Italian women who changed world
Italian women who changed world
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Italian women who proved themselves and brought changings are as follow;
First female gynaecologist in history, Trota:
Trotta practised medicine in the early twelfth century in the coastal city of Salerno. She is the first woman to hold the position of physician in the history of medicine, and she was the first professor at the local medical school. Despite the fact that we know little about her life, Trotta is known for penning numerous significant medical works that have survived the ages and come to be read today.
The pioneering female painter Artemisia Gentileschi

In the seventeenth century, there were numerous professions that were solely open to males. Artemisia Gentiles, however, broke through this barrier and was recognised as a significant artist of the day. She is renowned for her forward-thinking and experimental painting techniques.
The first woman to get a college degree was Elena Cornaro Piscopia:

Elenia Cornaro Piscopia owes it to all women who attend the institution to support them. The first woman in the whole globe to get a PhD in philosophy and an academic university degree is this royal duchess. At the age of 38, she passed away on July 26, 1684, having been born on June 5, 1646. In 1678, the University of Padua selected Cornaro Piscopia as a professor of mathematics. Piscopia was a member of several academies and one of the most illustrious intellectuals in all of Europe.
Rita Levi-Montalcini, An Innovative Scientist
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Rita Levi-Montalcini was an Italian neurosurgeon who was born on April 22, 1909, and who passed away on December 30, 2013 at the age of 103. In 1986, she and her coworker Stanley Cohen received the Nobel Prize in Medicine. She received the Grand Cross with the rank of Knight as the Order of Merit of the Italian Republic and was named a life member of the Italian Senate in 2001. She was a Nobel laureate who was over 100 years old.
The nation’s first female minister, Tina Anselmi

Tina Anselmi, who was less than thirteen years old when World War II began, played a significant and active role in the underground resistance at the time. She was persuaded to join the underground resistance after learning that her school, and specifically her classroom, had been transformed into a place where young revolutionaries were executed publicly by hanging, and that she could join the underground resistance. Later, she wrote in a number of novels for children and young adults about her experiences with the covert resistance.
Franca Viola, a rape victim who spearheaded a determined effort to amend the legislation

After the war, Franca Viola, who had pleaded with the authorities to file a lawsuit against her attackers, became well-known as a symbol of women’s emancipation in Italy and even across the globe. Artemisa Gentilesque was compelled to wed Franca Viola as a kind of atonement.