Around 800 years old - if you mean what you say in your question.
If you meant "How old did a woman have to be to become a nun in the middle ages", there is no specific answer since each Order and even each nunnery would have its own rules. Up to about 1216 it was common for girls to be "donated" to the local nunnery (and boys to a monastery) - they were called oblates and they could be very young indeed.
Oblates were not nuns straight away; they studied at the nun's school, learned to sew, embroidery, cook, read and write in Latin and studied the life of the nuns, learning the daily routine and the 8 services that took place every 24 hours.
At perhaps the age of 14 or 15 they could become a novice, wearing a white veil; many would have chosen instead to leave the nunnery and find employment in ordinary life. Novices might continue for a year or two (or longer) before taking their vows in front of a bishop and being made a professed nun.
Many women joined nunneries late in life; in an age without welfare support for the elderly, for widows or anyone, life in a nunnery promised security, stability and a degree of medical care not available elsewhere. Many joined in their teens because they were devoutly religious and received a calling; or were simply against the idea of marriage.
Convent or Nunnery
Nun in the Old Testament is Joshua's father.
The nun didn't have a part in a medieval feast. The castle priest gave the blessing before it started. Nuns didn't live in castles for the services held in the private castle chapels. They were just women who decided to get away from the world and enter a convent or a nunnery. Nun's didn't leave the nunnery very much because of their holy lives spent in prayer and solitude.
you have to be it least 10 or over
old fashion name for evil bum
Bread, Vegetables and most vegertatarian meanlsMeat for the young, sick n' old
Convent or Nunnery
Yes
Convent Nunnery
Nun in the Old Testament is Joshua's father.
In Egyptian myth, Nun never died.
The nun didn't have a part in a medieval feast. The castle priest gave the blessing before it started. Nuns didn't live in castles for the services held in the private castle chapels. They were just women who decided to get away from the world and enter a convent or a nunnery. Nun's didn't leave the nunnery very much because of their holy lives spent in prayer and solitude.
Money
Hildergaard Von Bingem, I believe. I may have butchered the spelling.... Hildegard of Bingen
nun
thirty years old.
It is from ecclesiastical Latin 'nonna' meaning 'nun' being the feminine form of the word 'nonnus' meaning monk. Adapted into old French as 'nonne' and English as 'nun'