Social Sciences, asked by sanvikamathur1, 1 year ago

what was the main motive of women clubs if France

Answers

Answered by abhay04kumar
105
1) ‘The Society of Revolutionary’ and ‘Republican Women’ were the two women’s club of France.
2) Their main objective was to attain equal political rights with that of men.
3) They insisted voting rights, to be nominated to the Assembly and to control political office.
4) Women wanted their interests should be shown in the new government.
Answered by Superindian
12

Answers

The great misfortune is this, that they both acquire manners before morals, and a knowledge of life before they have from reflection, any acquaintance with the grand ideal outline of human nature. The consequence is natural; satisfied with common nature, they become a prey to prejudices, and taking all their opinions on credit, they blindly submit to authority."

******

With the outbreak of the Revolution a new group of women came to prominence. These were the women of the urban lower orders who were often at the forefront of crowd protests.

Women’s experiences of the French Revolution were as varied as the women themselves. Noble women from the privileged world of Versailles, educated women of the middle classes, peasant women from the Vendée, silk weavers from Lyon, market women from Paris: all had very different responses to the Revolution. Many women were active participants in the Revolution: marching and protesting on the streets, debating in societies, viewing the proceedings of the assemblies and clubs from the public galleries, and writing pamphlets. Liberty, equality and fraternity were the founding principles of the Revolution

Similar questions