Yahoo Search Busca da Web

Resultado da Busca

  1. Marguerite de Witt-Schlumberger (20 January 1853 – 23 October 1924) was a French campaigner for pronatalism, alcoholic abstinence, and feminism. She was the president of the French Union for Women's Suffrage (Union française pour le suffrage des femmes / UFSF) movement.

  2. Délégation des femmes de l' Alliance internationale pour le suffrage des femmes, en 1919. Marguerite de Witt, née le 20 janvier 1853 à Paris et morte le 23 octobre 1924 à Saint-Ouen-le-Pin, Calvados ), est une féministe française, présidente de l' Union française pour le suffrage des femmes.

  3. Marguerite Schlumberger, a woman committed to the French cause For Jean Schlumberger’s son Paul, the problem was not the same. He was married to Marguerite de Witt, the granddaughter of Guizot, government minister under the July Monarchy.

  4. 1 de jan. de 2014 · Abstract. As early as August 1914, Marguerite de Witt-Schlumberger, previously engaged in charitable activities and in the feminist movement came to the help of war victims. Married to an...

  5. 4 de fev. de 2022 · Marguerite de Witt Schlumberger, the 66-year-old French suffragist who presided over the meeting, had sent all five of her sons to the front. Britain’s Millicent Garrett Fawcett had watched her nation’s suffrage movement splinter over the war question.

  6. 22 de dez. de 2020 · Par Collectif Némésis. Publié le 22 décembre 2020. Partage. Marguerite de Witt-Schlumberger, aujourd’hui bien oubliée de nos contemporains, était une militante normande qui se battit toute sa vie pour les femmes. Conservatrice et protestante, elle a combattu l’alcoolisme, la prostitution réglementée et la traite des blanches.

  7. Marguerite de Witt-Schlumberger was a French campaigner for pronatalism, alcoholic abstinence, and feminism. She was the president of the French Union for Women's Suffrage movement. She married into the Schlumberger family and became a powerfully influential matriarch and the mother of several sons who achieved notability in their own right.