The Collaborative International Dictionary
Beguinage \Be`gui`nage"\, n. [F.] A collection of small houses surrounded by a wall and occupied by a community of Beguines. [1913 Webster] ||
Wiktionary
n. A walled community of small houses occupied by the Beguines.
Wikipedia
A beguinage, from the French béguinage, is an architectural complex which was created to house beguines: lay religious women who lived in community without taking vows or retiring from the world. There are two types of beguinages: those housing small, informal, and often poor communities that emerged across Europe after the twelfth century and the "court beguinages" , a much larger and more stable type of community that emerged in the region of the Low Countries in the first decades of the thirteenth century.
Several Beguinages these are now listed by UNESCO as World Heritage. By the mid-thirteenth century, the French king Louis IX founded a beguinage in Paris, which was modeled on the court beguinages of the Low Countries.