Rowland entered the Ursuline Order in Duderstadt and made her
religious profession in October 1873, taking the religious name Mary Cordula. In June 1877 the anti-Catholic
Falk laws expelled the order from their convent. Sister Mary Cordula and a German nun went to England, arriving in
Dover on 24 June 1877. In Greenwich the order was assisted by Capuchin priest Father
Elzear Torreggiani. In 1879 Torreggiani was appointed
Bishop of Armidale and he invited the Ursulines at Greenwich to establish their order in New South Wales. In 1882 Sister Mary Cordula and nine other nuns undertook a 3-month voyage to
Sydney, where they attended the opening ceremony of St Mary's Cathedral on 8 September, after which they travelled overland to Armidale where they established their first convent and school. From there the order extended into other towns of New South Wales and
Queensland. She was also known as artist, painting many
religious pictures and many
illuminated manuscripts. One of her paintings was of the ship
Duchess of Edinburgh on which she immigrated to Australia. She was broadminded and maintained friendly relationships with the wider community. == Later life ==