Difference between revisions of "Ethel Smyth"
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==Description== | ==Description== | ||
− | + | Classical music composer who is noted for her opera works, particularly 'The Wreckers' and 'Der Wald'. Involved in women's suffragette movement. Her 1911 song, ‘The March of the Women’, which had lyrics by Cicely Hamilton, was dedicated to movement leader [[Emmeline Pankhurst]] – documented to have been a lover of Smyth’s – and became the official anthem of the Women’s Social and Political Union and women’s suffrage activism around the world. Appointed a Dame of the Order of the British Empire (1922). | |
==See Also== | ==See Also== | ||
* [[LGBTQ Classical Music Composers]] | * [[LGBTQ Classical Music Composers]] | ||
+ | * [[LGBTQ Activists in Suffragette Organizations]] | ||
+ | * [[The Bloomsbury Group in LGBTQ History]] | ||
==Further Reading/Research== | ==Further Reading/Research== |
Latest revision as of 18:07, 18 August 2023
Contents
Country
Great Britain
Birth - Death
1858 - 1944
Occupation
Composer
Notable Achievements
DBE
Description
Classical music composer who is noted for her opera works, particularly 'The Wreckers' and 'Der Wald'. Involved in women's suffragette movement. Her 1911 song, ‘The March of the Women’, which had lyrics by Cicely Hamilton, was dedicated to movement leader Emmeline Pankhurst – documented to have been a lover of Smyth’s – and became the official anthem of the Women’s Social and Political Union and women’s suffrage activism around the world. Appointed a Dame of the Order of the British Empire (1922).
See Also
- LGBTQ Classical Music Composers
- LGBTQ Activists in Suffragette Organizations
- The Bloomsbury Group in LGBTQ History