The cover image was created by the transcriber and is placed in the public domain.
The investigation, whose conclusions are partly described in thefollowing treatise, was undertaken with a view to discovering theactual circumstances of women’s lives in the Seventeenth Century.
It is perhaps impossible to divest historical enquiry from allpersonal bias, but in this case the bias has simply consisted in aconviction that the conditions under which the obscure mass ofwomen live and fulfil their duties as human beings, have a vitalinfluence upon the destinies of the human race, and that a littleknowledge of what these conditions have actually been in the pastwill be of more value to the sociologist than many volumes of carefullyelaborated theory based on abstract ideas.
The theories with which I began this work of investigation as tothe position occupied by women in a former social organisation havebeen abandoned, and have been replaced by others, which though stillonly held tentatively have at least the merit of resting solely onascertained fact. If these theories should in turn have to be discardedwhen a deeper understanding of history becomes possible,yet the picture of human life presented in the following pages willnot entirely lose its value.
The picture cannot pretend to be complete. The SeventeenthCentury provides such a wealth of historical material that only a smallfraction could be examined, and though the selection has been asrepresentative as possible, much that is of the greatest importancefrom the point of view from which the enquiry has been made, is notyet available. Many records of Gilds, Companies, QuarterSessions and Boroughs which must be studied in extenso before ajust idea can be formed of women’s position, have up to the pr