The rota or "turn" is a cylinder on a vertical axis, open on one side, that is built inside a wall of a monastery, nunnery or foundling hospital.[1] It was used for exchanging mail and food with cloistered clergy, being their only communication with the world.[2] It is usually about 50 centimeters wide by 30 centimeters high, and its opening does not permit visual or tactile contact with the uncloistered. Messages or food are put into the cylinder, then the rota is revolved so that the opening faces the other side.
Monks were stationed close by, or were notified by various mechanisms that the wheel had been turned. In some cases, especially at night and in winter, the rota was filled by the monks with food for the poor, to give them something to eat without them having to ask. The rota was also used by mothers giving up their (often illegitimate) newborn babies into the hopefully safe hands of monks or nuns, their anonymity being guaranteed by the rota. In some Church dioceses the instrument was abolished to discourage this.
References
- ↑ Rev Robert Willis, "The architectural history of the conventual buildings of the monastery of Christ Church in Canterbury," Archaeology cantiana, Kent Archeological Society, Volume 7, London, 1868, page 39.
- ↑ Gray, Arthur "Christ Church, Canterbury: I. The chronicle of John Stone, monk of Christ." University Press, Cambridge, 1897, pages 70-71.