About This Book
A survey of women's lives and social roles in ancient Greece, examining Homeric portrayals, myth and legend, civic and domestic institutions, religious functions, and the political influence exerted by women both publicly and behind the scenes. The text contrasts the recurrent extremes attributed to women—saintly devotion or destructive passion—and considers loyalty, enthusiasm, and moral stereotyping as recurring motifs. It integrates literary sources, mythic exempla, and archaeological findings to reconstruct daily life, legal status, marriage customs, and female agency, illustrating how women shaped events through personal influence, ritual participation, and occasional direct exercise of power.
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