Part 1. Women Make Early Historyunder construction
Women's Studies Timelines Index | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | Bibliography
Contribute to  Women's Studies Timelines!

BC / BCE ~ from the beginnings . . . 

from 2500

The cults of Isis and Ishtar flourish in Crete, Egypt, Sumaria.

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Diotima: Materials for the Study of Women and Gender in the Ancient World (Ross Scaife, 1995 - 2000)
http://www.stoa.org/diotima/

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"Ishtar: In Her Praise, In Her Image," By Pauline Campanelli, including ancient prayers to Ishtar / Inanna:
http://www.sacred-texts.com/bos/bos172.htm 
"Ishtar, Inanna, & Ancient Astrology," By Valkyrie (no date):
http://www.sacred-texts.com/bos/bos564.htm
From The Internet Sacred Text Archive J.B. Hare, 1997-2001:
http://www.sacred-texts.com/index.htm
Sacred Texts Bibliography J. B. Hare and Chris Weimer, 1997-2001:
http://www.sacred-texts.com/stbib.htm

c. 2300

Enheduanna, daughter of King Sargon of Akkad, was born in Sumeria in the city of Ur.  Enheduanna, high priestess of the Moon-God temple, composed the first known book of poetry in Western history.

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[Item #3:] Enheduanna. Daughter of King Sargon of Akkad. High-priestess of Moon-God temple. Ur. ca. 2300 B.C.  Ancient Tablets, Ancient Graves: Accessing Women's Lives in Mesopotamia.  Classroom Lesson Series #2, Women in World History Curriculum Dir. Lyn Reese, 2001:
http://www.womeninworldhistory.com/lesson2.html

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Enheduanna High Priestess of Ur Carolyn Cabe, Nikki Griffin, and Mercedes Santaella [graduates of Univ. of Georgia] - Undead Girlie Angels (no date):
http://www.negia.net/~ballet/immortal_enheduanna.html

c. 1479? Queen Hatshepsut [b. 1502 ? BCE] declared herself pharoah and led Egypt in a period of military conquest and prosperity.  Hatshepsut's funerary temple at Deir el Bahari, in Thebes, is magnificent.
bulletHatshepsut (r. 1479 -1458)
http://www.pbs.org/empires/egypt/hatshepsut.html
Women in Power
http://www.pbs.org/empires/egypt/tiy.html

PBS: Egypt's Golden Empire
http://www.pbs.org/empires/egypt/
bulletHatshepsut: The Queen Who Would Be King David Bediz (Art & Art History, Duke Univ., 1997):
http://www.bediz.com/hatshep/index.html
The Story of Hatshepsut:
http://www.bediz.com/hatshep/story.html
Hatshepsut's Temple
:
http://www.bediz.com/hatshep/temple.html
bulletPharaoh Maatkare Hatshepsut 
http://www.maatkare.com/qhat.html
The Temple of Hatshepsut: Pharoah Maatkare Hatshepsut, Daughter of Amun Ra Tjia Cook, 2001:
http://www.maatkare.com/index.html
bulletHatshepsut (Maatkare), 1473-1458 B.C., 18th Dynasty:
http://www.touregypt.net/18dyn05.htm
Temple at Deir el Bahari:
http://www.touregypt.net/bahari.htm
"Hatshepsut, Female Pharaoh of Egypt," by Caroline Seawright
http://www.touregypt.net/historicalessays/hatshepsut.htm

From "Egypt: Rulers, Kings and Pharoahs," Tour Egypt (InterCity Oz, Inc., 1999-2003): http://www.touregypt.net/index.htm
bulletNew Kingdom (c. 1540 - 1070 BC):
http://www.geocities.com/amenhotep.geo/history/18_20/index.html
From The Ancient Egypt History Site:
http://www.geocities.com/amenhotep.geo/
Queen Hatshepsut (Maatkara) reign: c. 1473 - 1458 BC
From Gateway to Ancient Egypt
Pathway: New Kingdom 18th-20th Dynasties, c 1550-1068 BC: 
http://www.gatewaytoancientegypt.co.uk/
mid-1400s ? As recounted in her song, [Old Testament Judges 4-5], the prophet Deborah sends for Barak to free the Israelites from the oppression of Jabin and his general Sisera in Canaan.  
bullet"Barak and Deborah," Old Testament Studies, Richard Abbott (no date): http://home.clara.net/abbottfamily/barakanddeborah.htm
bulletJudges 4 ~ The Song of Deborah: The Book of Judges from a Reformed Protestant Perspective, Studies in Bible Doctrine (sibd.org, 2002)
http://www.sibd.org/sibd/judges/judges_4.shtml

"Deborah and Jael are unique in Hebrew scripture.  Deborah is the only female prophet, judge and military leader.  Jael is the only female in the Hebrew canon who murders an enemy commander with a sharp object (Judith is in the Apocrypha)" (Johnson):

bulletFrom "Deborah, Jael And Canaanite Mythology," by Brenda M. Johnson, M.A., Mount Saint Agnes Theological Center for Women, 2000
http://www.msawomen.org/works/deborah.html
811-807 Queen Samuramat (AKA: Shamiram; in Greek: Semiramis) rules Assyria 
bulletHistory Ancient - 450, Time Line: Art, Literature, History (Univ. of Baltimore, 2000): http://ubmail.ubalt.edu/~pfitz/time/tl_alh0000.htm
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Fred Parhad 1947- An Assyrian Sculptor, Assyrian Information Medium Exchange: Arts Page - Sculpture, 2000:
http://www.edessa.com/art/parhad.htm

600-501 Greek women adapted the man's chiton as their standard dress.
From Women's Life in Greece and Rome (WLGR), Mary R. Lefkowitz and Maureen B. Fant (1992); adapted for Diatoma by Suzanne Bonefas and Ross Scaife
http://www.stoa.org/diotima/anthology/wlgr/
5th century Artemisia of Halicarnassus became the first female ship captain and fleet commander by taking her husband's place after his death and backing Xerxes's fleet near Marathon, Greece.
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Artemisia in Herodotus [excerpts from Books 7 and 8], Translation and notes by Caroline L. Falkner, 2001; in Diatoma:
http://www.stoa.org/diotima/anthology/artemisia.shtml

c. 450 Aspasia of Miletus, the well-educated courtesan of Pericles, holds court in her cultural salon in Athens and influences many of ancient Greece's great thinkers.
bulletAspasia: The Woman Behind the Great Men of 5th Century B.C. Lisa Lewis and Robyn Yearby, Univ. of Oklahoma, 2000:
http://students.ou.edu/L/Lisa.A.Lewis-1/
By late 
5th century
The traditional monopoly of female kin and neighbors who had themselves given birth--known as maia or midwife--on childbirth and female reproductive care (e.g. fertility, abortion, contraception, sex determination) breaks down after the Greek Hippocratic treatises are composed, and male doctors become increasingly involved in childbirth care.  
bulletWomen in Medicine, Antiqua Medicina - from Homer to Vesalius
http://hsc.virginia.edu/hs-library/historical/antiqua/text.htm
About Antiqua Medicina: From Homer to Vesalius (Bibliography):
http://hsc.virginia.edu/hs-library/historical/antiqua/abtexh.htm
University of Virginia Health Systems
http://hsc.virginia.edu/hs-library/historical/
by 350 The Celts, having arrived in Ireland, call their distant ancestors--the indigenous Gaels--Milesians.  Eire (AKA: Erin, Eriu), the Gaelic name for Ireland and its official name today, "was said to be the name of an indigenous goddess who implored the Milesians to name the island after her" (Parle).
bullet"Story of the Celts: The Celts of Ireland," by John Patrick Parle
RealMagick, 2000-2002:
http://realmagick.com/articles/08/1308.html
4th century Agnodice, according to Hyginus (Latin author of CE 1st century), studied medicine (disguised in men's clothing) and practiced gynecology in Athens, though at the time it was forbidden for women to become physicians. Because  Hyginus is her only historical source, many scholars conclude that Agnodice's story is the stuff of myth and folk tale.  
bulletWomen in Medicine, Antiqua Medicina - from Homer to Vesalius
http://hsc.virginia.edu/hs-library/historical/antiqua/text.htm
About Antiqua Medicina: From Homer to Vesalius (Bibliography)
This electronic display was created in fall 1996 for Historical Collections in the Claude Moore Health Sciences Library; the original text and display was designed and written by Amanda McDaniel and adapted for the Internet in winter 1997 by Mitchell Hammond.
http://hsc.virginia.edu/hs-library/historical/antiqua/abtexh.htm
University of Virginia Health Systems
http://hsc.virginia.edu/hs-library/historical/
316 Olympias, widow of Philip II of Macedonia and mother of Alexander the Great, was executed by Cassander, regent of Macedonia.   She reputedly had great influence in molding her son and in giving him an interest in mysticism and in art, but she quarreled with Antipater, whom Alexander had left as regent in Macedonia, and with Antipater's son Cassander.  
bullet"Olympias," Encyclopedia.com (eLibrary, Tucows, Inc., 2002):
http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/O/Olympias.asp
bullet"Alexander the Great" Encyclopedia.com (eLibrary, Tucows, Inc., 2002):
http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/A/AlexG1reat.asp
bullet"Philip II," Encyclopedia.com (eLibrary, Tucows, Inc., 2002):
http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/P/Philip2-M1ac.asp
bullet"Cassander," Encyclopedia.com (eLibrary, Tucows, Inc., 2002):
http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/C/Cassande.asp
c. 327 Roxane, a Bactrian princess and daughter of Sogdian nobleman Oxyartes, was married Alexander the Great to consolidate his power in Persia.  On his march to India, Alexander invaded Bactria, one of the provinces of Aryana (in modern Afghanistan) in the Achaemenid Persian Empire.  Roxane produced his only child, Alexander IV.
bullet"Roxane" [Bactrian Roshanak; c. 343-310], by Jona Lendering (Leyden Univ., 1993; & Amsterdam Free Univ. (1996), Livius (Amsterdam, The Netherlands). 
Pathway: Livius/Persia/Royal Persons/Roxane
http://www.livius.org/ro-rz/roxane/roxane.htm
bullet"Roxane," Encyclopedia.com (eLibrary, Tucows, Inc., 2002):
http://www.encyclopedia.com/html/r/roxana.asp
bullet"History" [of Afghanistan], Mahmood S. Zahin, 1996:
http://crick.fmed.uniba.sk/~zahin/hist.html
51-30 Cleopatra VII, daughter of Ptolemy XII Auletes, reigned as Egypt's last queen, engaging in celebrated love affairs with Julius Caesar and Mark Anthony, and ill-fated struggles for power with the Roman Empire. Ultimately, Cleopatra chose death rather be displayed as Octavian's captured booty.  Cleopatra has since been immortalized in English dramatic literature by William Shakespeare (Antony and Cleopatra), John Dryden (All for Love), and George Bernard Shaw (Caesar and Cleopatra).  
bullet"Cleopatra," Encarta.com, Microsoft Corp. Encyclopedia, 2002:
http://www.encarta.msn.com/find/Concise.asp?z=1&pg=2&ti=761574092
Search Encarta.com:
http://encarta.msn.com
bullet"Cleopatra," Danuta Bois, 1995-2002:
http://www.netsrq.com/~dbois/cleopatr.html
From Distinguished Women of Past and Present Danuta Bois, 1995-2002
http://www.netsrq.com/~dbois/index.html
bullet"Cleopatra," World of Royalty at Royalty.nu (pseud. Cinderella, 1998-2002):
http://www.royalty.nu/Africa/Egypt/Cleopatra.html
bullet"Cleopatra Images: Coins," Messengers of Light, Maitreya Sangha, 1997-2002:
http://www.sangha.net/messengers/cleopatra/Coins.htm

A.D. / C.E. 1st - 16th centuries

XXX

XXX

BOADICEA : QUEEN OF THE ICENI 
http://www.enya.org/stories/story04.htm

 

bullet

Diotima: Materials for the Study of Women and Gender in the Ancient World (Ross Scaife, 1995 - 2000)
http://www.stoa.org/diotima/

bullet

"Ishtar: In Her Praise, In Her Image," By Pauline Campanelli, including ancient prayers to Ishtar / Inanna:
http://www.sacred-texts.com/bos/bos172.htm 
"Ishtar, Inanna, & Ancient Astrology," By Valkyrie (no date):
http://www.sacred-texts.com/bos/bos564.htm
From The Internet Sacred Text Archive J.B. Hare, 1997-2001:
http://www.sacred-texts.com/index.htm
Sacred Texts Bibliography J. B. Hare and Chris Weimer, 1997-2001:
http://www.sacred-texts.com/stbib.htm

 

59 or 61 CE
(or AD)

Queen Boudicca (more) of the Iceni led an army against the Roman camp of Londinium in retaliation for the rape of her daughters (see also Tacitus's account of the Celts)

"My wish is to ride the tempest, tame the waves, kill the sharks. I will not resign myself to the usual lot of women who bow their heads and become concubines."
TrieuThi Trinh, Peasant who led an insurrection against Chinese invaders
(240 C.E./A.D., Vietnam)

370

Hypatia of Alexandria, Egypt, the first recorded woman scholar, studied mathematics with Plutarch, studied philosophy, designed a hydroscope and astrolabe, and taught geometry, algebra, and astronomy at the University of Alexandria (more on Hypatia; see also list of women's rights in ancient Egypt)

496

Clothilda, Queen of France, converted her husband Clovis to Christianity

527 - 548

Empress Theodora (c. 500-548) ruled the Byzantine Empire with her husband Justinian as partners. Theodora's intelligence and courage helped save and advance the Byzantine Empire. Theodora influenced Justinian's legal and spiritual reforms, had laws passed that prohibited forced prostitution and that
granted women more rights in divorce cases, and she also established homes for prostitutes.

534

Queen Amalaswintha ruled Italy (see Ravenna: 2. Portrait bust of Amalaswintha)

Born in 606

Fatima, Mohammed's youngest daughter, lived near her father in Medina and cared for him. Her sons founded the Shiite branch of Islam (see Islam Glossary: Fatima; Schools of Thought: Sunni vs. Shiite and Women in Islam; mention in Barbara Crossette's New York Times review of "A Manual on Rights of Women Under Islam," and Dr. Ali Shariati's tribute to Fatemeh)

610

Khadimah, Mohammed's wife, supported the prophet with her mercantile business while he completed his religious mission.

625-705

Empress Wu Zetian ruled successfully during the most glorious years of the Tang Dynasty, even though according to the Confucian beliefs having a woman rule would be as unnatural as having a "hen crow like a rooster at daybreak." Wu Zetian was the only female in Chinese history to rule as emperor.

634

Queen Sondok (or Sonduk) became the sole ruler of Silla Kingdom (Korea) through 647. Having no sons, her father, the king, chose as Sondok as his heir. Women in this period had a certain degree of influence already as advisers, queen dowagers, and regents; throughout the kingdom, women were heads of families since matrilineal lines of descent existed alongside patrilineal lines. Furthermore, the Confucian model, which placed women in a subordinate position within the family, was not to have a major impact in Korea until the fifteenth century. During the Silla kingdom, women's status remained relatively high.

797

Greek Empress Irene of Athens (c. 752-803) was crowned sole ruler of the Byzantine empire, the first woman ever to hold the throne of the (East) Roman Empire.

9th century

The poet Kasia ruined her chances for a place at court after retorting to a sexist remark made by the Emperor Theophilus

855

Pope Joan, under the name John VIII, remained in office in the Vatican until the birth of her child, for which she was stoned to death in 858 (See excerpts from Cross's novel & how Cross learned about Pope "Jeanne"'s existence; Was there really a Pope Joan? and more historical links on Christopher Moore's musical-dramatic production of Pope Joan)

913

Ethelfleda, daughter of Alfred the Great, designed an earth mound at Warwick Castle (genealogy). From the Gutenberg Project's e-text of the Anglo-Saxon Chronicles: A.D. 912. "This year also came Ethelfleda, lady of the Mercians, on the holy eve called the invention of the holy cross, to Shergate, and built the fortress there, and the same year that at Bridgenorth." A.D. 913. "This year by the permission of God went Ethelfleda, lady of Mercia, with all the Mercians to Tamworth; and built the fort there in the fore-part of the summer; and before Lammas that at Stafford: in the next year that at Eddesbury, in the beginning of the summer; and the same year, late in the autumn, that at Warwick. Then in the following year was built, after mid-winter, that at Chirbury and that at Warburton; and the same year before mid-winter that at Runkorn. ((A.D. 915. This year was Warwick built.))"

959

Hroswitha of Gandersheim composed comedy and poetry, which influenced the creation of miracle plays.

From Women's History in America (Women's International Center):
"Early Christian theology perpetuated these views. St. Jerome, a 4th-century Latin father of the Christian church, said: 'Woman is the gate of the devil, the path of wickedness, the sting of the serpent, in a word a perilous object.' Thomas Aquinas, the 13th-century Christian theologian, said that
woman was 'created to be man's helpmeet, but her unique role is in conception
. . . since for other purposes men would be better assisted by other men.'"

c. 1000

Novelist Murasaki Shikibu published The Tale of Genji, a Japanese adventure tale called the world's first novel (see also a beautiful 17th c. "Suma" from the Tale of Genji from the School of Iwasa Matabei [1578-1650] and try http://www.fsc.fujitsu.com/language/genji2.htm)

1098-1179

Hildegard of Bingen was a remarkable woman, a "first" in many fields. At a time when few women wrote, Hildegard, known as "Sybil of the Rhine," produced major works of theology and visionary writings. When few women were accorded respect, she was consulted by and advised bishops, popes, and kings. She used the curative powers of natural objects for healing, and wrote treatises about natural history and medicinal uses of plants, animals, trees and stones. She is the first composer whose biography is known. She founded a vibrant convent, where her musical plays were performed. Although not yet canonized, Hildegard has been beatified, and is frequently referred to as St. Hildegard (see links, two lluminations of Hildegard of Bingen, announcement of Michael Fox's ed. of her Book of Divine Works to learn more).

1322

Jacqueline Felicie de Almania faced charges of practicing medicine without a license. Male doctors of Paris forced her to cease her women's clinic.

c.1364 -
c. 1430

Christine de Pisan, who received an excellent education for her time, was left a widow at the age of twenty-five with three small children, her mother and a niece to support. She decided to earn her income as a writer. Her poems, songs and ballads were well-received and soon she was able to support her family. Christine de Pisan became popular and her work was later supported by many lords and ladies of medieval Europe. Much of her work contains a great deal of autobiographical information, which was unusual for writers of that time.

1429

Joan of Arc (c. 1412-1431), Maid of Orleans, led Charles VII to Reims for his coronation as King of France. This French national heroine, the most famous fighting woman in European history, led French troops on the battlefield to drive the British forces from her homeland. Although she knew nothing about warfare, she claimed to be guided by visions of saints to fight for her king and country. When Joan's enemies captured her, they declared her a witch and burned her at the stake.

"The Wife of Bath [Chaucer's Canterbury Tales], a literary figure familiar to most, [provides]... a bold and vivacious answer to the classical and medieval antifeminist traditions which depict women as the bane of Adam, the root of all evil, the source of temptation, or, at the opposite pole, as idealized and virginal objects of worship. The Wife brashly speaks out against the misogynistic teachings of the Church Fathers, asking,
"Who peyntede the leon, tel me who?
By God, if wommen hadde writen stories,
As clerkes han withinne hire oratories,
They wolde han writen of men moore wikkednesse
Than al the mark of Adam may redresse."

( From Dr. Deborah Everhart's course "Medieval Women: Tradition and Counter-Tradition," focusing on "medieval women who have struggled to find a voice and write themselves, despite the constraints of an oppressively patriarchal world. The abbess Heloise, the mystics Julian of Norwich and Margery of Kempe, the poet Marie de France, and the scholar Christine de Pisan all speak out against misogynistic inscriptions of women's roles as they attempt to write their own 'stories.'")

1558

Queen Elizabeth I (1533-1603), arguably the greatest of all English rulers, ascended the throne at age 25. Her life began in intrigue when her father Henry VIII cursed the birth of a girl. During her 45-year reign, Elizabeth refused to marry, a shrewd political tactic that kept all options open for political/marital alliances, and England grew in prosperity and power. Her reign was a major period of cultural growth in England, as well as relative stability and peace in the land. She established the right to a fair trial, and organized social welfare programs for the old, infirm, and the poor.

1560-158?

Marietta Robusti Tintoretto, a Venetian painter, was the eldest of eight children of Jacopo Robusti Tintoretto, and a full-time apprentice in his studio for 15 years. Her father was deeply attached to her, taking her everywhere he went and only until she was too old, dressed her as a boy. Along with her brother, Domenico, she learned to paint in the father’s grand manner. An accomplished musician as well, she produced her own portraits and her fame spread as far as the courts of Spain and Austria. She was invited to become the court painter for Phillip II of Spain and the Emperor Maximilian, however, her father would not allow her to leave his studio or home. Instead he found her a husband, and as a condition of their marriage, Marietta had to remain in the Tintoretto household until her father died. Marietta, however, died before Tintoretto in childbirth in her early 30s. A painting of Marietta’s entitled, "Portrait of an Old Man With Boy," long been attributed to her father and considered one of his finest portraits, is only now recognized as Marietta’s work after her monogram was discovered in 1920. Even with the monogram as evidence, some scholars still feel the reattribution is in dispute. Marietta was as proficient as her father, since for centuries, it has been impossible to tell the difference between the two artists’ hands. However, art historical accounts from as recently as 1929 describe Marieta’s work as strained, sentimental, and resolute. In addition, when discussing the Tintoretto studio output, historians have marveled at what they call the almost superhuman production of the great master. Many have even remarked at Tintoretto’s remarkable variety of brushstroke. However, this has not led to re-interpretations of any form of workshop production may veer from Tintoretto’s own hand. Some historians seem unwilling to consider that Marietta or even Domenico could have produced works on their own. Historians have also not investigated Tintoretto’s marked decrease in production after Marietta’s death, attributing it solely to a father’s mourning and resultant grief at the death of his beloved daughter. (see exhibition excerpts from The Marietta Robusti Tintoretto Story, and of related interest, the Renaissance's "only female sculptor" Properzia de'Rossi, 1491-1530, and others in the Women Artists Archive of Sonoma State Univ.).

ADD:

Women Who Ruled: Queens, Goddesses, Amazons 1500-1650
http://www.umich.edu/%7Eumma/women/

http://www.wellesley.edu/DavisMuseum/dmccexhib.html

http://www.wellesley.edu/DavisMuseum/dmccexhib.html

Women's Studies Timelines
Index | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | Bibliography

You are here: Part 1: Women Make Early History
URL of this webpage:  http://www.cocc.edu/humanities/HIR/Timelines/women/part1.htm
Last updated: 10 August 2002
Copyright © 2002, Cora Agatucci and Stacey Donohue, Professors of English,
Humanities Department, Central Oregon Community College

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