Title: Roman Women
1Roman Women
The Early Republic
2Early Rome
3Early Rome
Traditional Foundation by Romulus and Remus 753
BCE
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5Rape of the Sabine women
- Rape and marriage repeats traditions of
marriage by rape - Marriage as helpless experience need for myths
that show both violence and resolution? - Purity of first women (Roman women as chaste, not
outlaws)
88 BCE
6Rape of the Sabine women
- Feminization of enemies and allies Rome in
masculine role
7Rape of the Sabine women
- Marriage as transfer of loyalty to husbands
family
Livy Historical account Ovid Eroticization of
the rape
8Rape of Lucretia
- outstanding pudicitia not outstanding beauty
or, industry as arousing - she can receive visitors alone (though it is
dangerous ) - violation of her honor reputation?
humiliation, losing face? - what kind of response is suicide?
9Rape of Lucretia
- husbands attitude that she is not guilty, only
the rapist (while under Greek law, woman is still
punished equally for rape or adultery)
10Rape of Lucretia
- woman as inspiring the revolution her suicide
makes vengeance completely mandatory - symbolism of womens authoritative voice (like
Veturia and Volumnia)
11Veturia and Volumnia
- Mothers moral authority
- Women symbolize the land, the birthplace, the
home, the unchanging (unlike political turmoils)
12Vestal Virgins
- Aristocratic girls, chosen in childhood
- 30 years of service
- Exempt from tutelage
- Have masculine privileges making wills, etc.
- Feminine task (guarding the flame) but on a civic
level - Sometimes heroic action (guarding the flame in
the Gallic invasion)
13Vestal Virgins
(Atrium Vestae) view from Palatine
14Vestal Virgins
(Augustus) He increased the numbers and
dignities, and likewise the privileges of the
priests, and especially the Vestal Virgins.
Once, when a Virgin died and had to be replaced
and many parents tried to keep their daughters
from being picked by lot, he swore that is one of
his granddaughters had been the right age, he
would have offered her. (Suetonius)
15Vestal Virgins
Julia Aquilla Severa, wife of Elegaballus, former
vestal Virgin
16Verginia
- not the actor in this story her father is
- point about virtue over life a value both are
expected to share - as elsewhere, important development in Roman
history (writing of lawcodes) connected with an
abuse that required fixing
17Cloelia
- girls rarely hostages
- courage as a girls virtue too usually heroines
are matrons who influence men . . . (like Veturia
and Volumnia) - military honors rare but there was the model.
Hellenistic queens? - Something in Roman culture that favors this image
(Camilla in Vergil)
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19Roman Names
Men have three names e.g. Gaius Julius
Caesar Personal name Gens name Family
name There were only about 10 personal names to
choose from. Women have one name the feminine
form of the gens name e.g. Julia (of the Julius
gens), Clodia (of the Clodius gens) Sometimes a
woman might be known by two names, e.g. Clodia
Metella (Clodia who was married to Metellus)
20Roman Women Concepts
- Familia like Greek oikos, the household, under
paternal authority. - Pudicitia modesty, but even more, a kind of
centered self-restraint that has strength and
moral conviction behind it, reflected in
appropriate behavior. - Paterfamilias The male head of a family, who
retained power over it until his death. - patria potestas Paternal authority, the
(officially) life-and-death power of a father
over all his children, until his death.
21Roman Women Concepts
Paterfamilias and matrona united
22Roman Women Concepts
Images of the Roman family show the importance of
the bond between husband and wife.
23Roman Women Concepts
- Manus legal authority over children or (in some
cases) wife - Sui juris legally responsibe for oneself, rare
for women but attainable in some circumstances. - Tutor Like a Greek kyrios, the tutor handled
public business for the woman in his charge. - Tutelage reliance on a tutor
24Roman Women Concepts
Gens Essentially, Clan, or extended family with
the same clan name (e.g. Julius or
Claudius). Matrona A married woman, with all
the expectations of behavior and authority
involved Univira one-man or one-husband
woman who does not remarry after being widowed
25Proserpina
Ceres
26Personified concepts
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28view toward Tabulariumand Arch of Septimius
Severus. Central Roman Forum, late 2nd century CE
29(identity contested see Valerius Maximus,
Memorabilia 6.7.2) two fragments of a marble
plaque with inscribed text, beginning UXORIS,
dedicated by a grateful and admiring husband. 1st
century BCE.Baths of Diocletian, Rome. Credits
Ann Raia, 2005
302 women stand on left with girl child 2 males,
holding scroll, one holding pater, stand on right
with boy center aedicula ( house or mausoleum)
with slightly open figured doors, flanked by
nude, crowned boys
31terracotta relief of ships, monuments,
divinities.Vatican Museum, Rome. Credits Ann
Raia, 2005
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33octavia
34Porticus of octavia
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