Historical Heroines
Page 19
The Unknown Woman
I am your ancestor. I am everyone’s ancestor, the one history never considered significant enough to record or important enough to educate so that I might leave behind diaries of my own.
I am a street girl from Brazil; a homeless woman from India; an indigenous tribal leader from the ‘new world’; a prostitute from Thailand.
I am the peasant thrown in an unmarked grave; the midwife and wise woman persecuted for being a witch, whose healing skills were lost to the patriarchy of medicine; an artist, sculptor and musician whose talents were neither given training nor recognition. I am just the mother, sister, daughter whose small acts of heroism and bravery will never be known – the housewife who shielded the persecuted in war or fed the starving during crisis.
Maybe I was a rebel, a heroine or a villain but only the lucky or truly unusual have been given the rare honour of memory. I shouldn’t need to be a hero to have a name and identity.
I am many and I am none for I have no name.
There is his story and there is her story and without both of them we will never know the true story.
Photo Sources
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13. Christina of Sweden
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48. Madame du Barry
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50. Madam Stephanie Queen St Clair
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51. Madeleine de Verchère
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52. Marie Antoinette
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53. Marie Marvingt
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54. Mariya Oktyabrskaya
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55. Mary Anning
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57. Mary Frith aka Moll Cutpurse
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58. Mary Seacole
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59. Mary Shelley and the ghosts of Fanny Imlay and Harriet Shelley
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60. Mary Wilcocks, aka Princess Caraboo
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61. Mary Wollstonecraft
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62. Mata Hari, or Margaretha Zelle
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>
63. Maw Broon
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65. Messalina
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70. Neerja Bhanot
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71. Nur Jahan or Mehr-un-Nisa
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72. Queen Nzinga
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73. Pauline Bonaparte
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78. Princess Olga
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80. Sacajawea
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81. Sappho
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89. The Trung Sisters
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90. Veronica Franco
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