Margery Kempe

British author
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Quick Facts
Born:
c. 1373
Died:
c. 1440

News

These Rare Artifacts Tell Medieval Women’s Stories in Their Own Words Oct. 24, 2024, 9:46 AM ET (Smithsonian Magazine)

Margery Kempe (born c. 1373—died c. 1440) was an English religious mystic whose autobiography is one of the earliest in English literature.

The daughter of a mayor of Lynn, she married John Kempe in 1393 and bore 14 children before beginning a series of pilgrimages to Jerusalem, Rome, Germany, and Spain in 1414. Her descriptions of her travels and her religious ecstasies, which often included “boystous” crying spells, are narrated in an unaffected prose style that uses such contemporary expressions as “thou wost no more what thou blaberest than Balamis asse.” Apparently illiterate, she dictated her Book of Margery Kempe to two clerks from about 1432 to about 1436. It was first published (modernized) in 1936 and in Middle English in 1940.

The Editors of Encyclopaedia BritannicaThis article was most recently revised and updated by Encyclopaedia Britannica.