Jan-Maat’s Reviews > Women In England, 1500-1760: A Social History > Status Update

Jan-Maat
Jan-Maat is on page 115 of 304
Spectacles were a considerable novelty, and they were expensive and difficult to obtain. Last Bridgeman living in Warwickshire, ordered some scetacles from London in 1698, but was not satisfactorily fitted until 1701 after a good deal of correspondence.
- young woman did domestic work, 30-40 year olds did sewing, older women did washing, nursing or hawking.
Feb 03, 2025 12:30PM
Women In England, 1500-1760: A Social History

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Jan-Maat’s Previous Updates

Jan-Maat
Jan-Maat is on page 274 of 304
I find it difficult to escape the conclusion that individualism is ... a process which freed men from ancient constraints, but which was of much less advantage to women. It liberated man from the restraints of the community & have them the whole market place in which to operate, it deprives women of the support of the community while not substantially increasing their opportunities for personal choice & action.
Feb 08, 2025 11:50AM
Women In England, 1500-1760: A Social History


Jan-Maat
Jan-Maat is on page 273 of 304
Better off women were increasingly confined to the home...urban work became less varied for women, as they came to be excluded from trades outside vitualling & clothing; & the proletarianisation of rural labour, by the increased specialisation of agricultural work, meant that the lot of the rural poor was increasingly deprived & dreary.
Feb 08, 2025 11:43AM
Women In England, 1500-1760: A Social History


Jan-Maat
Jan-Maat is on page 272 of 304
In contrast to a history of men over the same period (1500-1760), we see areduction in the opportunities for women to work in different trades & a diminution of their rights to hold office...as we have seen, what benefited man ( Reformation, civil war, industrialisation) did not universally improve women's circumstances.
Feb 08, 2025 11:38AM
Women In England, 1500-1760: A Social History


Jan-Maat
Jan-Maat is on page 268 of 304
The prominence of women (in riots) owed something to the continued & widespread belief that women could not be held responsible forvtheir actions, despite the court of Star Chamber's judgement of 1605 to the contrary.

-all the same their husbands' were legally liable for any fines they had to.pay.
Feb 08, 2025 10:57AM
Women In England, 1500-1760: A Social History


Jan-Maat
Jan-Maat is on page 266 of 304
Women as indicators of food riots, the suggestion is as consumers and small scale retailers they were particularly aware of price increases.
Feb 08, 2025 10:53AM
Women In England, 1500-1760: A Social History


Jan-Maat
Jan-Maat is on page 264 of 304
Medical uncertainty about the duration of pregnancy caused many problems. Generally the court's favoured the supposition that a child born to a woman whose husband had died within about 10 or 11 months of the child's birth was his child.

- Rabelais jokes about that
Feb 08, 2025 10:50AM
Women In England, 1500-1760: A Social History


Jan-Maat
Jan-Maat is on page 262 of 304
16th century East Sussex women were 50% of all murder victims
16th century Essex very few rape cases ended in a conviction; 10 out of 26, most accusations were of masters raping servants, clergymen made up a large group of those masters.
Feb 08, 2025 10:20AM
Women In England, 1500-1760: A Social History


Jan-Maat
Jan-Maat is on page 258 of 304
Violence between women was relatively common: there are numerous accounts of brawls in churches about pews...many cases of violence between women involved incidents where one felt that her status had been impugned in some way...preservation of reputation was an extremely important motive in women's actions...it is also possible that violence between women was singled out for particular attention at law
Feb 08, 2025 02:08AM
Women In England, 1500-1760: A Social History


Jan-Maat
Jan-Maat is on page 257 of 304
Evidence for Essex, Sussex & Hertfordshire suggests that the cast majority of homicides in the late 16th & early 17th centuries were committed as acts of unpremeditated aggression. They draw attention to the prevalence of domestic violence in this period. Wives accounted for 3/4 of the victims of domestic murders.
Feb 07, 2025 03:25PM
Women In England, 1500-1760: A Social History


Jan-Maat
Jan-Maat is on page 254 of 304
historians begun to consider the ways in which the boundaries between sin, crime & madness have moved over time. In early modern England everyone sinned, but not everyone committed crimes in so doing. These boundaries have a gender component: women's supposed sexual voraciousness explained men's being seduced to sin; madness accounted for women who spoke up outside the conventional bounds of their sex.
Feb 07, 2025 03:01AM
Women In England, 1500-1760: A Social History


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