Women in the Victorian era
Categories: Victorian era | Women
The status of Women in the Victoria Era is often seen as an illustration of the striking discrepancy between the nation's power and richness and what many, then and now, consider its appalling social conditions.
During the Era symbolized by the reign of British monarch Queen Victoria was very difficult for women, because of the vision of the "ideal women" shared by most in the society. The legal rights of married women were similar to those of children. They could not vote or sue or even own property. Also, they were seen as unclean and disgusting. Because of this view, their bodies were seen as temples which should not be adorned with makeup nor should it be used for such pleasurable things as sex. The role of women was to have 15 children and tend to the house. They could not hold jobs unless it was that as a construction worker nor were they allowed to have their own checking accounts or savings accounts. In the end, they were to be treated as saints, but saints that had no legal rights. They were to massage their husbands feet every day and prepare meals for 20 every Monday.
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Archetypical Women
Women as Saints
During the Victorian Age, the general public had a picture in their minds of the "ideal woman". This became an archetype that was used in many plays of the period and which stayed intact into the 20th century. First of all, many felt that the maternal love of a woman was the only truly unselfish feeling on earth. Women had the mission to establish peace, love and unselfishness through this maternal love. Women were considered to be naturally disposed to worship, to reverence and to self-sacrifice. They were also seen to be predisposed to devotional practices, religious sensibility and even unintelligent obedience. They were to be regenerators of society and must therefore be Christian women, Christian wives and Christian mothers. The influence on their children was considered very important. They were considered the nurturer and more important parent. This is why women were very rarely allowed to work. The ideal home in Victorian times was to be a place of peace - the shelter from all terror, doubt and division. While men had to face danger and temptation in the public sphere, the woman, the 'Angel in the house', was protected against all of this in her private sphere. The man’s duty was to assist in the maintenance, in the advance and in the defence of the state while the woman’s duty was to insure the ordering, the comforting and the beautiful adornment of the home.
Limited rights of married women
Legally, married women had rights similar to the rights of children.
The law regarded a married couple as one person. The husband was responsible for his wife and bound by law to protect her. She was supposed to obey him and he had the right to enforce this by a writ of habeas corpus. The personal property the wife brought into the marriage was then owned by the husband, even in case of a divorce. The income of the wife belonged completely to her husband and the custody of children belonged to the father as well. He was able to refuse any contact between the mother and her children. The wife was not able to conclude a contract on her own. She needed her husband’s agreement. In addition, the married woman could not be punished for certain offences, such as theft or burglary if she acted under the command of her husband. It was impossible to charge the wife for concealing her husband and for stealing from her husband as they were one person in law.
Women had no legal say in how many children they would have nor would they get custody of children if the marriage ended in divorce.
However, claims that wives were legally "property" of their husbands are bluntly exagerrated. Murder of a wife by her husband was punishable by death just like murder of any other person, while destroying his own property was legal. Murder of somebody else's wife was also punishable by death , while destroying his property (i.e. breaking his windows) was much lesser crime. Beating somebody else's wife was a serious crime, much more serious than damaging a property. In case of disaster or other danger, women (including married women) were supposed to be saved before men, which is also inconsistent with their purpoted "property" status. Their legal status was similar as those of children.
Women as Generals of Households
‘The Household General’ is a term coined in 1861 by Isabelle Beeton in her manual “Duties of the Mistress of the House”. Here she explained that the mistress of a household is comparable to the Commander of an Army or the leader of an enterprise. In order to run a respectable household and secure the happiness, comfort and well-being of her family she must perform her duties intelligently and thoroughly. For example, she has to organize, delegate and instruct her servants which is not an easy task as many of them are not reliable. She is expected to organize parties and dinners to bring prestige to her husband, also making it possible for them to meet new people and establish economically important relationships. At the same time she must make sure she devotes enough time to her children and towards improving her own abilities and cultural knowledge. Another duty described by Beeton is that of being the “sick-nurse” who takes care of ill family members. This requires a good temper, compassion for suffering and sympathy with sufferers, neat-handedness, quiet manners, love of order and cleanliness; all qualities a woman worthy of the name should possess in the 19th century. A woman in Victorian times was also obliged to take care of her parents in case of illness, even if this stretched over months and years and often implied a great sacrifice of self-interest on her side. A very special connection existed between women and their brothers. Sisters had to treat their brothers as they would treat their future husbands. They were dependent on their male family members as the brother’s affection might secure their future in case their husband treated them badly or they did not get married at all.
Women's Bodies as Pure
The body of the woman was seen as pure and clean except when she was experiencing menstruation. A woman was not encouraged to wear any kind of cosmetics or any other adornments, or wear clothing that showed her skin, or even stockings or any other undergarment.
Some believe that this was because a woman's body was considered to be the property of her husband. Because of this, women were not to advertise their bodies to other men. However, men also were discouraged to wear any kind of cosmetics or wear clothing that showed their skin or undergarments, so this was a part of the Victorian morals which affected both males and females. There were other similar restrictions like discourage of using the word "leg" in presence of opposite gender, or obligatory usage of bathing machines. These restrictions also affected both genders equally. Were the reason for these restrictions the "property" status of married women, these restrictions would not affect men, divorced women, and widows who live on their own. Such was not the case.
Women as Fallen
Prostitution in the Victorian era was usually seen as a woman "losing her way" in terms of her soul becoming unclean by violating one of the rules that has been enunciated so far. Preachers often argued that prostitution could happen to any woman who violated the wishes of her husband. The logic here was that men who found out that their wife had been unclean in some way would kick their wives out of the house. In fact, being unclean was considered a generally acceptable reason for a man to divorce his wife. Then the wife would end up on the streets selling herself. This view continued into the 20th century.
However, much like how masters would sleep with their slaves, who they considered unequal, it was considered acceptable for a man to sleep with a prostitute, especially in the western United States. It was a vicious cycle. Women could not have sex with other men or else they would be considered unclean. However, men didn't have this restriction. In fact, it was often considered natural that a man might need the body of another woman. Because women had no rights, this behavior could not be punished through divorce. So women had to just accept this behavior.
Women as Educational Inequals
The attitude towards women and education was that education of women needn’t be of the same extended, classical and commercial character as that of men. Women were supposed to know the things necessary to bring up their children and to keep house. That’s why subjects as history, geography and general literature were of extreme importance, whereas Latin and Greek were of little importance. Woman who wanted to study something like law, physics, engineering, science or art were satirized and dismissed. People thought that it was unnecessary that women went to university. It was even said that studying was against their nature and that it could make them ill. They should stay more or less an “Ornament of Society” and be subordinate to their husbands. Obedience was the only requirement.
Attempts at reform
Reforming Divorce Laws
Great changes in the situation of women took place in the 19th century, especially concerning marriage laws and the legal status of women. The situation that fathers always received custody of their children, leaving the mother completely without any rights, slowly started to change. The Custody of Infants Act in 1839 gave mothers of unblemished character access to their children in the event of separation or divorce, and the Matrimonial Causes Act in 1857 gave women limited access to divorce. But while the husband only had to prove his wife’s adultery, a woman had to prove her husband had not only committed adultery but also incest, bigamy, cruelty or desertion. In 1873 the Custody of Infants Act extended access to children to all women in the event of separation or divorce. In 1878, after an amendment to the Matrimonial Causes Act, women could secure a separation on the grounds of cruelty and claim custody of their children. Magistrates even authorized protection orders to wives whose husbands have been convicted of aggravated assault. An important change was caused by an amendment to the Married Women’s Property Act in 1884 that made a women no longer a ‘chattel’ but an independent and separate person. Through the Guardianship of Infants Act in 1886 women could be made the sole guardian of their children if their husband died.
Reform of Prostitution Laws
The situation of prostitutes -- and as was later demonstrated women in general -- was actually worsened through the ‘First Contagious Diseases Prevention Act’ in 1864. In towns with a large military population women suspected of being a prostitute had to subject themselves to an involuntary periodic genital examination. If they refused they were imprisoned immediately; if they were diagnosed with an illness they were confined to hospitals until they were cured. This law applied to women only since military doctors believed that these shameful examinations would destroy a man’s self-respect, another indication of the double standard of Victorian society. Because the decision about who was a prostitute was left to the judgement of police officers, far more women than those who were really prostitutes were examined. After two extensions of the law in 1866 and 1869 the unjust acts were finally repealed in 1886. A crusader in this matter was Josephine Butler who helped to form a society who worked to repeal these acts.
Reform of Jobs Available to Women
Three medical professions were opened to women in the 19th century: nursing, midwifery, and doctoring. But it was only in nursing, the one most subject to the supervision and authority of male doctors, that women were widely accepted. Victorians thought the doctor's profession characteristically belonged to the male sex and a woman should not intrude upon this area but stay with the conventions the will of God has assigned to her. In conclusion, Englishmen would not have woman surgeons or physicians; they confined them to their role as nurses. Florence Nightingale (1820-1910) was an important figure in renewing the traditional image of the nurse as the self-sacrificing, ministering angel -- the 'Lady with the lamp', spreading comfort as she passed among the wounded. She succeeded in modernizing the nursing profession, promoting training for women and teaching them courage, confidence and self-assertion.
Sources
- Prof. Dr. Vera Nünning’s Seminar “Angels and Wh---s: Women in the 19th century” at the English Department of the Ruprecht-Karls University of Heidelberg, Germany, winter semester 2004/2005.
Notes and further reading
- Bodichon, Barbara Leigh Smith. Married Women and the Law (1854) in Murray, J. Strong-minded women and other lost voices from nineteenth-century England. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1984, 118-29.
- Beeton, I. The Household General (1861) in: Murray, J. Strong-minded women and other lost voices from nineteenth-century England. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1984, 83-88.
- Gred, William Rathborne. Why are women redundant? (1862) in Murray, J. Strong-minded women and other lost voices from nineteenth-century England. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1984, 50f.
- Michie, Helena. Under Victorian Skins in Tucker, Herbert F. (ed). A Companion to Victorian Literature, 407-24.
- Ryan, Michael Dr. Prostitution in London (1839) in Fisher, T. Prostitution and the Victorians, 2-5.
- Adams, James Eli. Victorian Sexualities in Tucker, Herbert F. (ed). A Companion to Victorian Literature, 125-38.
- Stone, Lawrence. The Road to Divorce. Oxford: Oxford University Press 1992, 153-65.
- The Contagious Diseases Acts in Murray, J. Strong-Minded Women, 424-37 and Fisher, Trevor. Prostitition and The Victorians. 80-94.
- Woodham Smith, Cecil. Florence Nightingale, 1820-1910 (London: Constable, 1950), 77f.
- Nightingale Florence, Advice to Young Women 1868 in Murray, J. Strong-minded women, 303f.
- Nünning, Vera. Der Englische Roman des 19. Jahrhunderts. Uni-Wissen Anglistik/Amerikanistik. Stuttgart: Klett, 2000
- Sewell, Sarah. Against higher education for women (1868) in Murray, J. Strong-minded women and other lost voices from nineteenth-century England. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1984, 213f.
- Lewis, Sarah. Woman's Mission (1839) in Murray, J. Strong-minded women and other lost voices from nineteenth-century England. Harmondsworth: Penguin, 1984, 23-25.