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  1. 9 de may. de 2016 · Lydia Becker. Llevada por su ansia de saber y su interés en participar en el ambiente científico de la época, en 1864 se afilió a la British Association for the Advancement of Science (en adelante BAAS), una de las pocas asociaciones que admitía mujeres en el siglo XIX.Se estima que 1100 mujeres habían asistido a la reunión de Newcastle de 1838.

  2. ABSTRACT In 1868, Lydia Becker (1827–1890), the renowned Manchester suffragist, announced in a talk before the British Association for the Advancement of Science that the mind had no sex. A year later, she presented original botanical research at the BAAS, contending that a parasitic fungus forced normally single-sex female flowers of Lychnis diurna to develop stamens and become ...

  3. 8 de mar. de 2023 · Lydia Becker. Manchester-born Lydia Becker was effectively the leader of the nationwide women’s suffrage movement during the later 19th century. She used a legal loophole to enable up to 1000 women to vote in the 1868 general election and persuaded the Manx parliament to allow women to vote as early as 1881.

  4. Lydia Becker (1827-1890) is known as a leader of the Women's Suffrage Movement but little is known about her work to include women and girls in science. Before her energy was channelled into ...

  5. 31 de oct. de 2012 · Researchers from the Lydia Becker Institute of Immunology & Inflammation. Fundamental and translational immunology addressing key concepts in health & disease.

  6. 8 de may. de 2016 · Además de la lucha sufragista, Becker se dedicó con denuedo a promover y mejorar la educación de las chicas, haciendo especial hincapié en la enseñanza de las ciencias, y también practicó, como aficionada, una actividad científica de mérito. Lydia nació el 24 de febrero de 1827 en Lancaster, Inglaterra. Era la hermana mayor de una ...

  7. 19 de abr. de 2024 · One of the most vocal, intellectually formidable, and persistent advocates for Victorian women’s right to fully participate in science was the English botanist and suffragist Lydia Becker. Born in 1827, Becker was the eldest of fifteen children and, after the death of her mother when Becker was in her late twenties, was forced into the role of mother figure to that large family.