I believe the answer is false
This question is actually harder to answer than it may appear. Some states have scrapped their old constitutions and written new ones. I've only included the ones that have stuck with their original constitutions. Here are those.
Alabama 905
California 511
Louisiana 300
Texas 495
The title of the map would be: "The states that made up the Italian Nation in the fifteenth century"
One of the distinctive features of the political organization in Italy was the importance of the city-states and in particular of the republics, which in the fifteenth century some had lost their independence, but not the Renaissance cities such as Florence and Venice. At the beginning of the fifteenth century the Italian territory was very fragmented in states of varying size and importance. The decline of the cities had led to a process of institutional strengthening, concluded with the establishment of signorie (the equivalent of the Iberian lordships), together with the oligarchic republics, founded previously.
Well you didn't attach said article, but I do know that prior to the 19th amendment, Women could not vote at all. The 19th was passed in 1919 (good way to remember it) so any date prior to that, women had no voting rights whatsoever