Humanities › History & Culture › Women's History › Important Figures › 100 Most Important Women in World History Famous Women Who Have Made a Difference Print National Archives/Getty Images History & Culture Women's History Important Figures History Of Feminism Key Events Women's Suffrage Women & War Laws & Womens Rights Feminist Texts American History African American History African History Ancient History and Culture Asian History European History Genealogy Inventions Latin American History Medieval & Renaissance History Military History The 20th Century View More Table of Contents Expand Women's Rights Heads of State More Politics Religion Inventors and Scientists Medicine and Nursing Social Reform Writers By Jone Johnson Lewis Jone Johnson Lewis Women's History Writer B.A., Mundelein College M.Div., Meadville/Lombard Theological School Jone Johnson Lewis is a women's history writer who has been involved with the women's movement since the late 1960s. She is a former faculty member of the Humanist Institute. Learn about our Editorial Process Updated on August 11, 2019 From time to time, people publish lists of "top 100" of women in history. As I think about who I'd put into my own Top 100 list of women important to world history, the women in the list below would at least make it to my first draft list. Women's Rights European and British Olympe de Gouges: in the French Revolution, declared that women were equal to men Mary Wollstonecraft: British author and philosopher, mother of modern feminism Harriet Martineau: wrote about politics, economics, religion, philosophy Emmeline Pankhurst: key British woman suffrage radical; Founder, Women's Social and Political Union, 1903 Simone de Beauvoir: 20th-century feminist theorist Americans Judith Sargent Murray: American writer who wrote early feminist essay Margaret Fuller: Transcendentalist writer Elizabeth Cady Stanton: women's rights and woman suffrage theorist and activist Susan B. Anthony: women's rights and woman suffrage spokesperson and leader Lucy Stone: abolitionist, women's rights advocate Alice Paul: a primary organizer for the last winning years of women's suffrage Carrie Chapman Catt: a longtime organizer for woman suffrage, organized international suffrage leaders Betty Friedan: feminist whose book helped launch the so-called "second wave" Gloria Steinem: theorist and writer whose Ms. Magazine helped shape the "second wave" Heads of State Ancient, Medieval, Renaissance Hatshepsut: Pharaoh of Egypt who took male powers for herself Cleopatra of Egypt: last pharaoh of Egypt, active in Roman politics Galla Placidia: Roman Empress and regent Boudicca (or Boadicea): warrior queen of the Celts Theodora, Empress of Byzantium, married to Justinian Isabella I of Castile and Aragon, ruler of Spain who, as a partner ruler with her husband, drove the Moors from Granada, expelled unconverted Jews from Spain, sponsored Christopher Columbus' voyage to the New World, established the Inquisition Elizabeth I of England, whose long rule was honored by calling that time period the Elizabethan Age Modern Catherine the Great of Russia: expanded Russia's borders and promoted westernization and modernization Christina of Sweden: patron of art and philosophy, abdicated on conversion to Roman Catholicism Queen Victoria: another influential queen for whom a whole age is named Cixi (Tz'u-hsi or Hsiao-ch'in), last Dowager Empress of China, wielding enormous power as she opposed foreign influence and ruled strongly internally Indira Gandhi: Prime Minister of India; also the daughter, mother, and mother-in-law of other Indian politicians Golda Meir: Prime Minister of Israel during Yom Kippur War Margaret Thatcher: British prime minister who dismantled social services Corazon Aquino: President of Philippines, reform political candidate More Politics Asian Sarojini Naidu: poet and political activist, the first Indian woman president of the Indian National Congress European and British Joan of Arc: legendary saint and martyr Madame de Stael: intellectual and salonist American Barbara Jordan: first Southern African American woman elected to Congress Margaret Chase Smith: Republican Senator from Maine, the first woman elected to both the House and the Senate, first woman to have her name placed in nomination at a Republican party convention Eleanor Roosevelt: wife and widow of Franklin Delano Roosevelt, his "eyes and ears" as president hampered by polio, and a human rights activist in her own right Religion European and British Hildegard of Bingen: abbess, mystic and visionary, composer of music and writer of books on many secular and religious topics Princess Olga of Kiev: her marriage was the occasion of the conversion of Kiev (to become Russia) to Christianity, considered the first saint of the Russian Orthodox Church Jeanne d'Albret (Jeanne of Navarre): Huguenot Protestant leader in France, ruler of Navarre, mother of Henry IV American Mary Baker Eddy: founder of Christian Science, author of key scriptures of that faith, founder of The Christian Science Monitor Inventors and Scientists Hypatia: philosopher, mathematician, and martyred by the Christian church Sophie Germain: mathematician whose work is still used in the construction of skyscrapers Ada Lovelace: pioneer in mathematics, created the concept of an operating system or software Marie Curie: mother of modern physics, two-time Nobel Prize winner Madam C. J. Walker: inventor, entrepreneur, millionaire, philanthropist Margaret Mead: anthropologist Jane Goodall: primatologist and researcher, worked with chimpanzees in Africa Medicine and Nursing Trota or Trotula: a medieval medical writer (probably) Florence Nightingale: nurse, reformer, helped establish standards for nursing Dorothea Dix: advocate for the mentally ill, supervisor of nurses in the U.S. Civil War Clara Barton: founder of the Red Cross, organized nursing services in the U.S. Civil War Elizabeth Blackwell: first woman to graduate from medical school (M.D.) and a pioneer in educating women in medicine Elizabeth Garrett Anderson: first woman to successfully complete the medical qualifying exams in Great Britain; first woman physician in Great Britain; advocate of women's suffrage and women's opportunities in higher education; first woman in England elected as mayor Social Reform Americans Jane Addams: founder of Hull-House and of the social work profession Frances Willard: temperance activist, speaker, educator Harriet Tubman: freedom seeker; underground railroad conductor; abolitionist; spy, soldier, and nurse in the Civil War; women's suffrage activist Sojourner Truth: Black abolitionist who also advocated for woman suffrage and met Abraham Lincoln at the White House Mary Church Terrell: civil rights leader, founder of National Association of Colored Women, charter NAACP member Ida Wells-Barnett: anti-lynching crusader, reporter, an early activist for racial justice Rosa Parks: civil rights activist, especially known for desegregating buses in Montgomery, Alabama More Elizabeth Fry: prison reform, mental asylum reform, reform of convict ships Wangari Maathai: environmentalist, educator Writers Sappho: poet of ancient Greece Aphra Behn: first woman to make a living through writing; dramatist, novelist, translator, and poet Lady Murasaki: wrote what's considered the world's first novel, The Tale of Genji Harriet Martineau: wrote about economics, politics, philosophy, religion Jane Austen: wrote popular novels of the Romantic period Charlotte Bronte: along with her sister Emily, author of key early 19th century novels by women Emily Dickinson: inventive poet and recluse Selma Lagerlof: first woman to win Nobel Prize for Literature Toni Morrison: first African American woman to receive the Nobel Prize for Literature (1993) Alice Walker: author of The Color Purple; Pulitzer Prize; recovered work of Zora Neale Hurston; worked against female circumcision Cite this Article Format mla apa chicago Your Citation Lewis, Jone Johnson. "100 Most Important Women in World History." ThoughtCo, Apr. 5, 2023, thoughtco.com/most-important-women-in-world-history-3528530. Lewis, Jone Johnson. (2023, April 5). 100 Most Important Women in World History. Retrieved from https://www.thoughtco.com/most-important-women-in-world-history-3528530 Lewis, Jone Johnson. "100 Most Important Women in World History." ThoughtCo. https://www.thoughtco.com/most-important-women-in-world-history-3528530 (accessed November 24, 2024). copy citation