INDEX.
- Achilles, his connexion with Briseis, 15, 192, 198
- Adultery, unknown in Sparta, 31;
- severely punished in Athens, 51;
- and in Roman wives, 88;
- Augustus’s legislation, 145.
- See Divorce and Marriage.
- Afrania, wife of Licinius Bucco, her fondness for law, 125
- Agesistrata, her efforts to reform Sparta, 35–8
- Agiatis, wife of Cleomenes, 38–9
- Agis, his efforts to reform Sparta, 35–7
- Agnodice, first Athenian midwife, 240
- Agrippina, the first, crushes a mutiny, 121
- Agrippina, the second, the mother of Nero, at the Conventus Matronarum, 126;
- her character, 132
- Alcibiades and his hetaira, 59
- Amæsia of Sentinum pleads her own cause, 125
- Appius Claudius admits slaves to citizenship, 78
- Ares bathed by Hebe, 200
- Arete, her influence, 18
- Aristophanes, on Aspasia, 65;
- on community of wives, 74;
- on women, 75;
- and Plato’s ‘Republic,’ 215
- Aristotle, on unfaithful husbands, 6;
- on Spartan women, 34;
- on Athenian citizenship, 213
- Arria, wife of Pætus, her fortitude, 134
- Asia, women elected to priesthood in, 124
- Asia Minor, honours conferred on women in, 124;
- inscriptions in honour of women, 237–8
- Aspasia, her connexion with Pericles, 60;
- her immense influence, 61;
- on the duties of wives, 62;
- and Lysicles, 63;
- tried, but acquitted, 64;
- the comic poets on, 65;
- was she beautiful? 66;
- in the Socratic dialogues, 73;
- modern critics on, 210;
- her portraits, 211
- Athenagoras, on kissing, 173;
- condemns second marriages, 179
- Athens: two classes of free women in, 49;
- restrictions on the citizen-woman, 50;
- her life as maiden and wife, 52;
- strangers in, 56;
- the stranger-woman forbidden to marry, 57;
- Aspasia’s influence in, 60–65;
- treaties of intermarriage, 68, 211;
- sons of an hetaira admitted to citizenship, 68;
- changes in law of citizenship, 212
- Augustus, was his wife a poisoner? 131;
- his marriage legislation, 140–43, 238;
- rewards for large families, 144
- Bacchus, his worship introduced into Rome, 95–7
- Bachelors, fined by the Censors, 138;
- disabilities imposed on, 144;
- in Plautus, 222
- Bader (Mlle.) on divorces in Rome, 117
- Baptism not to be administered by a woman, 162
- Benecke, E. F. M., on love in Greek poetry, 206
- Benoist, L. E., on female characters in Plautus, 227, 229, 230
- Blandina, her terrible martyrdom, 155
- Brandt, P., on Sappho, 208
- Breach of promise, actionable in Latium, but not in Rome, 116
- Bread-and-Cheesites, heretical sect, 165
- Briseis, beloved by Achilles, 15, 192
- Buchholz, E., on sexual passion among the Homeric Greeks, 205
- Byzantines, intermarriage with Athenians, 69
- Callistus, Bp., on marriage, 249–54
- Calpurnia, wife of Pliny the younger, her ability, 121
- Caracalla greatly extends Roman citizenship, 83
- Carfania, woman lawyer, 126
- Carvilius, Spurius, divorces his wife, 116
- Cato the Censor, on adultery, 88;
- opposes Roman matrons, 101–3
- Cato Uticensis divorces his wife and remarries her, 110
- Chelonis, her noble character, 36
- Children, Roman father had power to make away with, 140;
- looked upon as an evil, 141;
- regarded as burdens by Christian ascetics, 180–81;
- infanticide condemned by Christianity, 188;
- the fœtus and the soul, 189;
- “nothoi” in Homer, 193;
- notable instances, 194;
- legitimate and illegitimate, 195–7
- Christ, his conduct towards women, 148
- Christianity, its early influence on Rome, 113;
- and on marriage, 147;
- women in the Gospels, 148;
- reason of St. Paul’s sternness to women, 149;
- Christian views of morality: Clement of Alexandria, 151;
- Methodius, 152;
- various meanings of the term Christianity, 153;
- women at first prominent in, 154;
- martyrdom of Blandina, 155;
- and of Perpetua and Felicitas, 156;
- position of widows, 158;
- deaconesses and virgins, 159;
- women forbidden in the West to teach or baptize, 161;
- allowed by some Eastern churches to teach, 162;
- views on slavery, 167;
- opposite views on marriage, 169;
- pagan ideas of Christianity, 170;
- Love-feasts, 172;
- the “holy kiss,” 173;
- marriage as a blessing, 175;
- the ascetic view of marriage, 176–9;
- of children, 180;
- of woman’s nature, 181;
- gold, ornaments, dyed clothes, and mirrors condemned, 186;
- infanticide condemned, 188;
- the fœtus and the soul, 189;
- asceticism and the survival of the unfittest, 190;
- concubinage of the clergy, 214;
- influence of Christianity on the position of woman, 248;
- Bp. Callistus’s views, 249–254.
- See Paganism and Religion.
- Chrysostom, Dio, on women of Tarsus, 150
- Cicero, his affection for his daughter, 85;
- on women in politics, 122–3
- Clement of Alexandria, his ‘Pædagogus,’ 151;
- on kissing, 173;
- on children, 180;
- on woman, 183;
- her duties, 184;
- her dress, 185–6;
- on marriage, 239
- Cleombrotus, his wife’s faithfulness, 36
- Cleomenes, efforts to reform Sparta, 38–40
- Cleopatra as ruler, 242
- Clytemnestra, reasons why her conduct was condemned, 13
- Collyridians, honours paid to the Virgin by, 165
- Commodian on feminine adornment, 185
- Companion. See Hetaira.
- Comparetti, D., on portraits of Sappho, 211
- Concubines, their rights in Athens, 51n., 213;
- the “pallakis” and her children in Homer, 193–7;
- concubinage among Christian clergy, 214;
- a “God-loving concubine,” 254.
- See Hetaira, Marriage, and Wives.
- Conventus Matronarum, its history, 126
- Cornelia, mother of the Gracchi, her devotion to the State, 120
- Cornelia, Pompey’s second wife, her culture, 120
- Courtezans in Plautus, their heartlessness, 228, 231;
- some exceptions, 229–30.
- See Concubines and Hetaira.
- Cratesicleia, her noble conduct, 38–40
- Cyprian, on hair dyes, 186;
- and tinting the eyes, 187
- Deaconesses, their position in the early Church, 159–60;
- forbidden to administer baptism, 162
- Deacons, in the early Church, 160
- Dejanira on a husband’s unfaithfulness, 5
- Demosthenes on the Crown, forgeries in, 68
- Diotima and Sophocles, 59
- Divorce: Pericles divorces his wife, 60;
- Roman wives divorced for trifling offences, 88;
- dissolution of marriage contract by husband or wife, 109, 115;
- first Roman divorce, 116;
- divorces become frequent, 118;
- legislated for by Augustus, 145;
- provision for wife’s dowry in Egyptian contract, 245.
- See Adultery and Marriage.
- Drumann, W., on the virtues and vices of Roman women, 113
- Düntzer on Thetis and Achilles, 199
- Education:
- Athenian wives little educated, 52;
- the hetaira often highly educated, 58;
- Plato on woman’s education, 74;
- Pompey’s second wife highly educated, 120;
- also the wife of Pliny the younger, 121;
- Clement of Alexandria on women’s education, 239
- Egypt, illegitimacy not recognized in, 196;
- Cleopatra as ruler, 242;
- typical marriage contract, 245
- Elagabalus and the Conventus Matronarum, 127
- Elliot, G. F. Scott, on nakedness and morality, 204
- Epiphanius on the Collyridians, 165
- Erinna, pupil of Sappho, 43
- Eubœa and treaty of intermarriage with Athens, 68, 211
- Euripides, on women, 10;
- on Spartan women, 33
- Felicitas, story of her martyrdom, 156
- Finck, H. T., on nudity and bathing, 205
- Furtwängler, A., on portraits of Sappho and Aspasia, 211
- Gladstone, W. E., on Homeric women, 11n.;
- on men washed by women, 200–202
- Gracchus, Tiberius, his affection for his wife, 85
- Greece, ancient, honour paid to priestesses in, 163;
- sexual passion in, 205
- Greece, modern, early maturity of woman in, 54
- Greeks, their standard of conduct, 3;
- views of love, 4;
- their admiration of beauty of form, 7, 22.
- See Athens, Homer, and Sparta.
- Gregory Thaumaturgus, on chastity in woman, 183
- Hebe bathes Ares, 200
- Helen, not blamed by men, 13;
- washes Ulysses, 202
- Hetaira, companion or stranger-woman, forbidden in Athens to marry, 57;
- her interest in philosophy and politics, 58;
- Aspasia, 62–7;
- children of an hetaira sometimes admitted to citizenship, 68;
- influence on notable men, 71;
- her social position, 213–214.
- See Concubines, Courtezans, Marriage, and Wives.
- Hippolytus on Bp. Callistus and marriage, 249
- Hipponax on women, 9
- Homer:
- his women submissive, 11;
- no flirtation in, 14;
- Greeks monogamists in, 15;
- married life in, 16;
- influence of women, 17;
- wives and concubines and their children, 192–7;
- Melantho’s insolence, 198;
- Thetis’s advice to Achilles, ib.;
- men washed by women, 199–202
- Horace on the Lex Julia de adulterio cohibendo, 146
- Hortensia’s speech to the triumvirs, 105
- Hortensius marries Cato’s wife, 110
- Hruza, E., on the “nothoi” in Homer, 195
- Husbands, their unfaithfulness tolerantly viewed by Greek wives, 6;
- power over their wives in Rome, 87;
- poisoned by their wives, 89, 91;
- wives bought by, 105.
- See Marriage and Wives.
- Hyperides, his defence of Phryne, 7
- Illegitimacy. See Children.
- Julia, daughter of Julius Cæsar, her tact, 120
- Julia, daughter of Augustus, her marriages, 131
- Julius Cæsar gives rewards for large families, 143
- Kissing, in the early Church, 173;
- peculiar Roman custom, 233
- Kock, T., attacks Sappho, 207
- Koechly, H., on Thetis and Achilles, 199
- Kublinski, J., on Sappho, 208
- Lampito, her physical strength, 30
- Lasaulx on “nothoi” and “pallakis,” 195
- Laws. See Lex.
- Lawyers, women as, 125
- Leonidas opposes reform in Sparta, 36
- Lex:
- Canuleia, 82;
- Julia and Plautia, ib.;
- Oppia, 99–103;
- Voconia, 108;
- Papia Poppæa, 142–5;
- De maritandis ordinibus, 146, 251
- Livia, wife of Augustus, her share in politics, 123;
- was she a poisoner? 131
- Livy on woman’s influence in politics, 123
- Love-making, among the Greeks, 205;
- and the Romans, 230;
- lovers’ terms of endearment, 232–6
- Lysias on Eubœans and intermarriage, 211
- Lysicles, his connexion with Aspasia, 63
- Mæsta of Sentinum pleads her own cause, 125
- Mahaffy, J. P., on the Cleopatras, 243
- Marcia dissolves her marriage with Cato, and remarries him, 110
- Marriage:
- Greeks monogamists in Homer, 15;
- happiness of married life, 16;
- obligatory in Sparta for girls, 28;
- and for men, 29;
- restrictions on the citizen-woman in Athens, 51;
- matches arranged by old women, 53;
- the hetaira not allowed to marry, 57;
- Athenian treaties of intermarriage, 68, 211;
- intermarriage in Rome, 81;
- effect of Caracalla’s action, 83;
- status of the Roman wife, 105;
- effect of wealth on marriage, 108, 115;
- as a contract, 109;
- curious dissolutions of marriage, 110;
- consent the essence of Roman marriage, 114;
- could be dissolved by husband or wife, 115;
- Romans who married several times, 118;
- Musonius’s defence of, 137;
- regulated by Emperor Augustus, 138–43, 238;
- rewards for large families, 144;
- large families a disgrace, 147;
- effect of marriage on slaves, 168;
- two Christian views of marriage, 169;
- marriage as a blessing, 175;
- the ascetic view, 176–181;
- second marriages condemned, 179;
- children a burden, 180;
- dowried and undowried wives in Plautus, 220;
- effects of extravagance, 222;
- philosophers on, 239;
- between brother and sister in Egypt, 243;
- equality of the Egyptian woman in marriage, 244;
- typical contract, 245;
- Bp. Callistus’s views condemned by Hippolytus, 249–54.
- See Adultery, Concubines, Divorce, and Hetaira.
- Maximus Tyrius on Sappho, 44
- Medicine, first Athenian woman to practise, 240
- Melantho’s insolence to Ulysses, 198
- Men washed by women, 199–202, 204
- Menander on Sappho, 209
- Messalina, her death, 132
- Metellus, Quintus, on duty of marriage, 140
- Methodius, his ‘Banquet of the Ten Virgins,’ 152;
- on the blessedness of virginity, 178;
- on virgin purity, 188
- Midwife, first Athenian, 240
- Monogamy universal among Greeks in Homer, 15
- Montanists, honours paid to women by, 164
- Morillot, L., on legitimate and illegitimate children, 196
- Müller, O., on Athenian intermarriage, 212;
- on Athenian citizenship, 213
- Mure, Col. W., attacks Sappho, 207
- Musonius Rufus on the education of women, 135
- Octavia, wife of Antony, her interest in affairs of State, 121
- Oppius, his legislation against women, 99–103
- Paganism, its code of morality in Rome, 128;
- position of women under, 153;
- priestesses in Greece, 163;
- in Rome, 164;
- its ideas of Christianity, 170;
- priestess in Plautus, 227.
- See Religion.
- Pallakis. See Concubines.
- Panteus, his wife’s devotion, 40
- Paris, P., on woman in Asia Minor, 237
- Paul, reasons of his sternness towards women, 149–50;
- on the members of the Corinthian Church, 171
- Penelope, her love for Ulysses, 17
- Pericles, on Athenian women, 55;
- and Aspasia, 60;
- Wilamowitz on, 210;
- and law of Athenian citizenship, 212
- Periktione on wife’s duty, 5
- Perpetua, story of her martyrdom, 156
- Phidias, Wilamowitz on, 210
- Philemon on women, 10
- Philosophy in Rome:
- Epicureanism, 129;
- Platonism, 130;
- Stoicism, 133
- Phratria and citizenship, 69
- Phryne, influence of her beauty, 7, 71
- Platæa, treaty of intermarriage with Athens, 68
- Plato, on unfaithful husbands, 6;
- on Spartan women, 33n.;
- on Diotima, 59n.;
- on Aspasia, 62;
- his views on women, 73;
- and the ‘Ecclesiazusæ’, 215
- Plautus, women in his plays:
- as slaves, 217;
- the citizen-wife, 218;
- marriageable girls, 219;
- dowried and undowried wives, 220;
- woman’s extravagance, 221;
- its effect on marriage, 222;
- wives faithful, 223;
- husbands and female slaves, 224;
- exemplary wives, 225–6;
- a notable priestess, 227;
- character of the courtezan, 228, 231;
- some exceptions, 229–230;
- terms of endearment used by lovers, 232–6
- Pliny, the younger, praise of his wife, 121
- Plutarch, on Spartan women, 31n.;
- on Aspasia, 60;
- on girls wrestling naked, 203
- Poisoning by Roman wives, 89–92, 131
- Politics, Aspasia’s influence on, 65;
- Athenian citizen-wives without political standing, 67;
- influence of Roman matrons on, 99–104;
- notable instances, 120–24
- Polycaste washes Telemachus, 199
- Polygamy: Priam’s wives, 192
- Porcia, wife of Brutus, her appeal for her husband’s confidence, 133
- Priam, his wives, 192;
- and his “nothoi,” 194
- Religion, its effect on the condition of women in Greece and Rome, 93;
- worship of the Idæan Mother in Rome, 94;
- introduction of the Bacchanalia, 95;
- and of Isis and other faiths, 97.
- See Christianity and Paganism.
- Rohde, E., on love-making among the Greeks, 205
- Rome:
- citizens, aliens, and slaves, 77, 79;
- treatment of female slaves, 80;
- patricians and plebeians, 81;
- extension of the conubium, 82;
- position of the Roman matron, 84;
- religion in, 93;
- worship of Bacchus introduced, 95;
- its condition on the introduction of Christianity, 113;
- pagan ideas of morality, 128;
- Romans bound to marry, 138;
- decrease of population, 141;
- position of women in, 153;
- honours paid to priestesses, 164.
- See Christianity.
- Sappho, testimonies to her ability, 42;
- her poetry, 43;
- close friendship with her pupils, 45;
- her attitude towards marriage, 46;
- honoured by her contemporaries, 47;
- ridiculed by Athenian comic writers, 48;
- was she beautiful? 66;
- modern writers on her character, 207;
- Greek plays on her career, 209;
- her portraits, 211
- Schneidewin, M., on men washed by women, 202
- Servilia, mother of Brutus, her influence in politics, 122
- Simonides of Amorgos on women, 9
- Slaves in Rome:
- become citizens, 78;
- treatment of female slaves, 80;
- slaves as Christians, 167;
- female slaves in Plautus, 217;
- amours with, 224
- Sophocles, on Athenian wives, 53n.;
- his relations with Theodota and Diotima, 59;
- his grandson admitted to citizenship, 70
- Sparta, idea of the State in, 25;
- training of women in, 26;
- their gymnastic contests, 27;
- marriage obligatory for girls, 28;
- and for men, 29;
- physical development of men and women, 29–30;
- no adultery, 31;
- effects of Spartan system of training, 33;
- influence of women in, 34;
- decay and efforts at reform, 35–41;
- strangers not allowed to reside in, 56;
- girls wrestling naked, 202
- Strabo on Sappho, 43
- Sulpicia, her Satire, 127
- Tacitus, his praise of his mother-in-law, 121
- Tarsus, character of its women, 150
- Telemachus washed by Polycaste, 199
- Terentia, wife of Cicero, her share in politics, 123
- Tertullian, on virgins and widows, 159;
- forbids deaconesses to baptize, 162;
- denounces women who speak in church, 165;
- on marriage between Christians, 175;
- on wives and wedlock, and second marriages, 179;
- on children as burdens, 181;
- on woman as a temptress, 182, 185;
- on the fœtus and the soul, 189
- Thebans and Athenians, question of intermarriages, 68
- Theodota and Sophocles, 59
- Thessaly, land of the beautiful women, 22
- Thetis, her advice to Achilles, 198
- Tiberius, his mother’s plans for him, 131
- Ulysses, his love for Penelope, 17;
- promises wives to his slaves, 193;
- washed by Nausicaa, 200;
- and by Helen, 202
- Valerius, L., proposes abrogation of Lex Oppia, 102
- Valerius Maximus, on women as lawyers, 125;
- on bachelors, 139
- Vestal Virgins, allowed to marry, 129;
- honours paid to them, 164
- Virgin Mary honoured by the Collyridians, 165
- Virgins, their position in the early Church, 159;
- virginity extolled, 178;
- Cyprian’s advice to, 186–7
- Welcker, F. G., defends Sappho, 207
- Widows, their position in the Christian Church, 158;
- prohibited from teaching, 161;
- allowed to teach by some Eastern churches, 162
- Wilamowitz, U. von, condemns Aspasia, 210
- Williamson (Rev. David), his seven wives, 118
- Wine, Athenian wives fond of, 54;
- forbidden to Roman wives, 88;
- drunk during the Bacchanalia, 96
- Wives, in Homer, tolerant of husbands’ unfaithfulness, 5;
- their faithfulness in Sparta, 32;
- restrictions on, in Athens, 51;
- fond of wine, 54;
- Plato on community of wives, 74, 130;
- their position in Rome, 84;
- in early Rome, 87;
- forbidden to taste wine, 88;
- severe restrictions on, ib.;
- many husbands poisoned, 89;
- later cases, 91;
- bought by husband, 105;
- transferred to husbands’ family, 106;
- effect of wealth on, 107, 109, 115;
- their interest in politics, 120–124;
- Christian view of wifely duties, 176;
- wives and concubines in Homer, 193–7;
- wives in Plautus, 220;
- their extravagance, 221;
- its effect on marriage, 222;
- faithful to husbands, 223;
- model wives, 225–6.
- See Adultery, Concubines, Hetaira, and Marriage.
- Woman in Greece:
- reverence for her beauty of form, 7;
- her history written by and for men, 8;
- satirists on, 9;
- her culture in modern Greece, 54
- Woman:
- In Homer:
- her meekness, 11;
- her influence, 17;
- her freedom, 18;
- her open-air life, 20;
- causes of her beauty, 22;
- mildness of Homeric women, 192;
- two kinds of wives, 193–7;
- Melantho’s insolence, 198;
- Thetis’s advice to Achilles, ib.;
- men washed by women, 199–202, 204;
- girls wrestling naked, 203–4;
- love-making, 205
- In Sparta:
- legislation for motherhood, 26;
- gymnastic exercises, 27;
- marriage obligatory, 28;
- physical development, 30;
- moral courage, 31;
- faithfulness to husband, 32;
- land held by women, 34;
- heroic women—Agesistrata and Chelonis, 35–8;
- Agiatis and Cratesicleia, 38–9;
- the wife of Panteus, 40
- Sappho:
- her unique position, 42;
- her friendship with her pupils, 45;
- praised by contemporaries, 47;
- ridiculed by Athenian comic writers, 48, 209;
- modern critics on, 207;
- her portraits, 211
- In Athens:
- restrictions on the citizen-woman, 51;
- her life as maid and wife, 52–4;
- the stranger-woman or hetaira, 57;
- her interest in philosophy and politics, 58;
- Aspasia’s life and influence, 60–67, 210;
- notable “companions,” 71;
- Plato on the education of women, 74;
- Aristophanes on women, 75
- In Rome:
- as full citizen, as alien, and as slave, 79;
- female slaves, 80;
- effect of the conubium on, 82–3;
- position of matrons, 84;
- severe restrictions in early Rome, 87;
- worship of the Idæan Mother, 94;
- of Bacchus, 95–97;
- and of other gods, 97;
- opposition to sumptuary laws, 99–103;
- appeal to the triumvirs, 104;
- in power of father or husband, 105;
- effect of wealth on, 107;
- married several times, 118;
- active interest in politics, 120;
- elected to magistracies and priesthoods, 124, 237–8;
- as lawyers, 125;
- and law-makers, 127;
- their ideas of morality, 128;
- noble Stoic women, 133–5
- Under Christianity:
- women in the Gospels, 148;
- St. Paul’s sternness towards, 149;
- Clement of Alexandria on, 151;
- Methodius on, 152;
- contrast under paganism and under Christianity, 153–4;
- martyrdom of Blandina, 155;
- and of Perpetua and Felicitas, 156;
- position of widows, 158;
- deaconesses and virgins, 159;
- widows and deaconesses forbidden to teach, 161;
- women and teaching in the Eastern Church, 162;
- honours paid to women under paganism, 163;
- and by heretical sects, 164–6;
- Christianity and women-slaves, 167;
- the ascetic view of woman as a temptress, 182;
- her duties, 184;
- must not wear dyed clothes or use mirrors, 186;
- value of woman in the home, 191;
- effect of Christianity on, 248
- In Plautus:
- women-slaves, 217;
- the citizen-wife, 218;
- marriageable girls, 219;
- effects of dowries, 220
- Philosophers on woman’s education, 239;
- the first woman doctor in Greece, 240
- In Egypt:
- Cleopatra, 242;
- equality of the woman in marriage, 243.
- See Wives.
- Wordsworth, Bp. J., on women under Christianity, 248
- Zscharnack, L., on women under Christianity, 248