Monday, November 25, 2019
Christine de Pisan essays
Christine  de Pisan essays    The subject that I have  chosen  for  my  biography  is  Christine  de     Pisan. I chose her because I have never heard of her before  and  therefore;     her life and her work would shed light on my knowledge of history  and  open     up new avenues to work on.  Furthermore, I was curious as to what the  women     had done during her life that inspired and changed the society  during  that     Cultural and political setup of that time           In the early fifteenth-century in England, majority of the young  male     members of the aristocrats  received  their  education  in  the  patriarchal     family, where they were educated and  skilled  on  the  subjects  of  estate     management, jousting, hunting, heraldry  and  ethics.  As  time  progressed,     this  customary  approach  was  changed  by  a  classical   education   that     emphasized logic and discipline, as well as prepared the young  for  service     to  a  country  that  was  progressively  more  preoccupied  with   colonial           The new educational literature comprised of translations and  versions     of the philosophers and historians of prehistoric Rome, particularly  Seneca     and Cicero. The writings of  classical  authors  had  been  popularized  all     through the control of Charles V of France (1364-80), who  had  commissioned     French translations of Levy, and  the  Morals  and  Politics  of  Aristotle.     Translations of Seneca and Cicero followed in the  period  of  influence  of     Charles VI (1380-1422). Christine de Pisan (1364-c. 1430),  who  matured  at     the court of Charles V, sought after a wider view of  the  purposes  of  the     governing  class  as  skilled  civil  servants  rather  than  as   preserved     nobility. Seeing the solution to this developing function as education,  she     was the  first to employ these authors in this way (Willard, 4).           Christine de Pizan was able to develop into a flourishing writer in  a     time when women had no lawful rights and ...     
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