The Book of the City of Ladies, prose work by Christine de Pisan, published in 1405 as Le Livre de la cité des dames. Written in praise of women and as a defense of their capabilities and virtues, the work is a significant feminist argument against the misogynist male writing of the day. It was based in part on Giovanni Boccaccio’s De claris mulieribus (1360–74; Concerning Famous Women).
The Book of the City of Ladies has a three-part structure. The first section introduces the three Virtues—Reason, Rectitude, and Justice—with whom the author communes. Christine then tells the stories of 11 ladies of political and military accomplishment, 18 ladies of learning and skill, and 4 ladies of prudence. The second section includes ladies who exemplify virtuous conduct, and the third section includes discussions of various holy women, including Mary Magdalene, Saint Catherine, martyred virgin saints, Saint Christine (Christine’s patron saint), two female saints who lived disguised as monks, other martyred female saints, women who helped the Apostles, and a conclusion.
Of 25 extant manuscripts, the Harley 4431 manuscript is believed to represent the author’s intended final form; it may have been corrected in her own hand.