert Appleton Company, 1907. 10 Oct. 2014
  3. "The Loreto Convent School Timeline", Loreto Convent School, Pretoria
  4. "Past and Present". The Bar Convent, York. Retrieved 12 January 2013.
  5. Publications of the Catholic Record Society, Volume 4, Catholic Records society, 1907
  6. "Bedingfeld House", St. Mary's School, Ascot

Further reading

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain: Herbermann, Charles, ed. (1913). "article name needed". Catholic Encyclopedia. New York: Robert Appleton. 


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