

experimental Feminism/digItalFemme’inism presents :
“Is the ‘Gapeee’ of Feminism yet another logical half-evidence for nu|chronology and artificial century-expanding?”
(* UPDATE : 04/20 http://justpaste.it/universitygap001
(soundtracked at http://soundcloud.com/ewing2001/gendah-nu-equaliteee-r-feat http://soundcloud.com/ewing2001/diesch-nenmenschen-zou-bisou -the madWomen hommage mini hit)
compiled by Nico Haupt aka mc nicomedy2010 aka ewing2001 etc..
(diplom media Scientist, bionicDJ, musician, underground nicomedian™ and netWorkk junkey ;-)

[[the happe-animation : “futur’ish” http://goanimate.com/videos/0bEA0bcOxRSI/1 ]]
Why experimentalFeminism is logical evidence for nu|chronology - Part 2 : The ‘*gapeee “of specific documentation on Universities [universitas magistrorum et scholarium] )
History came up with some amazing bullshit on feminism.
There was allegedly someone called Aglaonice, the “very first female” astronome in the 1st century, but then nothing for 1800++ years. What happened ?
Why also such a huge gap of “documentation” between post-feminist Marie de Gournay (~before or around 1649) and Christine de Pizan (allegedly living around 1400s in Venice) ?
Most likely, *if de Gournay’s personality *was authentic and i take my blog at http://1649beginningofhumanz.tumblr.com/ serious), her *birth was a little bit pre-dated (or mistranslated) -before 1649- but possibly also combining other ficticious persons, i.e.”historian” Tacitus and Cicero, which “de Gournay translated”.
Hint: There is apparently no color painting available from deGournay while she was alive, but some black and white (lithographies?] and only one colorization, apparently not established during her lifetime and underpromoted, according to tineye.com.
~249 years of a gap and no progress or *any kind of documentation on feminism and|or gender equality ?
One logical reason could be that de Pizan was another ficticious person and instead her character based on other female personicas in ongoing history *after 1649++.
Odd, since suffragettes constantly evolved after Mary Wollstonecraft (1759-1797) ; Olympe de Gouges aka Marie Gouze (1748-1793), Marianne Adelaide Hedwig Dohm (1831-1919) etc…
Why also did most of the early feminists after 1649++ feel the need to mostly cite *ancient women?
Was there *such a black hole on female progressivism, or is it more likely that these centuries did not exist ?!
The following list includes more *authentic feminists and should show, why such a huge gap of non-feminism most likely refers to a historical falsification of artificially created centuries, rather than to the lack of such progress in itself.
It starts with personalities within one of the final gaps in such a documentation, between the so called “1450-years” until after 1649++, which stands for almost 200 years !!
Laura Cereta
Cereta allegedly lived around (1469–1499) and officially studied at the University of Prada, but no public records exist verifying this. As a matter of fact, there isn’t even a documentation of “Prada”, which nowadays is only known as famous handbag- and shoe design company, which was created in 1913 !
Also Cereta had some strange account of marriage:
Her husband died after 18 months from a fever.
Why “Cereta” was promoting also an ancient person, Cornificia, and noone else within 1400 years is another mystery.
Cornificia was also mentioned -together with 105 more or less mythological women- in the so called writings of Boccaccio: “De mulieribus claris”.
However also Boccacio was most likely ghostwritten and made up, constructed to refresh the “ancient myth”, by focussing on female characters i.e. Faustina the Younger, Poppaea Sabina -wife of Nero or Opis, wife of god Saturn ;
So no other “famous woman” are documented by both Cereta/Boccachio between the 1st century and 1374?
Conclusion: because *all of these 13 centuries were made up, including their ficticious characters ;-
Cassandra Fedele
Interestingly all early feminists lived allegedly altogether in Venice.
History states, Fedele wasn’t allowed to study, but oddly allowed to talk in “1487” at the Universitty of Padua, which has their own undocumented origin. Almost no famous alumni is documented at Padua before 1700 !
More obvious, Padua started to exist *after 1649++ and was maybe *indeed the first feministic university.

Venice also created very nice glass and is full of water.
It makes absolutely sense, to develop a specific clarity on this over there ;
There is documentation, that in 1678 Elena Lucrezia Cornaro Piscopia [above] obtained the very first doctor title in the history of Profession [also mentioned at my blog at http://1649beginningofhumanz.tumblr.com/ ; http://1649beginningofhumanz.tumblr.com/post/17423280429/1671-1683 .
Maybe it was Piscopia, who invented *earlier feminists, including Fedule ?
Why also was there no *femalePower* between 1487 and 1678 at Padua? A “gapeee” of 191 years ?!?!
Marguerite of Navarre
Most likely another ficticious person, this time to boost the alleged “medieval age”.
Of Navarre had various names, also known as Marguerite Porète or Marguerite d’Alençon.
Her “original writings” are locked up at Château de Chantilly, which is a hub for former “secretSociety” Institut de France. Chantilly “re-invented” itself at around the 1870s.
Porete’s character was embedded in process files of the so called Inquisition, accused as a witch,
and officially killed for this in “1310”, after 8 years jail.
Also her book was burned, but she ‘revised’ it.
How many releases did circulate around?
It’s fascinating, that compared with all *that kind of censorship, her poem Miroir de l’âme pécheresse (Mirror of the Sinful Soul) actually made it that popular ;
However the only available handwriting had no medieval slang,
but a clear distinction between Nominativ (Rectus) and Akkusativ (Obliquus).
This kind of distinction didn’t officially exist in the so called medieval age.
Who *really wrote “Miroir de l’âme pécheresse” ?
Is Porete actually also assembling Anne Boleyn, who was executed by her husband Henry VIII ?
But if Henry VIII was furthermore ficticious as well, it’s more likely a feministic idea from *after 1649, to get the idea of Protestant Reformation|”Calvinism” rolling ;
More odd, that until 1927!, Porete wasn’t even known among other feminists *at all.
It was someone called Clare Kirchberger, who introduced Porete for the english language,
but not much is known about Kirchberger either.
Interestingly Porete’s writings must have arrived at anarcho syndicalist Simone Weiss,
who read a version during 1942++, but it isn’t clear, if she was impressed of it.
Her notes apparently got reflected by Irene Leicht in some 1999 book, but it’s currently out of print.
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Marguerite_Porete#cite_note-61
Then suddenly 4 years later, Romana Guarnieri stated in 1946, that she found a latin version in these “inquisition process files”, but didn’t release it until 1965.
Was there yet another coOpted feminism-version for the 1960s in the making?
Why christian mysticism and politics had to be one and the same avenue, is an own mysterium for itself anyway ;
“Mirror of the Sinful Soul” was dedicated to the “(marriz|perplexed)” and (“adnienties|becomeDestroyed”).
It would be spectacular, if *todays female marriz had the guts, to speak about nu|chronology *now; then again many of these folks are more misled by the scientology version of Ophrah Winfrey, or former Howard Stern-intern SallyAnn “Snooky” Salsano, who created the Jersey Shore phenomena ;
Louise Labé
Cultivated during the end of the 18th century in Lyon, her life was dated into “1524 -1566” and described as a feminist during the medieval age, also labelled by reformists as “plebe meretrix”.
It’s possible, that Labé was fictionalized by german and|or french feminists during the mid 1800s, then forwarded to Rainer Maria Rilke, who described her thoughts in his books, also possibly influenced by his wife, Lou Andreas-Salomé, who had an affair with Friedrich Nietzsche.
Lou Andreas-Salomé was a convinced anti-confirmationalist and was influenced by Kant und Kierkegaard.
Lou von Salomé was also friend with Malwida von Meysenbug, an early hegelian and pro-emancipation activist during the 1840s. vonMeysenbug studied at the Hamburg “Hochschule für das weibliche Geschlecht”, to become an educator.
The claim, that Labé didn’t exist and someone else wrote her lyrics, was also populated during 2006 in France.
http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louise_Lab%C3%A9
Olympia Fulvia Morata
It is stated that Morata died 1555 in Heidelberg, Germany and moved from Italy, to inspire german women on feminism.
Her work was populated by Celio Secondo Curione, “re-popularized” between the late 1800s and 1927.
the *REAL FEM|grrlism started right after 1650 :
Compared with this huge absence of continuation or any progress between the 1st and 17th century, after 1650++ there is on the other hand more or less *consistency or a documentation on steady flow of scholars regarding experimental feminism, grrlism, emancipation and gender-equality :

Arcangela Tarabotti aka Galerana Baratotti
Yet another feminist from Venice, Italy.
If Tarabotti did really live, she died around 1652 and authored “Paternal Tyranny”, which wasn’t released until two years after her death.
Tarabotti apparently opposed the convent system of the Roman Catholic Church, labelled herself “poppa”[lame] and preferred to hook up with freethinkers from the Accademia degli Incogniti; among them libretti player Giovanni Francesco Busenello (“Gli amori d’Apollo e di Dafne”) or Giovan Francesco Loredano, the founder of the Accademia, who helped Tarabotti publishing her writings.
Tarabotti’s “Antisatira” was an attack against religious structures developed by “men”.
Among her other protofeminist writings had been “Disputatio nova contra mulieres”, “Che le donne siano” and the vanished “La via lastricata per andare al cielo”.
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Accademia_degli_Incogniti
Hortensia von Moos
Born in *1659, von Moos was a Swiss scholar who was known for her writings on the status of women and is regarded as a precursor by the Swiss women’s movement.
Rachel Ruysch
1664 — 1750. Dutch artist who specialized in still-life paintings of flowers.
Also worked as a court painter to Johann Wilhelm, Elector Palatine.
Élisabeth Jacquet de La Guerre
de La Guerre lived between 1665 and 1729 in Paris and was a French musician, harpsichordist and composer.
In 1649, her opera “Céphale et Procris” at the Académie Royale de Musique was the first written by a woman in France.
Dorothea Christiane Erxleben
Born in *1715, in Quedlinburg, she was the first female medical doctor in Germany.
Her son became the founder of the first and oldest academic Veterinary School in Germany, the Institute of Veterinary Medicine, in 1771.
Anna Maria Schwägel aka Schwegelin
Born in *1729, she was officially the last woman, who was executed for witchcraft in Germany, though others claimed she died in Prison.
Albertine Necker de Saussure
Born in *1766, de Saussure was a Women’s rights advocate and supporter of physical education for girls.
Marie-Anne Charlotte de Corday d’Armon
Born in *1768, she was considered to be one of the outspoken personalities of the so called French Revolution, then executed.
d’Armon was befriended with the The Girondists at around Madame Roland’s salon.
The Girondists represented the principle of democratic revolution within and of patriotic defiance to the European powers.
Marie-Sophie Germain
1776 – 1831. Marie-Sophie Germain was a French mathematician, physicist, and philosopher.
Worked on number theory in 1798.
Later she discussed Carl Friedrich Gauss’ Disquisitiones in some letters and claimed to have proved the theorem for n = p – 1, where p is a prime number of the form p = 8k + 7.
Florence Nightingale aka “The Lady with the Lamp”
1820 – 1910. Considered to be a pioneer in the concept of medical tourism.
Created in 1860 the Nightingale Training School at St. Thomas’ Hospital, now called the Florence Nightingale School of Nursing and Midwifery.
Baba Petkova
Born in *1826, Petkova founded the first girls’ schools in Bulgaria.
Christina Rossetti aka Ellen Alleyne
Born in *1830, Rossetti was an English poet who worked from 1859 to 1870 at the St. Mary Magdalene “house of charity” in Highgate, a refuge for former prostitutes.
It is suggested her collection “Goblin Market and Other Poems” may have been inspired by the “fallen women” she came to know.
Victoria Woodhull
Born in *1838, Woodhull became American leader of the woman’s suffrage movement.
Woodhull was a radical who advocated the eight-hour day, a progressive income tax, profit sharing, and social welfare programs. In 1872, she ran for president of the United States.
Eliška Krásnohorská
1847 – 1926. Czech feminist author.
Katherine Wilson Sheppard
Born in *1847, Sheppard was the most prominent member of New Zealand’s women’s suffrage movement.
Emilia Pardo Bazán
1851 – 1921, known for bringing naturalism and feminism to Spanish literature.
Adela Zamudio-Ribero aka Soledad
Founder of the Bolivian feminist movement, 1854. Also supported the legalization of divorce.
Aletta Jacobs
Born in *1854 in Netherlands, Jacobs was the first woman to graduate from a Dutch university and the first female physician in the Netherlands.
In 1915 Jacobs also established the Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom.
Amy Beach
Born in *1867, Beach was the first female composer in the United States.
Jane Addams
1860 – 1935 ; together with her bisexual partner Ellen Gates Starr (1859 - 1940), known for working on social reforms and founding the Chicago’s Hull House in 1889. Linked to the settlement movement (*1880s ; Friendly Inn Settlement House, 1874 ; Henry Street Settlement *1893 in Lower East Side NYC by nurse Lillian D. Wald (1867 – 1940)
Aleksandra Kollantay
Born in *1872 in Russia, she was elected elected Commissar of Social Welfare.
Adelheid Popp
Leader of the Austrian Socialist Women’s Movement, in the late 1880s.
Andrea Villarreal
Mexican feminist, born in *1881, who co-published La Mujer Moderna (The Modern Woman).
Zora Neale Hurston
1891 – 1960
Author during the time of the Harlem Renaissance.
Vita Sackville-West
In the early 1900s, Sackville-West was famous for her high-profile and controversial bisexual, exuberant aristocratic life.
Her husband Harold Nicolson was bisexual too and she had a passionate affair with novelist Virginia Woolf.

Anaïs Nin
Born in *1903, French-Cuban author Nin was one of the first official female authors to write erotica.
Her first journal was released when she was 11 years old.
Among her popular writings had been Delta of Venus, House of Incest, and Little Birds, but most of them had been released after her death in 1977.
Nin also covered an adult incestuous relationship with her father, describing him in some of her fictions as “Doña Juana”.
Nin also appeared in the Kenneth Anger film “Inauguration of the Pleasure Dome” (1954) as Astarte.
She was befriended with Henry Miller and Gore Vidal and apparently influenced by Djuna Barnes from Greenwich Village (NYC), who wrote about lesbian themes in her book “Nightwood”.
Agnes Smedley
Journalist, who traveled to Berlin in 1920 and helped opened Germany’s first birth control clinic.
…and there it goes …
(see more at http://justpaste.it/Zewditu Empress Zewditu vs. the Hype of Rastafari
plus nu|chronology mini blogs at http://justpaste.it/teb , http://justpaste.it/cannabis_gapeee ; http://justpaste.it/table001 [04/01/12] ;
[ps: If you enjoy these kinds of writings, presented by nu|chronology interactivity projects™ and http://1649beginningofhumanz.tumblr.com/
( 1649beginningofhumanz.tumblr.com )
(*now with readers from Peru, Argentina, Moscow, Japan, Malta, Israel, Hungary and the rest of Europe), please sponsor or obtain my book at http://tinyURL.com/occupybeyonce ; “Occupy Beyoncé…” and related blogs do additionally cover several manipulated or oppressed reports on impressive female charismatics in history, i.e. “The Ladies’ Mercury”, the first women magazine (1693) of the world in London ; 1678’s Elena Lucrezia Cornaro Piscopia (Venice, Italy) who gained the first worldwide female philosophy-title ; Juana Inés de la Cruz, a mexican nun, who promoted the first dramatized diseases after studying Philosophy, Astronomy and Medicine, plus the obscure, mystified pornocracy-phase, possibly taken place in a ficticious century, run by Theodora and her daughter Morazia, at the Roman Catholic Church etc.]
#feminism #experimentalfeminism #genderEquality #grrlism #nicofeminism #womenInhistory #ladys #slits #music #nu|chronology #newchronology #history #saints #femalepower #piscopia #occupybeyonce #femaleblogs #femalevocals #femalse