E-book PDF (3,4 Mb)
Pris en charge uniquement par Adobe Acrobat Reader (voir détails)

Families in the Greco-Roman World

2011 - Bloomsbury Publishing

216 p.

The family has been recognised in the ancient world as the key social institution on which both society and the state are based. However, in the pre-Classical and Classical world the family was constructed in dissimilar ways and provides the means to explaining why the civilizations of the ancient Mediterranean, although sharing many cultural features, in fact differed greatly. This volume draws on the most recent work of leading scholars in the field with the aim of establishing a new understanding of the ancient family for the 21st century. In so doing, the book includes new approaches to social institutions, depictions of women and children, the Seleucid dynasty as a negative model of family, the inclusion of Etruscan societies, and a fundamental re-assessment of the family in antiquity. [Publisher's text].

Special access authorizations may apply; please contact us for further information.