Presented to the 10th Annual Symposium on Graduate Research and Scholarly Projects (GRASP) held at the Heskett Center, Wichita State University, April 25, 2014.Research completed at Department of History, College of Liberal Arts and SciencesThis research aims to investigate the avenues of continuity and change concerning attitudes toward and virtues attributed to Roman women, both pagan and Christian, from the first to the fifth century C.E. Romans felt it necessary to commemorate their dead by way of monuments and inscriptions. Analysis of the plethora of funerary epitaphs from this period reveals how the various streams of continuity and change affected female social status, religious placement, and allows us to gain a deeper understandi...
The history of the Roman Empire has thus far been largely dominated by male narratives. With ancient...
The history of the Roman Empire has thus far been largely dominated by male narratives. With ancient...
The history of the Roman Empire has thus far been largely dominated by male narratives. With ancient...
Comparing the common grave monuments for women of Athenian society which were primarily stele and ko...
The emergence of Augustus and his restoration of the Roman Republic prompted innovations in public p...
Includes vitaMy dissertation examines a selection of fourth- and fifth-century inscribed Latin funer...
Thesis (M.A.)--Wichita State University, College of Fairmount College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, ...
By their social and material context as markers of graves, dedications and public signs of honour, i...
As final markers of identity and memory, the tombs of Roman women carried ritual, ideological, and e...
Both in funerary reliefs and in the written sources, writing tools and materials are often associate...
This paper explores the definition of the female gender throughout the Roman female life course and ...
This paper examines the depiction of Roman freedwomen (former slaves) in thirty-five late Republican...
Previous studies of tombstones and inscriptions dedicated to divinities have focused on methods of a...
This paper examines the cultural information of epigraphic choices within military communities of Ro...
This paper examines the cultural information of epigraphic choices within military communities of Ro...
The history of the Roman Empire has thus far been largely dominated by male narratives. With ancient...
The history of the Roman Empire has thus far been largely dominated by male narratives. With ancient...
The history of the Roman Empire has thus far been largely dominated by male narratives. With ancient...
Comparing the common grave monuments for women of Athenian society which were primarily stele and ko...
The emergence of Augustus and his restoration of the Roman Republic prompted innovations in public p...
Includes vitaMy dissertation examines a selection of fourth- and fifth-century inscribed Latin funer...
Thesis (M.A.)--Wichita State University, College of Fairmount College of Liberal Arts and Sciences, ...
By their social and material context as markers of graves, dedications and public signs of honour, i...
As final markers of identity and memory, the tombs of Roman women carried ritual, ideological, and e...
Both in funerary reliefs and in the written sources, writing tools and materials are often associate...
This paper explores the definition of the female gender throughout the Roman female life course and ...
This paper examines the depiction of Roman freedwomen (former slaves) in thirty-five late Republican...
Previous studies of tombstones and inscriptions dedicated to divinities have focused on methods of a...
This paper examines the cultural information of epigraphic choices within military communities of Ro...
This paper examines the cultural information of epigraphic choices within military communities of Ro...
The history of the Roman Empire has thus far been largely dominated by male narratives. With ancient...
The history of the Roman Empire has thus far been largely dominated by male narratives. With ancient...
The history of the Roman Empire has thus far been largely dominated by male narratives. With ancient...