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  1. Thus, Bathsua Reginald Makin was born in 1600, daughter of. Henry Reginald, sister of Ithamaria Reginald Pell, and sister-in-law John Pell. She probably lived with her father in Stepney until 1621 when she married Richard Makin in the parish of St. Andrew Under shaft on 6 March.

  2. Bathsua Pell Makin, the sister of John Pell. This mistaken identification of Bathsua Reginald Makin as Bathsua Pell Makin has influenced biblio-graphical entries and references to her work. She has not been, in conse-quence, recognized as the author of Musa Virginea (1616) and thus one of the first middle-class women to publish her poetry in ...

  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. ast.wikipedia.org › wiki › Bathsua_MakinBathsua Makin - Wikipedia

    Bathsua Reginald Makin ( 1600 – 1676 , Londres) foi una proto-feminista, de la clase media Inglesa, que contribuyó a les meyores de la crítica de la posición de la muyer na esfera doméstica y l'esfera pública nel sieglu XVII n'Inglaterra. Siendo muyer, Makin conozse como «la señοra más culta d'Inglaterra», esperta en griegu, llatín ...

  5. Bathsua Makin. Bathsua Makin, a scholar and teacher, penned the first treatise by an Englishwoman on women’s right to an education. Her father, Henry Reginald, operated a school in London, where Bathsua spent her early years, as both a student and teacher. Classmates remarked admiringly on her erudition and linguistic facility.

  6. 4 de abr. de 2023 · John Pell declared Bathsua Makin “a woman of great acquaintance,” and even now, when more of her life and the importance of her work has been recovered, what we know of her still comes predominantly from what acquaintances said of her, and through the results of her work that mattered most to her: the students that benefited from her teaching (Teague and Ezell 2016, 32).

  7. Bathsua Reginald Makin (geboren 1600, gestorben um 1675) war eine englische Gelehrte und frühe Frauenrechtlerin. Sie wurde von Zeitgenossen als die gebildeteste Frau Englands bezeichnet. Makin setzte sich dafür ein, dass Mädchen und Frauen eine umfassende Bildung erhalten sollten, die zu dieser Zeit mit wenigen Ausnahmen Männern vorbehalten war.