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When Denmark introduced compulsory education in 1814, the city of
Copenhagen responsed by regulating the already existing private
school system. Roughly half of the school age population went to
some kind of school and of those the overwelming majority attended
private schools, most of which were run by women. The book tells
the story of these women, their schools and pupils on the 150
private schools from 1790-1820. Carol Gold's contention is that
these private schools and their teachers were much better than is
presently assumed in Danish historiography. The teachers were all
literate; they could read and most of them could write. The
education provided for girls ranged from the basics of reading,
writing and arithmetic plus needlework in the beginner schools, to
the "scientific" subjects of history, geography, natural sciences
and foreign languages in the more advanced academies. Furthermore,
the schools formed the basis of the Copenhagen school system which
was established at the b
Animal Architects masterfully investigates how the structure an
animal builds reveals the inner workings of its mind. Beginning
with instinct and the simple homes of solitary insects, and
progressing to conditioning, the cognitive map," and the role of
planning and insight, James and Carol Gould use the amazing
engineering feats throughout the animal world to reach fascinating
conclusions about animals' behavioural capabilities. From two of
the world's most distinguished experts in animal behaviour, Animal
Architects is a creative and accessible approach to understanding
animal minds through the structures they build.
This volume tells the stories of women who worked legally, in their
own names, in early modern Copenhagen. They were to be found on the
streets selling food or yarn, managing shops or schools, working in
the metal trades or construction industries, or owning factories or
fleets of merchant vessels. Married, widowed, and single, these
women received their own licenses and paid their own taxes, often
in businesses or trades that had nothing to do with male relatives.
They were an integral part of the production and distribution of
goods in the flourishing capital city of Copenhagen during its
Golden Age at the turn of the eighteenth to the nineteenth century.
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