List of archaeologically attested women from the ancient Mediterranean region
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The following very incomplete list features women from the ancient Mediterranean region and adjacent areas who are attested primarily through archaeological evidence. They are notable either as individuals or because the archaeological data associated with them is considered significant.
Archaeology and ancient women
[edit]Archaeological data preserves information about women of different classes and social standings, while also saving details that might not have been preserved in texts. Scholars have noted its importance in revolutionizing our understanding of ancient women and providing new theoretical frameworks for analyzing them,[1][2] such as gender archaeology. Archaeological projects regularly uncover surprising information about ancient women on subjects as varied as motherhood[3] to the historical inspiration for Amazons.[4][5]
Archaeological data provides a wide range of information about ancient women. For example, bones reveal aspects of lived experience[6] and family relations.[7] Grave goods and funerary monuments record life histories,[8] social roles,[9] and religious affiliations.[10] Evidence from sanctuaries documents relationships between mortal women and deities.[11][12][13] House layouts indicate gendered spatial dynamics and work space.[14] Correspondence and records on papyrus, wood, or clay tablets preserve information about economic histories, social networks, and emotional experience.[15][16][17] Poems and hymns showcase women's contribution to ancient literature.[11][18] Visual culture highlights narratives about women but also the way they are portrayed by male artists.[19] Such archaeological evidence reveals valuable data not just about the individual woman herself, but also about women's history in ancient regions more generally. As many scholars have noted, archaeology provides an important corrective because ancient literary sources often emphasized elite women, were written by male authors, or the women were literary constructs rather than 'real' women.[20][21][22]
Geographical scope and chronology
[edit]Although ancient women from the wider Mediterranean region have often been analyzed based on their individual cultures, as area-studies has impacted scholarly disciplines, researchers have recognized the wider shared context of the Mediterranean and its adjacent areas.[23][24] It is now recognized that these various cultures have a connected history in antiquity.[25][26] This reflects the dynamic cultural interactions resulting from trade and migration, wherein people of various cultures often lived amongst each other or came into contact at ports and emporia, as well as the pressures of warfare and imperialistic projects.[27][28] As such, it has become common for larger surveys and collections to group together women from the various Mediterranean cultures (including the territories of the Roman empire), Mesopotamia, and the Black Sea, as has been done in this list.[29][30][31] For example, Budin & Macintosh Turfa note that dissatisfaction with treatments of the wider region led them to use an area-studies organization in their Women in Antiquity (2016): previous studies of the region's ancient women, they say, "consisted primarily of Greece and Rome, giving exceptionally short shrift to the rest of the ancient world—places like Mesopotamia, Egypt, Israel, Cyprus, Etruria, and the Celts."[22]
The 'ancient' period herein spans the Sumerian and Egyptian periods through Late Antiquity (the pre-Medieval).
Akkadian
[edit]Name | Dates | Biography & Archaeological Data |
---|---|---|
Enheduanna | 23rd century BCE | Enheduanna was an Akkadian entu-priestess of Nanna at Ur during the 23rd century BCE.[11][32] Her father was Sargon of Akkad and her nephew was Naram-sin. She has been described as the earliest named author in history, based on 37 cuneiform tablets discovered at Ur and Nippur. She also dedicated a votive disc to the god Nanna, which depicted Enheduanna in procession moving towards an altar.[33][34] The disc is now a major artifact in the Middle East Galleries at the Penn Museum.[35] It has been shown to the museum's special guests, such as Neil Gaiman,[34] and, together with other items related to the priestess, went on display for the 2022-2023 exhibit centered on her, She Who Wrote: Enheduanna and Women of Mesopotamia.[36][11] |
Assyrian
[edit]Name | Dates | Biography & Archaeological Data |
---|---|---|
Taram-Kubi | 19th century BCE | Taram-Kubi was an Assyrian businesswoman of the 19th c. BCE. She was married to Innaya, had a son, Ikuppiya, and had two siblings;[37] her brother, Imdī-ilum, and a sister, Simat-Assur.[38] Taram-Kubi lived in Assur while her husband lived and worked in Anatolian Kanesh. Taram-Kubi was business partners with Innaya, and they communicated through cuneiform clay tablets transported by caravans between Assur and Kanesh.[39] These tablets were part of The Old Assyrian corpus.[40] The majority of these tablets were excavated[41] from private homes in Kanes.[42] Taram-Kubi crafted textiles that were highly sought after, which were then sent to Innaya in Kanesh, where he would sell and send silver back. Taram-Kubi was wealthy, having enough funds to lend silver to her brother for purchasing a house.[43] She also covered a debt her husband had to city administration in Assur, which she then demanded he repay afterward. She also worked with authorities to resolve a lawsuit her husband had been involved in regarding suspicious sales of lapis lazuli.[44] Although Tarem-Kubi was an independent woman and had arguments with and placed demands on her husband from their business dealings, she still missed him and in her letters request he return to Assur to be by her side.[45] One example of their quarrels included Innaya emptying their house of barley before he left for Kanesh, and then a famine coming, leaving Taram-Kubi with no food for her and their child.[46] Her letters on the clay tablets showcased a more emotional side of communication, whereas the male counterpart's tablet communications were often more business-oriented.[47] |
Zizizi | 19th century BCE |
Zizizi was an Assyrian businesswoman at Kanesh,[47] wife of an Assyrian merchant, and known for expressive letters delivered on ancient clay tablets written in cuneiform.[48] Her journey started around 1860 B.C., when she followed her first husband to the Anatolian[48] city of Kanesh. He later died and she remarried a local. Her father Imdi-ilum and mother Ishtar-bashti responded to her leaving home by stating “we are not important in your eyes”.[49] In Kanesh, Zizizi became a successful moneylender, providing support for the conclusion that “the tablets women wrote indicate that they served crucial roles in trading networks, managed finances and workers, and pushed against societal expectations...”[47] An archived tablet found at Kanesh, holds a letter from Zizizi to her parents, that was written during an outbreak of disease, and shows her expressing anguish during that time. The tablet copy 688 found in a private archive at Kanesh displays Zizizi expressing her emotional circumstances by stating “I can’t manage anymore.”[50] In the year 1948, Turkish archaeologist excavated the previous tablet along with others, most of them being found in the town northeast of a mound in Kültepe.[51] They were specifically found in the storerooms of merchant houses,[52] along with 22,200 tablets found in the town. |
Etruscan
[edit]Name | Dates | Biography & Archaeological Data |
---|---|---|
Seianti Hanunia Tlesnasa | 2nd century BCE | Seianti Hanunia Tlesnasa was a well-to-do Etruscan woman from near Chiusi, at a time when Chiusi had already come under Roman sway.[53][54] Seianti's family has been well-documented in the area for multiple generations. She was married to a man named Tlesna ('Tlesnasa'). She also seems to be related to Larthia Seianti, whose sarcophagus is now in the National Archaeological Museum in Florence. Seianti (Hanunia) was buried in a sculpted and painted terracotta sarcophagus, which had been deposited in a rock-cut chamber tomb around 150 BCE. The depiction of the deceased shows her reclining on a couch and wearing elaborate jewelry. She was also buried with silver objects, including a mirror, aryballos (oil vessel), and strigil. Study of Seianti's skeleton has revealed several details about her life experience. She was 5'2", rode frequently, and gave birth at least once. She had several injuries on her right side consistent with a traumatic fall, perhaps from a horse, between the ages of 15-20; she recovered but may have experienced arthritic pain at the site of the injuries. While generally healthy at the time of death, she did have dental problems and halitosis. She died around age 50-60.[55][56]
Seianti's sarcophagus and skeleton are housed in the British Museum.[57] She and her sarcophagus have also been the subject of an Open University video course series.[58] |
Greek
[edit]Name | Dates | Biography & Archaeological Data |
---|---|---|
Aristaineta | 3rd century BCE | Aristaineta was a Greek woman from Aetolia who lived in the 3rd century BCE. She dedicated a large monument at the sanctuary of Apollo at Delphi which included her mother, father Timolaos, son Timolaos, and herself.[59] It was especially significant that Aristaineta was Aetolian, as the Aetolian League would have reason to display wealth and glory after their victory over the Gauls in 279 BCE.[60] There was Aetolian intent to expand influence in Delphi, for reasons of political and public image, and the temple had been under Aetolian domain since 262 BCE.[61] Aristaineta's place as a woman is also deeply relevant, as it was indicative of her social and economic power to dedicate such a large monument in her own name with no middle-aged male figure involved, it was a symbol of social status mainly reserved for the male head of the family, and therefore reinforced her position as an honorable woman and mother.[62][63]
The inscription names Aristaineta as the dedicator of the monument with four familial statues at the top to Pythian Apollo, and then lists her father, mother, son, and herself. The monument was Hellenistic in style and consisted of an Ionic double column on a stepped base. It had merit based on quality and style of the sculptures, but also the incredibly large height which would have been around 30 ft. tall, commanding the landscape.[citation needed] |
Phanagora | 5th century BCE | Phanagora was a known Athenian businesswoman[64] who owned and operated a local kapeleion (tavern) in Athens during the late 5th or early 4th century BCE.[65] In a grave pyre cache, archeologists discovered five lead curse tablets, including one which cursed the tavern operated by Phanagora.[66] The epigraph[67] addressed her with business partner Demetrios, who may be related to her (i.e., husband, son, or brother) and dates to around 400-375 BCE.[68] The curse inscription begins with an invocation of "chthonic" Hekate, Artemis, and Hermes, followed by a line targeting Phanagora's property and possessions and seeking to ruin her life. Mentioning of the workplace may suggest that this curse tablet was written out of commercial rivalry or based upon distasteful tavern activities.[69] The writer binds Phanagora "in blood and ashes," which could be a reference to the Homeric epic, The Odyssey, and perhaps show a change from oral to written curse tradition because the old Attic and Ionic alphabets are interchanged.[70] The tablet also includes a line that may relate to festival cycles that usually last 4 years, and suggests the curse wouldn't loosen during that time period.[71] This single binding curse phrase is used in a similar capacity in other tablets found outside the Athenian Long Walls and demonstrates the importance of private cursing in the late 5th century BCE.[72]
The curse tablet cache was excavated in-situ outside the Athenian Long Walls, near classical Xypete, slightly northwest of the harbor port, Piraeus.[73] It was excavated in 2003 by former ΚΣΤ’ Ephorate for Prehistoric and Classical Antiquities in rescue excavations and studied by Yale's Department of Classics and American School of Classic Studies at Athens. The assemblage is stored at Piraeus Archeological Museum.[74] |
Rich Athenian Lady | 9th century BCE | “The Rich Athenian Lady” was a Greek woman who lived around 850 BCE.[75] Her grave is located in Athens near the Agora and Acropolis, where archaeologists discovered the burials of several upper-class people.[75] She acquired this title from the 81 grave goods found buried with her, made from materials such as gold, glass, and ivory.[76] Her grave stands out because of these exotic items made from precious material and her burial amphora, which is an example of an Early to Middle Geometric belly-handled amphora.[77] The amphora contained her cremated remains. From the charred bones, archaeologists identified parts of her skeleton. Her skull was fairly small, but the presence of her wisdom teeth suggests she was older than 20,[78] while parts of her pubic bone and ribs suggest she died around her 30s.[78] Inside the amphora there were several bones which were not the bones of an adult, although they were originally thought to be animal bones. After further examination, Maria Liston identified the remains as that of a human fetus.[79] This established that she died while pregnant or while giving birth. Early childbirth is a factor that could explain the death of the lady and her fetus.The estimated development of the fetus was around 7 to 8 months before death of the mother occurred.[80] |
Royal Sister from Mycenae | 17-16th century BCE | Skeleton Γ58 at Mycenae was a woman buried at the time of the 17-16th c. BCE in Grave Circle B.[81] The woman's name was unable to be found. Surrounding her body were an ivory comb and jewelry; the other items were dedicated to the two men also in the shaft grave Γ.[82] When deciphering who was wealthy, researchers often look at what was buried in the tomb along with how the site was constructed.[83] Stelai, vases, stones, and gold are just a few things found in the richer tombs at Mycenae. During the excavation of skeleton Γ58, three stelai were found in this grave along with the ivory comb, weapons, and a wooden chest.[84] The woman buried here has been presumed to be of high status just as the men buried with her.
Digging deeper to see how the three were related, researchers took samples of bone from the woman's jaw to discover the she and the man next to her were brother and sister.[85] Researchers deciphered what types of bone structures there were to choose from and depending on how close the grave sites were. They discovered this after testing both samples and learning they both had beaky mandibles.[85] |
Roman
[edit]Name | Dates | Biography & Archaeological Data |
---|---|---|
Aurelia Nais | 3rd century CE | Aurelia Nais, also known as 'Nais', was a Roman piscatrix (fish seller).[86] According to her funerary inscription, Nais was a freedwoman. Also mentioned on Aurelia's tomb monument were two fellow freedmen by the names of Gaius Aurelius Phileros and Lucius Valerius Secundus.[87] Gaius is listed as Aurelia's patron on her epitaph.[87] Lucius, however, may have been Nais' husband as he originates from a different household.[88] Her tomb marker takes the form of an altar and is dated 3rd century CE.[87] The epitaph displays the companionship between a Roman woman and two Roman men.[89] Gaius and Lucius honor Nais by displaying this on the grave.[87] Aurelia worked in a warehouse called the Horrea Galbae.[90] This warehouse was named the Horrea Galbae after becoming imperial property[91] during the reign of emperor Galba, the era in which Nais lived.[92] Before emperor Galba's reign, the warehouse in which Nais worked had been built and owned by the Sulpicii family.[91][92] Said building was located near the Aventine Hill in Rome.[93] The warehouse in which Nais worked is mentioned on her tomb inscription.[94] This suggests that Nais worked at this establishment for a prolonged time and was not a traveling merchant, as other Roman businesswomen sometimes were.[95] |
Caecinia Bassa | 1st century CE | Caecinia Bassa (‘Bassa’) was the daughter of the Roman citizen Sextus Caecinius Bassus. She lived in Rome during the 1st century CE. She died at age 10 and was commemorated with an inscribed epitaph.[96][69] An illness or disease killed Bassa as well as three vernae, home-born slaves.[97][98] Bassa’s poetic epitaph opens with a laudatio funebris[99](her good characteristics and deeds), including dutifulness, chastity, and cleverness. As she sickened, her parents prayed to the gods but, the text claims, Pluto snatched her to the underworld. The epitaph suggests that Bassa’s end had been decreed by the Parcae, the female goddesses of destiny.[100] The poem closes with a ‘prayer for justice’ against anyone pleased by Bassa’s end, calling upon Ceres to inflict death from starvation upon them.[101] This final phrase finds similarity in Roman curse tablets and other funerary epitaph curses.[102][103]
Bassa’s inscription was discovered outside the Porta Salaria in Rome.[104] The stone is damaged and incomplete. It is now stored at the Museo Nazionale Romano (the Baths of Diocletian in Rome).[105] |
Julia Balbilla | 1st - 2nd century CE | Julia Balbilla was a Roman poet of eastern Mediterranean descent who toured with the court of Emperor Hadrian.[106] She built a large funerary monument in Athens in honor of her brother, the Philopappos Monument.[107] During a visit to the Egyptian Valley of the Kings with Hadrian, she inscribed three Greek poems on the legs of the Colossi of Memnon.[108] |
Maxima | 6th century CE | Maxima was a Roman woman alive during the 6th century CE. She lived with her husband for 7 years, 6 months.[109] She died at age 25 and she was buried on June 23 in the consulship of Flavius Probus Junior. She was honored with an inscribed epitaph.[110] Dating to 525 CE, the epitaph indicates she practiced the Christian religion. The epitaph describes her as a 'handmaid of Christ' (ancilla christi), uses the phrase "here rests in peace..." (hic requiescit pace), while also containing the abbreviation plus minus, which was commonly used as a Christian phrase.[111] (This can be seen as a replacement for the phrase, “more or less,” as the word, “or” is not in use.)[109] The end of the epitaph contains a list of domestica bona [112] (domestic virtues), describing her as friendly, loyal in all respects, good, and prudent.[110] These types of qualities were found in many Roman inscriptions about women of any class, but these inscriptions may be unreliable in describing Roman women in day-to-day real life.[21] The domestica bona tradition portrays her in an incredibly positive and biased light which does not necessarily depict Maxima's own view of herself.[21] The epitaph's reference to Christianity reflects that religious activity was an essential part of social life in the ancient world.[113]
Maxima’s inscription was found in Rome outside of Porta Maggiore in 1909.[114] |
Phryne | 1st -2nd century CE | Phryne[115] was a girl from Roman Africa who was enslaved during the 1st –2nd century CE. She is known for her funerary columbarium plaque. The slab was made out of crystalized white marble with dark steaks and at the bottom there is a circular perforation.[116] It was the widow of Dr. George N. Olcott who gifted this piece to the American Academy of Rome in 1926. Phryne’s inscription squeeze is currently housed in OSU’s Center for Epigraphical and Paleographical Studies.[117]
She only has one name because if she were to have a second name or a family name, it would show that she was a free woman.[118] Her funerary epitaph notes that she was a slave for Tertulla and that she was a quasillaria, that is, a spinner.[119] Tertulla would have paid for her columbarium plaque because it was required by the law to do so.[120] She died at the age of seventeen, but her cause of death is not known, nor anything about her family. Everything that is known of her is based on her funerary columbarium plaque. |
Severa Seleuciane | 3rd century CE | Severa Seleuciane was a Christian woman who lived in Rome during the 3rd century CE. According to her funerary epitaph, she lived to around about the age of 42, though the cause of her death was not disclosed. For the first 32 years of her life, she was a not considered a Christian and it wasn't until her last 10 years that she turned to Christianity. She was believed to live with her husband Aurelius Sabutius for about 17 years. Severa’s epitaph was made out of white marble and split into 3 pieces and was found in a Christian cemetery outside of Rome. It is also believed that she may have been a weaver due to their being loom on her epitaph.[121] It is believed that she was part of the early Christianity, due to the nature of her epitaph. The reason she is associated with early Christianity is due to[15] the appearance of the common phrase vixit in seculo ('lived in the [wicked] world').[121][122] It is important to remember that she is Christian because that can play a part in telling us that she may have been a part of a voluntary religious community.[123] |
Vesonia | 1st century BCE | Vesonia, a woman from Pompeii, lived during the 1st century BCE. She was the daughter of Publius and was possibly the last member of the prominent Vesonii family.[124] Vesonia was a Roman citizen and patroness of freedman Publius Vesonius Phileros; as such, she most likely helped the man navigate society and helped him with financial support. When Vesonia died, her remains were cremated, placed in a cooking vessel to contain them, and was sealed with a libation pipe installed for offerings.[125] Her burial is just outside the burial plot that Phileros had built and dedicated to himself, her, and his friend Marcus Orfellius Faustus.[124] Although she was buried just outside the plot secured by Phileros, the monument depicts three statues representing Vesonia in the middle and Phileros and Faustus on either side of her.[126]
Vesonia is dedicated in Phileros' large grave enclosure because he had probably been owned by her father before she helped free him and helped him become a Roman citizen.[127] It wasn't uncommon for women like Vesonia to be dedicated in a monument built by a former slave as the action was seen as a way of honoring their service.[128] Other than being an important woman in Roman society she is also known for the drama that later occurred at her burial between Phileros and his friend Marcus Orfellius Faustus. Something happened between Phileros and his friend, with Phileros going so far as beheading his friend's statue and covering up his tombs libation pipe and urn with mortar and carved his name on.[124] We know it was Phileros who did this because of a subsequent inscription[124][129] left on the stelae of the monument he built. |
See also
[edit]- Women in ancient Egypt
- Women in Etruscan society
- Women in ancient Rome
- List of distinguished Roman women
- Women in ancient warfare
- List of prostitutes and courtesans of antiquity
- List of women in the Bible
Notes
[edit]- ^ Hamilton, Sue, Ruth Whitehouse, and Katherine Wright. "Introduction." In Archaeology and Women: Ancient and Modern Issues, edited by Sue Hamilton, Ruth Whitehouse, Katherine Wright, 13-24. Walnut Creek: Left Coast Press, 2007.
- ^ Whitehouse, Ruth. "Gender Archaeology and the Archaeology of Women: Do We Need Both?" In Archaeology and Women: Ancient and Modern Issues, edited by Sue Hamilton, Ruth Whitehouse, Katherine Wright, 27-40. Walnut Creek: Left Coast Press, 2007.
- ^ Margarita Sánchez Romero and Rosa Ma Cid López. "Motherhood and Infancies: Archaeological and Historical Approaches." In Motherhood and Infancies in the Mediterranean in Antiquity, edited by Margarita Sánchez Romero and Rosa María Cid López, 1-11. Oxford: Oxbow Books, 2018, especially p. 3-6. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvh1dnj0
- ^ Mayor, Adrienne. "Warrior Women: The Archaeology of Amazons." In Women in Antiquity: Real Women Across the Ancient World, edited by Budin, Stephanie and Jean MacIntosh Turfa, 969-985. London: Routledge, 2016
- ^ Hawkins, Derrick (December 31, 2019). "Amazon warrior women were real, new research shows". Washington Post.
- ^ Lorentz, Kirsi O. "Real Bones, Real Women, Real Lives: Bioarchaeology and Osteobiographies of Women in Ancient Cyprus." In Women in Antiquity: Real Women Across the Ancient World, edited by Stephanie Budin and Jean MacIntosh Turfa, 349-360. London: Routledge, 2016.
- ^ Agarwal, Sabrina, et al. "Roles for the sexes: The (bio)archaeology of women and men at Çatalhöyük." In Assembling Çatalhöyük, edited by Ian Hodder and Arkadiusz Marciniak, 87-95. London: Routledge, 2017.
- ^ Delgado, A and A. Rivera-Hernández. "Death in Birth: Pregnancy, Maternal Death, and Funerary Practices in the Phoenician and Punic World." In Motherhood and Infancies in the Mediterranean in Antiquity, edited by Margarita Sánchez Romero and Rosa María Cid López, 54-70. Oxford: Oxbow Books, 2018. https://doi.org/10.2307/j.ctvh1dnj0
- ^ Quercia, Alessandro. "The Weaving Dead. The Role of the Loom Weights in the Funerary Contexts of the Greek and Indigenous Societies in Southern Italy." In Redefining Ancient Textile Handcraft Structures, Tools and Production Processes, edited by Macarena Bustamante Álvarez et al., 265-275. Granada: University of Granada, 2020.
- ^ Parks, S., Sheinfeld, S., and M. Warren. Jewish and Christian Women in the Ancient Mediterranean. London: Routledge, 2021. https://doi.org/10.4324/9781351005982
- ^ a b c d Babcock, Sidney and Erhan Tamur, eds., She Who Wrote: Enheduanna and Women of Mesopotamia, ca. 3400–2000 BC, New York: Morgan Library and Museum, 2022.
- ^ Vivante, Bella. "Women and Gender in Ancient Mediterranean Cultures." In A Companion to Global Gender History, edited by Teresa Meade and Merry Wiesner-Hanks, 221-237. Malden: Wiley-Blackwell.
- ^ Kaltsas, Nikolaos and Alan Shapiro (eds.), Worshiping Women: Ritual and Reality in Classical Athens. New York: Alexander S. Onassis Public Benefit Foundation, 2008.
- ^ Meskell, Lynn. "An Archaeology of Social Relations in an Egyptian Village." Journal of Archaeological Method and Theory 5 (1998): 209-243.
- ^ a b Bagnall, Roger and Raffaella Cribiore. Women's Letters from Ancient Egypt. 300 B.C.-A.D. 800. Ann Arbor: The University of Michigan Press, 2006.
- ^ Bagnall, Roger. "A Century of Women's History from the Papyri." In New Directions in the Study of Women in the Greco-Roman World, edited by Ronnie Ancona and Georgia Tsouvala, 95-122. New York: Oxford University Press, 2021.
- ^ Greene, Elizabeth. "Female Networks in Military Communities in the Roman West: A View from the Vindolanda Tablets." In Women and the Roman city in the Latin West, edited by Emily Hemelrijk and Greg Woolf, 369-390. Leiden: Brill, 2013.
- ^ Snyder, Jane McIntosh. The Woman and the Lyre: Women Writers in Classical Greece and Rome. Carbondale: Southern Illinois University Press, 1989.
- ^ Koloski-Ostrow, Ann Olga and Claire L. Lyons, eds. Naked Truths: Women, Sexuality and Gender in Classical Art and Archaeology. London: Routledge, 1997.
- ^ Blundell, Sue. Women in Ancient Greece. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 1989, p. 10.
- ^ a b c Caldelli 2015, 583.
- ^ a b Budin, Stephanie and Jean MacIntosh Turfa. "General Introduction." In Women in Antiquity: Real Women Across the Ancient World, edited by Budin, Stephanie and Jean MacIntosh Turfa, 1-4. London: Routledge, 2016.
- ^ de Sousa, Geraldo. “The Mediterranean: What, Why, and How.” Mediterranean Studies 28 (2020): 227–39. https://doi.org/10.5325/mediterraneanstu.28.2.0227.
- ^ Riva, C. and Mira, I.G. "Global Archaeology and Microhistorical Analysis. Connecting Scales in the 1st-milennium B.C. Mediterranean." Archaeological Dialogues 29 (2022):1-14.
- ^ Peregrine, Horden and Nicholas Purcell. The Corrupting Sea: A Study of Mediterranean History. Oxford: Blackwell, 2000.
- ^ Malkin, Irad, ed., Mediterranean Paradigms and Classical Antiquity. London and New York: Routledge, 2005.
- ^ Hodos, Tamar. The Archaeology of the Mediterranean Iron Age: A Globalising World c.1100-600 BCE. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2020.
- ^ López-Ruiz, Carolina. Phoenicians and the Making of the Mediterranean. Cambridge: Harvard University Press, 2021.
- ^ James, Sharon and Sheila Dillon. A Companion to Women in the Ancient World. Malden: Wiley-Blackwell, 2012.
- ^ Middleton, Guy. Women in the Ancient Mediterranean World: From the Palaeolithic to the Byzantines. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2023.
- ^ Carney, Elizabeth Donnelly and Sabine Müller, eds., The Routledge Companion to Women and Monarchy in the Ancient Mediterranean World. Abingdon: Routledge, 2021.
- ^ Ravilious, Katie (November–December 2022). "Priestess, Poet, Politician". Archaeology.
- ^ Winter, Irene. "Women In Public: The Disk Of Enheduanna, The Beginning Of The Office Of En-Priestess, And The Weight Of Visual Evidence". In On Art in the Ancient Near East Volume II: From the Third Millennium BCE, edited by Irene Winter, 65-84. Leiden: Brill, 2009.
- ^ a b Hafford, Brad (June 25, 2012). "Ur Digitization Project: Item of the month, June 2012". Penn Museum Blog.
- ^ B16665; Online Collections: Disc of Enheduanna.
- ^ "She Who Wrote: Enheduanna and Women of Mesopotamia, ca. 3400–2000 B.C." The Morgan Library & Museum. 2022-10-14. Retrieved 2024-04-28.
- ^ Bouscaren 2023, 44-45.
- ^ Simat-Assur was assumed to be a sister of Taram-Kubi & Imdi-ilum. This is mentioned in a tablet recognized by Michel on page 372.
- ^ Bouscaren 2023, 41.
- ^ The Old Assyrian corpus is a collection containing over 23,000 Old Assyrian cuneiform tablets that gave much insight into the daily life of the authors of the tablets. Michel 2020, 6.
- ^ This excavation started in 1948 and was directed by Tahsin Ozguc for 57 years. Tahsin was eventually joined by Kutlu Emre in 1955, who became a codirector of the excavation, helping for 59 years. Michel 2020, 7.
- ^ Michel 2020, 6-7.
- ^ Michel 2020, 274-275.
- ^ Michel 2020, 309.
- ^ Bouscaren 2023, 45.
- ^ Michel 2020, 216-217.
- ^ a b c Bouscaren 2023, 42.
- ^ a b Michel 2020, page 1 of introduction.
- ^ Archived tablet 9233, Bouscaren 2023, 41.
- ^ Tablet copy 688 found in private archive at Kanesh, Bouscaren 2023, 45.
- ^ Michel 2020, page 7 of introduction.
- ^ Michel 2020, page 8 of introduction.
- ^ Swaddling, Judith. "Seianti Hanunia Tlesnasa: An Etruscan aristocrat." In Women in Antiquity: Real Women Across the Ancient World, edited by Stephanie Budin and Jean MacIntosh Turfa, 769-780. London: Routledge, 2016.
- ^ Swaddling, Judith and John Prag, eds., Seianti Hanunia Tlesnasa: the story of an Etruscan noblewoman. London: British Museum, 2002.
- ^ Becker, Marshall Joseph. "Seianti Hanunia Tlesnasa: A re-evaluation of her skeleton in the British Museum." (2002): 17-22
- ^ Swaddling, Judith. "Seianti Hanunia Tlesnasa: An Etruscan aristocrat." In Women in Antiquity: Real Women Across the Ancient World, edited by Stephanie Budin and Jean MacIntosh Turfa. London: Routledge, 2016, esp. 775
- ^ British Museum 1887,0402.1.
- ^ Learning from human remains: Seianti's skeleton
- ^ Bobou 2020 p. 304
- ^ Grzesik 2018 p. 34
- ^ Bobou 2020 p. 306
- ^ Bobou 2020 p. 306-307
- ^ Dillon 2010 p. 39
- ^ On Athenian businesswomen: Cohen 2016, 714-725.
- ^ Lamont 2015, 159.
- ^ Lamont 2021. For complete assemblage images, visit Lamont 2021, as well as associated commentary.
- ^ MII 11948. For a photograph or drawing of tablet (MII 11948), see Lamont 2021, 81.
- ^ Lamont 2021. For information on tablet dating, see Lamont 2021, 79.
- ^ a b Lamont 2015; Lamont 2021. For kapeleion (tavern) activities, see Lamont 2015, 170.
- ^ For differences and discussion on old Attic and Ionic alphabets visit, Lamont 2021, 79-80.
- ^ Lamont 2021; Lamont and Boundouraki 2018. For festival examples, visit Lamont 2021, 100, with associated discussion.
- ^ Lamont 2021, 76.
- ^ For a map of cache location, see Lamont 2015, 160.
- ^ Lamont 2021, 76-78.
- ^ a b Smithson 1968, 77.
- ^ Morris, Papadopoulos 2004, 225.
- ^ Whitely 2016, 665.
- ^ a b Liston, Papadopoulos 2004, 17.
- ^ Liston, Papadopoulos 2004, 18.
- ^ Liston, Papadopoulos 2004, 7.
- ^ Bouwman, et al. 2008, 2580.
- ^ Graziadio 1991, 427.
- ^ Graziadio 1991, 404.
- ^ Graziadio 1991, 414.
- ^ a b Bouwman, et al. 2008, 2581
- ^ A female fish seller, Caldelli,2015, pg.593
- ^ a b c d Harvey 2004, pg.135
- ^ Harvey 2004, pg.136, Caldelli 2015, pg.593
- ^ fig.27.4 Caldelli 2015, pg.595
- ^ Becker 2016-pg.917
- ^ a b Harvey 2004, pg.136
- ^ a b Caldelli 2015, pg.593
- ^ Harvey 2004, pg. 136, Caldelli 201, pg593
- ^ Becker 2016, pg.917, CIL VI 9801
- ^ Becker 2016, pg.917
- ^ CIL VI 7898; CLE 1058; Museo Nazionale Romano #2936. Photos can be found at the online Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum here. For a color photograph, see Raia & Sebesta 2005, together with an associated textual commentary.
- ^ Mouritsen, Henrik. “The Families of Roman Slaves and Freedmen” In A Companion to Families in the Greek and Roman Worlds, edited by B. Rawson, 129-144. Malden: Wiley-Blackwell, 2011. On vernae: esp. p.134-135.
- ^ Conn, Robert. “Vernae in the Roman Republic: From an Undesired Byproduct to an Intentionally Cultivated Slave.” PhD. Dissertation, University of Florida, 2019.
- ^ Schiesaro, Alessandro. "laudatio funebris." Oxford Classical Dictionary. 7 Mar. 2016; Accessed 30 Mar. 2024. https://oxfordre.com/classics/view/10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.001.0001/acrefore-9780199381135-e-3606
- ^ Grüll, Tibor. “'The Book of Fate': A Distinctive Representation of Matronae/Parcae and the Spread of Literacy in the Northern Provinces of the Roman Empire,” Religion in the Roman Empire 7 (2021): 403-429.
- ^ Phillips, Richard L. “A Prayer for Justice on the Epitaph of Caecinia Bassa (‘CIL’ VI 7898).” Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik 205 (2018): 96–101. http://www.jstor.org/stable/26603973.
- ^ Versnel, Henk. “Beyond Cursing: The Appeal to Justice in Judicial Prayers.” In Magika Hiera, edited by C. Faraone and D. Obbink, 60-106. New York: Oxford University Press, 1991.
- ^ Versnel, Henk. “ΚΟΛΑΣΑΙ ΤΟΥΣ ΗΜΑΣ ΤΟΙΟΥΤΟΥΣ ΗΔΕΩΣ ΒΛΕΠΟΝΤΕΣ: ‘Punish those who rejoice in our misery’: On curse texts and Schadenfreude.” In The World of Ancient Magic: Papers from the First International Samson Eitrem Seminar at the Norwegian Institute at Athens 4–8 May 1997, edited by D. Jordan, H. Montgomery, and E. Thomassen, 125-161. Bergen: Norwegian Institute at Athens, 1999.
- ^ CIL VI 7898; Raia & Sebesta 2005.
- ^ Limón Belén, María. “L’epitaffio in versi per una fanciulla.” In Terme di Diocleziano: la collezione epigrafica, edited by R. Friggeri, M.G. Granino Cecere, and G.L. Gregori, 554-555. Milan: Electa, 2012.
- ^ Plant, I. Women Writers of Ancient Greece and Rome: An Anthology. University of Oklahoma Press, 2004, chapter 43.
- ^ Kleiner, Diana. The Monument of Philopappos in Athens. Rome: G. Bretschneider, 1983.
- ^ Speller, E. Following Hadrian: A Second-Century Journey Through the Roman Empire. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004, pXV.
- ^ a b Gordon 1983, 185.
- ^ a b ILCV 1469; Gordon 1983, 185.
- ^ ILCV 1469, Gordon 1983, 185.
- ^ Caldelli 2015, 585.
- ^ Caldelli 2015, 596.
- ^ Gordon 1983, 184
- ^ Van 1927, 21
- ^ Buren 1927, 21
- ^ See full image here. https://kb.osu.edu/items/05546877-f0d6-48f1-9a65-1b8833ceffa7
- ^ Christer 608-609, 2014
- ^ Caldelli 2014, 591
- ^ Bruun 2014, 611
- ^ a b Gordon, 1983 pages 164-165
- ^ Cooley, 2012
- ^ Caldelli, 2015
- ^ a b c d Henri Duday 2017, 83
- ^ Sébastien Lepetz and William Van Andringa 2011, 121
- ^ Pompeiiinpictures, Porta Nocera Tombs
- ^ Christer Brunn 2014, 605
- ^ Sébastien Lepetz and William Van Andringa 2011, 114-116
- ^ Christer Bruun 2014, 609-611
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