British freewomen :  Their historical privilege

audiobook

British freewomen : Their historical privilege

by C. C. (Charlotte Carmichael) Stopes

EN·~5 hours

Chapters

Description

This study uncovers the surprising legal and economic freedoms that women in Britain once enjoyed, tracing their roots from ancient customs through medieval courts to the early modern period. It examines how queens, noblewomen, and county landowners could hold offices, inherit property, sit in Parliament, and even serve as knights, illustrating a complex tapestry of rights that many assume never existed. By weaving together statutes, parliamentary rolls, and court cases, the author reveals a continuity of privilege that shaped women’s public roles long before the modern suffrage movement.

The narrative then follows the gradual erosion of those rights, detailing how legal opinions—most famously those of Sir Edward Coke—restricted women’s autonomy, and how reform efforts in the 19th century began to restore some of the lost freedoms. Readers encounter the pioneering campaigns of figures such as Anne Clifford and Mary Astell, alongside landmark legislation like the Married Women’s Property Acts. The book offers a compelling, data‑rich portrait of how British freewomen navigated law, property, and politics, inviting listeners to reconsider the foundations of gendered rights in history.

Details

Language

en

Duration

~5 hours (327K characters)

Series

Social science series. 76.

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Original publisher

London: Swan Sonnenschein & Co., 1894.

Credits

The Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)

Release date

2023-08-15

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

C. C. (Charlotte Carmichael) Stopes

C. C. (Charlotte Carmichael) Stopes

1840–1929

A lively Shakespeare scholar and determined campaigner for women’s rights, this Victorian writer brought literary research and political conviction together with unusual force. Her work on Shakespeare’s family and on the historic freedoms of women helped keep her name alive long after her own era.

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