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Young girls were taught, growing up that they had to obey their parents, especially the father. So they knew instinctively to obey men when they were older. Overall girls were taught that they were inferior to men.
Not much. The story is not an English story, and is older than the Elizabethan era. Thirteen-year old girls were not forcibly married in Elizabethan England, nor were they kept cloistered in their parents' house, nor were they Catholics, as everybody in this play is. In other words, the play is useless as a social document about Elizabethan England, but then it is not a social document but a script for an entertainment. A better play to consider life in Elizabethan England is The Merry Wives of Windsor.
Elizabethan girls and women were beaten into submission in order to ensure they were kept in line.
no no
men were but girls were not
no england has more boys than girls
New England Girls' School was created in 1895.
They did have many diseases, the bubonic plague killed many. And the lower classes didn't have much to eat all the time- mostly they ate soups and vegetables. The upper classes could afford meat and ate well. Schools were founded in the Elizabethan Era, but boys were the only ones who could go to school, and girls had to be tutored at home. Their lives were harsher than ours, for there were wars going on that included England, like Spain and Ireland- I believe.
there are approximatley 10million girls in this world
No, The Spice Girls are from England.
The spice girls are from Britain.
Knapely England