- Ancilla Dei
In
early Christian inscriptions the title "ancilla Dei" (Latin for "handmaid of God") is often given to a deceased woman. From the meaning attached to this term in theMiddle Ages it has sometimes been assumed that the persons so qualified in the first age of Christianity were consecratedvirgin s.The inscriptions containing this formula are of two classes: one, in which it is merely stated that a given person was "ancilla Dei"; the other, from which it is clear that this title was sometimes given to persons who certainly were not religious.
The former class is the more numerous, but one of the latter is quite explicit. This informs us that a certain monument was erected by a husband to his wife, whom he styles "Dei ancilla": "(Laur)entius Rufine coniugi Dei anci(llae) . . ." (De Rossi, Roma Sott., III, p. 11, n. 4). In a Roman inscription of the first quarter of the
sixth century a certain Guttes is referred to as "ancilla Dei", and it is further stated that she was "nonnes" -- "in presence of thenun Guttes, a handmaid of God" ("sub presentiâ nonnes Guttes, ancille Dei"). This reference shows that even in the sixth century, "ancilla Dei" is a title not peculiar to religious persons; the author regarded it as necessary to state explicitly that she was "nonnes" [Cabrol, "Dictionnaire d'architecture chrétienne", 1902] . From the pontificate ofPope Gregory I (590–604), however, only nuns, as a rule, were qualified by this title. [Greg. M. Ep., vi, 23]References
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