This dissertation is a cultural history of the role of human fertility – fecunditas – in Ancient Roman society c. 200 B.C. – A.D. 250. I ask how the Romans chose to understand human fertility, how they sought to preserve and encourage it, and how the absence of fertility affected their marriages, their families and their political careers. It is an investigation of the place of fertility in the Roman cultural consciousness. Using a wide range of sources – literary, epigraphic, papyrological, juridical, and numismatic – I argue that the Romans conceptualized fecunditas (fertility) not just as a generic female quality, but as one of the cardinal virtues that all married women were expected to embody. A woman’s fecunditas could be evaluate...
The history of the Roman Empire has thus far been largely dominated by male narratives. With ancient...
This dissertation examines how ancient Romans dealt with the innumerable military losses that the ex...
In this dissertation, I explore both the diverse variability and the traditional ideologies of the R...
This paper surveys and evaluates the range of methods recommended mostly to promote but also to prev...
This thesis employs arguments developed by historians on the British Empire to explore the essential...
For the patrician class, marriage was a form of power intended to uphold Roman patriarchy by providi...
Marriage in Rome was monogamous; mating was polygynous. Powerful men in the Roman empire, as in othe...
Studies of female adolescence, whether in historical or modern societies, recognize that the relativ...
Mating in Rome was polygynous; marriage was monogamous. In the years 18 and 9 the first Roman emper...
Scholarship to date has dealt mainly with the legal aspects of Roman marriage and its place wi...
This thesis has collected and investigated for the very first time a large variety of source- materi...
This study explores social and gendered aspects of female fertility in popular religious practices i...
This thesis explores infertility in the ancient medical texts. Fertility was a topic of great intere...
Since the first civilizations emerged, reproductive ability has been one of the most prominent eleme...
There were two major Augustan enactments on marriage and childbearing, the lex lulia de maritandis o...
The history of the Roman Empire has thus far been largely dominated by male narratives. With ancient...
This dissertation examines how ancient Romans dealt with the innumerable military losses that the ex...
In this dissertation, I explore both the diverse variability and the traditional ideologies of the R...
This paper surveys and evaluates the range of methods recommended mostly to promote but also to prev...
This thesis employs arguments developed by historians on the British Empire to explore the essential...
For the patrician class, marriage was a form of power intended to uphold Roman patriarchy by providi...
Marriage in Rome was monogamous; mating was polygynous. Powerful men in the Roman empire, as in othe...
Studies of female adolescence, whether in historical or modern societies, recognize that the relativ...
Mating in Rome was polygynous; marriage was monogamous. In the years 18 and 9 the first Roman emper...
Scholarship to date has dealt mainly with the legal aspects of Roman marriage and its place wi...
This thesis has collected and investigated for the very first time a large variety of source- materi...
This study explores social and gendered aspects of female fertility in popular religious practices i...
This thesis explores infertility in the ancient medical texts. Fertility was a topic of great intere...
Since the first civilizations emerged, reproductive ability has been one of the most prominent eleme...
There were two major Augustan enactments on marriage and childbearing, the lex lulia de maritandis o...
The history of the Roman Empire has thus far been largely dominated by male narratives. With ancient...
This dissertation examines how ancient Romans dealt with the innumerable military losses that the ex...
In this dissertation, I explore both the diverse variability and the traditional ideologies of the R...