1802: La Mulâtresse Solitude participates in the former slaves fight for freedom in the Battle of 18 May, when slavery was reintroduced on Guadeloupe by Napoleon.[6][7]
1803: Lorenza Avemanay led a revolt against Spanish occupation in Ecuador.[8]
1806-1812: Virginie Ghesquière took her brother's place in the 27th Line regiment of Napoleon's army, served during the Peninsular War under Andoche Junot, was promoted to lieutenant,[11] and in 1857 awarded the Saint Helena medal.[12]
1807–1816: Nadezhda Durova served in the Russian army. She earned the cross of St George for valour in combat and became the Russian army's first female officer.[15]
1808: Agustina de Aragón defended Spain during the Spanish War of Independence.[17] During the bloody sieges of Saragossa, French General Jean-Antonie Verdier started the attack with a twenty-seven-hour bombardment of Zaragoza. At the Portillo Gate, most of the Spanish defenders had been killed or wounded, and on 2 July 1808 a French column launched an assault on the unmanned Portillo Gate battery. Observing the danger, twenty-two-year-old Agustina rushed forward to a twenty-four-pound cannon, retrieved the still-burning wick from the hands of a fallen gunner, and fired the cannon loaded with grapeshot at the advancing French column that decimated it and gave time to arrive Spanish reinforcements from a near battery to reject the attack. Agustina herself explained the facts in a memorial signed in Sevilla city in date 12 August 1810.
1808–1809: Elisa Servenius enlisted in the Swedish army dressed as a man because "She had decided to live and to die with her husband", the soldier Bernhard Servenus; she participated in the war between Sweden and Russia over Finland and, during one battle, she collected ammunition from the Russians and gave them to her comrades. She was later discovered and discharged but decorated with a medal for bravery in battle.[18]
1809–1813: Joanna Żubr served in the Polish army.[19] She received the Virtuti Militari, the first woman to be granted the highest Polish military award.
1811–1817: María Martínez provides reports as a spy to the rebel army during the Mexican War of Independence. She is fined and jailed several times, and is eventually executed.[25]
1812: Marie Manuel and her husband Blaise Peuxe serve together as gunners in a French artillery unit during the Peninsular War. They are captured together when the British Army enters Madrid in August 1812, and become prisoners of war in Scotland, where Marie is officially acknowledged as an enemy combatant rather than simply a camp follower, wearing uniform and avoiding the repatriation imposed on other prisoners' attendant families. The memoirs of another prisoner hint that she was a Spanish girl who had met her husband when she saved him from guerrillas in 1811, but this source may combine the story of the husband-and-wife gunners with elements of the biographies of other female prisoners-of-war in the same group.[27]
1812–1814: Francina Broese Gunningh serve in the French, the Prussian and finally in the Dutch army dressed as a male under the name Frans Gunningh Sloet.[28][29]
1815: William Brown (birth name unknown), a Royal Navy sailor, is discovered to be a woman. She is the first black woman to serve in the Royal Navy.[37]
1815: Several women are found dead in British uniforms after the Battle of Waterloo, among them Mary Dixon, who dies in service after having served sixteen years in the British army dressed as a man.[38]
1817: La Pola is executed by the Spanish after having served as a spy during the Colombian war of Independence.[39]
1822: Angélique Brûlon, a female soldier who had in defence of Corsica from 1792 to 1799, is promoted to lieutenant. She had originally fought while disguised as a man, but eventually fought openly as a woman. She retires the same year.[48]
1842: African slave trader magnate Mary Faber de Sanger conducts warfare with her private army against the British and their allies the Susu tribe with her ally Elizabeth Bailey Gomez, and plunder the Susu capital.[54]
1843: The slave Carlota was one of the three leaders of the slave rebellion of Year of the Lash on Cuba.[57]
1854: Florence Nightingale (a British nurse) revolutionised both the care of sick soldiers in the Crimean War, and also expectations of the role of women of her status.[69][70]
1856: Pancha Carrasco takes part in the Second Battle of Rivas in Costa Rica. While serving the militia as a cook and impromptu medic, filled her apron pockets with bullets, grabbed a discarded rifle and shamed some of the retreating Costa Ricans forestalling what might have become a rout.[71]
1857: Last stand of Lalla Fatma N'Soumer, an Algerian woman who resisted French colonialism.[72]
1858, 28 March: After personally leading a campaign against the East India Company to regain her throne, Avantibai of the Indian state of Ramgarth kills herself when defeat seems imminent.[80]
25 July 1865: Retired military Inspector General, H.M. Army Hospitals, Doctor James Barry, dies. Upon inspection of the corpse, it is discovered that Barry was in fact, female assigned at birth.[83]
1873-1876: The Duch deaconess Jeanne Merkus dress like a man and leads her own group of rebel warriors within the rebel gerilla of Mićo Ljubibratić, who fights the Turks in Herzegovina, and is dubbed the "Joan of Arc of the Balkans" in the international press.[89]
1883: Marieta de Veintemilla, the niece and first lady of president Ignacio de Veintemilla, takes control of the capital, the government and its military forces in the name of her absent uncle and commands the defense of the capital of Quito when it is attacked by the rebels.[96]
^Lily Sosa de Newton (1980). "Diccionario Biográfico de Mujeres Argentinas" ("Biographic Dictionary of Argentine Women"). Plus Ultra: Buenos Aires. (Spanish)
^Durova, Nadezhda, The Cavalry Maiden: Journals of a Russian Officer in the Napoleonic Wars trans. Mary Fleming Zirin. Indiana University Press, 1989. ISBN0253205492
^ abRudorff, Raymond (1974) War to the death: the sieges of Saragossa, 1808–1809, p. 101. Hamilton. At Google Books. Retrieved 25 August 2013.
^Queralt del Hierro, María Pilar, Agustina de Aragón, la mujer y el mito, Madrid, La Esfera de los Libros, 2008.
^Cecilia af Klercker (översättning och redigering) (1942). Hedvig Elisabeth Charlottas dagbok VIII. P.A. Norstedt & Söners förlag.
^Encyklopedia Wojen Napoleońskich – R. Bielecki ("Encyclopedia of the Napoleonic Wars" in Polish)
^Pallis, Michael Slaves of Slaves: The Challenge of Latin American Women (London: Zed Press, 1980) pg. 24
^Ian MacDougall, All Men are Brethren: French, Scandinavian, Italian, German, Dutch, Belgian, Spanish, Polish, West Indian, American, and Other Prisoners of War in Scotland, 1803–1814 (John Donald, Edinburgh 2008), pp. 162–64, 227, 723–24
^Adams, Jerome R. (1995). "8, La Pola". Notable Latin American Women. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland & Company. pp. 75–82. ISBN978-0786400225. OCLC31328416.
^Alaidrus, Syarivah (27 April 2010). "Martha Christina Si Pemberani dari Timur" [Martha Christina, the Brave One from the East]. Kompas (in Indonesian). Jakarta. Archived from the original on 22 April 2012. Retrieved 27 December 2011.
^Azizah, Jiz (2011). Wanita-Wanita Perkasa dari Jawa [The Gallant Women from Java] (in Indonesian). Bantul: IN AzNa Books. ISBN978-9793194967.
^Ellis, William (1827). Narrative of a Tour through Hawaii (2 ed.). London: H. Fisher, son, and P. Jackson.
^Horacio Rodríguez Plata, [[Biblioteca de historia nacional : Antonia Santos Plata: genealogía y biografía[[, vol. 110, Academia Colombiana de Historia, 1969, 261 p.
^Jennifer S. Uglow, Maggy Hendry. The Northeastern dictionary of women's biography. UPNE, 1999 ISBN978-1555534219, p. 81: "Greek freedom fighter."
^Fodor's Essential Greek Islands: with Great Cruises & the Best of Athens
By Fodor's Travel Guides
^Jennifer S. Uglow, Maggy Hendry. The Northeastern dictionary of women's biography. UPNE, 1999 ISBN978-1555534219
^Jean-Loup Avril 1000 Bretons: dictionnaire biographique. 2002, p. 133 "Marie-Angélique Duchemin quitte l'armée, puis est admise à l'Hôtel des Invalides où elle passera 61 ans. ... Ce ne sera que par décret du 15 août 1851 à l'occasion de la fête impériale que Marie-Angélique Duchemin, veuve Brulon, figurera ..."
^Brazilian biographical annual, Volume 2, By Joaquim Manoel de Macedo, pp. 493–496
^A Life to Remember: An Autobiography Balawant Shankar Joshi · 2015
^Stefan Kieniewicz, Emilia Plater, Polski Słownik Biograficzny, Tom XXVII, Zakład Narodowy Imenia Ossolińskich I Wydawnictwo Polskieh Akademii Nauk, 1983, p.652
^ abcMouser, Bruce L. (17 October 1980). "Women Traders and Big-Men of Guinea-Conakry" (PDF). tubmaninstitute.ca. Tubman Institute. pp. 6–8. Archived from the original (PDF) on 9 August 2017. Retrieved 15 July 2019.
^Valdivia, Francisca (4 July 2011). "La importancia de la mujer en la guerra de 1879 a 1884" (in Spanish). Universidad Católica Silva Henríquez. Retrieved 28 January 2014.
^Restrepo, José Manuel (1952). Historia de la Nueva Granada. Bogotá: Editorial Cromos.
^Ana Lucia Araujo. Shadows of the Slave Past: Memory, Heritage and Slavery (Routledge Studies in Cultural History). Routledge, 2014. p. 198. ISBN978-1135011970.
^"Bandera Nacional" [Dominican Flag]. Presidency of the Dominican Republic. Retrieved 26 July 2016.
^Adams, Henry Gardiner, ed. (1857). A Cyclopaedia of Female Biography. London: Groombridge. p. 94.
^Gunhild Kyle and Eva von Krusenstjerna: Kvinnoprofiler (Female profiles) (1993) Norstedts Tryckeri AB Stockholm (Swedish)
^Benda: Lebstück Maria. In: Österreichisches Biographisches Lexikon 1815–1950 (ÖBL). Band 5, Verlag der Österreichischen Akademie der Wissenschaften, Wien 1972, S. 68
^Păcăţian, Teodor V. – Cartea de aur sau luptele politice-naţionale ale românilor de sub coroana ungară, volumul I, ediţia a II-a, Sibiu, Tipografia Iosif Marschall
^ abMagyar Nagylexikon. Főszerk. Élesztős László (1–5. k.), Berényi Gábor (6. k.), Bárány Lászlóné (8-). Bp., Akadémiai Kiadó, 1993–.
^ abcdLily Xiao Hong Lee, Clara Lau, A.D. Stefanowska: Biographical Dictionary of Chinese Women: v. 1: The Qing Period, 1644–1911
^Frederick Edwyn Forbes. Dahomey and the Dahomans, Being the Journals of Two Missions to the King of Dahomey, and Residence at His Capital, in the Year 1849 and 1850, Volume 1. Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans.
^Boles, Janet K. & Hoeveler, Diane Long (2004). Historical Dictionary of Feminism (Historical Dictionaries of Religions, Philosophies and Movements) (28 May 2004 ed.). The Scarecrow Press, Inc.; 2nd ed. p. 488. ISBN0810849461.
^"Imperialism in North Africa". Women in World History: Module 9. Center for History and New Media. Retrieved 25 August 2017.
^Dourado, Maria Teresa Garritano (November 2004). "Tropas femininas em marcha". Nossa História Ano (in Portuguese) (São Paulo) 2 (13): 39. ISSN 1679-7221
^Rethinking Islam and Liberal Democracy: Islamist Women in Turkish Politics By Yesim Arat, p.76
^Escala Escobar, Manuel; Fortin, Carlos; Fuentealba Jiménez, Fernando (1985). Historia didáctica de Chile crono-antológica: desde la época precolombina hasta 1973 (2nd ed.). Ediciones Hernández-Blanco.
^Valdivia, Francisca (4 de julio de 2011). "La importancia de la mujer en la guerra de 1879 a 1884". Universidad Católica Silva Henríquez. Consultado el 18 de mayo de 2016.