woman suffrage - translation to italian
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woman suffrage - translation to italian

LEGAL RIGHT OF WOMEN TO VOTE
Womens suffrage; Female suffrage; Woman's suffrage; Woman's Sufferage; Women's Suffrage; Woman suffrage; Woman Suffrage; Women’s suffrage; Suffrage parade; Women voting rights; Suffrage movement; Scottish Women's Suffragette Federation; Votes for Women; Women's suffrage movement; Women's right to vote; Right of vote for women; Cronology female suffrage europe; Votes for women; Vote for women; Women suffrage; Women's Rights and Sufferage; Female franchise; Women's sufferage; Female disenfranchisement; Female vote; Womens' suffrage; Female Suffrage; Women's suffrage in Norway; Women's suffrage in Sweden; Women's suffrage in France; Women's suffrage in Finland; Women's voting rights; Women's Suffrage movement; Women's suffrage in Albania; Women suffragist; Female suffragist; Womanhood suffrage; Women's suffrage in Paraguay; Women's suffrage in Luxembourg; Women's suffrage in China; Women's suffrage in Indonesia; Women's suffrage in Saudi Arabia; One woman, one vote; Women's suffragist; Women's suffrage in Bulgaria; Women's suffrage in Italy; Franchise for women; Women's suffrage in Estonia; Women's suffrage in Greece; Women's suffrage in Belgium; Women's suffrage in Bangladesh; Women's suffrage in Thailand; Women's suffrage in the Czech Republic
  • Women exercising the right to vote during the [[Second Spanish Republic]], November 5, 1933
  • Sergeant]] confiscates women's suffrage activist [[Gladys Morrell]]'s table in the 1930s
  • 1963 Iranian legislative election
  • The first Norwegian woman voter casts her ballot in the 1910 municipal election.
  • [[Anna II, Abbess of Quedlinburg]]. In the pre-modern era in some parts of Europe, [[abbess]]es were permitted to participate and vote in various European national assemblies by virtue of their rank within the Roman Catholic and Protestant churches.
  • Women's demonstration in Buenos Aires in front of the National Congress by law for universal suffrage, 1947
  • [[Jane Brigode]], Belgian suffragist, around 1910
  • Swedish suffragist [[Signe Bergman]], around 1910
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  • government cabinet]].
  • Women's suffrage demonstration in Gothenburg, June 1918
  • [[Edith Cowan]] (1861–1932) was elected to the [[Western Australian Legislative Assembly]] in 1921 and was the first woman elected to any Australian Parliament (though women in Australia had already had the vote for two decades).
  • Freedom or death]]'', was delivered in Connecticut in 1913.
  • [[Eva Perón]] voting at the hospital in 1951. It was the first time women had been permitted to vote in national elections in Argentina. To this end Perón received the Civic Book No. 00.000.001. It was the first and only time she would vote; Perón died July 26, 1952, after developing cervical cancer.
  • Eighteen female MPs joined the Turkish Parliament in 1935
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  • French pro-suffrage poster, 1934
  • The Swedish writer [[Maria Gustava Gyllenstierna]] (1672–1737); as a taxpaying property owner, and a woman of legal majority due to her widowed status, she belonged to the women granted suffrage in accordance with the constitution of the [[age of liberty]] (1718–1772).
  • Line luplau seen in the foreground on her daughter [[Marie Luplau]]'s large group portrait painting ''From the Early Days of the Fight for Women's Suffrage'' (1897).
  • [[Marie Stritt]] (1855–1928), German suffragist, co-founder of the [[International Alliance of Women]]
  • Program for [[Woman Suffrage Procession]], Washington, D.C., March 3, 1913. The parade was organized by suffragists [[Alice Paul]] and [[Lucy Burns]].
  • Philippine President [[Manuel L. Quezon]] signing the Women's Suffrage Bill following the 1937 plebiscite
  • First women electors of Brazil, Rio Grande do Norte, 1928.
  • [[Savka Dabčević-Kučar]], [[Croatian Spring]] participant; Europe's first female prime minister
  • "Kaiser Wilson" banner held by a woman who picketed the White House
  • A British cartoon speculating on why imprisoned [[suffragette]]s refused to eat in prison
  • Toledo Woman Suffrage Association, Toledo, Ohio, 1912
  • [[Wilhelmina Drucker]], a Dutch pioneer for women's rights, is portrayed by [[Truus Claes]] in 1917 on the occasion of her seventieth birthday.
  • Women's Rights meeting in Tokyo, to push for women's suffrage
  • A 1917 demonstration in Petrograd. The plaque says (in Russian): "Without the participation of women, election is not universal!"
  • Finland's parliamentary elections in 1907]]
  • Australian women's rights were lampooned in this 1887 ''Melbourne Punch'' cartoon: A hypothetical female member foists her baby's care on the House Speaker. [[South Australian]] women were to achieve the vote in 1895.<ref name=SA1895/>
  • access-date=March 2, 2017}}</ref>
  • first presidential election (October 2004)]] in Afghan history

woman suffrage         
n. diritto di voto alle donne
electoral franchise         
  • parliament]] and the caption: 'This is the house that man built' with a poem. From the [[People's History Museum]], [[Manchester]].
  • Demonstration for universal right to vote, Prague, [[Austria-Hungary]], 1905
  • The [[Peterloo Massacre]] of 1819
  • German election poster from 1919: ''Equal rights – equal duties!''
  • Chartists']] National Convention at the British Coffee House in February 1839
  • access-date=6 March 2020}}</ref>
  • WSPU]] poster by [[Hilda Dallas]], 1909.
RIGHT TO VOTE
Census suffrage; Right to vote; Voting right; Suffragist; Voting rights; Political franchise; The franchise; Enfranchisement; Afranchisement; Suffragists; Equal voting; Suffrage today; Enfranchise; Sufferage; Suffragism; Electoral franchise; Limited suffrage; The right to vote; Voter eligibility; Enfranchises; Enfranchised; Enfranchising; Enfranchisements; Suffrages; Voting requirements; Suffrage extension; Censitary suffrage; Ability to vote; Equal suffrage; Full suffrage; Business vote; Men's suffrage; Voting restrictions; History of suffrage; Active suffrage; Voter's rights; Political enfranchisement; The Franchise; Right to free elections; Voter enfranchisement; Voter suffrage; Vote suffrage; Vote enfranchisement
diritto di voto
woman of the town         
1943 FILM BY GEORGE ARCHAINBAUD
Woman of the Town
prostituta

Definition

suffragist
(suffragists)
A suffragist is a person who is in favour of women having the right to vote, especially in societies where women are not allowed to vote. (mainly AM)
N-COUNT

Wikipedia

Women's suffrage

Women's suffrage is the right of women to vote in elections. In the beginning of the 18th century, some people sought to change voting laws to allow women to vote. Liberal political parties would go on to grant women the right to vote, increasing the number of those parties' potential constituencies. National and international organizations formed to coordinate efforts towards women voting, especially the International Woman Suffrage Alliance (founded in 1904 in Berlin, Germany).

Many instances occurred in recent centuries where women were selectively given, then stripped of, the right to vote. In Sweden, conditional women's suffrage was in effect during the Age of Liberty (1718–1772).

The first province to continuously allow women to vote was Pitcairn Islands in 1838, and the first sovereign nation was Norway in 1913, as the Kingdom of Hawai'i, which originally had universal suffrage in 1840, rescinded this in 1852 and was subsequently annexed by the United States in 1898. In the years after 1869, a number of provinces held by the British and Russian empires conferred women's suffrage, and some of these became sovereign nations at a later point, like New Zealand, Australia, and Finland. Several states and territories of the United States, such as Wyoming (1869) and Utah (1870), also granted women the right to vote. Women who owned property gained the right to vote in the Isle of Man in 1881, and in 1893, women in the then self-governing British colony of New Zealand were granted the right to vote. In Australia, the colony of South Australia conferred voter rights on all women from 1894, and the right to stand for Parliament from 1895, while the Australian Federal Parliament conferred the right to vote and stand for election in 1902 (although it allowed for the exclusion of "aboriginal natives"). Prior to independence, in the Russian Grand Duchy of Finland, women gained racially-equal suffrage, with both the right to vote and to stand as candidates in 1906. Most major Western powers extended voting rights to women in the interwar period, including Canada (1917), the United Kingdom and Germany (1918), Austria, the Netherlands (1919) and the United States (1920). Notable exceptions in Europe were France, where women could not vote until 1944, Greece (equal voting rights for women did not exist there until 1952, although, since 1930, literate women were able to vote in local elections), and Switzerland (where, since 1971, women could vote at the federal level, and between 1959 and 1990, women got the right to vote at the local canton level). The last European jurisdictions to give women the right to vote were Liechtenstein in 1984 and the Swiss canton of Appenzell Innerrhoden at local level in 1990.

Leslie Hume argues that the First World War changed the popular mood:

The women's contribution to the war effort challenged the notion of women's physical and mental inferiority and made it more difficult to maintain that women were, both by constitution and temperament, unfit to vote. If women could work in munitions factories, it seemed both ungrateful and illogical to deny them a place in the voting booth. But the vote was much more than simply a reward for war work; the point was that women's participation in the war helped to dispel the fears that surrounded women's entry into the public arena.

Pre-WWI opponents of women's suffrage such as the Women's National Anti-Suffrage League cited women's relative inexperience in military affairs. They claimed that since women were the majority of the population, women should vote in local elections, but due to a lack of experience in military affairs, they asserted that it would be dangerous to allow them to vote in national elections.

Extended political campaigns by women and their supporters were necessary to gain legislation or constitutional amendments for women's suffrage. In many countries, limited suffrage for women was granted before universal suffrage for men; for instance, literate women or property owners were granted suffrage before all men received it. The United Nations encouraged women's suffrage in the years following World War II, and the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (1979) identifies it as a basic right with 189 countries currently being parties to this convention.

Examples of use of woman suffrage
1. It has been "attacked" before and was once slightly damaged (in 1'14), when a bomb was placed under the Coronation Chair during the woman suffrage agitation.