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2007-12-05 00:31:19 · 7 answers · asked by Link strikes back 6 in Social Science Gender Studies

7 answers

Well I wouldn't say that, 61AD Warrior Queen of the Iceni of East Anglia who sacked the Roman fort at Colchester, do you know I was born near Colchester, do you know how many times I've had that story rammed down my throat. Years of therapy gone I tell ya, gone.

Suggest others take History lesson, Joan of Arc?????? 1431AD

As a first feminist, hmmmmm Cleopatra 51 BC - 30 BC

Nefertiti c. 1370 BC - c. 1330 BC

I like the correct and up to date spelling of Boudica.

No Essex boy jokes please, I'm a Ph.D. now at Cambridge and I don't wear white socks.....................anymore.

2007-12-05 01:01:03 · answer #1 · answered by Zappster (Deep Thunker) 6 · 5 0

Queen Hatshepsut of Egypt. Cleopatra slept her way to success. But Boudicca, of course, was a great lady.

2007-12-05 01:00:46 · answer #2 · answered by Anonymous · 3 0

No, I would give that title to either the Queen of Sheba, or Artemesia of Halicarnassus, or even perhaps, the Syrian wife of Nebuchadnezzar the second, who comissioned the Hanging Gardens of Babylon.

2007-12-05 00:41:02 · answer #3 · answered by Robin 5 · 4 1

she was a female leader, in a time when females were not normally leaders. Hard to know whether we could class her a feminist as she wasn't fighting for just women, but the freedom of all her people

2007-12-05 00:34:31 · answer #4 · answered by music_lovin_miss 4 · 2 1

Cleopatra more likely

2007-12-05 00:44:24 · answer #5 · answered by Quizard 7 · 1 2

I think it was Andrew Dice Clay.

2007-12-05 00:43:51 · answer #6 · answered by Raj G 2 · 1 2

What about Joan of Arc?

2007-12-05 00:41:35 · answer #7 · answered by nosy old lady 5 · 0 4

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