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CANONESS (Fr. chanoinesse, Ger. Kanonissin, See also: female beneficiary of a religious See also: college
.
In the 8th century chapters of canons were instituted in the Frankish See also: empire, and in imitation of these certain See also: women took See also: common vows of obedience and chastity, though not of poverty
.
Like nuns they had common table and dormitory, and recited the breviary, but generally the See also: rule was not so strict as in the See also: case of nuns
.
The canonesses often taught girls, and were also employed in embroidering ecclesiastical See also: vestments and transcribing liturgical books
.
A distinction was See also: drawn between See also: regular and secular canonesses, the latter being of See also: noble See also: family and not practising, any austerity
.
Some of their abbesses were notable feudal princesses
.
In See also: Germany several See also: foundations of this kind (e.g
.
See also: Gandersheim, See also: Herford and Quedlinburg), which were practically secular institutions before the See also: Reformation, adopted the See also: Protestant faith, and still exist, requiring of their members the See also: simple conditions of celibacy and obedience to their See also: superior during membership
.
These institutions (Stiller) are now practically almshouses for the unmarried daughters of noble families
.
In some cases the right of presentation belongs to the See also: head of the family, sometimes See also: admission is gained by See also: purchase; but in See also: modern times a certain number of prebends have been created for the daughters of deserving officials
.
The organization of the Stift is collegiate, the head bearing the See also: ancient titles of abbess, prioress ^r provostess (Probstin), and the canonesses (Stiftsdamen) meet periodically in Konvent for the discussion of the affairs of the community
.
The ladies are not bound to residence
.
In many of these See also: Stifter quaint pre-Reformation customs and ceremonies still survive; thus, at the convent of St See also: John the Baptist at
See also: Schleswig, on the See also: day of the See also: patron See also: saint, the See also: room in which the Konvent is held is draped in black and a realistic See also: life-See also: size See also: wax head of St John on a charger is placed in the centre of the table round which the canonesses sit
.
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