For decades, women from Munich to Melbourne, from Westminster to Washington, had been campaigning for a voice.
Lady Rhondda was a suffragette, a business leader and an editor. A statue of her is expected to be revealed in Newport, south Wales, next year.
The landscape artist bravely left her aristocratic life behind to help save lives on the Italian front.
The suffragists who gained women the right to vote offer a model of Australia’s role in the world that remains as important as ever.
The effects of the Dublin insurrection went much further than Ireland.