consorority

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English

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Noun

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consorority (plural consororities)

  1. A group of women; a religious sorority or sisterhood.
    • 1978, Lester K. Little, Religious Poverty and the Profit Economy in Medieval Europe, Ithaca, N.Y.: Cornell University Press, →ISBN, page 133:
      As with the poor who joined the Humiliati, the poor women of Netherlandish towns could find economic security, social stability, and a deep sense of spiritual fulfilment in the urban religious confraternity or consorority of the Beguines.
    • 1990, Nicholas Terpstra, “Women in the Brotherhood: Gender, Class, and Politics in Renaissance Bolognese Confraternities”, in Renaissance and Reformation, volume XIV, new series / XXVI, old series, number 3, page 196:
      Women’s exclusion from the collective flagellation characteristic of battuti groups was based on more than just the shame of exposing their bodies or mixing male and female flagellants, since it continued through the period when those bearing the cords wore robes and hoods which obliterated their individual identity. More importantly, even the few “flagellant” consororities in thirteenth- and fourteenth-century Italy may not have practised the exercise.
    • 1998, Nina Rattner Gelbart, The King’s Midwife: A History and Mystery of Madame du Coudray, University of California Press, →ISBN, page 38:
      Midwives are deliberately kept as subordinate members of the guild of surgeons, “to whose policing they must submit,” and have historically been deprived of a separate, recognized voice. There is “absolutely no community among them,” gloats the surgeon Louis in the Encyclopédie with obvious relief, reassuring himself and his readers, as if an independent consorority of these women would be a nightmare.

Coordinate terms

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