Packet 2: Bonus 4

Stefan Hanss discussed how figures like the Queen of Sheba, shown on a sewing box from Nuremberg, linked craft to femininity during a “Material” form of this period. For 10 points each:
[10m] Name this period. Joan Kelly-Gadol’s essay titled “Did Women Have” this historical period argued that a change in conceptions of courtly love reduced focus on powerful women’s needs.
ANSWER: the Renaissance [accept Material Renaissance; accept “Did Women Have a Renaissance?”]
[10h] Early 17th-century receipts from this duchy illustrate craftswomen’s activity in the German Material Renaissance. Sabina of Bavaria, wife of this duchy’s so-called “Swabian Henry VIII,” Ulrich, formed a Protestant court at Nürtingen.
ANSWER: Duchy of Württemberg (“VURT-em-berg”) [or Herzogtum Württemberg; reject “Baden-Württemberg”]
[10e] In mid-17th-century Württemberg, these institutions for tailors only let unmarried women do seamstress work. The Arte di Calimala for textiles in Florence was an older one of these craftsmen’s associations.
ANSWER: guilds [accept trade guilds or craft guilds]
<Editors, European History> | B. Prelims 2 - Northwestern A + Virginia Tech + Brown + Penn State

HeardPPBE %M %H %
2117.62100%76%0%

Back to bonuses

Conversion


Summary

TournamentEditionMatchHeardPPBE %M %H %
Main Site2026-04-172117.62100%76%0%