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SPEAKER_00: Hello, from Wonder Media Network, I'm Jenny Kaplan, and this is Encyclopedia Wamanica. Today's beautiful mind was considered the most brilliant and highly educated woman of 17th century Europe. A visual artist, poet, writer, linguist, and scholar, she was best known for her lifelong advocacy for women's education and for questioning the role that women should play in society. Let's talk about Anna Maria von Sherman. Anna Maria was born in Cologne in 1607 to a wealthy Dutch family originally from Antwerp. From a very early age, Anna Maria was considered a prodigy. She could easily read and translate Latin and Greek by seven years old. And by 11, she'd learn German, French, Spanish, Italian, English, and ancient Hebrew. She was eventually proficient in 14 languages. Anna Maria was also a highly accomplished young artist who distinguished herself in drawing, painting, etching, embroidery, and even sculpture, which she did mostly in wax. Her father, who was very proud of his brilliant daughter, gave her the same serious classical education she would have received had she been a boy. That was quite unusual in the 17th century. As a result, Anna Maria became an advocate for women's education from an early age. In 1634, Anna Maria was asked to write a poem to honor the opening of the University of Utrecht. The poem was a celebration of the city and its new university, but it also called out the university for excluding women. As a result, Anna Maria, then 29 years old, was invited to attend the university as its first female student. She was forced to sit behind a curtain while in class because the administration believed her presence would be a distraction to the male students. Still, she became the university's first female graduate with a degree in law. After graduation, Anna Maria increased her work on the importance of equal education for women. She didn't believe that women should just receive some education. She believed that they should receive the same education as men. Anna Maria also believed that women should be educated for the sake of receiving an education and not just for employment. These were very radical ideas for the time, even amongst other women's education advocates. Most of Anna Maria's writings were published in the 1640s and 1650s, including her masterwork, a book entitled Whether the Study of Letters is Fitting for a Christian Woman, published in 1646. In it, she argued that anybody with principles, ability, and drive should be able to receive a thorough education in all subjects. Anna Maria followed up with a series of articles that argued, among other things, that women's brains function just as effectively as men's brains and that choosing not to educate women was wholly detrimental to their abilities. In the 1660s, Anna Maria became involved with a religious sect founded by a diffract Jesuit priest named Jean de Labadee, who she met through her brother. When Labadee formed a separatist community for his group in Amsterdam in 1669, Anna Maria sold her home and joined the community as one of its leaders. This religious churn caused a major rift between Anna Maria and many of the intellectuals with whom she'd previously worked and corresponded. Still, she stuck to her new beliefs and along with about 400 others, attempted to practice total detachment from the secular world for the rest of her life. Anna Maria died in 1678 at the age of 70. Tune in tomorrow for the story of Another Beautiful Mind. Special thanks to Liz Kaplan, my favorite sister and co-creator. Talk to you tomorrow.
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SPEAKER_03: Do you hear it? The clock is ticking. It's time for the new season of 60 Minutes. The CBS News Sunday Night tradition is back for its 56th season with all new big name interviews, hard-hitting investigations, and epic adventures. No place, no one, no story is off limits, and you'll always learn something new. It's time for 60 Minutes. New episode airs Sunday, September 24th on CBS and streaming on Paramount+.
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