Women's Commandments is a private book written by Ban Zhao in the Eastern Han Dynasty to teach class girls to be human beings. Including inferiority complex, husband and wife, respect and caution, women's behavior, determination, obedience, uncles and sisters. Because of Ban Zhao's integrity, literary talent is flying. This article was later copied and became popular at that time.
The Women's Commandment is a model of ancient women's education. In modern times, women's commandments are the chief culprit that men are superior to women, and they are regarded as the sin of Ban Zhao. For example, when women's education in China began to flourish, Ban Zhao's Women's Commandment was reinterpreted.
Han Ye (Wu Hao), a moral teacher at Shanghai Patriotic Women's School, once preached to the students in class: "... China's" Women's Commandments "and" Four Books for Women "are textbooks to teach women to rely on naive and humble men. It is conceivable that women in China are more indulgent to the naive and more restrained to the humble.