References to Military Ideals in the Sermons of Caesarius of Arles (original) (raw)

Wartime rape in late antiquity: consecrated virgins and victim bias in the fifth-century west

Early Medieval Europe, 2022

Late antique clerics rarely discussed wartime rape but singled out consecrated women as victims when they did. This emphasis testifies to the prominence of consecrated women by the fifth century, while inadvertently creating a victim bias. This paper examines this bias and puts forth a wider consideration of victims, including laywomen, children, and men. However, studies on wartime rape have shown that the rape of virgins is often treated differently from the violation of others. These findings are extended to holy virgins in late antiquity to offer new considerations of the grim success of rape as a weapon of war. * This article was drafted during a post-doctoral fellowship at the Institutum Romanum Finlandiae. It further benefited from the suggestions and expertise of colleagues, and so my thanks go to Máirín MacCarron, Victoria Leonard, Chris Mowat and Julia Hillner for their critique and feedback.

Trojan Sodomy and the Politics of Marriage in the Roman d'Enéas

Exemplaria, 2008

In the twelfth-century poem Le roman d'Enéas, the future mother-in-law of Enéas accuses him, and all Trojans, of being both abductors of women and "sodomites." This paper reads the contradictory meanings of "sodomy" in the context of two twelfth-century developments: the transformation of aristocratic marriage, as documented by Georges Duby, and the erosion of aristocratic power. The paper argues that the poem's repudiation of Trojan "sodomy" through the triumph of heterosexual love supports the weakening of horizontal ties between men and envisions a shift to dynastic power, legitimated by unbroken links between father and son.

Considering Rape in Ancient Rome and Greece

This paper seeks to answer the question: what consisted 'rape' for the Ancient Greek and Romans. Primary sources used feature: For Rome, Livy’s account of the abduction of the Sabine’s and demoralization of Lucretia will be analyzed. For Greece, the myth of Persephone and the seduction of Euphiletos’ wife.

Notes About the Wives of Christ (Sponsae Christi) and the Married Women in De Habitu Virginum of Cyprian of Carthage

RAUDEM. Revista de Estudios de las Mujeres, 2017

Following a brief introduction, this paper will then focus on Cyprian’s comments regarding the behaviour of Virgins in De Habitu Virginum. Cyprian of Carthage argues with the adulterium, a category of Roman criminal law which was particularly important in contemporary society, in order to justify the requirement for Virgins to adopt a way of life and behaviour that would be described today as ‘well-behaved and discreet’. Although fully aware that married women had a different way of life to sponsae Christi, he was inclined to impose the same rules on allChristian Women.Key words: Cyprian of Carthage, the Dress of Virgins, sponsae Christi, adulterium, Virgins, Christian women.Título en español: Nota mínima sobre las esposas de Cristo (Sponsae Christi) y las mujeres casadas en el De habitu virginum de Cipriano de CartagoResumen El trabajo, tras una primera parte introductoria, se centra en el comentario de algunos párrafos dedicados al comportamiento de las vírgenes. Cipriano no pudo ...