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Resultaten 51 / 60 van 404
 publication
Titel
Jaar
1831
Impressum
Utrecht: Joh. Altheer, 1831
Pagina/deel
14 p.
 publication
Titel
Jaar
1830
Annotatie
In dichtvorm
Impressum
Utrecht: N. van der Monde, 1830
Pagina/deel
4 p.
 publication
Titel
Jaar
1815
Annotatie
Lofdichten door J.F. van Oordt en H.J. Royaards
Impressum
[S.l.]: [s.n.], 1815
Pagina/deel
8 p.
 publication
Titel
Abstract

Gedicht opgedragen aan de studenten vrijwillige jagers van de Utrechtse Hogeschool in october 1830 (De Belgische opstand 1830-1833)

Jaar
1830
Annotatie
"Aux profit des orphelins et veuves malheureuses des guerries qui ont périe sous nos drapeaux"
Impressum
Utrecht: N. van der Monde, 1830
Pagina/deel
6 p.
 publication
Titel
Jaar
1830
Impressum
Utrecht: N. van der Monde, 1830
Pagina/deel
iv, 16 p.
 publication
Titel
Auteur
Jaar
1831
Impressum
Schiedam: G.W. van Hemsdaal, 1831
Pagina/deel
15 p.
 publication
Titel
Jaar
1831
Impressum
Utrecht: Altheer, 1831
Pagina/deel
42 p.
 publication
Titel
Jaar
1831
Impressum
Utrecht: N. v.d. Monde, 1831
Pagina/deel
12 p.
 publication
Titel
Jaar
1990
Annotatie
Verschenen ter gelegenheid van de gelijknamige tentoonstelling in het Verzetsmuseum, Amsterdam
Impressum
Amsterdam: Verzetsmuseum, 1990
Pagina/deel
45 p.
Illustraties
ill.
 publication
Abstract

Who was the first female university student in the Netherlands? Pose this question to anyone in the Netherlands and the incorrect answer Aletta Jacobs will probably come your way. But more than two centuries earlier, in 1636, Anna Maria van Schurman had become the first female university student in Utrecht, and thereby the first in the Netherlands and even in the whole of Europe. Anna Maria van Schurman attended not only private lectures at the University of Utrecht, but also public disputations and “listening” lectures in the fields of languages and medicine, but especially in theology. She wrote poetry in many languages and published a dissertation on women’s rights to academic study. Her book Opuscula Hebraea Graeca Latina et Gallica was reprinted several times and was noted internationally. Her knowledge of languages was astounding. She was proficient in Latin, Greek, Hebrew, Aramaic, Syrian, Samaritan, Arabic and Ethiopian, to name but a few. Van Schurman was well-known internationally and became a key figure within a European network of learned women which included Birgitte Thott, Christina of Sweden, Marie le Jars de Gournay, Bathsua Makin and Dorothea Moore. But in 1669 Anna Maria van Schurman, watched by many in disbelief, left the city, church and university of Utrecht to join the Labadists, a radical Protestant group. She attempted to explain the reasons for this turnabout in her Latin autobiography, the Eukleria. The first female university student: Anna Maria van Schurman (1636) provides a detailed picture of the life and times of Anna Maria van Schurman: her position in the academic world of the seventeenth century, her role within the Republic of Letters, and the content and influence of her publications in the Netherlands and Europe

Jaar
2010
Annotatie
Translated from: De eerste studente: Anna Maria van Schurman (1636). - Utrecht : Matrijs, 2004 (2007)
Impressum
Utrecht: Igitur, 2010
Pagina/deel
278 p.
Illustraties
ill.
Literatuuropgave
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