While women were conforming to being the property of men in the 15th - 17th centuries, some women were able to eek out a living for themselves as midwives and healers (people and animals). they were busy selling their brews, poultices and other herbal remedies that were harvested from the earth. It was not only supposed witches that were burnt at the stake but others who would not conform. For example Anne Askew (Ayscough) (1521 - 16 July 1546) was an English poet and member of the Reformed Church who was persecuted as a heretic. She is the only woman on record to have been tortured in the Tower of London, before being burned at the stake. Born at Stallingborough into a notable family of Lincolnshire, she was forced by her father, Sir William Askew (Ayscough), to marry the Catholic Thomas Kyme when she was just 15, as a substitute for her sister who had died. Anne rebelled against her husband by refusing to adopt his surname.
The marriage did not go well, not least because of her strong Protestant beliefs. When she returned from London, where she had gone to preach against the doctrine of transubstantiation, her husband turned her out of the house. She then went again to London to ask for a divorce, justifying it from scripture (1 Corinthians, 7.15), on the grounds that her husband was not a believer.
Eventually Anne left her husband and went to London where she gave sermons and distributed Protestant books. These books had been banned and so she was arrested. Her husband was sent for and ordered to take her home to Lincolnshire. Anne soon escaped and it was not long before she was back preaching in London.
Anne was arrested again. This time, Sir Anthony Kingston, the Constable of the Tower of London, was ordered to torture Anne in an attempt to force her to name other Protestants. Anne was put on the rack. Kingston was so impressed with the way Anne behaved that he refused to carry on torturing her, and Henry VIII's Lord Chancellor had to take over.
Askew enlisted her friends at court for support, in particular Catherine Parr, but Parr would not save Askew from charges of heresy; in 1546 the young woman was imprisoned, interrogated, and tortured on the rack, in the hopes that she would implicate Parr. Askew did not break under the months of torture, although, as a result, she was too badly crippled to walk to the stake.
To some degree these women were non conformists - they refused to conform to the men at the time that had decided women were chattels and of no real importance. This was Patriarchy. Its not surprizing that these women made a stance - prior to the Romans invading England Matriarchy was normal, and women were not seen as week and dependent but strong and on equal terms with men - their status being higher than men in some environments. For example Between AD 61 and AD 63 Boadicea led her Iceni people to a glorious but bloody war against the Romans. The Iceni Celts had submitted their kingdom in East Anglia to the conquering Romans and the rule of Emperor Claudius in AD 43. In AD 61, Prasutagus, Boadicea's husband and King of the Iceni died. A dispute followed during which Boadicea, was publicly beaten by the soldiers of the emperor, and her two daughters raped. The Iceni were insulted and rose in revolt led by their queen Boadicea. So successful was the uprising that the Romans were almost defeated. Unfortunately for the Iceni and their allies, the military skill of the Roman army finally led to the crushing of the rebellion.After the revolt, Roman rule was re-established. For almost two glorious years, Boadicea pillaged the Roman settlements; she remains to this day, the greatest of the heroines of Britain.
On reflection I think that Feminsm has its roots in non conformity and taking a stand at what is just and right. Its being prepared to fight for ones entitlements. The women burn from the 15h century onwards were willing to make a stand, a lot of innocent men and children were also burnt at the stake for a range of percieved crimes as well. It was basically the order of the day in Social Control. Good question, thanks.