Slaves waiting on their mistress |
Women experienced class structure both
directly, insofar as it qualified them for certain social privileges and for
entry into the few religious offices open to them, and indirectly, in that
women's status derived from the men with whom they were most closely
associated. From the time of the kings, Roman citizens (excepting women and
children) were registered in the census by tribe and class, originally for
purposes of taxation and military service; the quinquennial census enrolled new
citizens and monitored class criteria, which had social and political
implications for the entire citizen family. Although the divisions and
qualifications of class changed over time, the hierarchical concept did not, as
it translated into wealth, privilege, and office. An upper-class woman's very
identity was tied to her social status, as her single name for much of the
Republic was a feminized version of her gens name, setting the many
Claudias, Aemelias, and Julias apart from the crowd. As sisters, wives, and
daughters, elite women shared in the prestige and glory of their male kin,
jealously guarding their privilege and jockeying for primacy within their
class. They claimed rank through dress, jewelry, public display, and reputation
as respectable matronae, observing each other carefully for lapses.
Polybius, a 2nd century BCE Greek
historian of Rome, noted that Aemilia, Scipio Africanus' sister, dressed
opulently and rode in an elaborately decorated carriage when she participated
in women's ceremonies; she brought with her sacrificial baskets, cups, and
utensils made of gold or silver and was accompanied by a retinue of servants
larger than any other woman's. She reasoned that such great state was fitting
for one who had shared the life of the great Africanus (Histories
31.26-27 ). Because we have fewer
visual and literary sources for the lives of lower-class citizen women and
freedwomen, it is less clear how class and social distinctions within class
affected their lives. No doubt they were required to work in the house with
little or no help; many also worked outside the home to contribute to family
resources. They, too, must have experienced the benefits and disadvantages of
close community oversight of virtue, family honor, and wealth. |
| Text-Commentaries | Additional Readings | |
|---|---|---|
| Funerary Inscription: Petronia Hedone | See the Latin reader The Worlds of Roman Women for the following texts: | |
| Titus Livius, Ab Urbe Condita 10.23: Pudicitia Patricia | Petronius Arbiter, Satyricon 37, 67, 76 (excerpts): Fortunata at dinner | |
| Cornelius Nepos, De Viris Illustribus, Praefatio 2-8: Greek and Roman women | C. Nepos, De Viris Illustribus, frag. 1-2: Cornelia's letters to her son | |
| Valerius Maximus, Factorum et Dictorum Memorabilia 8.3.3: Hortensia's advocacy | M. Tullius Cicero, Epistulae ad Familiares 14.4, 20: scenes from a Roman marriage | |
| Memorial inscriptions for Claudia Olympias | C. Plinius Caecilius Secundus (minor), Epistulae 8.10: Calpurnia's miscarriage. | |
| Ulpian, Epitome. 13-14: social class and prostitution | Gaius, Institutiones 1.144-145, 148-150: tutela. | |
| T. Livius, Ab Urbe Condita 39.9-10 (excerpts): Hispala Faecenia | ||
| C. Sallustius Crispus, Bellum Catilinae 24-25 (excerpts): Sempronia | ||
| ILS 6373, Funerary Inscription: Naevoleia Tyche, public benefactor. | ||
| T. Livius, Ab Urbe Condita 1.39, 41 (excerpts): Tanaquil. | ||
| See De Feminis Romanis at Diotima for the following on-line Latin texts: | ||
| Dessau, Inscriptiones Latinae Selectae | ||
| C. Plinius Caecilius Secundus (minor), Epistulae 7.24: Ummidia Quadratilla | ||
Pudicitia Pose of the Elite Roman Matron: Example 1: a female statue with a portrait head. Capitoline Museums: Palazzo Nuovo, Rome; Example 2: female statue with a fringed cloak (from a Hellenistic type). Capitoline Museums: Palazzo Nuovo, Rome; Example 3: a funerary sculpture from the late Republic or early Empire. Altemps Museum, Rome; Example 4: a limestone funerary relief bust of Haliphat, a fashionable bejeweled woman of Palmyra's prosperous merchant class who died in 231 CE. Washington, DC, Smithsonian: Freer-Sackler Gallery.
Philematium: marble funerary relief of Aurelia Philematium and her husband Aurelius Hermia portrayed as Roman citizens. It is one of earliest tombstones to commemorate the legitimate marriage of freedpeople. Rome, from a tomb on Via Nomentana, c. 80 BCE. London, British Museum.
Elderly Woman: encaustic mummy portrait reproducing wrinkles and grey hair; the absence of jewelry and fine clothes suggests she belongs to the lower classes. Roman, Fayum Egypt, 300-325 CE. London, British Museum
Drunk: an African red slipware jug, shaped in the form of a comically drunken old woman clasping a wine jug. Roman, early third century CE. Boston, Museum of Fine Arts.
Mosaic of two elegantly dressed women seated on chairs (cathedrae) having conversation. Trier, Landesmuseum.
Maria Auxe: marble tombstone with a portrait relief of a freedwoman with an inscription by the dedicator, Gaius Domitius Agathopus. Rome, Baths of Diocletian.
Antonine Woman: marble bust, perhaps a member of the imperial family (Faustina minor, wife of Marcus Aurelius, or his daughter Lucilla). Late 2nd century CE. London, British Museum.
Matrona: marble statue of an elderly woman of the early Antonine period (side view). 130-50 CE. Rome, Museo Montemartini.
Matrona: Marble bust of a young woman. 3rd century CE. Vienna, Kunsthistorisches Museum.
Flavian Woman: bust of an aristocratic woman of the late 1st-2nd century CE. Rome, Palazzo Nuovo.
Caltilia Moschis, a freedwoman of Ostia; relief detail from her funerary altar. Santa Monica, Getty Museum.
Toilette: detail of a relief showing four female slaves styling the hair of their mistress; from the side of large family tomb monument in Neumagen. Trier, Landesmuseum.
Funerary relief in marble of a family of freedpersons who practiced medicine: CLODIA HILARA ( right ); CLODIUS METRODORUS MEDICUS (center ); CLODIUS TERTIUS MEDICUS (left). Roman, last third of 1st century BCE. Paris, Louvre Museum.
Clothing: Roman clothing was a clear sign of status; for more details click here.
Mosaic: detail of a female slave pouring wine from an amphora into a pot or bucket set on a bronze stand in the shape of a satyr (full image). From a Roman villa at Centocelle near Rome, 2nd century CE. Vienna, Kunsthistorisches Museum.
Women Playing Knucklebones, a painted terracotta group. Two women crouch on the ground playing with knucklebones they hold in their hands. Capua, 340-330 BCE. London, British Museum.
Portrait in colored mosaic of an elegant woman from Pompeii, 1st century CE. Naples, National Archaeological Museum.
Grave relief in marble of a freedman couple, a young woman with a much older man, both in civic dress, depicted in the marriage pose iunctio dextrarum. Below their portraits is inscribed: P[UBLIUS] AIEDIVS P[UBLI] L[IBERTUS] AMPHIO; AEIDIA P[UBLI] L[IBERTA] FAVSTA MELIOR. Found on the Via Appia, Rome, c. 30 BCE. Berlin, Pergamon Museum.
Mature Female Head of marble: Matrona? or Vestal? She wears a stern expression, a headband under her veil and a band around her throat (see sideview). 49 BCE. Vienna, Kunsthistorisches Museum.
Pair of Ladies: a painted terracotta group of elegantly dressed women seated on a couch and sharing close conversation. Myrina. 100 BCE. London, British Museum.
Young Etruscan Woman Life-size terracotta sculpture (smaller) of an elegantly dressed female wearing elaborate jewelry, perhaps molded on real pieces. Late 4-early 3rd century BCE. NY: Metropolitan Museum of Art.
All images are courtesy of the VRoma Project's Image Archive.