Married Life in Greco-Roman Antiquity

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ancient gender roles
Ancient Greece
Ancient Rome
BCE
Book III
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classical social history
Conjugal Love
conjugal love in Epistulae ex Ponto
conjugal love in tristia
conjugal relationships research
Conjugal Roles
conjugal roles in ancient greece
conjugal roles in ancient rome
conjugal roles in antiquity
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Curse Tablet
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emotional history classics
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family dynamics antiquity
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Funerary Epigrams
Funerary Monument
gender in ancient greece
gender in ancient rome
gender in the ancient world
gender in the roman world
Grave Epigrams
grave epigrams and marriage in the ancient world
grave epirgrams and marriage in antiquity
Greek Papyri
Hellenistic inscribed grave epigrams
Hellenistic Period
lived experience ancient couples
Marriage Agreement
marriage in ancient greek
marriage in ancient rome
marriage in antiquity
marriage in Epistulae ex Ponto
marriage in greek literature
marriage in in Greek papyri
marriage in latin literature
marriage in ovid
marriage in Petronius' Satyrica
marriage in plutarch
marriage in roman egypt
marriage in roman literature
marriage in the ancient world
marriage in the hellenistic world
marriage in the tristia
married couples in ancient greece
married couples in ancient rome
married couples in antiquity
married couples in the ancient world
married couples in the roman empire
Mid-first Century CE
non elite couple in the hellenistic period
non elite couples in ancient greece
none elite couples in ancient rome
Piper
plutarch's marriage precepts
Polla Argentaria
roman couples in art
Roman Egypt
Roman Egypt marriage economy
Staatliche Museen Zu Berlin
Thrasea Paetus
Vilicus and vilica
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032149653
  • Weight: 360g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 29 Jan 2024
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Beyond the institution of marriage, its norms, and rules, what was life like for married couples in Greco-Roman antiquity? This volume explores a wide range of sources over seven centuries to uncover possible answers to this question.

On tombstones, curse or oracular tablets, in contracts, petitions, letters, treatises, biographies, novels, and poems, throughout Egypt, Greece, and Rome, 107 couples express themselves or are given life by their contemporaries and share their experiences of, and views on, marital relationships and their practical and emotional consequences. Renowned scholars and the next generation of experts explore seven centuries of source material to uncover the dynamics of the married life of metropolitan and provincial, famous and unknown, young and old couples. Men’s and women’s hopes, fears, traumas, joys, endeavours, and needs are analysed and reveal an array of interactions and behaviours that enlighten us on gender roles, social expectations, and intimate dealings in antiquity. Known texts are revisited, new evidence is put forward, and novel interpretations and concepts are offered which highlight local and chronological specificities as well as transhistorical commonalities. The analysis of married life in Greco-Roman antiquity, from ongoing vetting process to place where to find security, reveals the fundamental yearning to be included and loved and how the tensions created by the sometimes contradictory demands of traditional ideals and individual realities can be resolved, furthering our knowledge of social and cultural mechanisms.

Married Life in Greco-Roman Antiquity will provide valuable resources of interest to scholars and students of Classical studies as well as social history, gender studies, family history, the history of emotions, and microhistory.

Claude-Emmanuelle Centlivres Challet is Scientific Collaborator at the Institut d’Archéologie et des Sciences de l’Antiquité at the University of Lausanne, Switzerland. Her research interests and publications include genders and couple relationships (Like Man, Like Woman: Roman Women, Gender Qualities and Conjugal Relationships at the Turn of the First Century, 2013), family, sexuality, breastfeeding, breast pumps, infant feeding, Pliny the Younger, and Juvenal. Her next book explores gender pressure in Roman times.