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The first early modern women Latinists lived in mid-fourteenth century Italy, and were educated as diplomats. By the fifteenth century, other upper-class women were educated in order to perform as prodigies on behalf of their city. Both strands of education for women spread to other European countries in the course of the sixteenth century: the principal women humanists were either princesses or courtiers. In the seventeenth century Latin lost its importance as a language of diplomacy and was no longer needed at court, but there was still a place for the ‘woman prodigy’, and a variety of women performed in this way. However, the productions of seventeenth and eighteenth-century women Latinists are more extensive and more varied than those of their predecessors, and include scientific writing and ambitious translations. By the mid-nineteenth century the integration of studious women into the wider academy was well under way.
Jane Stevenson, Ph.D. (1985), University of Cambridge, is Senior Research Fellow at Campion Hall, University of Oxford. She is the author of Women Latin Poets (2005) and many articles on women and Latin.
AbstractKeywords1 Introduction2 Women and Humanism in Renaissance Italy3 Beyond Italy: France, Spain and Northern Europe in the Sixteenth Century4 Educated Women and Work: The Sixteenth Century5 The Seventeenth Century and After: Change and Continuity6 ConclusionBibliographyIndex
Jane Stevenson, Peter Davidson, University of Warwick) Stevenson, Jane (Senior Lecturer, Centre for British and Comparative Cultural Studies, Senior Lecturer, Centre for British and Comparative Cultural Studies, University of Warwick) Davidson, Peter (Reader, Department of English and Comparative Literary Studies, Reader, Department of English and Comparative Literary Studies
Walter Scott, Sir Walter Scott, Jane Stevenson, Peter Davidson, University of Sheffield) Stevenson, Jane (Lecturer in Late Antique and Early Medieval History, Lecturer in Late Antique and Early Medieval History, University of Warwick) Davidson, Peter (Lecturer in English and Comparative Literature, Lecturer in English and Comparative Literature