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Woman; Her Position and Influence in Ancient Greece and Rome, and Among the Early Christians

Chapter 40: INDEX.
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About This Book

A scholarly survey traces women's social, legal, and religious roles in ancient Greek and Roman societies and within early Christian communities. It examines literary and historical sources to contrast Homeric, Spartan, and Athenian practices, highlights poetic and public figures, and analyzes Roman family law, religious life, and domestic effects of marriage arrangements. The study then considers the changing status of women in early Christianity, offering explanations for shifts in influence. Supplementary chapters address contested interpretations, regional variations, cultural practices, and specific textual portraits, and the volume concludes with a bibliography and index.

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
  • 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
  • Nausicaa, her industry and accomplishments, 20;
  • washes Ulysses, 200
  • Nothoi. See Children.
  • 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