Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. People also ask

    • Women in the 16th, 17th, and 18th Centuries: Further Reading.
    • Women in the 16th, 17th, and 18th Centuries: An Overview.
    • Women in Space.
    • Women in Public Life, Business, and Professions.
    • Women’s Jobs in The 17th Century
    • Women’s Education in The 17th Century
    • Women’s Clothes in The 17th Century
    • Famous Women of The 17th Century
    • GeneratedCaptionsTabForHeroSec

    In the 17th century, some women had jobs. Some of them worked spinning cloth. Women were milliners, dyers, and embroiderers. There were also washerwomen. Some women worked in food preparation such as brewers, bakers, or confectioners. Women also sold foodstuffs in the streets. A very common job for women was a domestic servant. Other women were mid...

    In some towns, young girls might go to dame schools where they were taught skills like reading. During the 17th century boarding schools for girls from better-off families were founded in many towns. In them girls were taught subjects like writing, music, and needlework. The first women’s magazine was The Ladies Mercury published in 1693.

    In the 17th century, women wore a linen nightie-like garment called a shift. Over it, they wore long dresses. The dress was in two parts the bodice and the skirt. Sometimes women wore two skirts. The upper skirt was gathered up to reveal an underskirt. However, women in the 17th century did not wear knickers. From the mid 17th century it was fashio...

    Famous English women of the 17th century included the philosopher Mary Astell (1666 – 1731) and the writer Aphra Behn (1640 – 1689). In 1637 Amye Everard Ball was the first woman in England to be granted a patent (for making tinctures from flowers). In other parts of Europe, Elena Piscopia (1646 – 1684) was a great woman philosopher. Marie Le Jars ...

    Learn about women's jobs, education, clothes, and famous figures in the 17th century. Find out how housewives, servants, spinsters, and wealthy women lived and worked in this period.

  2. How did race and legal status shape women's lives in 17th- and 18th-century North America and the Caribbean? Explore the diversity and complexity of women's experiences under the law across European, Indigenous, and African cultures and regions.

  3. Arguments for the superiority of women were used to establish a moral claim to dignity, liberty, education, and ultimately citizenship for women—and so to begin to gain for them equality in practice. I consider the arguments for the superiority of women made by two seventeenth-century women.

  4. May 29, 2019 · From farmwives who helped plant and harvest crops to fishmongers who sold their wares in markets to guildswomen who engaged in skilled labor, as well as artists, scholars, midwives, doctors, prostitutes, and servants, women participated in every corner of the economy.

  5. This essay explores the second class status of women in the Renaissance and the efforts to overcome it. It examines the idealised image of women in art and literature and asks whether it can be seen as a gender revolution.

  6. In examining some of the ways in which ideas about gender differences were expressed and perpetuated in early modern England, this chapter looks at a number of headings: medical understandings of women's bodies, religious teachings, the gender bias in legal structures, popular notions, stereotypes, and the links between different contexts.

  1. People also search for