ABSTRACT

This volume argues that ancient Greek girls and early Christian virgins and their families made use of rhetorically similar traditions of marriage to an otherworldly bridegroom in order to handle the problem of a girl’s denied or disrupted transition into adulthood.

In both ancient Greece and early Christian Rome, the standard female transition into adulthood was marked by marriage, sex, and childbirth. When problems arose just before or during this transition, the transitional girl’s status within society became insecure. Walker presents a case for how and why the dead Greek virgin girl, depicted in Archaic through Hellenistic sources, in both texts and inscriptions, as a bride of Hades, and the life-long female Christian virgin or celibate ascetic, dubbed the bride of Christ around the third century CE, provide a fruitful point of comparison as particular examples of strategies used to neutralize the tension of disrupted female transition into adulthood.

Bride of Hades to Bride of Christ offers a fascinating comparative study that will be of interest to anyone working on virginity and womanhood in the ancient world.

chapter |18 pages

Introduction

part I|78 pages

Virgin suicides

chapter 1|38 pages

Loving death

chapter 2|34 pages

Protecting the virgin bride

chapter |4 pages

Part I conclusion

part II|68 pages

Parents of the bride

chapter 3|28 pages

Hades takes a bride

chapter 4|32 pages

Recruiting brides of Christ

chapter |3 pages

Part II conclusion

chapter |3 pages

Epilogue