A
Dominican house located sixteen miles outside of London in Kent, known to be Dartfort Priory, is described by Paul Lee, author of
Nunneries, Learning and Spirituality in Late Medieval English Society: the Dominican Priory of Dartford, as one of the ten wealthiest and largest nunneries in England. Agnes was alleged to be an orphan and ward of the
Dartford Priory in
Dartford,
Kent. Agnes would have called the Priory home at a time when the Priory was also the home of Princess
Bridget of York, the younger sister to
Elizabeth, queen consort to
Henry VII and daughter of
Edward IV of England and
Elizabeth Woodville. Bridget was said to have entered Dartford in 1490, an event that was associated with her mother's withdrawal into Bermondsey Abbey, but in fact Woodville had gone to Bermondsey in 1487. Elizabeth Cressner, the prioress of the nunnery from 1489 to 1536, was in charge of the Priory throughout Bridget's tenure at Dartford. As the only Dominican nunnery in England, the nunnery followed the Rule of St. Augustine, which, according to Paul Lee, detailed a life of strict poverty, chastity, communal charity and obedience. Lee also notes that “[e]nclosure of the nuns was strict, in principle, and there is no hint of scandal involving nuns leaving the monastic confines.” Nonetheless, the priory did accommodate secular boarders, and both boys and girls received an education there. == Agnes Roper ==