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What she found in registers, records and archives led her to question existing assumptions and track the changes that have taken place in the history of titles. The ways that words derived from Mistress have developed their own meanings is quite fascinating and shifts in these meanings can tell us a lot about the changing status of women in society, at home and in the workplace.
A woman who governs; correlative to subject or servant; 2 A woman skilled in anything; 3. A woman teacher; 4. A woman beloved and courted; 5. A term of contemptuous address; 6. A whore or concubine. Before that, Miss was only used for girls, in the way that Master is only ever today increasingly rarely used for boys. Mrs and, later, Miss were both restricted to those of higher social standing.
Women on the bottom rungs of the social scale were addressed simply by their names. Erickson suggests that this interpretation is mistaken. Literally, they were masters and mistresses of their trades. The women who follow are recorded only by their first and last name, with no prefix. Ms is used here for an unmarried women Mary Prince and for a woman whose marital status is unspecified Gertrude Wingfield. Madam appears to be used here for married or widowed women of social standing.
But two thirds of these women in Bocking were specified as farmers or business proprietors. So Mrs is more reliably being used to identify women with capital, than to identify marital status. Only one woman was Miss: the schoolmistress. This trend was probably fuelled by the novels of the s such as those by Samuel Richardson, Henry Fielding and Sarah Fielding, which featured young gentry Misses and upper single servants titled Mrs.
The boundaries between the old and new styles are blurred, but Mrs did not definitively signify a married woman until around Austen used this technique to establish seniority among women who shared the same surname.