ABSTRACT

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.

chapter 1|20 pages

Life within an ancient knot

The extraordinary within the confines of the ordinary

chapter 2|21 pages

Mind the gap

Evidence (?) for non-elite couples in the Hellenistic period

chapter 3|17 pages

From ideal to reality

Married couples on Hellenistic inscribed grave epigrams 1

chapter 4|17 pages

Vilicus and vilica in the De Agri Cultura

The elder Cato's script for a farming couple

chapter 5|14 pages

Literary models and social challenges

Marital love according to Ovid in the Tristia and Epistulae ex Ponto

chapter 6|17 pages

For better or for worse

Conjugal relationships of writers and intellectuals under the challenges of the Empire

chapter 7|22 pages

Worth her weight

Worthy women, coupling, and eating in Petronius' Satyrica

chapter 9|19 pages

Looking ordinary

Ideals and ideologies in the iconography of married couples in Roman society

chapter 10|17 pages

Material aspects of marriage

Economic transactions between spouses in Roman Egypt 1

chapter 11|24 pages

‘For I have no other sun but you’

Emotions and married life in Greek papyri