Rita de Morais Sarmento

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Born11 February 1872
Died28 March 1931
OccupationCivil engineer
Rita de Morais Sarmento
Rita Sarmento
Born11 February 1872
Died28 March 1931
OccupationCivil engineer

Rita de Morais Sarmento (11 February 1872 – 28 March 1931) was a Portuguese civil engineer, the first woman to earn a degree in the subject in Portugal and probably the first woman to graduate as a chartered engineer in Europe.[1]

Rita de Morais Sarmento was born in the city of Porto in 1872, to an Aveiro family with liberal constitutionalist views who had suffered as a result of the Portuguese Liberal Wars (1828 to 1834), fought between constitutionalists and absolutists over the succession to the Portuguese throne.

Rita was the youngest of five children of Anselmo Evaristo de Morais Sarmento, a journalist and graphic artist, and Rita de Cássia de Oliveira. Her father edited the liberal left wing periodicals "Gazeta Literária do Porto" and "A Actualidade" and later the "A Ideia Nova – diário democrático". The household was a gathering place for his friends and colleagues, who were part of the liberal cultural and political scene, including Oliveira Martins, Ramalho Ortigão, Camilo Castelo Branco, Antero de Quental and Teófilo Braga.[2]

Education

The family had a strong belief in the value of education and of service for the public good.[3][2] After attending private schools in Porto, alongside her siblings, Rita enrolled to study Civil Engineering and Public Works at the Academia Politécnica de Oporto (the Polytechnic Academy in Porto) when she was 15 years old.[4] Her sisters Laurinda,[2] Aurélia[3] and Guilhermina[5] also went into the scientific field, training to become some of the earliest women doctors in Portugal.[6] The two eldest opened a short lived medical clinic for women and children in the early 1890s.[2]

University

Rita de Morais Sarmento completed her degree in Civil Engineering and Public Works in 1894, receiving distinctions in some of the categories, and frequently scoring at the top of her class.[7] Two years later, on 30 July 30, 1896, she applied to the university for a "Carta de Capacidade" the equivalent of chartered or licensed engineer certification for professional purposes. This was a particularly noteworthy achievement and a significant first for a woman, and was covered by several Portuguese newspapers. Within the next few years, women in other European countries earned engineering degrees. Agnes Klingberg and Betzy Meyer (Denmark, 1897), Alice Perry (Ireland, 1906) and Elisa Leonida Zamfirescu (Romanian student in Germany, 1912)[1]

Career

Marriage

References

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