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Women in science

wis-300For much of human history, women were officially excluded from the scientific realm. However, in spite of their invisibility in the history narrative, this did not mean that science was exclusively a man's world. Many women, throughout the centuries, have managed to overcome their marginalisation and excel in their chosen field, making vital contributions to the sum of human knowledge.

With this series the European Commission would like to celebrate European women scientists throughout the ages. It tells the compelling stories of some of the heroines of European science – some sung but many unsung – and, through their narratives, it enriches and completes the history of scientific knowledge by highlighting its female face.

Every week a podcast will tell the story of another woman scientist. Stories are displayed from the most recent published to the oldest.

This series was produced by the European Commission.

Click here for a download of the whole series

 
1 Rosalind Franklin
2 Dorothy Crowfoot Hodgkin
3 Maria Goeppert-Mayer
4 Rózsa Péter
5 Elise Käer-Kingisepp
6 Cecilia Payne-Gaposchkin
7 Elizaveta Karamihailova
8 Irène Joliot-Curie
9 Gerty Radnitz Cori
10 Paula Hertwig
11 Agnes Sjöberg
12 Johanna Westerdijk
13 Emmy Noether
14 Ellen Gleditsch
15 Gertrud Jan Woker
16 Lise Meitner
17 Tatyana Ehrenfest-Afanassyeva
18 Kristine Bonnevie
19 Marie Curie-Skłodowska
20 Hertha Marks Ayrton
21 Sofia Kovalevskaya
22 Iulia Lermontova
23 Elizaveta Federovna Litvinova
24 Agnes Mary Clerke
25 Clémence Augustine Royer
26 Eleanor Ormerod
27 Ada Lovelace (Lady Byron)
28 Jeanne Villepreux-Power
29 Mary Somerville
30 Marie-Sophie Germain
31 Caroline Herschel
32 Maria Gaetana Agnesi
33 Laura Maria Caterina Bassi
34 Émilie du Châtelet
35 Maria Margarethe Winkelmann-Kirch
36 Maria Sibylla Merian
37 Elena Lucrezia Cornaro Piscopia
38 Lady Margaret Cavendish
39 Hildegard von Bingen
40 Hypatia of Alexandria