A rich corpus of written documentation exists to aid in the reconstruction of conventual life in the Franciscan double monastery of Konigsfelden, founded in 1308 by Elisabeth, widow of king Albrecht of Habsburg. This documentation includes directives concerning the rights and responsibilities of the male and female communities and the organization of the Divine Office that were issued by Agnes, Elisabeth's daughter, who supervised the monastery for 48 years after Elisabeth's death in 1313. In addition, excavations of the 1980s have provided important information about the building history of the church, which still survives, and of other structures formerly in the monastic enclosure. Despite this wealth of material, however, it remains unclear precisely how the male and female communities shared the monastic space. A salient question is the position of the nuns' choir. Archeologists have determined that in the fourteenth century a narrow wooden gallery existed to the west of the nave, accessible from the ...