"For too long medieval women have been written out of history. It's high time we put them back in"
BBC History UK|September 2022
Janina Ramirez introduces three trailblazers whose stories show that medieval women were far more than the wives, sisters and aunts of men
By Janina Ramirez
"For too long medieval women have been written out of history. It's high time we put them back in"

1 The religious pioneer

The Yorkshire soil has offered up tantalising glimpses of a "princess" who straddled England's pagan and Christian ages

A few beads and pendants was all they found. It wasn't much to go on, but these diminutive treasures nestled in the soil threw up some tantalising clues about an influential woman who died in the seventh century.

That woman lived during a period of huge cultural change in England. Known as the Loftus Princess, her burial alongside a series of remarkable treasures, overlooking the cliffs of North Yorkshire, testifies that she was honoured by the people who placed her in the earth. The rest of her story what she achieved, how she lived, who she encountered - can only be surmised.

Should we stop asking questions and dismiss the Loftus Princess as yet another lost woman from our medieval past? Or can we put her in context and build up a world around her using a range of evidence and approaches at our disposal?

For all too long, the former option has prevailed. There's not enough room on these pages to list the medieval women who have been deliberately removed from the records. So let's cite just one: Ethelflaed, the Lady of the Mercians, a military leader, social reformer, patron of the arts and a diplomat whose contributions to ninth and early tenth-century English politics were substantially downplayed by her brother, King Edward the Elder.

This story is from the September 2022 edition of BBC History UK.

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This story is from the September 2022 edition of BBC History UK.

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