To regularise and strengthen female monastic life in his Winchester
diocese, in the early sixteenth century Bishop Richard Fox made
a new translation of the Rule of St Benedict explicitly for women. He
had it printed by Richard Pynson in 1517, thus taking advantage of the
ability of the printing press to provide multiple copies for all the members
of the four Hampshire womens' houses he addressed: St Mary Winchester
(Nunnaminster), Wherwell, Romsey and Wintney.
In addition to these printed copies Bishop Fox provided additional
manuscript books for each of the four houses, as his preface to the Rule tells
us: ‘And by cause we wolde not/that there shulde be any lacke amongis
them of the bokis of this sayd translation/we haue therfore/aboue and besyde
certayne bokes ther of/which we haue yeven to the sayde monasteris: caused it to be
emprinted’ [italics mine] (sig. Aiiv).