women in late republican rome
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Women in Late Republican
Rome
Communal and Family Power
Political Upheaval and Social Change
Punic Wars: 218-202 BCE:
•Italy invaded and occupied
•Husbands/sons serving in the military
•Hard times, impact on small farms
Civil disturbances: 120’s-27 BCE
•Extensive infighting and proscriptions among the elite
•Marriage and divorce increasingly as political tools
•Women in positions of mediation between families and factions
Sources
Livy: Historian, c. 30 BCE
•Writes a “standard history” of Rome from its foundation
•Republican sentiments; embroidered with Livy’s reconstruction of events (influenced by values common in his time)
Polybius, c. 120 BCE
•Greek historian, writing an inclusive history, lived for a long time in Rome
Other historians
•Surviving mainly in fragments
Sources
Inscriptions
•Often funerary
•Show conventional values
•Specifics of lives
Comedy
•Plautus, Terence
•Based on Greek originals but with ideas specific to Roman experience
•An exaggerated, comic view but must relate to real concerns
Marriage and Dowry
What were a wife’s or husband’s legal rights over her dowry?
•Women apparently retained control over it, as we have references to loans or gifts to husbands
•Husbands did typically use it and manage it, as evidence references to husbands who had a hard time replacing it when divorced
•Children had a legal right to it, 1/6 per child in the event of divorce
•Legal mediations may have favored the husbands, but fathers also had an interest in the outcome, so perhaps not.
The arbitrator [in a divorce] has the
authority to impose what
seems good to him, if the woman has acted in any
wrong or dishonorable
fashion. She is fined if she drinks wine; if she has
had a dishonorable relationship with another man, she is condemned.
Gellius, quoting Cato
Economic Life
Women engaged in marketing as a regular thing – both free and slave
Economic Life
An unusual female slave profession: gladiators. This plaque commemmorates the freedom of Achillea and Amazonia.
Professions:
•Pedagogue
•Personal secretary
•Hairdresser
•Fishmonger
•Grocer (in business with her husband)
•Porter
•Fuller – some of the slaves shown are children
Economic Life
•Wool-weigher (market position)•Seamstress; Weaver
•Actress
•Musician
Women’s personal slaves are predominantly female – and female slaves are often portrayed doing typically feminine tasks.
Slaves and Freedwomen
But most slaves described or referred to, even domestics, are male.
Slaves and Freedwomen
Cato’s Instructions to a slave overseer, regarding the hosuekeeper:
See that the housekeeper perform all her duties.
If the master has given her to you as a wife, keep yourself only to her.
Make her stand in awe of you. Restrain her from extravagance.
She must visit the neighboring and other women very seldom, and not have them either in the house or in her part of it.
She must not go out to meals or be a gadabout.
She must not engage in religious worship herself or get others to engage in it for her without the orders of the master or mistress.
She must be neat herself and and keep the farmstead neat and clean.
Slaves and Freedwomen
Slaves were not allowed to marry, though they could live in marriage-like relationships. A slave’s partner was called a contubernalis, essentially, “roommate.”
Slaves had no rights over their children, and at any point either partner or children could be sold away from the other.As Cato’s passge reveals, masters could reward male slaves with “wives,” niether slave having much choice in the matter.
Masters had sexual rights to their slaves. Though social disapproval and family issues were factors limiting this in some cases.
“dominus ancillae suae”
Slaves and Freedwomen
One measure of status in Rome was the large numbers of slaves the elite had attending and serving them. Elite women, as well as elite men, participated in this sort of display. Domestic slaves in rich households might have light duties but little personal space, and be subject to the whims of their master or mistress.
Slaves and Freedwomen
Slaves attending their mistress and her daughter
Slaves and Freedwomen
Funerary monuments of freedmen and freedwomen often emphasize mainstream family values.
Slaves could be manumitted, either for a price or otherwise, and could buy the freedom of their children – if the masters cooperated. Freedmen (and freedwomen) sometimes became wealthy, but most commonly lived ordinary lives.
Lucius Aurelius Hermia, freedman of Lucius, a butcher of the Viminal Hill. She who went before me
in death, my one and only wife, chaste in body, a loving woman of my heart possessed, lived faithful to
her faithful man; in fondness equal to her other virtues, never during bitter times did she shrink
from loving duties.
Slaves and Freedwomen
In life, I was named Aurelia Philematium, a
woman chaste and modest, knowing not the
crowd, faithful to her man. My man was a
fellow-freedman; he was also in very truth over and above a father to me; and
alas, I have lost him. Seven years old was I
when he, even he, took me to his bosom; forty years
old - and I am in the power of violent death. He through my constant
loving duties flourished at all seasons . . .
Slaves and Freedwomen
Adornment: Personal and Political
Limiting women’s display:
•The Lex Oppia, imposed during the Punic wars, “restricted women’s finery and withdrew the privilege of riding in carriages”
•Taxes were imposed on wealthy women’s property in particular (as individual rather than precisely related to the patriarchal concerns of the family line)
•Were these limitations practical or did they have (also or instead) a symbolic meaning?
Women cannot hold magistracies or
priesthoods or triumphs or military decorations or awards or spoils of war. Cosmetics and
adornments are women’s decorations. They
delight and boast of them and this is what our ancestors called
women’s estate. (Valerius, in Livy 34.7.8)
Adornment: Personal and Political
The Lex Oppia, instituted in the Punic War, was protested by women afterward
What view of women’s value in society and the outside world emerges here?
Adornment: Personal and Political
Whenever Aemelia left her house to partake in women’s processions, it had been her
habit to appear in great state, as befitted a woman who had shared the life of
the great Africanus , , , Apart from the magnificence of her
personal attire and the decoration of her carriage, all the . . . sacrificial essels and utensils were made of
gold or silver, and were carried in her train in such ceremonial occasions . . .
The ancient Trophy wife:
Adornment: Personal and Political
If you will let them unbind each element [of social control] and finally be
raised level with men, do you think that they will be tolerable? As soon as they
begin to be our equals, they will be our
masters . . . Speech attributed to Cato, Livy 34.3.2
Sumptuary and morality legislation often focuses on women, and is often an issue in conservative declarations of socal control:
Solon’s restrictions on Athenian women’s display in mourning
Islamic fundamentalism
Morality legistlation in the USA?
Elite Women
•Political marriages•Roles as mediators •Julia•Cornelia •Servilia•Octavia
•Education •Moral guidance•Fame (usually through deeds of her sons)
Finis
Slaves and Freedwomen
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