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  1. 24 de jun. de 2015 · Although Bathsua Makin is a noted writer and proponent of education for women, much of her life is not well documented. Her date of birth is not known (even the year isn't certain), and the year of her death is also unknown. So I've linked this post to an event in Makin's life that can be dated--Makin wrote a Latin elegy addressed to Lucy ...

  2. Bathsua Makin, woman of learning by Teague, Frances N; Makin, Bathsua, fl. 1612-1673. Essay to revive the antient education of gentlewomen in religion, manners, arts

  3. Makin is Governess, who was sometimes Tutoress to the Princess Elisabeth, Daughter to King Charles the First; Where, by the blessing of God, Gentlewomen may be instructed in the Principles of Religion; and in all manner of Sober and Vertuous Education: More particularly, in all things ordinarily taught in other Schools:

  4. Bathsua Reginald Makin is an important figure in women's history. A child prodigy, she was thoroughly educated in classical and modern languages at a time when most women were illiterate. She was a middle-class Englishwoman who published her own poetry, established her own school, and wrote in defense of women's right to learning.

  5. See Teague, Bathsua Makin, Woman of Learning, 168. ↵; Lady Mildmay: Lady Grace Mildmay was an Englishwoman living in the late sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries who was highly regarded for her education and medical knowledge, and who wrote spiritual meditations and memoirs. ↵

  6. Bathsua Reginald Makin is an important figure in women's history. A child prodigy, she was thoroughly educated in classical and modern languages at a time when most women were illiterate. She was a middle-class Englishwoman who published her own poetry, established her own school, and wrote in defense of women's right to learning.

  7. 21 de jun. de 2018 · Bathsua, however, went beyond this conventional role and studied the works of contemporary physicians. Some records show that she cured one of Charles I’s chaplains “of the palpitation of the heart.” In 1622, Bathsua married Richard Makin, who was about her age, and was in the service of the king.