History, asked by gkc2, 1 year ago

How had female figure become a allegory of nation during 19th century in Europe ? Analyse

Answers

Answered by Sneha259
11
Nationalism required personalizing a nation. Countries were often portrayed as female to give shape to an abstract idea. Often cultural icons such as trees or aspirational values such as liberty and justice needed icons and preferably female figures to get the message across. The female figure became an allegory of the nation.

E.g. under French Revolution, Justice is generally a blindfolded woman carrying a pair of weighing scales.

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Answered by sanamnizam1234
2

Answer:

Explanation:

In the 19th century in Europe, the female figures became an allegory of the nation in the following ways.

The artists, in the 18th and 19th centuries in Europe, wanted to represent a country, as if it was a person. In other words, they wanted to personify the nation. Nations were represented as female figures. The female form did not belong to any particular woman in real life. It was an abstract idea, which gave the nation a concrete form. The female figure became an allegory of a nation.

In France, the female form was given the name of Marianne, which represented the nation. Her characteristics were red cap, the tricolour and the cockade, drawn from those of Liberty and the Republic.

Similarly, Germania became the allegory of the German nation. Germania wears a crown of oak leaves because oak stands for heroism.

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