Gender roles in medieval societies (Europe, India, or Islamic empires).

Authors

  • Mr. Sumit Prakash Mandloi

Keywords:

Gender roles, patriarchy, medieval societies, women’s agency, religion.

Abstract

This study examines the construction and function of gender roles in medieval societies with a comparative focus on Europe, India, and the Islamic empires. It highlights how patriarchal systems, reinforced by religion, law, and cultural traditions, structured social and familial life while shaping opportunities and limitations for both men and women. In Europe, Christian ideology confined women largely to domestic and religious spheres, though noblewomen and nuns held occasional influence, while men dominated political and military roles. In India, caste and kinship determined women’s identities within marriage and household duties, even as figures like Mirabai and Akka Mahadevi resisted patriarchal norms, while men monopolized authority in politics and religious institutions. Within the Islamic empires, Sharia granted women certain rights to inheritance and divorce, but veiling and seclusion constrained them, as men held primary power in governance, religion, and warfare. This comparative analysis underscores both restrictions and spaces of female agency across civilizations.

References

Lees, C. A., & Overing, G. R. (2004). Signifying Gender and Empire. Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, 34(1), 1-16.

Brubaker, L., & Smith, J. M. (Eds.). (2004). Gender in the early medieval world: east and west, 300-900. Cambridge University Press.

Schaus, M. (2006). Women and gender in medieval Europe: An encyclopedia (Vol. 14). Taylor & Francis.

Bray, J. (2011). The family in the medieval islamic world. History Compass, 9(9), 731-742.

Dalkesen, N. (2007). Gender roles and women’s status in Central Asia and Anatolia between the thirteenth and sixteenth centuries (Doctoral dissertation, Middle East Technical University (Turkey)).

Vanina, E. (2012). Medieval Indian mindscapes: space, time, society, man. Primus Books.

O'HANLON, R. O. S. A. L. I. N. D. (2007). Kingdom, household and body history, gender and imperial service under Akbar. Modern Asian Studies, 41(5), 889-923.

Keddie, N. R., & Baron, B. (Eds.). (2008). Women in Middle Eastern history: shifting boundaries in sex and gender. Yale University Press.

Downloads

How to Cite

Mr. Sumit Prakash Mandloi. (2013). Gender roles in medieval societies (Europe, India, or Islamic empires). International Journal of Engineering, Science and Humanities, 3(1), 06–13. Retrieved from https://www.ijesh.com/index.php/j/article/view/153

Similar Articles

1 2 3 4 5 6 > >> 

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.