The role of women’s in Victorian England were limited to society single and married women’s during the Victorian era for women’s for being disadvantage they had to live.
The women’s in Victorians era were disadvantage because of their financially and sexually and also social statuses. The men’s in Victorians era were more stability, financial and had more power than the women in the Victorian era. Marriages during the Victorian England for the women were difficult to get a divorce from there husband during the Victorian era. The husbands of the Victorian era were participated in affairs with other women’s. The Wives of the husbands that haves an affairs have no right to divorce them because of a social
taboo.
The only women’s that enjoyed living in this Victorian England era were the nobility class women’s. The nobility class women’s were the women’s that attend tea parties and went to balls dances. The nobility class women’s also do knitting and horseback riding on their free time. (Wikipedia)
They nobility class women’s were not like the average women’s during Victorian era they were highly educated than any other women’s during their era. The nobility class women’s job was to effectively instruct the servant on what they want and what they need done. The nobility class women’s jobs was also to keep the younger young women’s groom and teach them to become nobility women’s.
Unlike the nobility class women’s there was the lower class women who had to take up menial jobs. One of the most popular jobs for a lower class women’s was prostitution and labor or any types of physical exertion. The lower class women’s were mostly single women’s all their lives and treated poorly in there society. The women were considered to be a sign of a purity and cleanliness except during the menstrual cycles. The women’s bodies during the Victorian era was treated like an temples and the women’s were not to be engaged in any types of vigorous activity such sex as well during the time of Victorian era.(Source Victorian –era.org/roles of women in the Victorian)