Rimma Ivanovna Filipchik, Podgrusha Valentina Vasilyevna, and Kenik (Khoma) Ksenia Ivanovna:[40] First females to serve as Judges of the Constitutional Court of Belarus (1994)
Natalia Iosifovna Andreichik:[41][42] First female to serve as the President of the Belarusian Republican Bar Association (1997)
Marie Popelin:[44] First female to earn a doctorate in law in Belgium in 1888, but denied the right to practice as a lawyer
Paule Lemy and Marcelle Renson (1922):[45][46][47][48] The first women who took the oath of lawyer in Belgium
Geneviève Janssen-Pevtschin (1937):[49][50][51] First female judge in Belgium (upon her appointment as a Judge of the Brussels Court of First Instance in 1948)
Odette Virlée-Leclef:[52][53] First female to serve as the Chairperson of a Bar Association in Belgium (upon becoming the Chairperson of the Dinant Bar in 1968)
Lucie Deltour:[54] First female to serve as the president of a Belgian court (1977)
Irène Pétry:[56][57] First female to serve as a Judge (1984) and President (1991) of the Court of Arbitration of Belgium (Francophone Group) [renamed as the Constitutional Court of Belgium in 2007]
Anne Thily[fr]:[58][59] First female appointed as an Attorney General for a Belgian Court of Appeal (upon her appointment to the Liège Court of Appeal in 1996)
Bohumíra Kopečná:[118] First female to serve as the Supreme Public Prosecutor of the Czech Republic (1994)
Eliška Wagnerová:[119] First female to serve as the President of the Constitutional Court of the Czech Republic (1998-2002)
Michaela Bejčková, Miluše Došková, Lenka Kaniová, Lenka Matyášová, Milada Tomková, Eliška Cihlářová, Brigita Chrastilová, Dagmar Nygrínová, Marie Souckova, Marie Turkova, Ludmila Valentová and Marie Žišková:[120][121] First females to serve as Judges of the Supreme Administrative Court of the Czech Republic (2003)
Monika Novotná:[122] First female to serve as the Vice-President of the Czech Bar Association (2019)
Henny Magnussen (1909):[124][125] First woman to be permitted to work in the high courts of Denmark. Nanna Kristensen-Randers, who received a legal diploma in 1887, was not authorized to work in the country's high courts but was restricted to the lower courts.
Elisa Ussing (1909):[126] First female temporarily appointed as a Judge in the Østre Landsret (One of the high courts of Denmark; 1933). She was officially appointed to the aforementioned court in 1939.
Ilse Zimmermann: First female to graduate with a law degree in Estonia in 1922[138]
Margot Viirmann-Kanemägi: First female member of the Estonian Bar Association (1924), though she was not officially registered as a lawyer until 1932[139]
Auguste Susi-Tannebaum and Olli Olesk: First females to apply for judicial positions, but were ultimately rejected (1924–1929)[139]
Hilda Reimann and Marta Kurfeldt (1930): First female lawyers in Estonia[139]
Lyubov Hütsi: First female to serve in a judicial capacity in Estonia (1936) [upon being elected as the Chairman of the Tartu Orphans' Court][139]
Imbi Jürgen:[141] First female to serve as the President of the Estonian Bar Association (2022)
Agnes Lundell (1911):[142] First female to graduate with a law degree (1906) and become a lawyer in Finland
Elsa Sohlstedt (1917) and Inkeri Harmaja (1917):[143][144] First female lawyers to receive the honorary title varatuomari (deputy judge) in Finland [1929-1930]. In 1933, Harmaja became the first female to receive the title of vicehäradshövding (district notary) in Finland. Harmaja became the first female advisor of a Finland Court of Appeal in 1954.[145][146]
Inkeri Anttila (1942):[143][147] First female doctor of law (1946) and first female professor of law in Finland (upon her appointment as Professor of Criminal Law at the University of Helsinki in 1961)
Ritva Hyöky (1944):[143] First female appointed as a President of a Court of Appeal in Finland (upon her appointment to the Vaasa Court of Appeal in 1975)
Olga Petit and Jeanne Chauvin (1900):[158][159][160] First female lawyers in France. Chauvin would be the first female lawyer to actually plead a case before the French court.[161]
Maria Vérone (1906):[162][163] First female lawyer to plead before a French assize court (1908)
Mme. Valat:[163][164] First female lawyer to plead a case before a French military court (1913)
Paule Godinot:[165][166][167] First female to serve as a Commissioner-in-waiting in France (1928)
Paule-René Pignet:[168] First female to serve as the president of a bar association in France (1933)
Marguerite Haller and Charlotte Béquignon-Lagarde:[169][170][171][172][173][174][175] First female judges in France (1946). They later became the first females to serve as President of the Conflict Court and preside over a French assize court respectively in France (1962 and 1964).[163][172]
Christiane Féral-Schuhl:[186] First female to serve as the President of the National Bar Council (2018–2020)
Anita Augsburg:[187] First woman to earn her Doctor of Law in 1897 in Germany, though she was not allowed to practice law until after the law changed in 1922.
Gisela Niemeyer (c. 1950s):[199][200] First female appointed as a Justice of the Supreme Court of Finances in the German Federal Republic (1973) and Judge of the Federal Constitutional Court (1977)
Penelope Athanasopoulou:[214] First female judge in Greece [upon her appointment as a Judge of the Council of State (Supreme Administrative Court) of Greece in 1958]
Ilonka Hajnal:[223] First female to study law in Hungary (1913)
Irén Svábyné (Priegl):[224] First female to earn a Juris Doctor and become a lawyer candidate in Hungary (1925). She died before she could achieve her goal.
Letizia De Martino, Ada Lepore, Maria Gabriella Luccioli, Graziana Calcagno Pini, Raffaella D'Antonio, Annunziata Izzo, Giulia De Marco and Emilia Capelli:[271][272][273][274][275] First female judges in Italy (1965). Luccioli later became the first female President of the Chamber of Cassation of Italy (2008).
Edith Frick, Brigette Feger, and Hilda Korner:[303][304][305] First females to serve as Judges of the State (Constitutional) Court of the Principality of Liechtenstein (1979; 1985)
Liuda Vienožinskaitė-Purėnienė (1917):[306] First female lawyer in Lithuania
Ona Aldona Budienė, Irena Stankevičienė, and Lidija Liucija Žilienė:[310] First females appointed as Justices of the Supreme Court of Lithuania (1994)
Janina Januškienė, Laima Garnelienė, Janina Stripeikienė and Violeta Ražinskaitė:[311] First females appointed as Judges of the Lithuania Court of Appeal (1995)
Marguerite Welter (1923):[317][318] First female admitted to the Luxembourg Bar, though she ultimately did not practice law
Netty Probst (1927):[319][320][321] First female lawyer to actually practice law in Luxembourg. She was also the first female to serve as the Bâtonnière of the Luxembourg Bar Association (1954–1956).
Marthe Glesener:[322] First female to apply to become a magistrate in Luxembourg, but was denied (1937)
Anne-Marie Courte, Claire Peters and Jeanne Rouff:[322] First females to serve as magistrates in Luxembourg (1961). Rouff later became the first female to serve as a state prosecutor in Luxembourg, as well as the first female President of the Chamber of the Court of Appeals of Luxembourg.[323]
Paulette Lenert:[324] First female to serve as a judge and the Deputy Chairperson of the Administrative Court of Luxembourg (1997–2010)
Chantal Arens:[325] First French (female) magistrate to serve on the Luxembourg Court of Justice
Martine Solovieff:[326][327] First female appointed as the State Attorney General of Luxembourg (2015)
Joanna Digiorgio (1949):[328] First female lawyer in Malta
Jacqueline Padovani Grima:[332] First female magistrate in Malta (1991)
Ena Cremona (1959):[333][334][335][336] First Maltese judge (and female) to serve on the European Court of First Instance in Luxembourg upon the country's accession to the European Union in 2004
Ivanova Olga Dmitrievna and Valentina Nikolaevna Chebotar:[345][346] First females to serve as the Chairperson and Deputy of the Supreme Court of the Pridnestrovskaia Moldavskaia Respublika (PMR) respectively (1992)
Laurence Aureglia (1959):[347] First female lawyer in Monaco
Ariane Picco-Margossian:[347] First female magistrate in Monaco (upon her appointment as a deputy judge in 1970). She was also the first female Attorney General of the Principality of Monaco.[348]
Monique François:[349][350] First Monegasque female magistrate appointed as the First President of the Court of Appeal of the Principality of Monaco
An unknown woman became the first female judge in Montenegro in 1954. She had served in the Basic Court.[351]
Julija (Julia) Jovanova Lazović:[352] First female to earn a university (law) degree in Montenegro (1906)
Zorka Komnenić and Antonija Bulat Stojanović:[353][354][355][356] First female lawyers in Montenegro. Stojanović would become the first female President of the Bar Association of Montenegro.
Ksenija Raičević:[357][358] First female appointed as a Judge of the Constitutional Court of Montenegro
Emilija Durutović:[359] First female to serve as a Justice of the Supreme Court of Montenegro
Vesna Medenica:[357][358][360] First female appointed as a state prosecutor in Montenegro, as well as the first female President of the Supreme Court of Montenegro (c. 2016)
A.A.L. "Guusje" Minkenhof (law degree c. 1940s):[364][365] First female advocate general (1966) and first female counselor (1967) at the Supreme Court of the Netherlands
Dien Korvinus (law degree 1964):[366][367][368] First female appointed as the Attorney General of the Netherlands (1970–1999)
PMA de Groot-van Dijken:[369] First female to serve as the Chairperson of a Bar Association in the Netherlands (upon becoming the Chairperson of the Young Bar Association in Utrecht in 1977)
Winnie Sorgdrager:[370] First female chief prosecutor of any court in the Netherlands (1994)
Els Unger:[371] First female to serve as the Dean of the Dutch Bar Association [Nederlandse orde van advocaten] (2005)
Alma Mustafovska-Salimovska:[376] First Roma female lawyer (now registered with the Bar Association of North Macedonia) in the former country of Yugoslavia
Branka Ciriviri-Antonovska:[377] First female to serve as a Judge of the Constitutional Court of North Macedonia (1984)
Janina Podgórska-Jurkiewiczowa:[399] First Polish female admitted as an assistant to a sworn attorney (her admission occurred in the Russian Empire in 1908)
Blanka Morgenstern, Irena Kaliska, Szaja Frenkel, and Irena Brodzińska:[400][401] First female law students in Poland (upon their admittance to the University of Warsaw in 1915)
Maria Teresa Budzanowska:[404][399] First female to serve as the Vice President of the Polish Bar Council (1979). She was also the first female to serve as the President of its Supreme Bar Council (1983).
Maria da Assunção Esteves (c. 1989):[420] First female judge to serve on the Portuguese Constitutional Council (1989–1998), as well as become the first female President of the Assembly of the Republic (2011)
Elizaveta Fedoseevna "E.F." Kozmina:[441][442] First female to practice law in Russia (c. 1871). Despite passing a required exam by 1875, her legal practice ended when the Minister of Justice forbade women to act as attorneys in 1876.
Praskovya Danilova-Plotnikova[ru]:[446] First female judge in Soviet Russia (1917)
Faina Efimovna Nyurina and N. A. Gorsheneva:[447][448] First females to serve as the Acting Prosecutor General of the RSFSR (1936) and Deputy Prosecutor General of the RSFSR respectively
Gloria Giardi, Gianna Burgagni, Antonella Annamaria Bonelli, Daniela Della Balda, Anna Maria Lonfemini and Maria Christina Lonfemini (1995):[455][456] First females to register as members of the Order of Lawyers and Notaries in San Marino (Ordine degli Avvocati e Notai della Repubblica di San Marino)
Maria Selva:[457][458][459] First female to serve as the President of the Order of Lawyers and Notaries in San Marino (2012). She later became the first female Vice President of the Criminal Chamber of San Marino in 2015 (since the Camera Penale di San Marino's establishment in 2014)
Gianna Burgagni:[460] First female to serve as the President of the Criminal Chamber of San Marino (2016)
Zora Tominšek (1929) and Zdenka Brejc-Perne (1937):[478][479][480][481] First female lawyers in Slovenia respectively
Jolanka Kuhar–Mevželj and Francka Strmole–Hlastec:[482][483][484] First females to serve as Judges of the Supreme Court of Slovenia (1974). Strmole–Hlastec later became the first female to serve as the President of the Supreme Court of Slovenia (1991–1993).[485]
Milagros Calvo:[511][512] First female magistrate of the Supreme Court of Spain (Fourth Chamber; 2002)
María Emilia Casas:[513] First female to serve as the President of the Constitutional Court of Spain (2004)
María Eugènia Alegret i Burgués:[506] First female to become President of a Superior Court of Justice in Spain (upon becoming the President of the Superior Court of Justice of Catalonia in 2004)
Ángela Murillo:[514][515] First female to serve as a magistrate of the Criminal Chamber of the National Court of Spain and its President (2008)
Maria Luisa Segoviano Astaburuaga:[520] First female to become president of a chamber of the High Court (upon becoming the President of the Fourth Chamber of the Supreme Court of Spain in 2020)
Ita Maria Eisenring and Annemarie Geissbühler:[537][538] First female prosecutors in Switzerland (1959). Eisenright became the first Swiss female cantonal judge in 1979.
Elena Abramovna Halperin-Ginsburg:[547][548] One of the first female lawyers in Ukraine. She was denied the right to practice law in 1909 despite passing the bar exam in Kharkiv.
Some sources identify Anny Maass as becoming the first woman lawyer in the Czech Republic in 1938. Maass was stripped of her right to practice law due to her Jewish background.
Certain sources state that Katri Hakkila (née Caselius; lawyer as of 1919) was Finland's first female judge. Although she was identified as a judge during the 1930s, it is uncertain when and if she started in the same timeframe as Sohlstedt and Harmaja.
Quemin, Alain (1998). "Modalités féminines d'entrée et d'insertion dans une profession d'élites: le cas des femmes commissaires-priseurs". Sociétés Contemporaines. 29 (1): 87–106. doi:10.3406/socco.1998.1843. S2CID143952315.
Kimble, Sara L. (2003). ""For the Family, France, and Humanity": Authority and Maternity in the Tribunaux pour Enfants". Proceedings of the Western Society for French History. 31. hdl:2027/spo.0642292.0031.013. ISSN2573-5012.
Boigeol, Anne (1996). "Les femmes et les Cours. La difficile mise en œuvre de l'égalité des sexes dans l'accès à la magistrature". Genèses. Sciences Sociales et Histoire. 22 (1): 107–129. doi:10.3406/genes.1996.1372.
Poet was disbarred by the attorney general not long after being called to the bar due to gender-based restrictions. Labriola was the first Italian woman to actually practice law once the restrictions were lifted.
Albisetti, James C. (2000). "Portia Ante Portas: Women and the Legal Profession in Europe, ca. 1870–1925". Journal of Social History. 33 (4): 825–857. doi:10.1353/jsh.2000.0051. JSTOR3789167. S2CID153728481.