The
Bridgettines in south Germany welcomed urban patrician women. Katerina Lemmel had become familiar with Birgittine writings already in Nuremberg. The
Revelations of
Bridget of Sweden and other devotional texts were read not only in the local women's monasteries but also by women in the world, and thus generally impacted spirituality and encouraged women's self-determination. The attitudes Lemmel expresses suggest that she may have wished to avoid the monasteries in and near Nuremberg, which were under the close scrutiny of male trustees from the City Council. As an astute, knowledgeable, and experienced businesswoman, Lemmel could continue many of her mercantile endeavors. This included not only managing the funds she had brought with her when she professed, but also negotiating donations by assuring prayers and memorials in exchange for support in the form of funding, furnishings, commodities, services, and favors. Katerina Lemmel brought a substantial amount of her own capital with her to Maria Mai. She used the funds immediately to improve, remodel and complete the nun's
cloister and several adjacent structures. For her remaining financial resources, she sought profitable but secure investment opportunities. Lemmel's ongoing efforts to solicit donations of
stained glass panels for the glazing of the cloister continued throughout much of her correspondence. Finally by 1519 a narrative cycle focusing on the Passion of Christ was completed by the famous Hirsvogel workshop of Nuremberg and installed at Maria Mai. The nuns, however, had little time to make use of their windows: during the
German Peasants' War of 1525 angry rebels stormed the monastery, forcing the nuns to flee to the town of
Oettingen. Upon their return after the uprising was squelched, the women found large parts of their monastery and properties had been destroyed and plundered. By that time many of the merchant cities of South Germany, among them Nuremberg, had adopted the Lutheran Reformation thus depriving the nuns of one of their major sources of support. Maria Mai never returned to its former splendor. Katerina Lemmel died in Maihingen in the year 1533. A short passage about her life and description of her death was entered in the House Book of Maria Mai. == Letters ==