
Despite The Developing Emphasis In Current Scholarship On Children In Roman Culture, There Has Been Relatively Little Research To Date On The Role And Significance Of The Youngest Children Within The Family And In Society. This Volume Singles Out This Youngest Age Group, The Under One-year-olds, In The First Comprehensive Study Of Infancy And Earliest Childhood To Encompass The Roman Empire As A Whole: Integrating Social And Cultural History With Archaeological Evidence, Funerary Remains, Material Culture, And The Iconography Of Infancy, It Explores How The Very Particular Historical Circumstances Into Which Roman Children Were Born Affected Their Lives As Well As Prevailing Attitudes Towards Them. Examination Of These Varied Strands Of Evidence, Drawn From Throughout The Roman World From The Fourth Century Bc To The Third Century Ad, Allows The Rhetoric About Earliest Childhood In Roman Texts To Be More Broadly Contextualized And Reveals The Socio-cultural Developments That Took Place In Parent-child Relationships Over This Period. Presenting A Fresh Perspective On Archaeological And Historical Debates, The Volume Refutes The Notion That High Infant Mortality Conditioned Roman Parents Not To Engage In The Early Life Of Their Children Or To View Them, Or Their Deaths, With Indifference, And Concludes That Even Within The First Weeks And Months Of Life Roman Children Were Invested With Social And Gendered Identities And Were Perceived As Having Both Personhood And Value Within Society.
This volume investigates the social, cultural, and personal status of infants under one year old within the Roman Empire, challenging the assumption that high mortality rates led to parental indifference. Author Maureen Carroll, a specialist in Roman archaeology and social history, synthesizes diverse evidence—including funerary remains, material culture, and iconography—to argue that Roman infants were recognized as individuals with distinct social and gendered identities from birth.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars recognize this work as a significant contribution to the field of Roman childhood studies for its rigorous integration of archaeological data with historical texts. It is frequently cited as a foundational text for those seeking to understand the complexities of family life and social personhood in the ancient world.
Page Count:
368
Publication Date:
2018-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
019252433X
ISBN-13:
9780192524331
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