The beginning of the Tidskrift för hemmet, the first women's magazine in the Nordic countries.
The post of college teacher and lower official at public institutions are open to women.[1]
The first institute for the intellectually disabled is founded by
Sophia Wilkens.
The first seminar for adult women, Lärokurs för fruntimmer is opened in the capital, resulting in the foundation of the
Royal Seminary two years later.
Women are explicitly permitted to engage freely and without restrictions in any type of
retail business in both the cities as well as the countryside and to manage village
general stores without inheriting them (married women, however, would as minors still be obliged to provide a permit from their spouse as well).[2]
The beginning of the Tidskrift för hemmet, the first women's magazine in the Nordic countries.
The post of college teacher and lower official at public institutions are open to women.[1]
The first institute for the intellectually disabled is founded by
Sophia Wilkens.
The first seminar for adult women, Lärokurs för fruntimmer is opened in the capital, resulting in the foundation of the
Royal Seminary two years later.
Women are explicitly permitted to engage freely and without restrictions in any type of
retail business in both the cities as well as the countryside and to manage village
general stores without inheriting them (married women, however, would as minors still be obliged to provide a permit from their spouse as well).[2]