1938
Women began to cease being considered chattel in the late 19th and early 20th centuries, particularly with the advancement of women's rights movements. Legal changes, such as the Married Women's Property Acts in various countries, began to grant women greater autonomy and property rights. However, the timeline varies significantly by region and culture, with some areas progressing further into the 20th century. The full recognition of women as individuals with rights continues to evolve today.
The only people to get education were the people with the most money(a.k.a the rich got educated)
common people really didn't have a part in the renaissance because it was driven by the wealthy.
In all cultures and times there have been women who wanted to see their families prosper and their children grow healthy. And there have been other women whose goals have been different, in whatever way and for whatever reason. In medieval times, most women were serfs, and serfs had very few opportunities. They also left few records, but we can guess that without opportunities, these women were probably mostly without ambitions beyond the safety and health of their families. And they probably felt very little power to influence things to see their very humble hopes fulfilled. We cannot speak of the people of the Middle Ages without speaking of religion. There were a number of women, just as there were a number of men, whose dominant goal was for the salvation of their own souls, or for serving God, possibly by nursing the sick or feeding the hungry, or hosting pilgrims. Many women had these simple goals, and lived by them. The middle ages had its share of upwardly mobile people. Men and women of this type could have as goals anything that might be within their reach, and perhaps a few things that were not. Middle class women doubtless wanted to become members of the nobility, which some managed to do. Members of the nobility wanted to become more rich or more powerful. And while some women might have seen themselves as the power behind the throne, or some title, advancing their husbands and guiding them, there were a few who took control in their own right. And a few of these even succeeded.
they wore extravagent expensive clothes with jewels and stuff on it for women
This form of slavery is called chattel slavery. In chattel slavery, individuals are treated as property that can be bought, sold, or inherited. Children born to slave women also become slaves, inheriting the same status from their mothers.
Asian women are not chattel, although they appear to be to some people. If you want to help out an Asian woman or even have her as a maid then that's one thing, but to buy her. Forget it!
The laws of Canada at that time allowed "people" living in Canada to vote, but the legal definition of "people" excluded children (under age 21), mental patients, jailed prisoners, and women.
The term chattel is derived from the root word cattle.In some jurisdictions chattel refers to items of property that are movable as distinguished from real property. In others, it refers to tangible and intangible personal property. In that sense it can refer to a right or an interest in real estate less than a fee interest such as a leasehold. A chattel mortgage is an obsolete form of loan secured by personal property.The most interesting and disturbing aspect of chattel law is the notion of women as chattel that has woven itself into legal codes throughout history. In various times, places and cultures such as Merry Old England, the Hebrew Bible, The Code of Hammurabi and the Middle East, a bride price was/is an amount of money or property paid by the groom to the parents of his bride, she thus becoming his possession like a horse, a wagon or household utensils. Its origins were before recorded history and it established the wife as property, or, chattel. That practice established the world-wide dominion over women by men. Most European noblewomen were joined to their husbands in chattel marriages. In the patriarchal society of Old New York, women were treated as chattel and only valued as objects. For many men a wife still remains his chattel, in theory.Historically, under common law, damages could be awarded to a husband on the loss of his wife due to the actions of another because his wife was considered chattel. In certain Middle Eastern societies, women (and women in some Orthodox Jewish cultures) are still considered chattel having no legal existence outside their husbands, fathers, sons and brothers. A husband owns his wife and any children of the marriage. In some areas, that chattel status is modified to only include sexual and reproductive rights that are owned by husbands.
They don't usually hate them? in fact they usually become friends with them
Slaves, foreigners, women
REAL Women of Canada was created in 1983.
They were kept at home in purdah. They had no political or other rights, being in custody of their parents or husbands. Some were slaves and were the chattel of their owners).
How many women go missing in Canada
Kellie Leitch is the Minister for Status of Women for Canada.
who is the first women prime minister of canada
They didn't do anything, but men read the bible and interpreted it as meaning that women were suppose to be under the rule of men. In asking this question you are blaming women for a condition they found themselves in through the centuries. This is like blaming other people who have been enslaved or discriminated against for their condition.