Vadstena Abbey (Monasterium sanctarum Mariæ Virgìnis et Brigido in Vatzstena) was the motherhouse of the Bridgettine Order, situated on Lake Vättern, in the Diocese of Linköping, Sweden. The abbey started as one of the farms donated by the king, but the town of Vadstena grew up around it.
The daughter of Saint Bridget, Saint Catherine, on arriving there in 1374 with the relics of her mother Bridget, found only a few novices under an Augustiniansuperior. They chose St. Catherine as their abbess. She died in 1381, and it was not until 1384 that the abbey was blessed by the Bishop of Linköping. The canonization of St. Bridget in 1391 and her translation in 1394 added greatly to the fame and riches of her abbey. In 1400 Eric of Pomerania was invested at Vadstena by his aunt, Queen Margaret, with full royal rights over Denmark, Norway, and of Sweden.
The Bridgetine literature consisted mostly of translations into Swedish of portions of the Bible or of the legends of the saints. Such writings as are extant have been published for the most part by the Svenska fornskriftsällskapet (Old Swedish Texts Society) of Stockholm. Of these authors the best known belonging to Vadstena are perhaps Margareta Clausdotter, (abbess 1473, died 1486), author of a work on the family of St. Bridget (printed in "Scriptores Rerum Svecicarum", III, I, 207-16), and Nicolaus Ragvaldi, monk and general confessor (1476-1514), who composed several works. When he died, the end of the abbey was near at hand.
It was deprived of a many valuables by King Gustavus Vasa in 1523, and lost most of its lands after the reformation in 1527. The reformation abolished the convents in Sweden by not allowing them to accept new novices, though, in reality, there are examples of novices being accepted at Vadstena Abbey during the ban of novices. The nuns and monks were allowed to stay or leave as they wished; the Abbess Birgitta Botulfsdotter left the convent and married in 1539. In 1543 the larger part of the books and valuables were taken. Vadstena Abbey, however, was treated much more favourable then the other old convents, because of its international fame and because its strong position within the nobility: the majority of the monks and nuns were form the nobility, and it also served as a burial ground for many noble families. in contrast to the other convents, Vadstena was still allowed to receive new members, though with a special permission from the king, and large donations were made to it from the public and also the royal house: among the more known donators were the queen Margaret Leijonhufvud and her family, the former abbess Birgitta Botolfsdotter and her wealthy husband, and Karin Månsdotter. The male section of the convent lasted until 1555, when the king made the monks leave the convent and made them teachers, priests and doctors, but the female section was to last until 1595.
During the reign of John III (1569-1592), the abbey was restored and enriched, and Antonio Possevino, as papal legate, reformed it in 1580. King John was influenced by his Catholic queen, Catherine Jagiellon, who much benefited and often visited the convent. In 1575, Vadstena Abbey, as well as other Catholic convents still active in Sweden, was allowed by the king to receive novices again, which had been forbidden since the reformation; in 1580, there were twenty sisters in the convent, as well as novices, and the Abbess Katarina Bengtsdotter Gylta (r. 1551-93), was on very good terms with the king and queen.
At the beginning of the 20th century, the Catholic Encyclopedia noted that only the chapter house and a few cells of the convent of the sisters remained as part of a lunatic asylum. A general hospital occupied the site of the convent of the brothers. The abbey church is still standing; it contains a few memorials of St. Bridget.
Chronology
1346 - King Magnus Eriksson and Queen Blanche of Namur donate the royal estate Vadstena kungsgård to the foundation of a future convent.
1370 - Pope Urban V give his approval to the plan of St Bridget.