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Elite women in the Roman world were often educated, socially
prominent, and even relatively independent. Yet the social regime
that ushered these same women into marriage and childbearing at an
early age was remarkably restrictive. In the first book-length
study of girlhood in the early Roman Empire, Lauren Caldwell
investigates the reasons for this paradox. Through an examination
of literary, legal, medical, and epigraphic sources, she identifies
the social pressures that tended to overwhelm concerns about girls'
individual health and well-being. In demonstrating how early
marriage was driven by a variety of concerns, including the value
placed on premarital virginity and paternal authority, this book
enhances an understanding of the position of girls as they made the
transition from childhood to womanhood.
Elite women in the Roman world were often educated, socially
prominent, and even relatively independent. Yet the social regime
that ushered these same women into marriage and childbearing at an
early age was remarkably restrictive. In the first book-length
study of girlhood in the early Roman Empire, Lauren Caldwell
investigates the reasons for this paradox. Through an examination
of literary, legal, medical, and epigraphic sources, she identifies
the social pressures that tended to overwhelm concerns about girls'
individual health and well-being. In demonstrating how early
marriage was driven by a variety of concerns, including the value
placed on premarital virginity and paternal authority, this book
enhances an understanding of the position of girls as they made the
transition from childhood to womanhood.
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