The problem encountered by historians who are trying to understand the status of women in the late medieval period is that there is little documentation of their lives. Even the women in the loftiest echelons of medieval society, could not hold office or keep their own land after marriage. In even the royal realm, women were treated as assets to be bartered to achieve the highest possible value.
No
Surfs
D.younger women
The status of women in the society in the sangam age was not equal to that of men
The problem encountered by historians who are trying to understand the status of women in the late medieval period is that there is little documentation of their lives. Even the women in the loftiest echelons of medieval society, could not hold office or keep their own land after marriage. In even the royal realm, women were treated as assets to be bartered to achieve the highest possible value.
no, women didn't participate in anything in medieval times, women were looked down on and it was inappropriate.
Yes, the term "winch" was used in medieval times, but it primarily referred to a type of mechanical device used for lifting or hoisting. While the word itself may have been used in derogatory contexts to describe women, it was not a common term specifically for women. Instead, women were often referred to by various other terms, depending on their social status, occupation, or role in society. Overall, the use of "winch" as a term for women was not widespread or standard in medieval vernacular.
clothing
the exclusion of women from medieval universities affected their lives
No
Presidential Commission on the Status of Women was created in 1961.
Surfs
Muslim women never lost their high status.
Kellie Leitch is the Minister for Status of Women for Canada.
no noble were richer
D.younger women