This thesis explores the advent of gentlewomen's chymical activities in Elizabethan England. In the sixteenth century, chymistry gained widespread currency under Queen Elizabeth I. This thesis argues that the queen's significant chymical interests contributed to her iconography, thereby bridging England's previously discrete chymical and female realms. It shows that Elizabeth's influence and fundamental societal changes enabled women, beginning with the gentry, to acquire and apply chymical knowledge. Four case studies highlight the queen's impact on her female subjects through an examination of primary manuscript and printed sources. The Protestant gentlewomen Grace Mildmay, Mary Sidney Herbert, Margaret Hoby and Margaret Clifford may firs...
A brief introduction to the history of the Tudor Court and the subject in hand is enlarged upon in t...
This thesis examines the power of aristocratic women in politics and patronage in the final years of...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Oxford, 1992This thesis is concerned primarily with determining\ud the...
This thesis explores the advent of gentlewomen's chymical activities in Elizabethan England. In the ...
This thesis explores the advent of gentlewomen's chymical activities in Elizabethan England. In the ...
This thesis examines laywomen’s responses to and participation in the early English Reformation, thr...
The thesis analyzes the extent to which English and Scottish women participated in the thriving manu...
My doctoral thesis is not a gender study, but examines instead the political, social and religious r...
The thesis examines both the image and the reality of upper class English women's lives in the peri...
The purpose of this dissertation, Busy Bodies: the Role of Women at the Court of Elizabeth I, 1558-1...
My doctoral thesis is not a gender study, but examines instead the political, social and religious r...
In Tudor and Stuart Britain, women writers were shaped by their culture, but they also helped to sha...
Regnant queenship is one of the defining features of the early modern era. During this period Englan...
This dissertation examines the ways Jane Dudley, Duchess of Northumberland, and her daughters Mary D...
This dissertation explores the reigns of two early sixteenth-century queens consort of England and S...
A brief introduction to the history of the Tudor Court and the subject in hand is enlarged upon in t...
This thesis examines the power of aristocratic women in politics and patronage in the final years of...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Oxford, 1992This thesis is concerned primarily with determining\ud the...
This thesis explores the advent of gentlewomen's chymical activities in Elizabethan England. In the ...
This thesis explores the advent of gentlewomen's chymical activities in Elizabethan England. In the ...
This thesis examines laywomen’s responses to and participation in the early English Reformation, thr...
The thesis analyzes the extent to which English and Scottish women participated in the thriving manu...
My doctoral thesis is not a gender study, but examines instead the political, social and religious r...
The thesis examines both the image and the reality of upper class English women's lives in the peri...
The purpose of this dissertation, Busy Bodies: the Role of Women at the Court of Elizabeth I, 1558-1...
My doctoral thesis is not a gender study, but examines instead the political, social and religious r...
In Tudor and Stuart Britain, women writers were shaped by their culture, but they also helped to sha...
Regnant queenship is one of the defining features of the early modern era. During this period Englan...
This dissertation examines the ways Jane Dudley, Duchess of Northumberland, and her daughters Mary D...
This dissertation explores the reigns of two early sixteenth-century queens consort of England and S...
A brief introduction to the history of the Tudor Court and the subject in hand is enlarged upon in t...
This thesis examines the power of aristocratic women in politics and patronage in the final years of...
Thesis (Ph.D.)--University of Oxford, 1992This thesis is concerned primarily with determining\ud the...