Abstract
In the second half of the eighteenth century, the Enlightenment
brought forth progressive conceptions of marriage and women’s role in
society. Author and Königsberg city council president Theodor Gottlieb
von Hippel (1741-1796) was an eloquent advocate of reforming women’s
legal rights and social status. In addition to writing novels in the
sentimental tradition, he also published the pioneering and influential
treatise On the Civic Improvement of
Women (1792). The frontispiece and title page of the third edition
of his work On Marriage (1792; first
publ. in 1774) is reproduced below.