
Kategória: 5.2 The emancipation of women 2
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Michalina Wisłocka [Wikipedia – Public Domain]
Michalina Wisłocka (1978) – House of Michalina Wisłocka, Warsaw
Michalina Wisłocka (1978) – House of Michalina Wisłocka, Warsaw Fact of the Polish figure „Women political rights in Poland” Part…
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Anna Walentynowicz and Lech Walesa during a mass during the strike at the Gdansk shipyard in August 1980.
Anna Walentynowicz – Grave of Anna Walentynowicz at Srebrzysk Graveyard in Gdansk
Anna Walentynowicz – Grave of Anna Walentynowicz at Srebrzysk Graveyard in Gdansk Fact of the Polish figure „Women political rights…
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Feminism in culture – Věra Chytilová – Praha, Villa of Věra Chytilová
Feminism in culture – Věra Chytilová – Praha, Villa of Věra Chytilová Fact of the Czech figure „Suffrage movement” Part…
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Milada Horáková – Praha, Vyšehrad, Symbolic grave
Milada Horáková – Praha, Vyšehrad, Symbolic grave Fact of the Czech figure „Suffrage movement” Part of the „The emancipation of…
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The Struggle for Women’s Suffrage – Praha, Senát ČR, Commemorative plaque for F. Plamínková
The Struggle for Women’s Suffrage – Praha, Senát ČR, Commemorative plaque for F. Plamínková Fact of the Czech figure „Suffrage…
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The Women’s Congress held in Warsaw in 1917 was a landmark event in the Polish women’s movement, uniting activists who demanded full suffrage and greater public roles for women. Taking place amid the struggle for national independence, the congress linked women’s rights to the broader cause of liberation, paving the way for the introduction of women’s suffrage in 1918
Women’s Congress in Warsaw (1917) – Polskie Towarzystwo Higieniczne, Warsaw
Women’s Congress in Warsaw (1917) – Polskie Towarzystwo Higieniczne, Warsaw Fact of the Polish figure „Women political rights in Poland”…
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Title page of the book „365 Dinners for Five Zlotys” [Polona]
365 Dinners for Five Zlotys – a cookbook by Lucyna Ćwierczakiewiczowa – Protestant Reformed Cemetery, Warsaw
365 Dinners for Five Zlotys – a cookbook by Lucyna Ćwierczakiewiczowa – Protestant Reformed Cemetery, Warsaw Fact of the Polish…
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Anna Kéthly’s ashes were repatriated and reburied in Budapest’s New Public Cemetery in 1990; her full rehabilitation followed in 1994. Honored with a statue and square named after her in Erzsébetváros, her memory is also preserved through several commemorative plaques across Budapest, despite the biographical inaccuracy of her portrayal in Márta Mészáros’s 2009 film The Last Report on Anna.
Anna Kéthly – A Trailblazing Socialist in the Hungarian Parliament – Budapest, Anna Kéthly Statue
Anna Kéthly – A Trailblazing Socialist in the Hungarian Parliament – Budapest, Anna Kéthly Statue Fact of the Hungarian figure…
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One of the leading figures of the early Hungarian feminist movement, Rosika Schwimmer was also the world’s first female ambassador. A founder of the Woman’s Peace Party and a precursor to the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom, her legacy is preserved in major archives across the United States.
Rosika Bédy-Schwimmer – Pioneer of the International Women’s Movement – Subotica
Rosika Bédy-Schwimmer – Pioneer of the International Women’s Movement – Subotica Fact of the Hungarian figure „Margit Schlacta – The…
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Countess Katinka Andrássy, widely known as “the Red Countess,” was the granddaughter of Gyula Andrássy, former Prime Minister of Hungary (1867–1871) and Foreign Minister of Austria-Hungary (1871–1879). She and her husband, Count Mihály Károlyi, are buried in the Károlyi Mausoleum at Budapest’s Kerepesi Cemetery, designed by architect Lajos Skoda.
Katinka Andrássy – The Countess with a Passion for Politics and Diplomacy – Fiume Road Graveyard
Katinka Andrássy – The Countess with a Passion for Politics and Diplomacy – Fiume Road Graveyard Fact of the Hungarian…