Resources on women in Ancient Rome.
The following ancient Roman women have been considered the embodiment of Roman virtue and as women to be emulated.
Coriolanus was one of the famous Romans whose biography was written by Plutarch. Coriolanus was a Roman military leader who suffered unfairly at the hands of his fellow Romans, and then turned on them, but who was successfully prevailed upon by his mother and the women of Rome.
A look at the question of whether Roman women could divorce their husbands.
Laudatio Turiae is a late first century B.C., epitaph written by a man for his beloved wife.
On the anniversary of the foundation of the temple of Juno Lucina on the Esquiline, Roman matrons held a festival known as the Matronalia on March 1.
Pompey the Great had five wives. These are their names and the conditions of the marriages and divorces.
Chapter from Ancient Rome from the Earliest Times Down to 476 A.D., by Robert F. Pennell, on customs of daily life, including Roman houses, names, marriages, education, funerals, festivals and games, and more.
About.com's Women's History Guide has put online an etext on ancient Roman women. "Women and Marriage in Ancient Rome," from The Women of the Caesars, was written in 1911 by Gugliemo Ferrero.
Diotima's Latin readings on Roman Women.
Suzanne Cross' meaty pages on Roman women provide a look at roles of important imperial women and heroines, but also the forgotten women, like the farming and slave women.
Valerie French's article on
Midwives and Maternity in the Roman World. Examines the gap between professional and folk medicine.
Courage and intelligence were virtues for both men and women, but chastity was peculiarly a woman's virtue. Treatise by a female Pythagorean.