Description: Normal 0 false false false EN-US X-NONE X-NONE We offer a combined shipment when you purchase multiple different items, with an additional cost of only $0.50 per extra item ($1 for international shipping). We reimburse over-payments on shipping charges! Please contact us if you need more details. Julie-Victoire Daubie (1824-1871) Known for being the first woman to obtain a baccalaureate, Julie-Victoire Daubié devoted her entire life to defending gender equality, whether in terms of civil rights or school education. The eighth child of her siblings, Julie-Victoire was born in 1824 in the house of the Clerks of the Manufacture Royale de Bains-les-Bains, a tinsmith, of which her father was director. She was only twenty months old when he died. The family retired to Fontenoy-le-Château, where Victoire grew up and attended primary school. She took advantage of the private lessons given to her brothers to learn Latin. At the age of twenty, she obtained her certificate of competency, a diploma authorizing her to teach. She became a tutor at Docelles, in Fribourg, then in Paris, where she taught the high school curriculum to the children of the governor of the Bank of France and where she took courses at the Natural History Museum. In 1859, the Academy of Lyon put out a competition for a question on women's salaries. Victoire's manuscript was rewarded there. The following year, she registered for the baccalaureate exams in Lyon. She received her baccalaureate on August 17, 1861. Her manuscript will become the basis of her first book: La Femme Poor au XIX siècle, which will be rewarded at the Universal Exhibition of 1867. Columnist, speaker, she also wrote Progress in primary education: justice and freedom and The Emancipation of Women. During the siege of Paris, she participated in the joint education commission set up by Jules Ferry. In 1871, she created the Association for Women's Suffrage. The same year, she became the first graduate of literature. She then retired to Fontenoy where she prepared her doctoral thesis on the condition of women in Roman society. She died at her work table on August 25, 1874. Specifications:Printing technique - IntaglioThematic - Famous peopleType of physical product - Beautiful single stampsNature of shipment - Green letter (D+3)Type of bonding - GummedShipment destination - FranceMaximum weight - 20gLegal Notice - Creation and engraving Sarah Lazarevic from photos © Alamy/ABACA and © Ville de Paris/marguerite Durand library.Author - LAZAREVIC SarahIssue date - 03/11/2024Format - Sheet 145 x 183 mm-Stamp 40.85 x 30 mmNumber of stamps per presentation - 1Permanent validity - No
Price: 2.9 USD
Location: Herndon, Virginia
End Time: 2024-04-19T20:51:09.000Z
Shipping Cost: 2.4 USD
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Item Specifics
Restocking Fee: No
Return shipping will be paid by: Buyer
All returns accepted: Returns Accepted
Item must be returned within: 14 Days
Refund will be given as: Money Back
Year of Issue: 2024
Type: Individual
Place of Origin: France & Colonies
Quality: Mint Never Hinged/MNH
Color: Multi-Color
Region: France
Grade: Superb
Country/Region of Manufacture: France
Topic: Historical Figures
Certification: Genuine