Female figures in "Merchants of Venice" Shakespeare introduced a very new and bright idea such as the rights of women brought to Elizabeth people and equality of men among relatively short drama "merchants of Venice" . It is totally unacceptable to say. . In a world dominated by men, women are considered not to be beyond cattle and land, and it is useless or even impossible to talk directly about their rights and needs. But Shakespeare's talent and wisdom transcends this impossibility and stimulates the people's idea of accepting new ideas to face in the future.
Most of the women of Venetian merchants were like this during the Elizabethan era, but they were just attractive. Shakespeare is immortal in art like her contemporary person, but she seems to think that women are more absorbed in play than material beauty. When his daughter left him to marry Christian, Sherlock was destroyed thought that she was not his own property, but he thought of jewelry and the duke. Persia has strength and wisdom, but she also tends to prejudice. She took a derogatory attitude towards the lower class and treated the 3,000 duke as "a small debt." Although Bassanio likes Bassanio really despite its low social status, he was initially depicted as a vulgar materialist, and he thought that Portia is more than just a prize. Only by marrying her, we can achieve aristocracy of every society.
When William Shakespeare wrote a merchant in Venice, he included a female character that influenced the drama. In most Shakespeare plays women have little power and wisdom. But in "Venetian merchants" Portia is a woman who saves men's life with wisdom and wisdom. Another woman created by Shakespeare has the same quality as Persia, Beutrice of Nothing about from Much Ado. Two women joined the theme of the drama because they were able to have love using their wisdom and witty remarks. Since Portia seems to be placed on a pedestal that rarely reaches, women have many similarities and many differences seem inevitable.