, father of Christian Monasticism and early anchorite. The
Coptic inscription reads '' or 'The Great Father Anthony'. The earliest recorded anchorites lived in the third century AD. Saint
Anthony the Anchorite (251–356), also known as "Anthony of the Desert", has a traditional reputation as Christianity's "Father of Monasticism".
Hilarion (
Gaza, 291 –
Cyprus, 371) was known as the founder of anchoritic life in
Palestine. The anchoritic life proved popular in England, where women outnumbered men in the ranks of the anchorites, especially in the 13th century. when the
Dissolution of the Monasteries ordered by Henry VIII brought anchoritism in England to an end. However, the lack of a consistent registration system for anchorites suggests there may have been substantially more. English anchorholds can still be seen at
Chester-le-Street in
County Durham and at
Hartlip in
Kent. •
Bede records that prior to a conference in 602 with
Augustine of Canterbury, British churchmen consulted an anchorite about whether to abandon their
Celtic Christian traditions for the
Roman practices which Augustine was seeking to introduce. • Toward the end of the seventh century,
Guthlac of Crowland, related to the royal family of
Mercia, withdrew from the monastery at
Repton to an island in the
Lincolnshire Fens where he lived for some 15–20 years. •
Wulfric of Haselbury (died 1154) was enclosed as an anchorite in a cell built against the church in his village of
Haselbury Plucknett in
Somerset. •
Christine Carpenter, who submitted a petition in 1329 and was granted permission to become the anchoress of
Shere Church, also known as
the Church of St. James, in the
Borough of Guildford, received her food and drink through a metal grating on the outside wall. In the interior of the church, a
quatrefoil through which she could receive the Eucharist and a hagioscope for her use for prayer and reflection were cut out of the wall. Although she left her cell, in 1332 she applied for—and was granted—permission to be re-enclosed. •
Katherine of Ledbury, anchorite at
Ledbury,
Herefordshire, in the early 14th century. • Margaret Kirkby (possibly 1322 to ), an anchoress at Hampole, for whom Richard Rolle wrote his
vernacular guide
The Form of Living. • In 1346, an unnamed anchorite scribe translated Latin texts into
Welsh, producing what is today known as
Book of the Anchorite of Llanddewibrefi. •
Walter Hilton ( 1340/1345 – 1396) composed the first book of his
Scale of Perfection for an unnamed enclosed woman. •
Julian of Norwich (died after 1416) wrote the mystic text
Revelations of Divine Love, which made a permanent contribution to Christian spirituality. Her cell, attached to
St Julian's Church, Norwich, was destroyed during the Dissolution, and the church itself was gutted by bombing in the
Second World War, but afterwards rebuilt. On the site of the cell is a modern shrine to Julian. • Patrick Begley (or Beglin) was an Irish anchorite who lived in a cell at
Fore Abbey in the 17th century. •
Nazarena of Jesus was an American who felt called to become an anchorite and entered the
Camaldolese Abbey of Sant'Antimo in Rome in 1945, remaining there until her death in 1990. Other anchorites included
Calogerus the Anchorite ( – 561),
Cyriacus the Anchorite (448–557) and
Suster Bertken (1426–1514). ==In popular culture==