| Birthdate: | |
| Birthplace: | London, England |
| Death: | Died |
| Managed by: | Erica Howton, (C) |
| Last Updated: | |
Bathsua Reginald Makin was born around 1600, probably in London, England, and died after 1675. She was a scholar, writer, educator and early feminist.
Parents: Henry Reginald / Reynolds / Reginolles [1] [2] of London and unknown. Her younger sister Ithamaria married the mathematician John Pell.
Fran Teague, University of Georgia
I particularly like Makin because she was a bit of a smart aleck. Here is an example of what I mean from her essay on educating women:
Bathsua Makin was a proto-feminist, middle-class Englishwoman who contributed to the emerging criticism of woman’s position in domestic and public spheres in 17th-century England. Herself a highly educated woman, Makin was referred to as “England’s most learned lady,” skilled in Greek, Latin, Hebrew, German language, Spanish, French and Italian. Makin argued primarily for the equal right of women and girls to obtain an education in an environment or culture that viewed woman as the weaker vessel, subordinated to man and uneducable. She is most famously known for her polemical treatise entitled An Essay to Revive the Ancient Education of Gentlewomen, in Religion, Manners, Arts & Tongues (1673).
Makin's identity as the daughter of Henry Reginald has been confirmed by recent scholarship.[1] Up until the 1980s mistakes and oversights identified Makin wrongly as sister to John Pell and Thomas Pell. The evidence from the writings of Sir Simonds D'Ewes, a pupil of Reginald (Reynolds), was also lost to sight.[2]
| 1675 |
1675
Age 67
|
|
|
| 1608 |
1608
|
London, England
|