Podcast Episode Details

Back to Podcast Episodes
Women Alone with God: Extraordinary Lives of Medieval Women / Hetta Howes (SOLO Part 4)

Women Alone with God: Extraordinary Lives of Medieval Women / Hetta Howes (SOLO Part 4)


Episode 231


What is the role of solitude in Christian history? Medievalist Hetta Howes comments on the allure of enclosure, how seeking solitude supports community, and what these ancient lives reveal about our modern search for connection.

“Even those moments of solitude that she’s carving for herself are surprisingly sociable.”

This episode is part 1 of a 5-part series, SOLO, which explores the theological, moral, and psychological dimensions of loneliness, solitude, and being alone.

Medieval Anchoresses and Women Mystics sought a life of solitude with and for God—what about their vocation might illuminate our perspectives on loneliness, isolation, and solitude today?

In this episode, Hetta Howes joins Macie Bridge to explore the extraordinary lives of medieval women mystics, including Julian of Norwich and Marjorie Kempee. Drawing from her book Poet Mystic Widow Wife: The Extraordinary Lives of Medieval Women, Howes illuminates how these women lived in literal and spiritual solitude—sometimes sealed in stone anchorages, sometimes carving sacred space in the midst of family and community. Together they consider the physical and spiritual demands of enclosure, the sociable windows of anchorages, and the simultaneous human longing for both solitude and companionship. Across the centuries, these women invite us to think anew about loneliness, vocation, and the need for community—even in devotion to God.

Helpful Links and Resources

Episode Highlights

  1. “An anchorage is a small cell, usually joined to a church… and the idea was that you would never leave that place alive again.”
  2. “Sometimes you do come across these things and you’re like, oh, maybe the cultural consciousness was so different that they had a different language for loneliness.”
  3. “Marjorie frames herself as a figure who is constantly looking for connection—sometimes finding it, but often being rejected in really painful ways.”
  4. “Even those moments of solitude that she’s carving for herself are surprisingly sociable.”
  5. “What I’ve learned from them is the importance of community—that even solitary professions absolutely rely on other people.”

About Hetta Howes

Hetta Howes is a Lecturer in Medieval and Early Modern Literature at City St. George’s, University of London. She specializes in the literature of the Middle Ages, with particular focus on medieval women writers, mysticism, and representations of gender and devotion. Her most recent book is Poet Mystic Widow Wife: The Extraordinary Lives of Medieval Women (2024).

Show Notes

Solitude and Sanctity

  • Howes introduces her research on medieval women mystics and writers (Julian of Norwich, Margery Kempe, Christine de Pizan, Marie de France).
  • Exploration of the anchoritic life—cells built into church walls where women lived sealed from the world.
  • The paradox of solitude: enclosure for God that still required connection for survival.

The Anchorite’s World

  • Anchorages included small windows—to the church, the street, and for food—balancing isolation with limited engagement.
  • Guidebooks warned women against gossip and temptation, revealing anxiety about sociability and holiness.
  • “Why have a window to the world if you’re not ever going to con


    Published on 1 week ago






If you like Podbriefly.com, please consider donating to support the ongoing development.

Donate