free hosting   image hosting   hosting reseller   online album   e-shop   famous people 
Free Website Templates
Free Installer

Nicholiana Directory 08
Page 08

In a Nicholiana mode things come together quickly.

Nicholiana

Nicholiana Home

Nicholiana Sitemap

Nicholiana Dir 01

Nicholiana Dir 02

Nicholiana Dir 03

Nicholiana Dir 04

Nicholiana Dir 05

Nicholiana Dir 06

Nicholiana Dir 07

Nicholiana Dir 08

Nicholiana Dir 09

Nicholiana Dir 10

Nicholiana Directory 08
Page 08

A third feature of former times is the condition of women during those ages. Eulogizers of Old Japan not only seem to forget that working classes existed then, but also that women, constituting half the population, were essential to the existence of the nation. Though allowing more freedom than was given to women in other Oriental nations, Japan did not grant such liberty as is essential to the full development of her powers. "Woman is a man's plaything" expresses a view still held in Japan. "Woman's sole duty is the bearing and rearing of children for her husband" is the dominant idea that has determined her place in the family and in the state for hundreds of years. That she has any independent interest or value as a human being has not entered into national conception. "The way in which they are treated by the men has hitherto been such as might cause a pang to any generous European heart.... A woman's lot is summed up in what is termed 'the three obediences,' obedience, while yet unmarried, to a father; obedience, when married, to a husband; obedience, when widowed, to a son. At the present moment the greatest duchess or marchioness in the land is still her husband's drudge. She fetches and carries for him, bows down humbly in the hall when my lord sallies forth on his good pleasure."[C] "The Greater Learning for Women," by Ekken Kaibara (1630-1714), an eminent Japanese moralist, is the name of a treatise on woman's duties which sums up the ideas common in Japan upon this subject. For two hundred years or more it has been used as a text-book in the training of girls. It enjoins such abject submission of the wife to her husband, to her parents-in-law, and to her other kindred by marriage, as no self-respecting woman of Western lands could for a moment endure. Let me prove this through a few quotations.

Shortly afterward Tullus Hostilius made war against the Etruscans of Fidenae and Veii. The Albans, under their dictator Mettius Fuffetius, followed him to the war as the subjects of Rome. In the battle against the Etruscans, the Alban dictator, faithless and insolent, withdrew to the hills, but when the Etruscans were defeated he descended to the plain, and congratulated the Roman king. Tullus pretended to be deceived. On the following day he summoned the two armies to receive their praises and rewards. The Albans came without arms, and were surrounded by the Roman troops. They then heard their sentence. Their dictator was to be torn in pieces by horses driven opposite ways; their city was to be razed to the ground; and they themselves, with their wives and children, transported to Rome. Tullus assigned to them the Caelian Hill for their habitation. Some of the noble families of Alba were enrolled among the Roman patricians, but the great mass of the Alban people were not admitted to the privileges of the ruling class. They were the origin of the Roman _Plebs_, who were thus quite distinct from the Patricians and their Clients. The Patricians still formed exclusively the Populus, or Roman people, properly so called. The Plebs were a subject-class without any share in the government.


[ Sec 08 Page 01 ] [ Sec 08 Page 02 ] [ Sec 08 Page 03 ] [ Sec 08 Page 04 ] [ Sec 08 Page 05 ]
[ Sec 08 Page 06 ] [ Sec 08 Page 07 ] [ Sec 08 Page 08 ] [ Sec 08 Page 09 ] [ Sec 08 Page 10 ]


This page is Copyright © Nicholiana and all rights are reserved. Please don't copy without proper authorization. References to other Web sites are not endorsements. Nicholiana provides no guarantees about the quality or content of other sites to which Nicholiana links. Nicholiana links are made available only for information and entertainment and destinations may change without notice or notification to Nicholiana.