Quick Facts
- NAME: Christine de Pisan
- OCCUPATION: Women's Rights Activist, Journalist, Poet
- BIRTH DATE: 1364
- DEATH DATE: c. 1430
- PLACE OF BIRTH: Venice, Italy
- AKA: Christine de Pizan
- AKA: Christine de Pisan
Best Known For
Christine de Pisan was a prolific and versatile French poet and author whose diverse writings include love poems, a biography, and works championing women.
Quiz
Think you know about Biography?
Answer questions and see how you rank against other players.
Play NowChristine de Pisan. (2013). The Biography Channel website. Retrieved 11:58, Jun 19, 2013, from http://www.biography.com/people/christine-de-pisan-9247589.
Christine de Pisan. [Internet]. 2013. The Biography Channel website. Available from: http://www.biography.com/people/christine-de-pisan-9247589 [Accessed 19 Jun 2013].
"Christine de Pisan." 2013. The Biography Channel website. Jun 19 2013, 11:58 http://www.biography.com/people/christine-de-pisan-9247589.
"Christine de Pisan," The Biography Channel website, 2013, http://www.biography.com/people/christine-de-pisan-9247589 [accessed Jun 19, 2013].
"Christine de Pisan," The Biography Channel website, http://www.biography.com/people/christine-de-pisan-9247589 (accessed Jun 19, 2013).
Christine de Pisan [Internet]. The Biography Channel website; 2013 [cited 2013 Jun 19] Available from: http://www.biography.com/people/christine-de-pisan-9247589.
Christine de Pisan, http://www.biography.com/people/christine-de-pisan-9247589 (last visited Jun 19, 2013).
Christine de Pisan. The Biography Channel website. 2013. Available at: http://www.biography.com/people/christine-de-pisan-9247589. Accessed Jun 19, 2013.
Synopsis
French poet and author Christine de Pisan was born in 1364 in Venice, Italy. Widowed, she took up writing in order to support herself. Her first poems were ballades of lost love written in memory of her husband. These verses met with success, and she continued writing ballads. In her prose works she wrote of women's heroism. After the Battle of Agincourt, she retired to a convent, and died circa 1430.
Contents
Early Life
Born in Venice, Italy, in 1364, Christine de Pisan is considered a pioneering feminist writer. She was one of the most notable women writers of medieval times. Her father, Tommaso di Benvenuto da Pizzano, was the court astrologer for France's King Charles V.
De Pisan joined her father in France at a young age, and he saw to her education. Studying a range of topics, she became knowledgeable about such subjects as Greek and Latin. De Pisan also had access to an extensive library, allowing her to delve into works of great literature. Leading science and philosophical works were also available to her.
Around the age of 15, de Pisan married Etienne du Castel, a member of the French court. He was very supportive of her interest in writing and other intellectual pursuits. The couple had three children together before his tragic death in 1389. According to some reports, he died after contracting the bubonic plague.
Major Works
After her husband's death, de Pisan turned to writing as a way to support her family. She had to care for her children as well as her mother and a niece. Her father had died in 1386, leaving behind some debt and ending the family's connection to the French monarchy. While she had offers to join the royal courts of England and Milan, de Pisan was committed to staying in France.
With support from such royals as Philip the Bold, the duke of Burgundy, and Isabella of Bavaria, de Pisan wrote numerous works. She was famous for her poetry, which sometimes reflected her grief over her husband's death. De Pisan also penned a biography of King Charles V, which was published around 1404.
In modern times, however, de Pisan is best remembered for her revolutionary works on women. In Epistre au dieu d'amour (1399), she explored the status of women within society and critiqued their depiction in literature. With La cité des dames (1405), which is considered to be one of the first feminist texts, de Pisan profiled leading female figures from history and advanced the idea of gender equality. She continued to espouse the rights of women in Le livre du trésor de la cité des dames (1405). Both of these feminist books were later translated into English.
Later Years
The course of de Pisan's life was altered by the Hundred Years War, a political and military clash between France and England. Sometime after France lost the Battle of Agincourt, she decided to enter a convent located in Poissy, France. De Pisan wrote little while at the convent. In 1429, she penned a work to praise Joan of Arc. This proved to be her final contribution to literature. De Pisan died at the convent around 1430 (some sources say 1431).
© 2013 A+E Networks. All rights reserved.
profile name: Christine de Pisan profile occupation:
Your Connections
Sign in with Facebook to see how you and your friends are connected to famous icons.
Profile Connections
Included In These Groups
-
Famous Women's Rights Activists
View groupWomen and men have continued the call for full-fledged women’s rights in a number of venues, including voting access, fair treatment in the workplace and reproductive and sexual freedom. Find out more about this eclectic and electric group of global activists who include Shirin Ebadi, Coretta Scott King, Asra Nomani and Elizabeth Cady Stanton.
Visit Biography.com's Women's History group to explore more biographies, photos and videos of some the world's most fascinating women.
Famous Women's Rights Activists 79 people in this group
-
Famous Activists
View groupBrowse notable activists such as Pink, Quincy Jones, and Robert Kennedy.
Famous Activists 485 people in this group
-
Famous Poets 212 people in this group

Prince William
Famous Astronauts
Kanye West
My Ghost Story
I Survived
Liberace
Annie Oakley
I Survived


