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Sotiria Aliberti nee. Cleomenous Σωτηρία Αλιμπέρη νέος Κλεομένης
Born1847
DiedDecember 12, 1929(1929-12-12) (aged 82)
Pen nameΑττική Γυναίκα (Attic Woman)
OccupationGreek feminist and educator
NationalityGeek Ottoman
Alma materstudied in Greece and Italy
SubjectFeminism
SpouseIn 1882 she married Ioannis Alibertis Ιωάννη Αλιμπέρτη[1]
RelativesAnna Dimitriou Άννας Δημητρίου (mother), P. Cleomenous Π. Κλεομένους (father)

Sotiria Aliberti nee. Cleomenous was a greek activist of the feminist movement teacher, scholar and sociologist.

Biography[edit]

She was Head teacher of the Zografeion Lyceum Girls' School of Constantinople.[2]

She published in many magazines, newspapers and journals. Till 1896 she lived Romania where, together with the other women of the Greek community, she founded a school for girls.[3]

In 1896 she founded the Ergani Athina and which name was changed in 1911 to Πανελλήνια Εταιρεία Γυναικών (Panhellenic Women's Society); its main objective was to organize exhibitions of women's handicrafts and to establish charitable homes. From 1899 to 1902 she was editor of the magazine Pleiad (λογοτεχνικό περιοδικό Πλειάδες), the organ of Ergani Athina which main goal was to promote the education of Greek women. In 1916 a Commemorative Album of the Panhellenic Women's Society (Αναμνηστικό Άλμπουμ της Πανελλήνιας Εταιρείας Γυναικών) was published. In the Εφημερίδα των Κυριών (Ladies' Newspaper) Aliberti, used as pen-name Αττική Γυναίκα (Attic Woman) published "the first biographies of distinguished Greek women," articles which were later to be published in three volumes entitled Γιορτές και Διακεκριμένες Ελληνίδες (Celebrated and Distinguished Greek Women). [4]

She demanded Women's rights even in belligerent matters.

I have never been married and can thus not be a widow and I have never been wounded and can thus not be an invalid. Through its previouly mentioned ruling, [the Secretariat] excluded me from the rights of the rest of the army's officers, as if my services to the homeland were of another kind than those of the other officers and as if the nation, in its calls and deecrees, had make a distinction between men and women who served the homeland in the military area.

— (S.Aliberti, Αι ηρωίδες της Ελληνικής Επαναστάσεως , 1933; The Heroines of the Greek Revolution)[5]

Publications[edit]

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References[edit]

  1. ^ Η Σωτηρία Αλιμπέρτη, κόρη της Άννας Δημητρίου και του Π. Κλεομένους (γεννήθηκε στην Αθήνα το 1847. Το 1882 παντρεύτηκε τον Ιωάννη Αλιμπέρτη. Για το έργο και τη βιογραφία της, βλ. το εισαγωγικό κείμενο στην οψίτυπη έκδοση του βιβλίου της Αι ηρωίδες της Ελληνικής Επαναστάσεως, Αθήνα (Sotiria Aliberti, daughter of Anna Dimitriou and P. Cleomenous, was born in Athens in 1847. In 1882 she married Ioannis Alibertis. For her work and biography, the introductory text in the book edition of The Heroes of the Greek Revolution, Athens, 1933, pp. 5-20; Ath. Gaitanou-Gianniou, "There are great figures. Sotiria I. Aliberti ", Hellenic Th. 12 (December 1929), p. 253-255; B ', I / 1 (January 1930), p. ) compare: Eirēnē Rizakē - 2007, Οι «Γραφουσες» Ελληνιδες: σημειωσεις για τη γυναικεια λογιοσυνη του 19ου αιωνα (The "Clergy" Greek women: notes on 19th-century feminine scholarship)
  2. ^ The Zografeion Lyceum was created in 1875 on the initiative of Greek Orthodox anticlericalists to educate teachers who would spread Greek language and culture among the Orthodox populations of the entire Balkans. The founders invited Kalliopē Kechagia and Sôtēria Kleomenous-Aliberti from Athens to Istanbul to direct the Zografeion Lyceum. compare Efi Kanner, Transcultural_Encounters_Discourses_on_Women_s_Rights_and_Feminist_Interventions_in_the_Ottoman_Empire_Greece_and_Turkey_form_the_Mid-Nineteenth_Century_to_the_Interwar_Period, [1]
  3. ^ Edited by Jenny Uglow, Maggy Hendry, The Palgrave Macmillan Dictionary of Women's Biography, p. 13
  4. ^ J.C. Gieben, Pharos: Journal of the Netherlands Institute in Athens, 1999, p.6[2]
  5. ^ Edited by Christine Fauré [fr], Political and Historical Encyclopedia of Women, 2004, The age of revolution, p. 251


Category:1847 births Category:1929 deaths Category:Greek feminists Category:Greek women journalists Category:Greek women writers