The Book of the City of Ladies
The Book of the City of Ladies or Le Livre de la Cité des Dames , is perhaps Christine de Pizan's most famous literary work, and it is her second work of lengthy prose. Pizan uses the vernacular French language to compose the book, but she often uses Latin-style syntax and conventions within her French prose. The book serves as her formal response to Jean de Meun's popular Roman de la Rose. Pizan combats Meun's statements about women by creating an allegorical city of ladies. She defends women by collecting a wide array of famous women throughout history. These women are "housed" in the City of Ladies, which is actually the book. As Pizan builds her city, she uses each famous woman as a building block for not only the walls and houses of the city, but also as building blocks for her thesis. Each woman added to the city adds to Pizan's argument towards women as valued participants in society. She also advocates in favour of education for women.
Christine de Pizan also finished by 1405 The Treasure of the City of Ladies, a manual of education, dedicated to Princess Margaret of Burgundy. This aims to educate women of all estates, the latter telling women who have husbands: "If she wants to act prudently and have the praise of both the world and her husband, she will be cheerful to him all the time". Her Book and Treasure are her two best-known works, along with the Ditie de Jehanne D'Arc.
Summary
Part I
Part I opens with Christine reading from Matheolus's Lamentations, a work from the thirteenth century that addresses marriage wherein the author writes that women make men's lives miserable. Upon reading these words, Christine becomes upset and feels ashamed to be a woman: "This thought inspired such a great sense of disgust and sadness in me that I began to despise myself and the whole of my sex as an aberration in nature". The three Virtues then appear to Christine, and each lady tells Christine what her role will be in helping her build the City of Ladies. Lady Reason, a virtue developed by Christine for the purpose of her book, is the first to join Christine and helps her build the external walls of the city. She answers Christine's questions about why some men slander women, helping Christine to prepare the ground on which the city will be built. She tells Christine to "take the spade of intelligence and dig deep to make a trench all around … help to carry away the hods of earth on shoulders." These "hods of earth" are the past beliefs Christine has held. Christine, in the beginning of the text, believed that women must truly be bad because she "could scarcely find a moral work by any author which didn't devote some chapter or paragraph to attacking the female sex. had to accept unfavourable opinion of women since it was unlikely that so many learned men, who seemed to be endowed with such great intelligence and insight into all things, could possibly have lied on so many different occasions." Christine is not using reason to discover the merits of women. She believes all that she reads instead of putting her mind to listing all the great deeds women have accomplished. To help Christine see reason, Lady Reason comes and teaches Christine. She helps Christine dispel her own self-consciousness and the negative thoughts of past writers. By creating Lady Reason, Christine not only teaches her own allegorical self, but also her readers. She gives not only herself reason, but also gives readers, and women, reason to believe that women are not evil or useless creatures but instead have a significant place within society.Women discussed
The following 36 women are discussed in Part I of the Book of the City of Ladies.- Mary Magdalene
- Queen of Sheba
- Fredegund
- Blanche of Castile
- Jeanne d'Évreux
- Blanche of France
- Marie of Blois, Duchess of Anjou
- Semiramis
- Amazons: Thamiris, Menalippe, Hippolyta, Penthesilea, Synoppe, Lampheto, Marpesia, Orithyia
- Zenobia
- Artemisia II of Caria
- Lilia, mother of Theodoric
- Camilla
- Laodice of Cappadocia
- Cloelia
- Cornificia
- Faltonia Betitia Proba
- Sappho
- Manto
- Medea
- Circe
- Carmenta
- Minerva
- Ceres
- Isis
- Arachne
- Pamphile
- Thamaris
- Irene
- Iaia
- Sempronia
- Woman of Valor
- Gaia Cirilla
- Dido
- Ops
- Lavinia
Part II
Women discussed
The following 92 women are discussed in Part II of the Book of the City of Ladies.- Sibyls: Erythraean Sibyl, Cumaean Sibyl
- Deborah
- Elizabeth
- Anna the Prophetess
- Queen of Sheba
- Cassandra
- Basina of Thuringia
- Carmenta
- Theodora
- Dripetrua
- Hypsipyle
- the virgin Claudine
- Roman Charity
- Griselda
- Hypsicratea
- Triaria
- Artemisia I of Caria
- Argea
- Agrippina the Elder
- Julia
- Aemilia Tertia
- Xanthippe
- Pompeia Paulina
- Sulpicia
- Lacedaemonian women who saved their husbands from execution
- Porcia Catonis
- Curia
- Cornelia Metella
- Andromache
- Stateira II
- Mary, mother of Jesus
- Stateira II
- Bithia
- Judith of the Book of Judith
- Esther
- The Rape of the Sabine Women
- Veturia
- Clotilde
- Catulla
- Saint Genevieve
- Hortensia
- Novella d'Andrea
- Susanna
- Sarah
- Rebecca
- Ruth
- Penelope
- Mariamne I
- Antonia Minor
- Sulpitia
- Lucretia
- Chiomara
- Hippo
- Sicambrian women
- Verginia
- Claudia Octavia
- Claudia Antonia
- Athaliah
- Jezebel
- Brunhilda of Austrasia
- Florence of Rome
- Wife of Bernabo the Genovan
- Leaena
- Dido
- Medea
- Thisbe
- Hero of Hero and Leander
- Ghismonda of Salerno
- Lisabetta of Messina
- Dame de Fayel
- Dame de Vergi
- Iseult
- Deianira
- Juno
- Europa
- Jocasta
- Medusa
- Helen of Troy
- Polyxena
- Claudia Quinta
- Blanche of Castile
- Busa of Canosa di Puglia
- Marguerite, Dame de la Riviere
- Isabeau of Bavaria
- Joan of Armagnac
- Valentina Visconti, Duchess of Orléans
- Margaret of Bavaria
- Marie, Duchess of Auvergne
- Margaret of Burgundy, Duchess of Bavaria
- Isabella of Valois
- Marie of Savoy, Countess of Saint-Pol
- Anne de Bourbon
Part III
Women discussed
The following 37 women are discussed in Part III of the Book of the City of Ladies.- The Virgin Mary
- The Virgin Mary's sisters and Mary Magdalene.
- Saint Catherine of Alexandria.
- Saint Margaret of Antioch.
- Saint Lucy.
- Blessed Martina.
- Saint Lucy
- Saint Benedicta
- Saint Fausta
- Saints Cyprian and Justina
- Blessed Eulalia
- Saint Macra
- Saint Fida
- Blessed Marciana
- Saint Euphemia
- Blessed Theodosina
- Saint Barbara
- Saint Dorothy
- Saint Cecilia
- Saint Agnes of Rome
- Saint Agatha of Sicily
- Saint Christina of Bolsena
- Several female saints who were forced to watch their children being martyred: blessed Felicia, blessed Julitta, Saint Blandina
- Euphrosyne of Alexandria
- Blessed Anastasia
- Blessed Theodota
- Saint Natalia of Nicomedia
- Saint Afra
- Several ladies who served the Apostles: Drusiana, Susanna, Maximilla, Saint Ephigenia, Helena of Adiabene, Saint Plautilla, Saints Julian and Basilissa
Boccaccio's influence
Boccaccio's influence can be seen in Christine's stance on female education. In the tale of Rhea Ilia, Boccaccio advocates for young women's right to choose a secular or religious life. He states that it is harmful to place young girls into convents while they are “ignorant, or young, or under coercion.” Boccaccio states that girls should be “well brought up from childhood in the parental home, taught honesty and praiseworthy behavior, and then, when they are grown and with their entire mind know what of their own free will” choose the life of monasticism. Boccaccio believes that young girls need to be taught about life and virtues before they are consecrated to God.
While he does not say women should have a formal education, he is still advocating for women to have a say in their lives and the right to be well informed about their possible futures. Therefore, Boccaccio's belief in educating young girls about secular and religious life could have acted as a stepping stone for Christine's belief in female education. Boccaccio's outlook was however, according to Margaret King and Albert Rabil, "sexist in that he praised the traditional values of chastity, silence, and obedience in women, and furthermore depicting women in the public sphere as suffering as in form of punishment for transcending boundaries."
Boccaccio's text is mainly used for Parts I and II of the book, while Part III is more reliant upon Jean de Vignay's Miroir historical. This text is the French translation of the historical portions of Speculum Maius, an encyclopedia by Vincent of Beauvais that was begun after 1240.
Themes
The Book of the City of Ladies is an allegorical society in which the word "lady" is defined as a woman of noble spirit, instead of noble birth. The book, and therefore the city, contains women of past eras, ranging from pagans to ancient Jews to medieval Christian saints. The book includes discussion between Christine de Pizan and the three female Virtues which are sent to aid Christine build the city. These Virtues – Reason, Rectitude, and Justice – help Christine build the foundations and houses of the city, as well as pick the women who will reside in the city of ladies. Each woman chosen by the Virtues to live in the city acts as a positive example for other women to follow. These women are also examples of the positive influences women have had on society.Christine asks the virtues if women should be taught as men are and why some men think women should not be educated. Other questions that are explored are: the criminality of rape, the natural affinity in women to learn, and their talent for government.