Women can be identified as an essential component of civic communities within cities of the Roman Empire, despite their not being allowed to hold public offices (with the exclusion of the sacerdotal office). Such an important presence was visually represented through the erection of monuments (mainly statutes) publicly devoted to women, chiefly ob merita eius (an epigraphic formula describing financial intervention on their part to benefit the city), and the introduction of new honorific titles specifically for women, titles which customarily borrowed their lexicon from the family sphere and in the end created a true female civic patronage
Cenerini, F. (2016). Donna e città romana: identità civica e genere a confronto. Reggio calabria : Falzea Editore.
Donna e città romana: identità civica e genere a confronto
CENERINI, FRANCESCA
2016
Abstract
Women can be identified as an essential component of civic communities within cities of the Roman Empire, despite their not being allowed to hold public offices (with the exclusion of the sacerdotal office). Such an important presence was visually represented through the erection of monuments (mainly statutes) publicly devoted to women, chiefly ob merita eius (an epigraphic formula describing financial intervention on their part to benefit the city), and the introduction of new honorific titles specifically for women, titles which customarily borrowed their lexicon from the family sphere and in the end created a true female civic patronageI documenti in IRIS sono protetti da copyright e tutti i diritti sono riservati, salvo diversa indicazione.