This is a Missing Articles worklist for Wikipedia:WikiProject Women/Women in Red by nationality. It is both incomplete and crowd-sourced, so you can help by adding to it. Of course, all new articles must satisfy Wikipedia's notability criteria; people on these lists may or may not qualify.
Contents
- 1 Tables using Wikidata
- 2 Afghanistan
- 3 Australia
- 4 Botswana
- 5 Canada
- 6 China
- 7 Colombia
- 8 France
- 9 Finland
- 10 Ghana
- 11 Greece
- 12 Haiti
- 13 Guatemala
- 14 India
- 15 Indonesia
- 16 Iran
- 17 Italy
- 18 Morocco
- 19 New Zealand
- 20 Nigeria
- 21 South Africa
- 22 South Korea
- 23 Spain
- 24 Suriname
- 25 Taiwan
- 26 UK
- 27 US
- 28 Venezuela
- 29 Wales
- 30 Zimbabwe
- 31 References
Tables using Wikidata
Afghanistan
- Lina Rozbih, journalist
- your redlink here
Australia
- Margaret Adams (pilot), 1938, became president of the Women's Flying Club
- Catherine Deakin – Sister of Alfred Deakin[1]
- Christian Brynhild Ochiltree Jollie Smith – Solicitor, second woman to be admitted as a solicitor in New South Wales, first female taxi driver in Melbourne[2]
Botswana
- Razia Khan (economist), expert on African markets, chief economist for Africa at Standard Chartered, [1], [2]
Canada
Maple Batalia an article that was deleted in 2011 – new information is available on the article's talkpage, more avalaible by following What links here
- your redlink here
China
- Ono Kazuko, feminist writer and academic.
Colombia
- Mile Virginia Martín, [Murder Victim]
- your redlink here
France
Finland
- Klara Grön, Finnish character of the 1809 war [[3]]
- Valpuri Urpiainen, Finnish woman, central figure in a known crime case [[4]]
- Anna Lisa Jermen, Finnish industrialist [[5]]
- Helena Escholin, [[6]]
- Helena Ehrenmalm, [[7]]
- Anna Elisabeth Baer, Finnish ship owner, [[8]]
- Beata Bladh, Finnish merchant, [[9]]
- Maria Elisabet Öberg, [[10]]
Ghana
- Regina Adu Safowaah, actress, TV presenter, [11]
Greece
- your redlink here
Haiti
- First ladies of Haiti
- Marie-Claire Heureuse Félicité
- Marie-Louise Coidavid
- Marie-Madeleine Lachenais
- Louisa Geneviève Coidavid
- Louise Villarson
- Laurence Raphael
- Elizabeth Adelina Derival Leveque
- Lorvana McIntosh
- Wilmina Delacourse
- Pauline Strattman
- Rose Marie Isaure Marion
- Adélaide Marcial
- Constance Salomon
- Adelaïde Mentor Chéry
- Reine Joséphine Laroche
- Rose Anselinette Durand
- Alice Euchariste Pommayrac
- Véronique Péralte
- Lucie Parisien
- Gulna Dartiguenave
- Hélène Saint-Mascary
- Résia Vincent
- Georgina Saint-Aude
- Lucienne Heurtelou
- Yolette Leconte
- Lydia Jeanty
- Carmen Jean-François
- Rosa Lévy
- Simone Ovide
- Michèle Bennett
- Mirlande Manigat
- Gabriëlle Célestin
- Célima Dorcely
- Guerda Benoit Préval
- Mildred Trouillot
- Elisabeth Debrosse
- Sophia Saint-Rémy
Guatemala
India
- Uma Chakravarti, historian, social scientist and feminist. dedication volume
- Kumkum Sangari and Sudesh Vaid. – see Recasting Women: Essays in Colonial History
- V. Geetha, Maithreyi Krishnaraj, Kalyani Dutta, Saroj Pathak. – see Bhatkal and Sen
Indonesia
- Śri Ajñadewi (queen regnant of Bali, fl. 1016)
- Śri Maharaja Sakalendukirana Laksmidhara Wijayottunggadewi (queen regnant of Bali, fl. 1088-1101)
- Gusti Ayu Karang (regent 1809-1814)
- Dewa Agung Istri Kanya (queen regnant of Bali, 1814–1850, died 1868)
- Gusti Ayu Oka Kaba-Kaba (regent of Bali 1770/80-1807)
- Gusti Ayu Istri Biang Agung (1836–1857) [queen regent of Bali widow of Gusti Agung Ngurah Made Agung Putra]
Iran
- Shams Kasmaei (شمس کسمایی) Persian poet; a pioneer of "شعر نو" (New Poetry) in Iran.
- Effat Tejaratchi, first Iranian woman to fly airplane solo, [12]
Italy
- Jole Fano , Italian/Chilean actress
- Fanny Salazar Zampini[13]
- Dora Melegari[14]
Morocco
- your redlink here
New Zealand
- Ella Cooke, (d. 1917), served as a nurse in the military, [15]
- Allison Joy Haywood, planktonologist, [16]
- The ten nurses who died on the Marquette hospital ship. http://www.nzhistory.net.nz/page/troopship-marquette-sunk-killing-32-nz-medical-staff
Nigeria
See also unreferenced redlinks here
- Akachi Adimora-Ezeigbo, writer
- Hauwa Ali, novelist[17]
- Anne Akpabot, writer, [18]
- Hauwa Ali, novelist [19][3]
- Rose Anizoba, writer, [20]
- Unoma Nguemo Azuah, poet, [21]
- Esther Bali, writer [22]
- Phanuel Egejuru, writer
- Amy Jadesimi, doctor and businesswoman, [23]
- Lekki Wives (TV show), [24]
- Bridget Nwankwo, writer
- Helen Ofurum, Scottish-born Nigerian children's writer
- Gracy Osifo, writer
- Mary Okoye, Nigerian writer of children's fiction
- Rosemary Uwemedimo, Nigerian children's writer
South Africa
- Precious Moloi-Motsepe, medical doctor, fashion entrepreneur, philanthropist and one of the wealthiest women in Africa today.
South Korea
Spain
- your redlink here
Suriname
- Alice Bhagwandai Singh, Surinamese social and cultural leader[25]
Taiwan
- Esther Shu-Shin Lee Yao, feminist and author of Chinese Women.
UK
US
- Debra Amesqua (born 1951), first woman chief of the Madison, WI Fire department. [29]
- Tommiee Clack, Texas pioneer, (1882–1989), Texas Women's Hall of Fame, [30]
- Elaine D. Harmon, first WWII woman pilot to be buried at Arlington National Cemetery [4]
- Dottie Lamm, Colorado's first lady, Renaissance woman, Colorado Women's Hall of Fame
- Mary Florence Lathrop, (1865–1951) first woman to try a case before the Colorado Supreme Court, Colorado Women's Hall of Fame
- Sage Lovell, first transgender teen in the state of Georgia to be elected Homecoming Queen, [31], [32], [33], [34].
- Caroline Nelson, US socialist[35]
- Darlene Owens, first woman pipefitter in Ohio, Ohio Women's Hall of Fame
- Martha Parsons, (1869–1965), Executive secretary of Landers, Frary and Clark Co, Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame
- Jenny Lind Porter, Poet Laureate of Texas (1919–2011), Texas Women's hall of fame
- Dessie Smith Prescott, first woman pilot in Florida, served in women's army corps in WWII, Florida Women's Hall of Fame
- Jo Stewart Randel, philanthropist, museum advocate, [36]
- Millie Reid Trumbull, advocate[37][38][39]
- Mary Nan West, Texas Rancher, Texas Women's Hall of Fame, [40]
- Rhea Woltman, pilot and one of the first female astronaut trainees, Colorado Women's Hall of Fame
- Also see:
-
- Alabama Women's Hall of Fame
- Alaska Women's Hall of Fame
- Arizona Women's Hall of Fame
- Connecticut Women's Hall of Fame
- Florida Women's Hall of Fame
- Georgia Women of Achievement
- Hall of Fame of Delaware Women
- Iowa Women's Hall of Fame
- Kentucky Women Remembered
- Louisiana Center for Women and Government Hall of Fame
- Maine Women's Hall of Fame
- Maryland Women's Hall of Fame
- Michigan Women's Hall of Fame
- National Cowgirl Museum and Hall of Fame
- National Women's Hall of Fame
- New Jersey Women's Hall of Fame
- Ohio Women's Hall of Fame
- Oklahoma Women's Hall of Fame
- Texas Women's Hall of Fame
- Victorian Honour Roll of Women
- Women's Basketball Hall of Fame
- User:Bonnie Montgomery/Notable American Women (1971) based off this book it seems. Made clickable here: User:Edgars2007/Notable American Women (1971)
Venezuela
From: Diccionario biográfico, geográfico e histórico de Venezuela (1957)[5]
Wales
Redlinks from the Dictionary of Welsh Biography
- Beris Cox, Jurassic specialist, [41]
- Mary Jane Evans (1888–1922), performer
- Beti George, radio and television personality [42] [43] [44] [45]
- Winifred Mair Griffiths (1916–1996), educator
- Charlotte Elizabeth Bertie Guest (1812–1895), diarist, translator
- Margaret Jones (travel writer) (died 1902), writer
- Mary Pendrill Llewelyn (1811–1874), writer
- Catherine Roberts (writer) (1891–1985), writer
- Ethel Woods, geologist, [46]
Zimbabwe
- Fungai Machirori, feminist blogger, journalist and photographer. [47]
- Divine Ndhlukula, owner of one of Zimbabwe's largest security companies, Securico.
References
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
PLCHistory
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ Australian Dictionary of Biography: Smith, Christian Brynhild Ochiltree Jollie (1885–1963)(accessed:07-08-2007)
- ^ Cite error: The named reference
bloomsbury
was invoked but never defined (see the help page). - ^ Fandos, Nicholas (2016-09-07). "A Female World War II Pilot Is Finally an Equal at Arlington". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved 2016-09-09.
- ^ Rodríguez, Ramón Armando (1957). Diccionario biográfico, geográfico e histórico de Venezuela (in Spanish). Madrid, Spain. pp. ?.