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More handpicked essays just for you.
Women witches in the 17th century
Women witches in the 17th century
Women witches in the 17th century
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lizabeth Bathory was gruesome character in history and continues to live on in infamy with the help of urban legends. While the stories hold some truth, the actual history behind it is much more cruel, and her purpose of these things is unknown. At the end of her life, after the cultural influences, her background and the position she was put in, it has not yet been explored as to whether of not Bathory got what she wanted. She was born sometime in 1560, and was of noble birth, although incestuous. This was a common practice at the time, as the Hungarians were intent on keeping blood lines as pure as possible. She was related to many powerful people, politicians, war victors, and her cousin was the Prince of Transylvania. This placed her in an utmost position within her region, allowing her many freedoms and leisures. Even her …show more content…
Elizabeth was then sent to one of his castles to live, and the couple soon gained a reputation as cruel and relentless. While Elizabeth was no doubt wicked by her own doing, it was said that her husband upon her arrival demonstrated his own favorite method of torture to the servants. “There are also tales of the couple engaging in diabolic rites and patronising various occultists and satanists.” (Prophet 1). But her husband being a warrior, Elizabeth was often left to herself in the castle, and was often bored and sexually repressed. She took several lovers, and being bisexual, often used her servants for sexual needs. This though, was known to always be against their will, and they were subsequently tortured if they did not comply. While Elizabeth did have one daughter before her marriage from a peasant, this child was taken away and put in the peasant home. After several year, she gave birth to four children in quick succession. She was known to be kind and gentle with her children, nor did they know anything of her mass
Bold and Beautiful Bernice Burgos is an American entrepreneur, model, reality TV star and media personality by her profession. She has done music videos for J. Cole and Rick Ross and was also featured on MTV’s Wild ‘N Out. In addition, she owns her own clothing line which she named Bold & Beautiful.
Faye Carey is a 16 year old girl that has managed to re-home more than 60 dogs. News Hub says that ¨She wants to have a career in animal control.¨ ¨She has made a Facebook page called Animal Re-Home Waikato.¨ Says News Hub. Her Facebook page has nearly 300 likes and a loyal following of new parents. (Of animals). News Hub also said that ¨With Faye being there, when an animal comes into the shelter or animal control, the animal goes right into a new loving home. ¨
Mary Wade, born on the 5th of October 1777 was the youngest convict to be sent to Australia. Before her life as a convict, she would sweep and beg on the streets of London to make her living.
Mary Bryant was in the group of the first convicts (and the only female convict) to ever escape from the Australian shores. Mary escaped from a penal colony which often is a remote place to escape from and is a place for prisoners to be separated. The fact that Bryant escaped from Australia suggests that she was a very courageous person, this was a trait most convicts seemed to loose once they were sentenced to transportation. This made her unique using the convicts.
For example, the Wife of Bath boldly states among many that she often uses her “instrument” or her body as a weapon in order to gain power in her relationships. To be blunt, she has sex with her partners in order to get what she wants. If that’s not enough evidence to claim that she is diabolical, she takes it a step further by describing a particular incident with her fifth husband that supports this claim further. The Wife of Bath sees her fifth husband reading a collection of stories about how bad women are. She snatches the book from him, and rips it up. The fifth husband becomes enraged by this and hits her, deafening her in one ear in the process. The Wife of Bath pretends to be dead to make him feel guilty. She does this, not to make him understand that what he did was wrong, but to use her helplessness as a way to achieve power and authority over him: which she ultimately does. These two excerpts of evidence support the claim that the Wife of Bath is viewed as not only controlling, but manipulative. As if this wasn't enough to label her as imperfect and inadequate, Chaucer had to give the Wife of Bath another unappealing flaw: a know-it-all
Elizabeth I was born in 1533 to Henry VIII and Anne Boleyn. Although she entertained many marriage proposals and flirted incessantly, she never married or had children.
At the age of 14, she delivered a child. This child was from another father, so it was killed. The following year she was married to Count Ferencz Nadasdy. He was a very powerful noble in Hungary. Because of his high power, he was often chosen to govern the Hungarian Army during the Ottoman wars. He was not very supportive of her. Only marrying her for her father’s money and power. Making her feel bad about herself. Some people believe that this is why she started to kill and torture the common women, making them feel bad about being a commoner, and her feeling good about being a noble’s daughter.
...men who kept them in bondage and to sleep with them?” (6). Almost every night she would have to lie on her back and make love to her husband where she “unleashed [her] fury and [their] moments of love-making resembled a battle” (23) willingly or not. She was stripped of her body and womanly factors, and in her husband's eyes was made to be his sexual slave.
Both Shahrazad and Shahzaman have cheating wives and the section that tells of Shahrazad’s wife’s infidelity is frank about exactly how adulterous she is. When Shahzaman is witnessing his sister-in-law and her slaves enter the garden suggestive language is used which shows that they clearly have very little modesty (or at least modesty in the way the Victorians would see it). The queen and her ladies are “strutting” around the garden and take off their clothes then “…a black slave jumped from the tree to the ground, rushed to [the lady], and, raising her left, went between her things and made love to her” (558). The second time this happens, when both Shahzaman and Shahrazad are watching, the Queen and her lover have a small discussion during which she is called a “slut” and she responds by laughing and then readying herself for her lover (560). Later on when the two brothers are traveling and moping about their misfortune they happen across a demon who has a woman with a “beautiful figure and a face like the full moon” held captive. The woman tricks the two brothers into making love with her by threatening to wake her demon husband if they disobey her (561). Once the deed is done the woman
Because she never married, Elizabeth had to cultivate her image of perpetual Virgin as an asset. As she did not have a male consort to legitimize her monarchy, she had to exploit her virginity in a way that would reinforce her single rule. The construction of the Virgin Queen drew once again on Ancient culture, as the Neoclassicism of the Renaissance was predominant in the arts. The Sieve Portrait of 1583 probably is the most powerful evocation of the Queen 's virginity (Fig. 2). The sieve that Elizabeth holds in her hand is a reference to an episode of Roman mythology where the Vestal virgin Tuccia had to carry water from the Tiber in a sieve, in order to prove her virginity after she was wrongly accused of being unchaste.1 In the Sieve Portrait, the Queen is represented as being larger and taller than her subjects, suggesting that her virginity makes her superior and more fit to rule, as she never succumbed to the temptations of the flesh.
Eliza Farnham was known for her talent in writing which made her national. Mrs.Farnham passed away from consumption in New York in the year of 1864 on the 15th of December at the age of 49. She grew up with foster parents from the age of four. When Eliza turned 15 she moved in with her uncle, and attended the Albany Female Academy. In 1835, Eliza Burhans moved in with a sister who was married in Tazewell county, Illinois. During the 18 century, Cornelius and Mary Wood Burhans gave birth to Eliza Burhans in November 17, 1815. Eliza Burhans was born in Hudson Valley Town of Rensselaerville, New York. Eliza Farnham was involved in numerous events during her time known as Vanguard of several social, political movements including abolitionism,
Elizabeth was born September 7, 1533 in Greenwich England. She was the daughter of King Henry VII and his second wife, Anne Boleyn. Elizabeth had a half sister from the king’s first wife, Catherine of Aragon, and also had a half brother from the king’s third wife, Jane Seymour. When Elizabeth was only two, her father had her mother executed for suspicion of adultery. When her father decided to have Elizabeth’s mother executed, he then stripped Elizabeth of her title as princess.
The Wife of Bath’s Tale begins in the castle of King Arthur. A lustful Knight has just been brought to court on charges of rape. Arthur condemns him to death, but, after hearing the queen’s and the other ladies’ prayers “that he might grant [the knight] grace” (l 895), he places the knight in the merciful hands of his wife. Both just and merciful, Arthur’s wife extends an opportunity to save his life: a quest to discern worldly women’s greatest desire. The following is an account of his quest and the meaning of the answer he finds.
Elizabeth goes about describing the events that occurred during her time in captivity and how her experiences have allowed her to relate to other victims of sexual abuse. Elizabeth recounts the original night of her abduction and how she constantly prayed for an escape (CNN). Smart then goes into the criticism she faced after she had been emancipated and how vile it is to judge a child who had been a victim of sexual assault by saying, "You can never judge a child or a victim of any crime on what they should have done, because you weren't there and you don't know and you have no right just to sit in your armchair at home and say 'Well, why didn't you escape? Why didn't you do this?' I mean, they just don't know.”
"Damned as thou art, thou hast enchanted her./ For I'll refer me to all things of sense,/ If she in chains of magic were not bound .../ So opposite to marriage that she shunned/ the wealthy curled darlings of our nation, / Would over have .../ Run from her guardage to the sooty bosom? Of such a thing ... to fear not to delight." (I, ii, 63 - 71)