Role of Women in the Scientific Revolution

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Maria Sibylla Merian was an early biologist. She was the daughter of Matthäus Merian, a Swiss artist and publisher. Matthäus died when Maria was three, and her mother remarried Jacob Marrel, a painter, who taught and encouraged Maria in the arts. As a child, she loved to go with her stepfather to collect wildflowers and insects, but unlike her stepfather, Maria also liked to study the specimens. She published her first book of drawings of different species and different stages in their life cycle at age thirteen, and published five more in her lifetime. (Fisher) In 1691, Maria moved to Amsterdam, where she discovered that her works were famous there for their information on plants. She found that many wealthy families had exotic species that she had never seen before. Many of these families were more than willing to let her study their plants. This let Maria to become more and more curious about South American plants. (Epigenesys) When she was fifty-two, she went on a two-year ecological study in South America. Unfortunately, she contacted yellow fever and had to return early. Because Maria published her findings in picture form, she is remembered in history as an artist, not a scientist. (Fisher)
Margaret Cavendish was born in Colchester in 1623. Since she was a middle class woman, she did not receive an education in mathematics, English, history, philosophy, and sciences, but she read books on these subjects in the Oxford library. To avoid marriage, Margaret became a maid of honor for Queen Henrietta Maria, who was exiled to France one year later. (Cunning) Margaret stayed with the queen during her exile, and in France, met William Cavendish, an artist and scientist, who she married in 1645 (University of Notting...

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