Women's Suffrage Movement In Europe

554 Words2 Pages

The women's suffrage movement in Europe across the nineteenth and twentieth centuries was an absolutely vital role in the shaping of the Europe of today’s world. Finland was the first European nation to grant universal suffrage on July 20th, 1906, which fell in line with the typically more liberal governments in Scandinavia. Since then, all other European nations have followed suit with this crucial progressive reform. Liechtenstein, a German- speaking microstate bordering Switzerland and Austria, was the last to enact this policy on July 1st, 1984. While it may have taken 78 years to encase the entire continent, to vote is a right held by all female citizens in the European Union. The suffrage movement was led by feminists and activists such as Millicent Fawcet, a suffragist from the United Kingdom and the eventual President of the National …show more content…

Liechtenstein was the last to enact this policy on July 1st, 1984. While it may have taken 78 years to encase the entire continent, to vote is now a right by all female citizens in the European Union. The fight against a woman’s vote was fueled with sexism and misogyny. Many believed that women had the sole responsibilities of being a wife and a mother. It was widely accepted that women were the inferior of the two sexes. These prejudices are what kept the suffrage movement in a defensive, precarious situation that often led to dangerous situations on both sides of the argument. The Women’s Suffrage Movement has been a hot topic for many years. This is mostly due to the fact that it played such a large role in History. While a long and hard battle, it is one that has succeeded, at least in Europe. Now the feminist activism community must focus its collective attention to others areas of injustice around the world such as voting rights in other areas or the wage inequality that still affects the majority of nations

More about Women's Suffrage Movement In Europe

Open Document