(1878-1926): She was a writer and feminist, born in Ljubljana. She was a pioneer of Slovenian feminist literature, known for her novels, short stories and essays. She was born on 22 April 1878 in Ljubljana to her father Janez and her mother Neža, née Legat. Shortly after her daughter’s birth, the family moved several times. In 1884 she began attending the folk school in Bloki. She continued her education at the Lichtenturn Institute in Ljubljana and finished it with good results in 1893 at the Ursuline School in Ljubljana. In December 1896, she got her first job as a clerk in Kočevje. In 1897 she moved to Ljubljana, where she copied various documents in the office of the lawyer Ivan Šušteršič. In her work and writing she focused on themes touching on women’s lives. Her first articles on the position of women in society were published in the magazine Slovenka (Slovene newspaper), and later in Slovene Nation, Edinosta and Jugoslovanska Žena. Here she often published articles (For our wives, who take care of their own subsistence, Our hyperidealism, What we want, Woman in the family and society, About today’s woman…) on women’s rights to work, voting and education. She has advocated for an emancipated woman, a creator and an educated woman. She stressed that emancipated women are not the enemy of men and should not be feared by them. She wanted to prove that an emancipated woman could also be a wife and mother.