List of female scientists before the 20th century
See also: List of female scientists in the 20th century and List of 21st-century women scientists
This is a historical list, intended to deal with the time period when women working in science were rare. For this reason, this list ends with the 20th century.
Antiquity

Marble herm in the Vatican Museums inscribed with Aspasia's name at the base. Discovered in 1777, this marble herm is a Roman copy of a 5th-century BC original and may represent Aspasia's funerary stele.
.jpg)
Hypatia by Julia Cameron.
- Abrotelia (5th BCE), philosopher in Ancient Greece
- Aemilia (c. 300 – 363), Gallo-Roman physician
- Aesara of Lucania (4th or 3rd BCE), philosopher in Ancient Greece
- Agamede (12th century BCE), (possibly mythical) physician in Ancient Greece
- Aglaonike (2nd century BCE), the first woman astronomer in Ancient Greece
- Agnodike (4th century BCE), the first woman physician to practice legally in Athens[1]:2
- Andromache (mid-6th century), Egyptian physician[2]:39
- Amyte (300 BCE), Greek physician and poet[2]:40
- Arete of Cyrene (5th–4th centuries BCE), natural and moral philosopher, North Africa
- Artemisia of Caria (c. 300 BCE), botanist
- Asclepigenia (4th AD), Greek Neoplatonist[2]:55
- Aspasia (4th century BCE), philosopher and scientist
- Aspasia the Physician (fl. 1st century CE), Greek physician
- Axiothea of Phlius (fl. c. 350 BCE), Greek philosopher[2]:62
- Beronice (1st AD), Roman philosopher[2]:118
- Caerellia (c. 45 BCE), Roman academician[2]:219
- Clea (1st-2nd century AD), philosopher[2]:267
- Cleachma (5th century BCE), Greek philosopher[2]:267-68
- Cleopatra the Alchemist - wrote the alchemical book, Chrysopoeia, or "gold-making".[3]:99[4]
- Damo (6th century BCE), Greek natural philosopher
- Diotima of Mantinea (4th century BCE), philosopher and scientist, ancient Greece (sources vary as to her historicity; possibly a fictionalized character based on Aspasia of Miletus)
- Eccello of Lucania (5th or 4th century BCE), Greek/Italian mathematician and natural philosopher[2]:396
- Echecratia the Philiasian (5th century BCE), Greek/Italian mathematician and natural philosopher[2]:397
- Elephantis (1st century BCE), Greek physician
- Enheduanna (c. 2285 – 2250 BCE), Sumerian/Akkadian astronomer and poet
- Fabiola (died 399), Roman physician
- Favilla (2nd century), Roman physician[2]:436
- Gargi Vachaknavi (7th century BCE), Indian philosopher
- Hypatia (370–415), mathematician and astronomer, Egypt[1]:137
- Laïs, midwife[2]:735[5]
- Lastheneia of Mantinea, (5th century BCE), student of Plato
- Leontium (3rd BCE), Greek philosopher
- Leoparda (4th century AD), gynecologist
- Macrina (4th century AD), Greek physician and nun[2]:828
- Marcella (4th century AD), Roman healer[2]:841
- Mary the Jewess (1st or 2nd century CE), alchemist[3]:128
- Melissa (3rd century BCE), Greek philosopher
- Merit Ptah (c. 2700 BCE), Egyptian physician
- Metrodora (c. 200 – 400 AD), Greek physician and author
- Myia (5th century BCE), Greek philosopher
- Nicerata (c. 5th century), physician and healer
- Occello of Lucania (4th or 5th century BCE), Greek natural philosopher and mathematician[2]:957
- Olympias of Thebes (1st century BCE), Greek midwife[2]:962
- Origenia (2nd century AD), Greek healer[2]:965
- Paphnutia the Virgin (c. 300), Egiptian alchemist[2]:978
- Paula (347–404 CE), Roman healer[2]:990
- Perictione (5th century BCE), Greek philosopher, mother of Plato
- Peseshet Egyptian physician (Fourth Dynasty)
- Pulcheria (5th century AD), healer[2]:1059
- Pythias of Assos (4th century BCE), marine zoologist
- Salpe (1st century BCE), Greek midwife
- Sotira (1st century BCE), Greek physician[2]:1217-18
- Tapputi-Belatekallim (First mentioned in a clay tablet dating to 2000 BCE), Babylonian perfumer, the first person in history recorded as using a chemical process.[6]
- Theano (6th century BCE), philosopher, mathematician and physician
- Thelka, Iranian[2]:1278
- Theosebeia (4th century AD), healer[2]:1278
Middle Ages

Herrad of Landsbert
- Abella (14th century), Italian physician
- Adelle of the Saracens (12th-century), Italian physician.
- Adelmota of Carrara (14th-century), Italian physician.
- Hildegard of Bingen (1099–1179), German natural philosopher[1]:126
- Dorotea Bucca (fl. 1390), Italian professor of medicine
- Clarice di Durisio (15th century), Italian physician
- Constance Calenda (15th century), Italian surgeon specialising in diseases of the eye[7][8]
- Constanza, Italian physician[7]
- Jacobina Félicie (fl. 1322), Italian physician
- Alessandra Giliani (fl. 1318), Italian anatomist
- Rebecca de Guarna (14th century), Italian physician[7][8]
- Heloise (12th century), French physician
- Magistra Hersend (floruit 1249–1259) French surgeon
- Maria Incarnata, Italian surgeon[8]
- Anna Komnene (1083–1153), Greek physician
- Lilavati (c. 12th century), daughter featured in Bhāskara II's treatise on mathematics, who solves mathematical exercises
- Margarita (14th century), Italian physician[8]
- Thomasia de Mattio, Italian physician[8]
- Mercuriade (14th century), Italian physician and surgeon[7]
- Dame Péronelle (1292–1319), French herbalist
- Empress Theodora (500–545), Byzantine philosopher and mathematician
- Trota of Salerno (12th century), Italian physician
16th century
- Sophia Brahe (1556–1643), Danish astronomer and chemist
- Isabella Cortese, (fl. 1561), Italian alchemist[9]:99
- Loredana Marcello (died 1572), Venetian botanist
- Tarquinia Molza (1542–1617), Italian natural philosopher
- Catherine de Parthenay (1554–1631) French mathematician
- Elinor Sneshell (fl. 1593), surgeon
17th century
- Anna Åkerhjelm (1647–1693), Swedish traveller and amateur archeologist.
- Ann Baynard (1672–1697) British Natural philosopher
- Aphra Behn (1640–1689), British translator of an astronomical work
- Elisabeth of Bohemia, Princess Palatine (1618–1680), German natural philosopher
- Celia Grillo Borromeo (1684–1777), Italian natural philosopher
- Margaret Cavendish (1623–1673), natural philosopher
- Marie Crous (fl. 1640), French mathematician
- Maria Cunitz (1610–1664), Silesian astronomer
- Jeanne Dumée (fl. 1680), French astronomer
- Maria Clara Eimmart (1676–1707), German astronomer
- Eleanor Glanville (1654–1709), English entomologist
- Elisabeth Hevelius (1647–1693), astronomer, wife of Johannes Hevelius
- Maria Sibylla Merian (1647–1717), naturalist[1]:206
- Marie Meurdrac (c. 1610 – 1680), French chemist and alchemist
- Elena Cornaro Piscopia (1646–1684), Italian mathematician and the first female PhD
- Marguerite de la Sablière (c. 1640 – 1693), French natural philosopher
- Jane Sharp (fl. 1671), British midwife
- Titia Brongersma (1650–1700), Frisian archaeologist, poet
- Elizabeth Walker (1623–1690), British pharmacist

Margaret Cavendish
18th century

Portrait of Émilie du Châtelet by Maurice Quentin de La Tour.
- Maria Gaetana Agnesi (1718–1799), Italian mathematician[1]:1
- Geneviève Charlotte d'Arconville (1720–1805) French anatomist
- Princess Charlotte of Saxe-Meiningen (1751–1827), German astronomer
- Maria Angela Ardinghelli (1728–1825), Italian mathematician and physicist
- Sarah Sophia Banks (1744–1818), British natural history collector
- Giuseppa Barbapiccola (c. 1702 – 1740), natural philosopher, translator
- Laura Bassi (1711–1778), Italian physicist[1]:20
- Marie Marguerite Bihéron (1719–1795), French anatomist
- Jacoba van den Brande (1735–1794), Dutch founder of first all-female science academy
- Maria Christina Bruhn (1732–1802), Swedish inventor
- Margaret Bryan (c. 1760 – 1815), British natural philosopher
- Elsa Beata Bunge (1734–1819), Swedish botanist
- María Andrea Casamayor (1700–1780), Spanish mathematician
- Émilie du Châtelet (1706–1749), French mathematician and physicist[1]:52
- Maria Medina Coeli (1764–1846), Italian physician.
- Jane Colden (1724–1766), American biologist
- Maria Dalle Donne (1778–1842), Italian physician
- Eva Ekeblad (1724–1786), Swedish agronomist
- Dorothea Erxleben (1715–1762), German physician
- Charlotta Frölich (1698–1770), Swedish agronomist and historian
- Elizabeth Fulhame (fl. 1794), British chemist
- Lucia Galeazzi Galvani (1743–1788), Italian physician
- Sophie Germain (1776–1831), elasticity theory, number theory[1]:105
- Clelia Durazzo Grimaldi (1760–1830), Italian botanist
- Catherine Littlefield Greene (1755–1814), American inventor
- Caroline Herschel (1750–1848), German-British astronomer[1]:124
- Josephine Kablick (1787–1863), Botanist
- Christine Kirch (1696–1782), German astronomer
- Margaretha Kirch (1703–1744), German astronomer
- Maria Margarethe Kirch, (1670–1720), German astronomer[1]:157
- Marie Lachapelle (1769–1821), French midwife
- Marie-Jeanne de Lalande (1760–1832), French astronomer
- Marie Paulze Lavoisier (1758–1836), French chemist and illustrator
- Nicole-Reine Lepaute (1723–1792), French astronomer
- Elisabeth Christina von Linné (1743–1782), Swedish botanist
- Martha Daniell Logan (1704–1779), American horticulturalist
- Eliza Lucas (1722–1793), American agronomist
- Maria Lullin (1750–1831), Swiss entomologist.
- Catharine Macaulay (1731–1791), British social scientist
- Anna Morandi Manzolini (1716–1774), Italian physician and anatomist
- Sybilla Masters (1675–1720) patent for a corn mill
- Maria Petraccini (1759–1791), Italian anatomist and physician
- Louise du Pierry (1746– fl. 1807), French astronomer
- Marie Anne Victoire Pigeon (1724–1767) French mathematician
- Faustina Pignatelli (died 1785), Italian physicist
- Eliza Luca Pinckney (1723–1766) indigo dye pioneer
- Cristina Roccati (1732–1797) Italian physics teacher
- Lady Hester Stanhope (1776–1839) British archaeologist
- Clotilde Tambroni (1758–1817), Italian philologist and linguistic
- Geneviève Thiroux d'Arconville (1720–1805), French chemist
- Petronella Johanna de Timmerman (1723–1786), Dutch scientist
- Wang Zhenyi (astronomer) (1768–1797), Chinese astronomer
19th century
Anthropology
- Maria Czaplicka (1884–1921), Polish cultural anthropologist
- Alice Cunningham Fletcher (1838–1923), American ethnologist
- Johanna Mestorf (1828–1909), German prehistoric archaeologist
- Margaret Murray (1863–1963) British anthropologist
- Clémence Royer (1830–1902), French anthropologist
- Ellen Churchill Semple (1863–1932), American geographer
- Praskovja Uvarova (1840–1924), Russian archaeologist
Archeology
- Cornelia Horsford (1861 – c. 1941), American archaeologist
- Zsófia Torma (1832–1899), Hungarian archeologist, paleologist, anthropologist
Astronomy
- Mary Albertson (1838–1914), American botanist and astronomer
- Annie Jump Cannon (1863–1941), American astronomer[1]:47
- Agnes Mary Clerke (1842–1907), British astronomer
- Florence Cushman (1860–1940) American astronomer
- Williamina Fleming (1857–1911), Scottish/American astronomer[1]:89
- Margaret Lindsay Murray Huggins (1848–1915), British astronomer
- Henrietta Swan Leavitt (1868–1921), American astronomer[1]:170
- Annie Russell Maunder (1868–1947), Irish astronomer
- Antonia Caetana Maury (1866–1952), American astronomer[1]:195
- Maria Mitchell (1818–1889), American astronomer[1]:209
- Isis Pogson (1852–1945), British astronomer
- Caterina Scarpellini (1808–1873), Italian astronomer
- Sarah Frances Whiting (1846–1927), American astronomer and physicist[10]
- Mary Watson Whitney (1847–1921), American astronomer
- Anna Winlock (1857–1904), American astronomer
Biology or natural history

Mary Anning
- Frances Acton (1793–1881) British botanist
- Elizabeth Cary Agassiz (1822–1907), American natural historian
- Mary Albertson (1838–1914), American botanist and astronomer
- Mary Anning (1799–1847), British natural historian[1]:9
- Emily Arnesen (1876–1928), Norwegian zoologist
- Anna Atkins (1799–1871), British botanist
- Harriet Henrietta Beaufort (1778–1865), British botanist
- Isabella Bird Bishop (1831–1904), British natural historian
- Mary Agnes Meara Chase (1869–1963), American biologist
- Cornelia Clapp (1849–1934), American zoologist
- Anna Botsford Comstock (1854–1930), American natural historian
- Clara Eaton Cummings (1855–1906), American botanist
- Lydia Maria Adams DeWitt (1859–1928) American pathologist
- Mary Cynthia Dickerson (1866–1923), American herpetologist, museum curator and writer
- Amalie Dietrich (1821–1891), German natural historian
- Alice Eastwood (1859–1953), American biologist[1]:77
- Rosa Smith Eigenmann (1858–1947), American biologist
- Olga Fedtschenko (1845–1921), Russian botanist
- Maria Elizabeth Fernald (1839–1919), American entomologist
- Susanna Phelps Gage (1857–1915), American embryologist and comparative anatomist
- Lilian Jane Gould (1861–1936), British biologist
- Amelia Griffiths (1768–1858), British phycologist
- Susan Hallowell (1835–1911), American botanist
- Gabrielle Howard (1876–1930), British plant physiologist
- Ellen Hutchins (1785–1815), Irish botanist
- Ida Henrietta Hyde (1857–1945), American biologist[1]:135
- Alice Johnson (zoologist) (1860–1940), English zoologist
- Helen Dean King (1869–1955), American biologist
- Marie-Anne Libert (1782–1865), Belgian botanist and mycologist
- Friederike Lienig (1790–1855), German-Baltic entomologyst
- Katharine Murray Lyell (1817–1915), British botanist
- Olive Thorne Miller (1831–1918), American natural historian
- Maria Gugelberg von Moos (1836–1918), Swiss botanist
- Margaretta Morris (1797–1867), American entomologist
- Mary Murtfeldt (1848–1913), American biologist
- Eleanor Anne Ormerod (1828–1901), British biologist
- Edith Marion Patch (1876–1954), American biologist
- Beatrix Potter (1866–1943), British mycologist
- Mary Jane Rathbun (1860–1943), American marine biologist
- Ethel Sargant (1863–1918), British biologist
- Hazel Schmoll (1890–1990), American botanist working on plant life in Colorado
- Lilian Sheldon (1862–1942), English zoologist
- Alexandra Smirnoff (1838–1913) Finnish pomologist
- Annie Lorrain Smith (1854–1937), British lichenologist and mycologist
- Emilie Snethlage (1868–1929), German-Brazilian naturalist and ornithologist
- Nettie Stevens (1861–1912), American geneticist[1]:284
- Jantina Tammes (1871–1947), Dutch botanist and geneticist
- Charlotte De Bernier Taylor (1806–1863), American entomologist
- Mary Treat (1830–1923), American naturalist
- Anna Vickers (1852–1906), marine algologist
- Jeanne Villepreux-Power (1794–1871), French marine biologist
- Anna Maria Walker (c. 1778 – 1852), Scottish botanist
- Elizabeth Andrew Warren (1786–1864), Cornish botanist
- Mary Anne Whitby (1784–1850), English breeder of silkworms
Chemistry
- Vera Bogdanovskaia (1868–1897), Russian chemist[11]:64
- Ida Freund (1863–1914), first woman to be a university chemistry lecturer in the United Kingdom[11]:59–60
- Louise Hammarström (1849–1917), Swedish chemist
- Edith Humphrey (1875–1978), probably the first British woman to gain a doctorate in chemistry[12]
- Julia Lermontova (1846–1919), Russian chemist[11]:61–64
- Laura Linton (1853–1915), American chemist [11]:57–58
- Rachel Lloyd (1839–1900)[11]:55–56
- Adelaida Lukanina (1843–1908), Russian physician and chemist
- Muriel Wheldale Onslow (1880–1932), British biochemist
- Marie Pasteur (1826–1910), French chemist and bacteriologist
- Mary Engle Pennington (1872–1952), American chemist
- Agnes Pockels (1862–1935), German chemist
- Vera Popova (1867–1896), Russian chemist
- Anna Sundström (1785–1871), Swedish chemist
- Ellen Swallow Richards (1842–1911), American industrial and environmental chemist[1]:254[11]:51–54
- Anna Volkova (1800–1876), Russian chemist
- Nadezhda Olimpievna Ziber-Shumova (died 1914), Russian chemist
Engineers
- Emily Roebling (1844–1903), American civil engineer
- Lanying Lin (1918–2003), Chinese materials science
Geology
- Florence Bascom (1862–1945), American geologist[1]:18
- Etheldred Benett (1776–1845), British geologist
- Mary Buckland (1797–1857), British paleontologist and marine biologist
- Margaret Crosfield (1859–1952), British paleontologist and geologist
- Maria Gordon (1896–1939), Scottish geologist
- Mary Emilie Holmes (1850–1906), American geologist and educator
- Charlotte Murchison (1788–1869), Scottish geologist
- Elizabeth Philpot (1780–1857), British paleontologist
Inventors
- Mary Brush (19th century), American inventor
- Ellen Eglin (19th century) inventor
- Hanna Hammarström (1829–1909), Swedish inventor
- Mary Kies (1752–1837), American inventor
Mathematics
- Sofia Kovalevskaya (1850–1891), Russian mathematician (partial differential equations, rotating solids, Abelian functions)[1]:162
- Augusta Ada Byron Lovelace (1815–1851), British mathematician[1]:180
- Emilie Martin (1869–1936), American mathematician
- Florence Nightingale (1820–1910), British statistician and nurse
- Emmy Noether(1882–1935), German mathematician

Ada King, Countess of Lovelace (Ada Lovelace)
- Dorothy Vaughan (1910–2008), American mathematician, worked at NACA's Langley Memorial Aeronautical Laboratory
Microbiology
- Alice Catherine Evans (1881–1975), American microbiologist
Medicine
- Elizabeth Garrett Anderson (1836–1917), British physician [1]:7
- Hedda Andersson (1861–1950), Swedish physician
- Lovisa Årberg (1801–1881), first woman doctor and surgeon in Sweden
- Amalia Assur (1803–1889), Swedish dentist
- Sara Josephine Baker (1873–1945), American doctor (child hygiene pioneer)
- Elizabeth Blackwell (1821–1910), American physician [1]:31
- Emily Blackwell (1826–1910 ), American physician
- Marie Boivin (1773–1841), French writer on obstetrics
- Maria Dalle Donne (1778–1842), Italian physician
- Marie Durocher (1809–1893), Brazilian obstetrician, midwife and physician
- Rosalie Fougelberg (1841–1911), Swedish dentist
- Johanna Hedén (1837–1912), Swedish midwife, feldsher and barber
- Maria Jansson (1788–1842), known as Kisamor, Swedish physician
- Sophia Jex-Blake (1840–1912), British physician
- Varvara Kashevarova Rudneva (1844–1899), Russian physician
- Emmy Rappe (1835–1896), Swedish nurse
- Martha Ripley (1843–1912), American physician and suffragist
- Florence R. Sabin (1871–1953), American medical scientist
- Regina von Siebold (1771–1849), German physician and obstetrician
- Charlotte von Siebold (1788–1859) German physician and gynecologist
- Anna Stecksén (1870–1904), Swedish pathologist
- Lucy Hobbs Taylor (1833–1910), American dentist
- Isala Van Diest (1842–1916), first female medical doctor and female university graduate in Belgium
- Catharine van Tussenbroek (1852-1925) Dutch gynecologist
- Mary Walker (1832–1919), American surgeon
- Karolina Widerström (1856–1949), Swedish physician
- Rachel Alcock (1862–1939), British physiologist
Nuclear physics
- Lise Meitner (1878–1968), Austrian, Swedish, nuclear physicist
Physics
- Hertha Marks Ayrton (1854–1923), British physicist[1]:14
- Mileva Einstein-Maric (1875–1948), Serbian/Swiss physicist
- Margaret Eliza Maltby (1860–1944), American physicist
- Mary Somerville (1780–1872), British physicist, Polymath[1]:280
Psychology
- Mary Whiton Calkins (1863–1930), American psychologist
- Christine Ladd-Franklin (1847–1930), American psychologist[1]:167
- Margaret Floy Washburn (1871–1939), American psychologist
Science education
- Jane Webb Loudon (1807–1858), Writer of introductory gardening books
- Jane Marcet (1769–1858), Writer of introductory science books
- Almira Hart Lincoln Phelps (1793–1884), American science educator
- Josephine Silone Yates (died 1912), American chemistry professor
Sociology
- Jane Addams (1860–1935), American sociologist
- Charlotte Perkins Gilman (1860–1935), American sociologist
- Beatrice Webb (1858–1943), English sociologist and economist
Notes
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 Yount 2007
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 Ogilvie, Marilyn; Harvey, Joy (2003-12-16). The Biographical Dictionary of Women in Science: Pioneering Lives From Ancient Times to the Mid-20th Century. Routledge. ISBN 9781135963439.
- 1 2 Ogilvie 1986
- ↑ Brown, James Campbell (1920). A History of Chemistry from the Earliest Times. P. Blakiston's Son & Company. pp. 19–24.
- ↑ Pliny the Elder, Natural History 28.81-84. Irby-Massie , 'Women in Ancient Science', in Woman's power, man's game: essays on classical antiquity in honor of Joy K. King, Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers, 1993. p.366
- ↑ Gabriele Kass-Simon, Patricia Farnes, Deborah Nash, eds. (1999). Women of science : righting the record (First Midland Book ed.). Bloomington, Ind.: Indiana Univ. Press. p. 301. ISBN 9780253208132.
- 1 2 3 4 Walsh 1911
- 1 2 3 4 5 Howard 2006
- ↑ Alic 1986
- ↑ "Sarah Whiting". CWP.
- 1 2 3 4 5 6 Rayner-Canham & Rayner-Canham 2001
- ↑ Rayner-Canham, Marelene; Rayner-Canham, Geoff (23 Feb 2009). "Fight for Rights" (PDF). Chemistry World 6 (3): 56–59.
References
- Alic, Margaret (1986). Hypatia's heritage : a history of women in science from antiquity through the nineteenth century. Boston: Beacon Press. ISBN 9780807067314.
- Byers, Nina. "Contributions of 20th Century Women to Physics". UCLA. Retrieved 24 October 2013.
- Herzenberg, Caroline L. (1986). Women scientists from antiquity to the present : an index : an international reference listing and biographical directory of some notable women scientists from ancient to modern times. West Cornwall, CT: Locust Hill Press. ISBN 0-933951-01-9.
- Howard, Sethanne (2006). The hidden giants. Lulu.com. ISBN 978-1430300762.
- Howes, Ruth H.; Herzenberg, Caroline L. (1999). Their day in the sun : women of the Manhattan Project. Philadelphia: Temple Univ. Press. ISBN 1-56639-719-7.
- Ogilvie, Marilyn Bailey (1986). Women in science : antiquity through the nineteenth century : a biographical dictionary with annotated bibliography (3. print. ed.). Cambridge, Mass.: MIT Press. ISBN 0-262-15031-X.
- Ogilvie, Marilyn Bailey (2003). The Biographical Dictionary of Women in Science: Pioneering Lives From Ancient Times to the Mid-20th Century. Routledge. ISBN 9781135963422.
- Rayner-Canham, Marelene; Rayner-Canham, Geoffrey (2001). Women in chemistry : their changing roles from alchemical times to the mid-twentieth century. Philadelphia: Chemical Heritage Foundation. ISBN 978-0941901277.
- Stevens, Gwendolyn; Gardner, Sheldon (1982). The women of psychology. Cambridge, Mass.: Schenkman. ISBN 9780870734434.
- Walsh, James J. (2014). "VIII. Medieval Women Physicians". Old-Time Makers of Medicine The Students and Teachers of Medicine During the Middle Ages. Auckland: The Floating Press. pp. 150–169. ISBN 9781776530236.
- Yount, Lisa (2007). A to Z of Women in Science and Math (Rev. ed.). New York: Infobase Pub. ISBN 9781438107950.
External links
- 4000 Years of Women in Science
- Most influential British women in the history of science (selected by Royal Society panel)
- This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by expanding it with reliably sourced entries.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, April 27, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.