The Roman Wedding
The wedding ritual of the ancient Romans provides a crucial key to understanding their remarkable civilization. The intriguing ceremony represented the starting point of a Roman family as well as a Roman girl's transition to womanhood. This is the first book-length examination of Roman wedding ritual. Drawing on literary, legal, historical, antiquarian, and artistic evidence of Roman nuptials from the end of the Republic through the early Empire (from ca. 200 BC to AD 200), Karen Hersch shows how the Roman wedding expressed the ideals and norms of an ancient people. Her book is an invaluable tool for Roman social historians interested in how ideas of gender, law, religion, and tradition are interwoven into the wedding ceremony of every culture.
- The first book in any language to fully address the Roman wedding in its own right
- The first book in English to investigate in great length the rituals of the wedding
- Of interest not only to classicists but also anthropologists, art historians, and those working on gender studies
Reviews & endorsements
"...very high quality text... . All interested in Roman daily life, from student to scholar, will benefit from this excellent book." --BMCR
Product details
May 2010Hardback
9780521196109
256 pages
235 × 159 × 21 mm
0.6kg
9 b/w illus.
Available
Table of Contents
- Introduction
- 1. The laws of humans and gods
- 2. At the house of the bride
- 3. To the groom's house
- 4. Gods of the Roman wedding
- Conclusion.