Right: Photo of suffragists at the Seneca Falls Convention in Seneca Falls, NY. Photo courtesy of University of Nebraska Omaha archives.
Eighty-nine years ago today the 19th amendment was formally adopted into the U.S. Constitution, guaranteeing women their right to vote. By 1920 more than 70 years had passed since the beginnings of the women's suffrage movement. Women had famously rallied in Seneca Falls, NY in 1848. In 1850 the first ever national women's rights conference was held, and this conference was repeated annually ever after. Women wanted equal rights in employment, finances, and politics. They wanted their voices to be heard, and in 1869 led by Susan B. Anthony, women founded the National Women's Suffrage Association. By 1890 only one state, Wyoming, had changed its laws in order to allow women to vote.
In 1916 women suffragist had been fighting long and hard to no avail (only 4 states in total allowed women to vote: Wyoming, Colorado, Utah, and Idaho), so they changed their tactics. Women picketed the White House and staged acts of civil disobedience across the U.S.
Finally on August 26, 1920 Congress heard these women's cries and instituted a law that would allow them to vote. Many of the early suffragist leaders had by this time passed away, but their work was carried on without them and their dreams were finally a reality. In the 2009 presidential election more women voted than men. A woman even ran in the presidential primary.
As women we have a long line of suffragist, some like Susan B. Anthony and Elizabeth Cady Stanton whose names we know, some whose names we will never know, to thank for our right to be heard in a political election. Unfortunately, there are still places in this world where women either lack the right to vote or possess only partial suffrage. Women in the United States certainly owe a debt of gratitude to the suffragettes who came before us, and it is the purpose of this blog to remember those women with thanks.
Available online source for more information can be found here.
Wednesday, August 26, 2009
Monday, August 10, 2009
2,700 Year Old Tablets Found
(Photo by J. Jackson)
A University of Toronto led excavation in Tall Tayinate, the capital city of a Neo-Hittite kingdom in ancient Palastine, located in modern Turkey, has turned up a cache of 2,700 year old cuneiform tablets. The tablets were located in a recently discovered temple, inside the temple's cella, or a room called the holy of holies. The writings appear to be part of some kind of archive and are remarkably intact. The tablets date to the Iron Age and may provide insight into Assryian religious and political life. The team also unearthed libation vessels, ornamented ritual objects, and implements made of gold, bronze, and iron.
Timothy Harrison, professor of Near Eastern Archeology and director of the University of Toronto's Tall Tayinate Archaeological Project, was quoted by Science Daily as saying, "The tablets, and the information they contain, may possibly highlight the imperial ambitions of one of the great powers of the ancient world, and its lasting influence on the political culture of the middle east."
Tayinate was once destroyed by the Assyrian king Tiglath-pileser III, and was thereafter converted into an Assyrian provincial capital. Dr. Harrison says that Tayinate was, "equipped with its own governor and imperial administration." It was a very important city in the ancient Near East. This discovery may even hint at Biblical proportions.
Dr. Harrison informed reporters, "Scholars have long speculated that the reference to Calneh in Isaiah's oracle against Assyria alludes to Tiglath-pileser's devastation of Kunulua--i.e. Tayinate. The destruction of the Luwian monuments and conversion of the sacred precinct into an Assyrian religious complex may represent the physical manifestation of this historical event."
In any case, the artifacts were well preserved and tablets should reveal interesting data soon.
A University of Toronto led excavation in Tall Tayinate, the capital city of a Neo-Hittite kingdom in ancient Palastine, located in modern Turkey, has turned up a cache of 2,700 year old cuneiform tablets. The tablets were located in a recently discovered temple, inside the temple's cella, or a room called the holy of holies. The writings appear to be part of some kind of archive and are remarkably intact. The tablets date to the Iron Age and may provide insight into Assryian religious and political life. The team also unearthed libation vessels, ornamented ritual objects, and implements made of gold, bronze, and iron.
Timothy Harrison, professor of Near Eastern Archeology and director of the University of Toronto's Tall Tayinate Archaeological Project, was quoted by Science Daily as saying, "The tablets, and the information they contain, may possibly highlight the imperial ambitions of one of the great powers of the ancient world, and its lasting influence on the political culture of the middle east."
Tayinate was once destroyed by the Assyrian king Tiglath-pileser III, and was thereafter converted into an Assyrian provincial capital. Dr. Harrison says that Tayinate was, "equipped with its own governor and imperial administration." It was a very important city in the ancient Near East. This discovery may even hint at Biblical proportions.
Dr. Harrison informed reporters, "Scholars have long speculated that the reference to Calneh in Isaiah's oracle against Assyria alludes to Tiglath-pileser's devastation of Kunulua--i.e. Tayinate. The destruction of the Luwian monuments and conversion of the sacred precinct into an Assyrian religious complex may represent the physical manifestation of this historical event."
In any case, the artifacts were well preserved and tablets should reveal interesting data soon.
Labels:
archaeology,
Assyria,
history,
Near East,
Turkey
Subscribe to:
Posts (Atom)