Declaration of the Rights of Woman and of the [Female] Citizen

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External Websites Also known as: “Déclaration des droits de la femme et de la citoyenne” Written by Carrie L. Cokely

Director, First Year Seminar, Curry College. Her contributions to SAGE Publications's Encyclopedia of Gender and Society (2009) formed the basis of her contributions to Britannica.

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The Editors of Encyclopaedia Britannica Table of Contents French: Déclaration des droits de la femme et de la citoyenne (Show more)

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Declaration of the Rights of Woman and of the [Female] Citizen, pamphlet by Olympe de Gouges published in France in 1791. Modeled on the 1789 document known as the Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the [Male] Citizen (Déclaration des droits de l’homme et du citoyen), Gouges’s manifesto asserted that women are equal to men in society and, as such, entitled to the same citizenship rights.

The preamble of Gouges’s pamphlet emphasized that women must be included among those considered part of France’s National Assembly. It stated that women, like their male counterparts, have natural, inalienable, and sacred rights. Those rights, as well as the related duties and responsibilities to society, are outlined in the remainder of the document.

Following the preamble, Gouges included 17 articles outlining the basic rights that should be extended to women, including the right to liberty, property, security, and resistance to oppression; the right to participate fully in the making of laws that they are to abide by; the right to participate at all levels of government; and the right to voice opinions in public. More radically, Article 11 gives a woman the right to publicly name the father of her children and to be entitled to pass along property to those children. That was one of the more controversial elements of the declaration, because it holds that men who father children outside of marriage must be held accountable for those children just as they are for children fathered within marriage. Article 15 gives women, who were for tax purposes counted as part of a male-headed household, the right to ask public officials about the finances of the household, and Article 17 extends property rights to women regardless of their marital status.

A postscript to the document urges women to recognize the unequal ways they are treated in society and to take action to remedy those injustices. The declaration further includes a Form for a Social Contract Between Man and Woman. In that contract, a man and a woman agree to unite in an equal partnership within which wealth is communal, belonging to both parties, and, as such, can be divided among all children belonging to either member of the partnership. Furthermore, according to the contract, in the event of a separation of the two parties, that wealth will be set aside for any and all children of either party. Finally, the pamphlet outlines measures that should be taken to provide for widows and young girls deceived by false promises.

In November 1793, two years after the publication of the Declaration of the Rights of Woman, Gouges, who had sided with the Girondins, was tried for and found guilty of treason and was executed.