lol no answer for you
by by by birdy
Great BritainFranceRussiaBelgiumItalySerbiaRomaniaAlbaniaMontenegroGreecePortugalI just learned this in class :P
In 1914 women were still regarded as 'belonging' to their husbands and very few worked outside the home, if they did it was as teachers, nurses etc. and then only single women, middle class married women did not work. Working class married women might clean or take in laundry. During World War I many men went off to war and the women had to take over the jobs that they did. Things like working in factories, driving buses etc. Of course many of the men did not come back so the women had to continue with the work. Many women were now widowed so they had to work to support the family. Finally, many of the women enjoyed the work they did outside the home and the added responsibility, so they were not as willing to go back to the old ways. This also started the breakup of extended families as people had to move where the jobs were. This really all started with the Industrial Revolution and is still going on today.
Well, 1914 is the year when ww1 broke out, so a lot of men went to fight. This meant women needed to do all the men's jobs likeengineermechaniccarpenterchemistteacherships captainbutcherfarmershop keepertram runnersfactory workers.
Because they are people too.The SuffragettesAt the time, the Suffragettes caused a lot of anger and it has been argued that they lost support for the cause. Certainly, women had not been given the vote by 1914, even after a lot of Suffragette violence. However, some historians argue that, although they could not be seen to give in to Suffragette violence, politicians could not face a return to Suffragette violence after the war, and that is why they gave women the vote. The WarDuring the war, women served the nation and did men's work in many ways. When they were given the vote in 1918, almost every person who supported the motion in Parliament said that they deserved it because of their conduct during the war - they had proved that they could go to war' with the men. The problem with this argument is that only women who were householders over the age of 30 (6 million women) got the vote in 1918; women over 21 did not get the vote until 1928. Yet the 1918 Representation of the People Act gave the vote to all men over the age of 21 so the war did not bring women equality. Sylvia PankhurstIn June 1914, she famously took a delegation of working class women to lobby Prime Minister Asquith who did not think that working class women were intelligent enough to have the vote. This proved to Asquith that working class women were intelligent enough to vote. The SuffragistsSome historians argue that the long-term persuasion of the Suffragists won the vote. In 1916, Lloyd George, who supported women's suffrage, replaced Asquith as prime minister, and many pro-suffrage MPs who had been young men before 1914 now held influential places in the government. So the women won by patient persuasion, after all.
The Upper Hand - 1914 was released on: USA: 3 September 1914
Monuments of Upper Egypt - 1914 was released on: USA: 18 February 1914
Hearts of Women - 1914 was released on: USA: 24 January 1914
The cast of The Upper Hand - 1914 includes: Leah Baird as Mrs. Carson William Humphrey as Carson
Men and Women - 1914 was released on: USA: August 1914 USA: 12 July 1916 (re-release)
It was considered a Golden Age because the upper class was free to indulge in excess. Meanwhile the workers suffered and were kept silent.
Alan Marquis has written: 'In the shadow of the golden virgin' -- subject(s): Fiction, World War, 1914-1918, English, Upper class, Trench warfare
SECR L class was created in 1914.
NBR S class was created in 1914.
The cast of Women and Roses - 1914 includes: Phil Dunham Wallace Reid as Wallace
Gail Braybon has written: 'Attitudes to working class women in industry during the First World War' 'Women workers in the First World War' -- subject(s): Employment, History, Influence, Public opinion, Women, World War, 1914-1918 'Out of the cage' -- subject(s): Employment, History, Social conditions, Women, World War, 1914-1918, World War, 1939-1945
Women's Emergency Corps was created in 1914.