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Find link is a tool written by Edward Betts .
searching for Women in the Victorian era 10 found (29 total)
alternate case: women in the Victorian era
Snood (headgear)
(538 words)
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typically have a looser fit. Decorative hairnets, popular among women in the Victorian era , were referred to as snoods. This term was then applied to any
Leslie P. Hume
(432 words)
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California. She has published scholarship about the place of women in the Victorian era as well as women's suffrage societies. She served as President
Bangs (hair)
(568 words)
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into mortal sin". Bangs, often curled, regained popularity among women in the Victorian era . The "Alexandra fringe", a mass of short, frizzy bangs named for
Nightcap (garment)
(605 words)
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prisoner, if he could afford it. Nightcaps were worn by many women in the Victorian era , but were seen as old-fashioned by the Edwardian era. Some women
Rosa Mulholland
(1,891 words)
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setting, her conclusions never defy accepted gender limits for women in the Victorian era . The first novel that Mulholland wrote was Dunmara (1864), written
Pamela Swynford De Beaufort
(1,090 words)
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cruel person due to the limited opportunities available to human women in the Victorian era . Throughout the series, Pam is portrayed as callous, amoral, and
Thereza Dillwyn Llewelyn
(942 words)
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photography and astronomy, although both were uncommon endeavours for women in the Victorian era . Her cousins were the sisters novelist and industrialist Amy Dillwyn
Tea in the United Kingdom
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rooms were also significant since they provided a place where women in the Victorian era could take a meal without a male escort, without risk to their
Margaret Fountaine
(2,791 words)
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collecting them. Natural history was particularly popular among women in the Victorian era . Far from being eccentric, Fountaine's work as entomologist followed
Tipping the Velvet
(6,086 words)
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period puts a stranglehold on women, forcing readers to compare women in the Victorian era with present-day sexual attitudes. Nan never has difficulty accepting