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#36 |
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c. 594
Japanese Empress Suiko encourages the spread of Buddhism and orders the construction of Buddhist temples. 600 Women in England may be publicly punished as “scolds,” a practice that will continue for 1,000 years. 632 Queen Sondok becomes the ruler of the Korean kingdom of Silla. During her reign, she fights the kingdom of Paekche, sends students to China for education, and constructs Buddhist temples. 656 'A'ishah, widow of Muhammad, rebels against the caliph 'Ali in the Battle of the Camel at Basra. c. 659 Indian Queen Vidya writes Sanskrit poetry. 721 According to legend, Princess Libuše and her husband, Premysl, found the city of Prague. 787 The second Council of Nicaea is convened by Byzantine ruler Irene to settle the question of worshipping icons. The bishops rule in favour of icon worship. 801 Charlemagne outlaws prostitution. c. 900 The practice of binding the feet of aristocratic women becomes popular in the Chinese court. c. 950 An anonymous Norwegian woman writes Wise Women's Prophesy, a history of the world, including prophecies for the future. 988 Vladimir I of Russia converts Russia to Christianity and marries Anne, sister of Byzantine Emperor Basil II. With this act, Byzantine culture is introduced to Russia and the Crimea. c. 1010 Japanese author Murasaki Shikibu finishes the Genji monogatari (The Tale of Genji), a masterpiece of Japanese literature. c. 1070 Englishwomen embroider the Bayeux Tapestry, using wool thread on linen to record the events of the Norman Conquest. c. 1118 In France, Héloïse begins her doomed romance with Peter Abelard. The relationship outrages her family, and Héloïse flees to a convent in Argenteuil, where she is later made prioress. 1147 Eleanor of Aquitaine accompanies her husband, French King Louis VII, on the Second Crusade. After their marriage collapses in 1152, she marries the future King Henry II of England. 1152 Abbess Hildegard of Bingen completes Scivias, a recollection of her visions that had been confirmed as authentic by a committee of theologians. c. 1160 Frau Ava of Melk is one of Germany's first female poets. 1220 At the University of Paris, women are banned from practicing medicine. 1319 Chinese calligrapher and painter Guan Daosheng dies after a career that included a number of commissions for Emperor Renzong. 1350 The presence of more than 3,000 nuns in England reflects the flourishing of convents and religious orders for women in the Middle Ages. 1351 England's Treason Act considers any murder that subverts the usual hierarchies, such as a servant killing his master or a wife killing her husband, to be petty treason. 1384 Jadwiga is crowned “king” of Poland. Two years later she marries Grand Duke Jogaila of Lithuania, thus uniting the kingdoms. 1390 London licensing law for doctors requires a university education, thus barring women from the profession. 1390 At the University of Bologna, Dorotea Bocchi takes the chair of medicine, formerly held by her father. 1397 Under the Kalmar Union, Denmark, Sweden, and Norway are united under Queen Margaret I as their sole monarch. 1405 Italian-born French scholar Christine de Pisan writes The Book of the City of Ladies, in praise of women and in defense of their virtues. 1406 In Korea plans are made for training women doctors to serve female patients who refuse to be treated by male doctors. 1429 Joan of Arc, supported by Queen Yolande, begins her military and religious campaign against the English. At the Battle of Orléans she leads the French army to victory. c. 1436 The mystic Margery Kempe finishes dictating her autobiography, The Boke of Margery Kempe, to two clerks. The book is one of the earliest English autobiographies. 1448 Margaret of Anjou, the wife of Henry VI of England, establishes Queens' College, Cambridge. 1455 Female English silk manufacturers petition the crown to stop competition from Lombard silk manufacturers. c. 1486 Johann Sprenger and Heinrich Kraemer publish Malleus maleficarum (“Hammer of Witches”), arguing that women, as the weaker sex, are more likely to be witches. 1492 Queen Isabella I of Spain finances Christopher Columbus's voyage of exploration to the East Indies. Columbus instead finds the West Indies. ------------------------------------- Next up: Early modern period: 1501 to 1800
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