miercuri, 10 septembrie 2014

The role of women in society - yesterday (18th-19th centuries)


                                                                                    
Everyone knows about the numerous opinions regarding feminism and the everlasting feminine that incited a great number of controversies along many centuries. The feminism is “the advocacy of women’s rights on the ground of the equality of the sexes. “[1] The everlasting feminine is seen as being a psychological and philosophical archetype that idealize the women’s concept of permanence [2], the most repeated sentence that we all have heard at least once: ‘The woman is still a woman’. When a man says that, he generally may refers to the fact that a woman never change the way of being, even though her role advances along centuries, her nature didn’t change and nowadays she is still followed by the ancient stereotypes. I think that women were created by God to be men’s presence, to complete each other and a woman should have been regarded as an angelic human being without who the man wouldn’t manage.
It is said that women were not created from men’s legs to touch the earth or from head to be superior to men but from men’s anat in order to be equal.[3] But, it did not happen that, women were not equal to men. They were seen as being inferior to men and more sinful. Women were destinated to express the eternal beauty, both external and internal beauty and even if they are considered to be more sinful than men, because of Eve who eat from the forbidden tree and gave the forbidden fruit also to Adam, they are a sort of angelic human beings that were useful for poets who took them and their beauty and sensibility as muse when they wrote their poems. This is another fact that proves the importance of women in men’s life. Excepting that sin, they are considered to be perfect, God gave to woman external beauty but also internal beauty which consists in sensibility, fragility, having a good heart but despite these ‘weaknesses’ a woman is stronger than a man because she is the one who bears more than men do and she still stay strong. And the fact that ‘a woman is still a woman’, that’s true, she can’t change, that is her nature and she remains how God created her.
From the most ancient times human communities were organized in roles that were attributed to men and women. This image of the ‘first’ woman dates for a long time and lasted until the beginning of 19th century when the woman starts to be recognized as mother and wife, but even though she starts being idealized, this fact didn’t wipe the reality of social hierarchy of sexes because the important decisions are still taken by men. After the ‘model’ of the ‘first’ woman who was inferior, in 19th century appeared the image of the ‘second’ woman who was worshiped and in this century, women will recognized the last form of men’s domination.[4]
During the 18th century, in England like in other many countries, there was the belief that men and women were different from each other and society favored men. Society did not appreciate women, and their role not only in society but also in men’s life was extremely difficult, their role was null and they did not matter. In this century persisted the idea that women and men naturally posses distinct characteristics. Still from the beginnings, boys were thought that a man was the stronger sex and he must be intelligent, courageous, strong, determined, agressive and on the other hand, girls were thought that a woman was more governed by her emotions, she was more passive and her virtues must be chastity, modesty, compassion and pity.[5] We can observe that from the beginnings there was a preconceived idea; boys and girls were prone to what they have to be and how they must behave in society or in couple’s life when they would become man and woman. Boys or men were prone to violence, obstinacy and selfishness while girls or women were prone to teach how to be a good wife and mother. Because of this preconceived ideas women had to suffer.
Women in the 18th and 19th century lived in a patriarchal society dominated entirely by the word of men. Women were considered as being weak and it was like they came to world only to suffer, so they had no importance and they were regarded as being a sort of ‘erotic passives bodies’ or ‘children producing machine’. Simone de Beauvoir is doting this reality very well telling us what a woman is: “Tota mulier in utero, says one, woman is a womb.”[6] John Shebbeare, an English tory, he also is doting in 1758  this reality by saying that “The woman was the companion in the hours of reason and conversation in French, but in England she was only the momentary toy of passion.”[7] According to these statements it can be said that women’s role is to give life and to feed, being excluded from other things that involved men. “And she is simply what man decrees; thus she is called ‘the sex’, by which is meant that she appears essentially to the male as a sexual being. For him she is sex-absolute sex, no less.”[8] Men ruled over their wives and all property belonged to the husband; women did not have the right to own properties and they had to obey their husbands.
Robert Burton stated that “England is paradise for women, and hell for horses; Italy is a paradise for horses and hell for women.”[9] I think that Paradise is a great place where every person would like to live but in this statement, Robert Burton compares women to horses and as we know, horses are like slaves because they receive commands from their masters, women, they also had to obey their husbands. This Paradise for women is actually the same hell like for horses because both are living out their days in the style provided by men, their masters. Usually, women were not included in men’s discussions, in their business and unfortunately men were very proud of their reputation of treating their women like that and to exert their authority and superiority on them, they really felt as being their masters and felt very powerful.

“…woman has not been socially emancipated through man’s need – sexual desire and the desire for offspring – which makes the male dependent for satisfaction upon the female. Master and slave, also, are united by a reciprocal need, in this case economic, which does not liberate the slave.” The master is the one who owns the control and thus he can satisfy all his desires.[10]

There is a sort of indispensable relationship between slaves and masters, they need one another. The slave knows that he need the master in order to survive (to be dressed, to eat and so on) and the master needs the slaves in order to be helped in house-keeping or other works. Thus, regarding the relationship between the wife who is associated to a slave and her husband who is considered to be the master, there is no big difference. The wife has to obey her husband, to do her duty in house-keeping because the husband is the one who keeps her and the husband satisfies her pleasures and sexual desires. Married women had no control of their earnings and could not appear in court as witness or vote; only the widows had a better situation because they could receive a part from their late husband’s property and they could had control over it. And, a widow could also vote but only in some areas.[11] All these represent the so called ‘Paradise for women’.
In the 18th century women were not encouraged to receive education because it was believed that women would ruin their marriage chances and it could be harmful for them if they were well educated.[12] Maybe, if they were less intelligent than men were, it was easier for men to exert their superiority on them, they were believed as being stupid and incapable to think. Only the daughters of wealthy families or nobility could benefit an education and the nuns were also among the women who had an education. Upper class girls received a good education that centered on making them as marriable as possible. They had governesses whose main job was to give them an education that consisted in some knowledge of reading, writing, dancing, music and how to behave in society, the elementary things. Or, some upper class and middle class girls had the opportunity to go to boarding schools which were called seminaries. The educated young women during the 18th century were usually upper class ladies that had progressive parents. But, they had to hide their knowledge because in that century, society didn’t want educated women and they were regarded by the society as being women of questionable moral character. Poor women who wanted to be educated would join the convents. [13] People thought that women didn’t need education and there were very limited careers for women because their role was to stay at home and take care of children and other things that a wife does, so, women had fewer skills and obligations than men had. A few sectors of the economy were seen as being an extension to domestic responsibilities, so, women could work in these sector but they were law paid than men. Poor people had to work hard in order to survive, they did everything that was necessary, and so, their life was less comfortable.[14]
Regarding marriage, in the 18th century, it was vital for a woman to get married, although some women preferred to remain spinsters, not to get married because they knew that they would lose their freedom and become the ‘slaves’ of their husbands. In poor families women’s role was homemaking and this occupied all their time, they had to cook meals, make clothing, clean the house, and take care of animals and children. Middle class and wealthy women were a little bit luckier because they had servants that helped them in homemaking. Women were also responsible for children education, if their children were not well educated, their mothers were, usually, those to blame: “Men were the primary wage earners, while women were expected to be primarily responsible for housework and childcare.”[15] The growth of children and the care of family were women’s priority. This kind of woman, we can say, lived for others, the welfare of her husband and children were a priority for her and her personal needs were on the second plan. Generally, women had no word in many aspects of the male decision. While women stayed at home doing domestic activities and taking care of children; men had the opportunity to get an education. Women and men, both were pressed by society to marry. Girls had to marry at tender age and if they did not get married until 25 it was socially humiliating.[16] Generally, marriage was not carried out from romantic situations but for economic benefits and sometimes children’s parents were those who plan their marriage without taking children’s opinions into account. What really matters was to have a family name that has an important role in society, have properties, a good reputation and condition. Even the widows were pressured to get married again as soon as possible, no matter if their husband was death or not since only one year or less. Husbands were responsible for all things that were in connection with their wives, even discipline.
Usually, women ran away from bad marriages because divorces were rarely granted and in case of separation or divorce women could not gain the custody of the child. If a woman lost her virginity before marriage she was seen by society as ruined or fallen. A woman was expected to lose her virginity only after marriage and to have relations only with a man who was her husband. For men was acceptable to have many partners in their life and to have relations before marriage. Often, upper class and middle class women or ladies spent their time attending social events such as balls and dinners and these places were a good occasion for unmarried ladies to revolve around capturing a husband and, usually, they were looking to be a wealthy man, educated, intelligent and with a good reputation and social condition. All unmarried girls were the property of their fathers until they got married and became the property of their husbands and if the father of unmarried girl dies before his daughter gets married, then she will be taken at the mercy by a relative male, for example an uncle or a family male close friend.[17] For the women whose role in society revolved around the idea of getting a husband the major concern was dressing and presenting oneself well. In the early 18th century, they wore a dress with wide volume called mantua that was for formal occasions and hair was worn close to the head with a small cap that was covered by a hood or heat. The ideal woman in the 18th century had white skin, plump cheeks, black eyes, small lips, narrow waist that was accomplished by constricting the abdomen with a corset and had to be pure, modest, refined, and chaste and to have manners. Women were dressed according to their social class. Clothing that people wore could reflect their status and situation. A typical men’s outfit consisted in knee-length coat, knee breeches, a vest, and leather shoes with heels of low or medium height and a hat with upturned brim.[18]
Robert Burton says that “One was never married and that’s his hell, another is and that’s his plague.”[19] In this statement, Robert Burton refers to woman as being in the same time something good but also something bad. The hell may represent the life of an unmarried man, he is unhappy because he hasn’t got a family and he suffered for being alone. We can say that Robert Burton refers to the woman as being an angel that comes in man’s life to save him from living a life like in hell, unhappy and alone. The woman is like something necessary in men’s life, but the man is also necessary in woman’s life, so they are a necessity one to another. Simone de Beauvoir stated about the woman that “she is the Other in a totality of which the two components are necessary to one another.”[20] But, the woman is also compared with a plague; once one gets married he remains married till the end of life, the woman is like a plague because you can’t get off of her anymore. “…woman represents only the negative, defined by limiting criteria, without reciprocity.”[21] Unfortunately, women were also the victims of violence; men beat their wives and it was legal, they had the right to do it. “Even the word of the law seems to encourage the superiority of men and their dominion over women”: in 1782, a British judge, Sir Francis Buller declared that it was “Perfectly legal for a man to beat his wife, as long as he used a stick no thicker than his thumb.”[22]
If women thought that they would have a happy marriage, they were wrong, they could realize that once married here start the limitations, stress and struggles. So, most of women were unhappy thanks to domestic violence. If a husband murdered his wife, the law says that he would be hanged and if a woman murdered her husband she would be burned alive. And, if happens that a woman runs away from her husband it was considered to be a thief because she was stealing the clothes that she was wearing. English society consisted not only in civil society but also in Anglican Church society. Women’s role in Anglican Church was the same as in society, they were considered those who brought the sin on the earth and it was considered that they could not have virtues, they could not speak in terms of theology and they were criticized by the clergy. At the end of 18th century and also along the 19th century, the rights regarded as a concept started to gain political, social and philosophical importance. The movements asked for freedom of religions, abolition of slavery, rights for women, rights for those who had no property and the universal vote. Also, at the end of 18th century the problem of feminism and of women’s rights became a theme of debates. The law said that a married woman must obey her husband and she was considered the man’s property round the others properties.[23] A married woman had no legal identity apart from her husband, but “men privilege and domination began to be eroded in the nineteenth century. It was the Victorians who pioneered the emancipation of women.”[24] The image of the ‘first’ woman existed for a long time and lasted in some societies until the beginning of the 19th century which started to rise up women’s role and their power.
The late eighteenth and the begging of the nineteenth centuries brought significant changes in gender roles which led to separate spheres. The nineteenth century is often called the ‘Victorian Age’, this name comes from England’s Queen Victoria who ruled many years. Even though she was also a woman, she hardly did something in order to support women. Only in 1870 Queen Victoria wrote that the woman should be let to be what God intended, to be a helpmate for man but with different duties and vocations. [25] In this century England was transformed by the Industrial Revolution, women started to fight for their rights and for the first time they started to work outside the home. The 19th century saw the organized women’s movement that had a major impact and enlarged their opportunities and their rights in the following centuries. In 1856 there was a petition to Parliament, which was signed by 26,000 women, regarding the spheres of occupation, the right of education for women and to break down their dependence upon men. In 1792, Mary Wollstonecraft wrote ‘A Vindication of the Rights of Woman’ as a response to 18th century’s educational and political theorists who present women as being totally inferior to men and said that women didn’t need to have an education. Mary Wollstonecraft is called the ‘first feminist’ or ‘mother of feminism’ and she affirms that women are not so weak as men believe, she defend women’s rights and she said that they must have an education, otherwise how could they educate their children and having a good education they would be well regarded by society. She also presents women as being equal to men in some areas, but she carefully draws the attention on the fact that she “do not wish them [women] to have power over men; but over themselves.”[26]
For Mary Wollstonecraft women were rational creatures who were capable of intellectual achievement as men are. So, she advocates in her ‘Vindications of the Rights of Woman’ the equality between men and women. She also shows to women which rights they should have and tries to convince them to fight for it because they have the right to be more independent and not to be treated like slaves; they are human beings as men are. In 1860 the public put in question women’s rights and her role and in the middle of 19th century appeared the first writings in favor of women. [27]
Abigail Adams wrote to her own husband a letter that pleaded for Congress (where her husband was at that moment) to remember ladies when writing to the new constitution and her husband ensured her that the law would not be changed but they would take in account ‘the ladies’. There also appeared some famous female novelists such as Jane Austen, Mary Shelley and the Bronte sisters who present in their works the condition of women in society. Feminist writers, in 19th century, started to question women’s inferior social position and they tried to eliminate discriminatory practices. The role of women in society and in politics started to be questioned in times of wars through the Revolution that took place in 1848. During the Revolutionary war women played an important role because they were those who sew the uniforms that soldiers needed and they even started to make cartridges and wrote about the war in the local newspapers. And when the war had finished women started to focus on how to change their rights and their inferiority to men. During the whole of the
nineteenth century, women still had no political rights but there had been some movements in other areas in order to advance the rights of women. [28]
Thus, the 19th century showed an improvement in women’s education, and it was also the war that opened up the work place to women and increased their job opportunities. After the war there were more opportunities for girls or women regarding the education, especially for upper class girls or women. Jane Austen, in her novel ‘Pride and Prejudice’ said that

 “a woman must have a thorough knowledge of music, singing, drawing, dancing and the modern languages, to deserve the world; and besides all this, she must possess a certain something in her air and manner of walking, the tone of her voice, her address and expressions, or the word will be but half deserved.(Caroline Bingley)”[29]

In this century, in society, appeared the idea that a well educated woman is better regarded in society, when she has some knowledge about music and dance (it was a pride for them to know how to sing at piano and dance, for example, at different balls), about drawing, arts and it was, also, very important that a woman know how to behave in society, how to speak and to be standoffish. But, girls received less education than boys, were barred from universities and could obtain only low-paid jobs. They were thought reading, writing, math, foreign languages, dancing, drawing and music. Middle class women received limited education and poor women could attend school. Society started to encourage modern languages, French being at that time the most popular language. Modern languages became something fashionable, were useful when people traveled abroad and it was also a way of broadening lady’s horizons. Some women, even if it was not permitted yet, excelled also in subjects that were considered to be only for men such as science, art, law, engineering, physics.[30]
Women’s fashion during this century was largely dominated by full skirts which gradually moved to the back of the silhouette; the fashion is renowned for its corsets, bonnets, top hats, bustles and petticoats. Like in the previous century, the ideal silhouette demanded a narrow waist. “Women’s fashions became more sexual, the hips, buttocks and breasts were exaggerated with crinolines, hoopskirts and corsets which nipped in the waist and thrust out the breasts.”[31] The fashion was quite similar in both 18th and 19th centuries. But, the 1870s to 1880s introduced styles that revealed their natural silhouette and the corset became a very elegant and desirable object in a woman’s wardrobe and it took a V form. The hair was arranged at the top of the head in a bun and puffed out around the face. Women were dressed in the way that they could be separated from the world of work. Regarding men’s fashion, it had changed by the early 19th century: the coat still finished in long tails at the back but was cut higher in front; long trousers were adopted rather than knee breeches and a tall hat.
Starting by the nineteenth century women ceased from being excluded from work and public life and they were allowed even to keep money that they earned. Lower class women had to work with sweat in order to support themselves and their families and their job, usually they were working at home and their job was the sewing. Middle class and worthy women could be authors, teachers, make charity work and towards the end of the century they could even become shop assistants, typists and clerks.  Also, some women were thought how to own their own businesses such as clothing store or sewing shop and some were employed even in heavy industry such as coal mines and the steel industry. Poor women who were pregnant worked up until the day they gave birth and they returned to work as soon as possible, when their physically able. Only in 1891 it was introduced the law that required that women could take four weeks away from the factory work after giving birth, but they were not paid in that period of staying home and many of them could not afford to lose money. Middle class women who had the possibility to study had a chance for better jobs such as saleswomen, cashiers, typists, secretaries, school teacher and governess. In the 19th century also appeared three medical professions for women such as nursing, midwifery and doctoring but only in nursing were widely women accepted because it was believed that doctoring was characteristic for men, so women were confined to their role as nurses. Wealthy women and ladies spent their time learning music and conventional skills also in order to be well regarded by their match maker and to conquer him. Also, in this century, charitable missions did begin to extend the female role of service.[32]

Thus, “most people in mid-nineteenth-century England believed that women should and would participate in philanthropic work. As a number of historians and critics who have studied the history of women and their roles have observed, women’s philanthropy seemed to be a natural extension of their domestic role.”[33]

In the 19th century took place great changes concerning also marriage and divorce. Apparently, in 18th century, marriage was motivated rather by money than by love.

“For most people in early nineteenth century England marriage was an indissoluble union, terminable only by death; this was because the Church Courts could not give an absolute divorce, though they could grant a legal separation, known as divorce a mensa et thoro, ‘from bed and board’.”[34]

This situation takes another aspect in the mid nineteenth century when it started to be allowed marriage from love and women could marriage being in love with their husband and also they could choose their other half. Women started to have limited access to divorce, but even so, it was difficult to obtain. It would be accepted only in case of adultery and if a man or a woman uses adultery in order to divorce, the adultery should be demonstrated. A woman could divorce from her husband if he was cruel to her or if she was left by him and if he committed adultery but she also had to prove that. Divorces were very expensive, one can be lose wealth and even properties, so, for poor people the divorce was not an option. The numbers of divorcing in this century were minuscule and “one reason for this was that it was much more difficult for a woman to file for divorce than it was for a man, since a man had only to prove adultery plus aggravating offences by her husband.”[35]
Beginning from 1839, in case of divorce or separation, a woman could take custody of their children only if she is not accused for adultery. Before this new law, in case of divorce, the father was the one who was given the custody of children no matter which were the reasons of the divorce. In 1870 the law started to allow women to keep their earnings and inherit property and in the later years of the 19th century women gained the right to vote.[36]

“In the half-century between 1870 and 1923 ( when women were allowed to sue for divorce on the same grounds as men) women achieved an equality of legal rights within marriage which had not been theirs during the eight-and a half centuries since Anglo-Saxon England.”[37]

Regarding the domestic life, women’s place was still in the home being a good mother and wife. Queen Victoria represented a kind of femininity which was centered on the domestic life, on the family. She became a model for all women of that period; she wanted to give herself to them as an example. Being a woman did not mean anymore the one who had to make children, an erotic passive body, but she received a symbolic meaning and many people started to regard the role of woman as a mother and as a wife like a sweet vocation. Marriage signified that a woman achieved her maturity and she expected to become mother; a childless single woman was a figure to be pitied and she was often encouraged to find work such as being a governess or a nursery maid in order to compensate her for her loss. As the 19th century continued society had increased the attention of domestic violence towards wives, it was somehow imposed some legal limits on the amount of force that was permitted.
The ideal woman in this century is the same as in the 18th century, except the fact that in the 19th century it became very important for a woman to be educated and it was still expected that women, especially middle class and upper class women, had sexual relations only after marriage and only with their husbands, but husbands could have pre-marital sexual relation with servant or could spend their inheritance on a mistress or on prostitutes. Most women of these classes learned about sexual relation from their husbands in the wedding’s night. Prostitution was rife in this century; the majority was casual and resorted to only when there was no any alternative. Most doctors of that period said that a real woman is that woman who had no sexual desire or just little and only abnormal women felt strong sexual desire. Only men’s sexual desire was ‘permitted’ but it was thought that if it cannot be controlled it could damage men’s health and it was seen as being something unnatural and evil. In 19th century were widely discussed cases of excessive hardship for wives and were regarded as being unusual.[38]

Regarding the marriage, every woman dreams about a perfect one, thus, “women had a clear idea of what they hoped to achieve in marriage (whatever really followed). They wanted affection and companionship, even if they thought romantic love was not likely to last; they wanted a home of their own, children, a husband with a legal obligation to maintain his family, an acknowledged status in the community as a wife and mother.”[39]

The Christian churches, Parliament, and the government thought about marriage that it was an indissoluble contract, a validation of property and inheritance rights and a legally approved sexual relationship. In the early nineteenth century, if a husband ill-treated his wife or was unfaithful to her even she could afford, it was little likelihood getting a full divorce. “Her only redress in the early nineteenth century being to try to put an end to their cohabitation by obtaining a judicial separation (divorce a memo, et thoro).”[40]
As the century advanced it was considered necessary that law should protect not only the property of upper class wives but also that of wives of all classes. “ ’I changed a Misses trammel’d life / For all the glorious licence of wife’; said a character in the early nineteenth century play, Whistle Me First ( quoted in Airlie, 1921).”[41] Thus, wealthy women who had separate estates, after marriage, they were the most liberated group of women in the nineteenth century and they could do whatever they wanted and so they did. A woman who had personal wealth, after marriage, she could lead a much more independent life than other women; she could travel at home or abroad, visit friends or relatives and thereby she could avoid the claustrophobia of marriage where the spouses depended on each other entirely and she could leave her husband since she could maintain herself. Middle class wives were the most affected by the laws of marriage and they were those who most reacted against them and these reactions were those which provoked changes in the legal relations between husbands and wives and, these introduced the concept of separate spheres and the ideal of the angel of the house. Working class women also benefited from changes in marriage such as legal separation and they could also maintain and control their own earnings.[42] Thus, the roles of women in the 18th and 19th centuries greatly differed from the roles of women in today society, they had few opportunities and were not appreciated as women are nowadays and

“the nineteenth century was a period during which gender roles and above all women’s role in society underwent considerable change. At the beginning of the century, the notion of separate social spheres for women and men was firmly established; at the end of the century, the women’s suffrage movement, dominated by middle class women, had grown strong and the stage was set for the suffragettes’ battle for the beginning of the twentieth century (Leneman 1998: 37-8).”[43]






[2]  Eternul Feminin, Posted by Cătălin Stănculescu, http://mythologica.ro/eternul-feminin/, 17.12.2013
[3]  Biblia- verset cu verset : « Căci precum femeia este din bărbat, aşa şi bărbatul este prin femeie”, Facerea 2,22, http://ziarullumina.ro/agenda-crestinului/biblia-verset-cu-verset-caci-precum-femeia-este-din-barbat-asa-si-barbatul-este, 17.12.2013
[4] Gilles Lipovetsky, A treia femeie (traducere de Radu Sergiu Ruba si Manuela Vrabie), Univers, Bucuresti, 2000, (pages 180-184)
[5] Gender roles and Gender differences, http://highered.mcgraw-hill.com/sites/0072820144/student_view0/chapter15/,  17.12.2013
6 Simone de Beauvoir, The Second sex, Vintage, Reissue edition, 1949 , (page 2)
7 Beyond the Sea, Quoting poetry, http://sailingbeyondthesea.blogspot.ro/2011_03_20_archive.html, 19.12.2013
[8] Simone de Beauvoir, The Second sex, Vintage, Reissue edition, 1949,  (page 8)
[10] Simone de Beauvoir, The Second sex, Vintage, Reissue edition, 1949,  (page 17)
[12] Women’s Education, http://womenseducation.blogspot.ro/, 20.12.2013
[13] Women’s Education, http://womenseducation.blogspot.ro/, 20.12.2013

[14] Gender in the Proceedings, http://www.oldbaileyonline.org/static/Gender.jsp, 23.12.2013

15 Gender roles in the Eighteenth Century, http://www.oldbaileyonline.org/static/Gender.jsp#genderroles, 23.12.2013
[16] Women’s Education, http://womenseducation.blogspot.ro/, 20.12.2013
[17] Gender roles in the Eighteenth Century, http://www.oldbaileyonline.org/static/Gender.jsp#genderroles, 23.12.2013

[18] Women’s Hairstyles & Cosmetics of the 18th Century: France & England, 1750-1790, http://demodecouture.com/hairstyles-cosmetics-18th-century/, 23.12.2013

[20] Simone de Beauvoir, The second sex, Vintage, Reissue edition, 1949  (page 16)    
[21]Simone de Beauvoir, The Second sex, Vintage, Reissue edition, 1949 (page 6)
22 English women in the eighteenth century...?, https://answers.yahoo.com/question/index?qid=20101029003415AAA5Oc0, 24.12.2013



24 Joan Perkin, Women and Marriage in Nineteenth Century England, Lyceum Books, 1989
  (page 2)
[25] Women In The Victorian Age 1860, [Doc] written by Ambra Garcea & Valentina Guerrini, 26.12.2013

[26] Quotes About Women’s Rights, http://www.goodreads.com/quotes/tag/women-s-rights, Marry Wollstonecraft, A Vindication of the Rights of Woman, 27.12.2013

[27] Rosemarie Ton, Feminist Thoughts, Westview Press, 2009 (pages 1,13,15) ; Mary Wollstonecraft Legacy, http://womenshistory.about.com/od/wollstonecraft/a/wollstonecraft-legacy.htm, 27.12.2013

[28] The first women's movement. Suffragist struggles in the 19th and early 20th centuries, [Pdf] http://www.amerikanistik.uni-muenchen.de/forschung/konferenzprojekte/ip_60s/finalpapers/juncker_remy.pdf , 27.12.2013
30 Women’s status in mid 19th-century England, A brief Overview, By Helena Wojtczak, http://www.hastingspress.co.uk/history/19/overview.htm, 01.01.2014

[31] Ideals of Womanhood in Victorian Britain, By Lynn Abrams http://www.bbc.co.uk/history/trail/victorian_britain/women_home/ideals_womanhood_03.shtml, 01.01.2014

[32] Gender in the Proceedings, http://www.oldbaileyonline.org/static/Gender.jsp, 01.01.2014

[33] Dorice Williams Elliott, The Angel Out of the House: Philanthropy and Gender in Nineteenth-Century England, University of Virginia Press, 2002 (page 6)
[34] Joan Perkin, Women and Marriage in Nineteenth Century England, Lyceum Books, 1989  (page 22)
[35] Joan Perkin, Women and Marriage in Nineteenth Century England, Lyceum Books, 1989 (page 23)
[36] Gender in Proceedings, http://www.oldbaileyonline.org/static/Gender.jsp, 01.01.2014
[37] Joan Perkin, Women and Marriage in Nineteenth Century England, Lyceum Books, 1989 (page 8)
[38]  Gender in Proceedings, http://www.oldbaileyonline.org/static/Gender.jsp, 01.01.2014
[39] Joan Perkin, Women and Marriage in Nineteenth Century England, Lyceum Books, 1989  (page 30)
[40] Joan Perkin, Women and Marriage in Nineteenth Century England, Lyceum Books, 1989 (page 24)
[41] Joan Perkin, Women and Marriage in Nineteenth Century England, Lyceum Books, 1989  (page 76)
[42] Gender in Proceedings, http://www.oldbaileyonline.org/static/Gender.jsp, 01.01.2014
[43] Merja Kytö, Mats Rydén, Erik Smitterberg, Nineteenth-Century English. Stability and Change, Cambridge University Press, 2009 (page 18)

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