Fráňa Zemínová
Member of the Constituent National Assembly
In office
1946–1948
Member of the Interim National Assembly
In office
1945–1946
Member of the Chamber of Deputies
In office
1920–1939
Personal details
Born15 August 1882
Dolní Chvatliny, Austria-Hungary
Died26 September 1962(1962-09-26) (aged 80)
Velichovky, Czechoslovakia

Františka Zeminová (15 August 1882 – 26 September 1962) was a Czechoslovakian women's rights activist and politician. In 1920 she was elected to the Chamber of Deputies, becoming one of the first group of female parliamentarians in the country. She remained a member of parliament until 1948, after which she was jailed by the communist authorities.

Biography

Zeminová was born in Dolní Chvatliny, then in Austria-Hungary, in 1882, the youngest of twelve children of a farming couple.[1] She graduated from business school and from the age of 20 until 1918 worked as an accountant and saleswoman in the Prague publishing house I. L. Kober. She had been active in the Czech National Social Party since 1897, but was unable to join until 1912. In 1905, together with Františka Plamínková, she was a co-founder of the Committee on Women's Suffrage and several other women's associations. Her participation in demonstrations brought her to the attention of the Austrian police, and she spent a short time in jail for 'anti-state activities'.[1] She was also involved in the trade union movement and had articles published in the Ženské snahy monthly magazine and České slovo daily newspaper.

In 1918 she became a member of the Revolutionary National Assembly for the National Socials. Following the formation of Czechoslovakia, she was a candidate in the 1920 parliamentary elections, and was elected to the Chamber of Deputies. She was re-elected in 1925, 1929 and 1935 serving until 1939. Following the occupation of parts of Czechoslovakia by Germany and Hungary in 1939, she became a member of the Party of National Unity. After World War II she served in the Interim National Assembly from 1945 to 1946 and was then elected to the Constituent National Assembly, serving until the 1948 elections.

Following the 1948 coup, she was arrested in 1949 and sentenced to 20 years in jail. She spent eleven years in prisons in Prague, Jihlava and Plzeň working as a seamstress, before being pardoned by President Antonín Novotný as part of a large amnesty in 1960. During her time in prison she had organised hunger strikes,[1] and suffered two heart attacks. After being released, she remained under the supervision of the StB until her death in Velichovky in 1962.[1] She was posthumously awarded the Order of Tomáš Garrigue Masaryk in 1992.

References

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