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  1. May 29, 2019 · Clark’s groundbreaking work examines working women in England in the Early Modern era. She focuses on women in English guilds and skilled professions, observing a decline of womens status from the medieval period in representing a lost “golden age” of female work.

  2. 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.

  3. Oct 12, 2023 · Women scientists during the Scientific Revolution (1500-1700) were few in number because male-dominated educational institutions, as well as scientific societies and academies, barred women entry, meaning that few had the education or opportunity to pursue a career in science.

  4. Women in the 17th century were second-class citizens, subject to their fathers from birth and later handed over like chattel to their husbands. Fastidious demands were placed upon them with regards to conduct and virtue which they were expected to uphold these at all times or be judged accordingly.

  5. May 28, 2017 · Learn about women artists in Europe in the seventeenth century, with illustrations of their work.

  6. Jul 29, 2020 · The subject of gender is not the same as the topic of women and art, but in the 17th century, a number of women artists altered the arena and women indeed are the focal point of a study of gender and art in the 17th century.

  7. Superficially, the ideal lady of the seventeenth century is an attractive philosophical absolute; but to the humanist of our own time she is a tragic figure of repression. Well-meaning and pious conduct writers created the ideal out of their rigid puritanism; men less gloriously motivated seized on their precepts with avidity to keep the woman ...

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