The hereditary aristocracy of England used education to maintain its cultural, political, and economic superiority of men and women in the hierarchy of society. Aristocratic education was training for leadership of the group and the skills taught were those that the group defined as signifying a leader. Part of aristocratic education was also based around play and conspicuous consumption. The sentiments of the twentieth-century slogans, "if you've got it, flaunt it," and "let the good times roll" would not have seemed foreign to a fifteenth-century English aristocrat. These principles were adopted by those who moved into the upper classes of society.The main venue for the provision of education for elite women was the household. Women were ...
The problem of the education of noblewomen in the 18th century still requires more thorough research...
This book is the first published full-length study of five remarkable sixteenth-century women. Part ...
During two particular decades of her reign—the 1560s and the 1590s—Queen Elizabeth I strategically a...
The hereditary aristocracy of England used education to maintain its cultural, political, and econom...
This thesis focuses on the education of women in three elite West Country households, the Arundells ...
© 2010 Catherine Elizabeth Margaret ScottThe period 1650 to 1750 in England saw the development of s...
Until comparatively recently it was widely believed that the English medieval lay nobility was illit...
A lively and vibrant aristocratic youth culture existed in Western Europe in the medieval and early ...
The thesis examines both the image and the reality of upper class English women's lives in the peri...
With the advent of humanism in England, native scholars were increasingly aware that if they were to...
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/history-of-education-quarterly/issue/C6AF1DB0DCE82934AA3CF0E...
As a code of conduct linked to knightly values, chivalry arguably had little to offer women. Royal a...
This dissertation traces the failure of the late medieval English gentry to define themselves, and t...
This thesis provides a study of attitudes and practice in respect of female education in England and...
This paper explores the education and training received by the sons of the English gentry in the lat...
The problem of the education of noblewomen in the 18th century still requires more thorough research...
This book is the first published full-length study of five remarkable sixteenth-century women. Part ...
During two particular decades of her reign—the 1560s and the 1590s—Queen Elizabeth I strategically a...
The hereditary aristocracy of England used education to maintain its cultural, political, and econom...
This thesis focuses on the education of women in three elite West Country households, the Arundells ...
© 2010 Catherine Elizabeth Margaret ScottThe period 1650 to 1750 in England saw the development of s...
Until comparatively recently it was widely believed that the English medieval lay nobility was illit...
A lively and vibrant aristocratic youth culture existed in Western Europe in the medieval and early ...
The thesis examines both the image and the reality of upper class English women's lives in the peri...
With the advent of humanism in England, native scholars were increasingly aware that if they were to...
https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/history-of-education-quarterly/issue/C6AF1DB0DCE82934AA3CF0E...
As a code of conduct linked to knightly values, chivalry arguably had little to offer women. Royal a...
This dissertation traces the failure of the late medieval English gentry to define themselves, and t...
This thesis provides a study of attitudes and practice in respect of female education in England and...
This paper explores the education and training received by the sons of the English gentry in the lat...
The problem of the education of noblewomen in the 18th century still requires more thorough research...
This book is the first published full-length study of five remarkable sixteenth-century women. Part ...
During two particular decades of her reign—the 1560s and the 1590s—Queen Elizabeth I strategically a...