The most, and perhaps for some the only known female name of this period was Marie Antoinette, the hated queen of France. By logic, one would also be inclined to say women merely supported their husbands, fathers, and brothers during these affairs from home while tending to their traditional roles as mothers and wives. This of course is a false affirmation for all women as, for example, the March on Versailles occurred during the Revolution, an event that was led entirely by the infuriated women of the third estate. This march made it evident that was not the time to just be child bearers and home keepers, with the revolt occurring right outside their doorsteps. Women of all ages, social classes, and occupations found a way to demonstrate their devotion to their gender, their people, and to a change in their country. They are les citoyennes, the French term meaning “the female citizens.” The women during the French Revolution were not just background characters as the Feminist movement and a general interest in social and political changes began to flourish, which allowed female figures such as Charlotte Corday, Madame Tallien, and Olympe de Gouges to express their ideologies and secure a place in history despite their limitations and expectations as women in the late
The most, and perhaps for some the only known female name of this period was Marie Antoinette, the hated queen of France. By logic, one would also be inclined to say women merely supported their husbands, fathers, and brothers during these affairs from home while tending to their traditional roles as mothers and wives. This of course is a false affirmation for all women as, for example, the March on Versailles occurred during the Revolution, an event that was led entirely by the infuriated women of the third estate. This march made it evident that was not the time to just be child bearers and home keepers, with the revolt occurring right outside their doorsteps. Women of all ages, social classes, and occupations found a way to demonstrate their devotion to their gender, their people, and to a change in their country. They are les citoyennes, the French term meaning “the female citizens.” The women during the French Revolution were not just background characters as the Feminist movement and a general interest in social and political changes began to flourish, which allowed female figures such as Charlotte Corday, Madame Tallien, and Olympe de Gouges to express their ideologies and secure a place in history despite their limitations and expectations as women in the late