At some point in the 15th century the community adopted the Third Rule of St Francis, later shifting to the Rule of St Augustine.[1] It was a large community, and a major centre for the production of mystical literature.[2][3]Reinalda van Eymeren, who has been suggested as the author of the influential spiritual text Die Evangelische Peerle (The Pearl of the Gospel), was a member of the community.[4]
In 1581, during the Dutch Revolt, the city forbade new entrants to the convent.[1] The last four sisters to survive dissolved the community in 1634.[1]
The buildings passed to St Catherine's Hospital in 1636.[5] In 1751 the former convent chapel became the Walloon church in Arnhem.[6] This was damaged during the Second World War and restored in 1950-1952; it is now protected heritage as Rijksmonument 8310.[7]
^ abcIneke Cornet, The Arnhem Mystical Sermons (Leiden and Boston, Brill, 2018), pp. 34-37.
^Ineke Cornet and Kees Schepers, "The Arnhem Mystical Sermons and sixteenth-century mystical culture", Mystical Anthropology: Authors from the Low Countries, edited by John Arblaster and Rob Faesen (London and New York, Routledge, 2017), pp. 134-136.
^Kees Schepers, "A Web of Texts: Sixteenth Century Mystical Culture and the Arnhem Sint-Agnes Convent", in Nuns' Literacies in Medieval Europe: The Kansas City Dialogue (Turnhout, Brepols, 2015), pp. 269-285.
^Paul Begheyn, Biografisch woordenboek Gelderland, edited by J. A. E. Kuys, R.M. Kemperinck, E. Pelzers and P. W. van Wissing, vol. 2 (Hilversum, Uitgeverij Verloren, 2000), pp. 28-30.
^Gerda B. Leppink, with R. C. M. Wientjes, Het Sint Catharinae Gasthuis in Arnhem (Hilversum, Verloren, 1996), pp. 104-107.