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and the right to vote and be voted for. She also advocated laws to protect women and children, one of the first people to do so. At the time, Brazil did not have voting slips and no prior registration of candidates. The limited number of people entitled to vote just wrote the names of the people they supported on a piece of paper. Despite not campaigning in Bahia, Dillon received some support, but not enough to be elected. In the same national election, Maria
Augusta Meira de Vasconcelos Freire was also a candidate for deputy in
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politics in the 19th century was seen as a man's activity, so that the judge concluded that it was unnecessary to make such a prohibition explicit in the legal text. However, according to Dillon, she was later granted the right to vote after appealing and in 1887 she voted for Júlio de Mendonça
Moreira, a member of the
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Despite having been denied electoral registration in 1890, Dillon sought election as a federal deputy for Bahia in 1891. Her platform was published in
Brazilian newspapers, in which she said she was against socialism and promised to defend principles of equality, religious freedom, freedom of thought
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Dillon's daughter, Niobe
Elisabeth Gonçalves, who she had brought up as a single mother, died in 1913 at the age of 20 when she was four months pregnant, having already had three children. The case was the subject of a police investigation due to suspicions of medical malpractice and self-induced
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in Rio Grande do Sul. The municipal judge dismissed the petition on 18 November 1886 on the grounds that the electoral legislation had not considered that women might be given access to university qualifications. Although the country's constitution did not explicitly prohibit women from voting,
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in Rio Grande do Sul to obtain a diploma confirming that she had been registered to vote in 1885. The commission in Rio de
Janeiro was divided between not depriving the "voter of the right to vote already acquired" and not making an exception to the then recent decision to prohibit women from
185:, as a federal deputy for Rio Grande do Sul. He was not elected but was successful four years later. In 1890, when she became an unsuccessful candidate to become a national deputy representing the state of Bahia, the press described her as Brazil's first female voter.
204:. Voter registration there was controlled by district commissions, which analyzed and decided on each voter's suitability to register, based among other factors on whether they were literate. In case of doubt, the matter was forwarded to the Minister of the Interior,
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Other women, such as Luiza Amélia
Bemfica Ribeiro and Balbina de Castro Figueiredo, were included on the register of electors in the same period, but were subsequently excluded on appeal. It was not until November 1927 that women were legally entitled to vote with
135:. Graduating in 1883, she was one of the first Brazilian female dentists and, as well, claimed to have been the first woman to vote in Brazil. An activist for women's rights and the abolition of slavery, she was also a notable poet.
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on 20 January 1861. Taking advantage of changes to the law that allowed females to attend university, she initially studied medicine but then graduated in dentistry from the
Faculty of Medicine of what is now the
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A prestigious name at the beginning of the 20th century, she contributed articles to various
Brazilian periodicals and wrote many sonnets, having them published in newspapers and books.
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In 1885, in view of her degree and based on the
Brazilian law that provided the right to vote for every holder of a degree, she requested her inclusion in the list of voters in
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Dillon continued working as a dental surgeon and as secretary of the Women's
Republican Party. She died in Rio de Janeiro on 19 June 1920. She was buried as a pauper in the
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512:""Mostrai-vos denodadas, generosas, caritativas, verdadeiras riograndenses": a participação de mulheres na campanha abolicionista de Pelotas e Rio Grande (1880 - 1888)"
168:. Widowed at the age of 24, she then married a fellow dental surgeon, Thomaz Cantrell Dillon, on 17 February 1885. He was a naturalised Brazilian of English origin.
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274:. The abolitionist movement was mostly male, but the men recognized the strategic importance of women's participation. Openly opposed to
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In 1884, Isabel created the 28th of September Abolitionist Commission, an organization made up of women in the city of
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registering to vote. After consulting the minister, it was decided to deny her registration. Two other women living in
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131:(1861–1920), also known as Isabel de Sousa Mattos and Isabel de Mattos Gonçalves was a Brazilian
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on 14 May 1883. By February 1884, she was already advertising her services as a dentist in
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ridiculed the male refusal to both give the vote to women and vote for women.
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in 1893 and was arrested. She would subsequently write about her experiences.
228:, 29 March 1890, portraying minister Cesário Alvim's refusal to vote for women
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270:. The Commission's objective was to raise funds to purchase letters of
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217:, both wives of public servants, had also applied and been rejected.
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state. The experiences of Dillon and others inspired the comedy
208:. She presented herself to the 2nd District of the parish of
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455:"O voto feminino no Brasil: um difícil caminho a percorrer"
486:"Republicana Histórica, a Dra. Isabel de Matton Dillon"
160:. In December of the same year, she organized a female
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430:"Mulheres no Poder é tema de debates na Capital"
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224:Cartoon by Antônio Bernardes Pereira Netto in
377:História da odontologia no Brasil, 1500-1900
197:reportedly being the first two to register.
560:Federal University of Rio de Janeiro alumni
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374:Cunha, Ernesto de Mello Salles (1952).
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262:. Also participating were the writer
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150:Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
85:Federal University of Rio de Janeiro
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514:. Universidade Federal de Pelotas
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254:Work for abolition of slavery
103:First Brazilian woman to vote
200:In 1890, Dillon returned to
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459:Centro de Liderança Pública
248:Josefina Álvares de Azevedo
246:, (Women's Vote), in which
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484:A Rua (20 January 1917).
405:"Isabel de Mattos Dillon"
350:"Izabel de Mattos Dillon"
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164:committee in the city of
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268:Julieta de Melo Monteiro
264:Revocata Heloísa de Melo
139:Early life and education
565:Brazilian abolitionists
354:Brasiliana ´Fotográfica
129:Isabel de Mattos Dillon
23:Isabel de Mattos Dillon
510:Nunes, Etiane (2022).
380:. Editora Científica.
233:Candidate for election
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191:Celina Guimarães Viana
575:Brazilian suffragists
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172:Women's right to vote
215:Rio de Janeiro state
16:Brazilian suffragist
570:Brazilian feminists
195:Júlia Alves Barbosa
143:Dillon was born in
87:Faculty of Medicine
550:Brazilian dentists
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226:Revista Illustrada
555:People from Bahia
280:Revolta da Armada
178:São José do Norte
158:Rio Grande do Sul
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162:abolitionist
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68:(1920-06-19)
545:1920 deaths
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272:manumission
534:Categories
315:References
311:cemetery.
260:Rio Grande
240:Pernambuco
166:Rio Grande
133:suffragist
115:Profession
92:Occupation
47:1861-01-20
434:JusBrasil
81:Education
386:23576323
57:, Brazil
518:21 June
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359:21 June
309:Inhaúma
154:Pelotas
118:Dentist
95:Dentist
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286:Poetry
490:A Rua
303:Death
145:Bahia
55:Bahia
520:2024
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409:CGEE
382:OCLC
361:2024
193:and
63:Died
41:Born
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