It has been nearly 14 centuries since the priory founded by Saint Hilde of Whitby, a prominent abbey in Anglo-Saxon England in the 7th century, hosted an assembly of the Kingdom of Northumbria to discuss the date on which the Christian church would celebrate Easter. This assembly, or synod, would bring the Church of the Kingdom into line with the Catholic Church in Rome.
“Scholars have long thought Heald was a member of that synod,” said Katie Boggis, associate professor and intern of medievalism in the liberal studies program at the University of Notre Dame in South Bend, Indiana.
St. Held’s notwithstanding, women have been denied decision-making at the highest levels of the Catholic Church — that is, until Wednesday, when Pope Francis ordered unprecedented changes to the upcoming Synod of Bishops at the Vatican in Rome: to have a voice — and voting power — in Assembly, as well as non-clerical believers.