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Western Michigan University ScholarWorks at WMU Dissertations Graduate College 4-2011 Women of Foreign Superstition: Christianity and Gender in Imperial Roman Policy, 57-235. Karl E. Baughman Western Michigan University Follow this and additional works at: http://scholarworks.wmich.edu/dissertations Part of the Feminist, Gender, and Sexuality Studies Commons, History of Christianity Commons, and the History of Religion Commons Recommended Citation Baughman, Karl E., "Women of Foreign Superstition: Christianity and Gender in Imperial Roman Policy, 57-235." (2011). Dissertations. Paper 324. This Dissertation-Open Access is brought to you for free and open access by the Graduate College at ScholarWorks at WMU. It has been accepted for inclusion in Dissertations by an authorized administrator of ScholarWorks at WMU. For more information, please contact [email protected]. WOMEN OF FOREIGN SUPERSTITION: CHRISTIANITY AND GENDER IN IMPERIAL ROMAN POLICY, 57-235 by Karl E. Baughman A Dissertation Submitted to the Faculty of The Graduate College in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy Department of History Advisor: Paul L. Maier, Ph.D. Western Michigan University Kalamazoo, Michigan April 2011 WOMEN OF FOREIGN SUPERSTITION: CHRISTIANITY AND GENDER IN IMPERIAL ROMAN POLICY, 57-235 Karl E. Baughman, Ph.D. Western Michigan University, 2011 The relationship between Christianity and the im- perial Roman government from 57 to 235 was partially dependent upon the enforcement of traditional gender roles and the exercise of those roles by women in unique positions of influence. Rather than attempt to break free of their defined gender roles, women with distinctive connections to Christianity and the Roman government were, especially during times of crisis, able to influence imperial policies that provided an atmosphere conducive to positive growth for the early Church. This work concen- trates on the crises which were connected to gender - especially times during which the emperors failed to fulfill their obligation as "manly" rulers. Although these women wielded power without having to usurp the legitimate authority reserved only for men, some of the ancient writers, like Tacitus, Dio Cassius, and Herodian cast these women in heavily gendered language with the intention both to assert traditional gender roles and to explain the calamities associated with the emperors they considered unmanly. Pomponia Graecina, Poppaea Sabina, Flavia Domitilla, Marcia, and Julia Mamaea, all demonstrate the connection between gender and the religio-political system of the early Empire. Spe- cifically, each also reveals the nuances of a Roman cultural understanding of gender and its role within the embodiment of imperial ideology. Otacilia Severa, Cornelia Salonina, and Eutropia, although living in eras beyond the scope of this dissertation, further demonstrate the ability of women to use gendered norms to their advantage during times of crisis, even when it appears to be disconnected from issues of gender. In short, these women all show the pervasiveness of gender in all aspects of imperial culture. Copyright by Karl E. Baughman 2011 ACKNOWLEDGMENTS In his Metaphysics, Aristotle wrote, "It is just that we should be grateful, not only to those with whose views we may agree, but also to those who have expressed more superficial views; for these also contributed something, by developing before us the powers of thought." Bearing this in mind, I have a host of professors, colleagues, friends, and family who have helped guide me in my quest for completing this dissertation, both through their agreeable and disagreeable viewpoints. Specifical- ly, I am sincerely grateful to my doctoral advisor, Paul L. Maier, without whose guidance and attention this dissertation could never have been completed. Joining Dr. Maier in my sincere thanks is the rest of my Dissertation Committee, Drs. Marion Gray, E. Rozanne Elder, and Dimiter Angelov. The staffs at the libraries of Western Michigan University, the University of Michigan, Concordia College, and the countless others affected by my inter-library loan account were of immeasurable assistance in acquiring the texts I needed. I received very helpful feedback regarding my paper on Flavia Domitilla I gave at the 2009 Annual Meeting of the Classical Association of ii Acknowledgments—continued Canada in Vancouver; helpful suggestions. chapter two My fellow was shaped graduate by those colleagues at WMU, Michael Ciletti, Johnny Smith, Joshua Schier, Elise Boneau, Brian Bradford, David Zwart, Kristi Dunn, Brian Becker, and many others were important in keeping my mind not only on my dissertation, but also on the weekly beer and trivia at Harvey's. My friends, Dion Garrett Bill Wangelin, were of endless support. and They cannot be thanked enough for their assistance in helping me articulate my argument in a style coherent to those outside the field, and our close friendships were strengthened in our long intellectual discussions. I am sincerely indebted to my wife, Sarah and my children, Magdalena and August, whose love and support kept me going. My parents, Pear- ley and Diane Baughman, and Gary and Ruth Palmer, and extended family were of incalculable support as well. And of course, the faculty, staff, and administration at Concordia College in Selma, Alabama, who took a chance on me and hired me ABD in the Fall of 2009, have been most encouraging as I completed this dissertation. If I am for- getting anyone, it is by no means on purpose. all errors and faulty interpretations are my own. Karl E. Baughman iii Finally, TABLE OF CONTENTS ACKNOWLEDGMENTS ii LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS v CHAPTER I. "FROM A KINGDOM OF GOLD TO ONE OF IRON AND RUST" Introduction II. "PUNISH US AS YOU DO THEM" Gender, Law, and Culture: Pomponia Graecina, & Flavia Domitilla III. "UNSEX ME" Gendered Crisis: Poppaea, Marcia, & Julia Mamaea IV. "THEY WILL BE YOUR SUPERIORS" Conclusions 1 48 96 181 Epilogue: "POWER IS LIKE BEING A LADY" Otacilia, Cornelia Salonina, & Eutropia 188 BIBLIOGRAPHY 233 iv LIST OF ABBREVIATIONS ActaSS Acta Sanctorum AJArch American AJPhil The American AJT ANRW Bollandiana Journal Aufstieg of Journal American (1643- Archaeology of Journal und Niedergang der C Phil Classical CW The Classical Forschungen Historia Harvard . . . . Historia: JEH JFSR Zeitschrift Journal Journal JBL of Review of Ecclesiastical History Feminist Studies JRS The Journal Journal LCL of PL Quarterly Review of Studies Roman Classical Completus, Series Patrologia v Religion Literature Theological Loeb Cursus in of Biblical Jewish Patrologiae Berichte Geschichte JQR PG und World Alte Journal JTS Journal Quarterly Theological fiir Welt Philology CQ HTR Theology Romischen Classical FuB Philology of Classical CJ ) Studies Library Graeca Latina List of Abbreviations—continued RE Realencyclopadie der Classischen Altertumswissenschaft Stud. Doc. Hist. Iur. ...Studia et et TAPA Transactions of documenta historiae iuris the American Philological Association TUGAL Texte und Untersuchungen altchristlichen Vig. zue Geschichte der Literatur Chr Vigiliae Christianae Abbreviations of ancient authors and texts are from the Oxford Classical vi Dictionary CHAPTER I FROM A KINGDOM OF GOLD TO ONE OF IRON AND RUST Introduction To Be or Not To Be: Defining Terms At first glance of the title, "Women of Foreign Superstition," this work appears to be solely the study of women. However, it would be mistaken immediately to categorize a work with the words "woman" or "man" in the title into the respective fields of either "women's" or "men's" histories (as if the two should or even could be mutually exclusive) . study of the This work is a study of gender - a relationship between men and women; the relationship between what was masculine and feminine in Roman culture; the relationship between men and women and how each used that division to influence and direct the course of imperial policy; the relationship between the divisions of Roman society which built, drove, and shaped what it was that made them Roman and made their men men, 1 T h i s q u o t a t i o n i s t a k e n from D i o ' s summation of t h e Empire a f t e r t h e d e a t h of Marcus A u r e l i u s and a s c e n s i o n of Commodus i n 1 8 0 : ...dmo jpvor\q xe fiaoiXeiaq kq aiSipav K<XI Komu>|Lievr|v xcov tercpaYndacovxoiq xoxe'Pco(xaioiq KOU fipav vuv Kaxamaov(jr\q xr\q laxopiaq. ( C a s s . Dio l x x i . 3 6 . 4 ) . 1 and their women prevalent women. within demonstrated the The importance ancient throughout of sources. this work, the gender is will be As ancient authors (all men) were very interested in explaining, asserting, and evaluating society. the distinction of gender within their They were intent on ensuring that what they saw as the proper relationship of one's biological sex to constructed gender identities was exercised in a way that was both legally distinction foundation and between on which culturally masculine Romans effectiveness of someone's expressed in the acceptable. and judged feminine the This was quality a and life and work, and was best evaluation of those in positions of political authority or influence. About the spread of Christianity in the early centuries, Jo Ann McNamara wrote, "Women helped to shape and spread Christianity worth separate most likely as from worldly the case for a validation of individual social status."2 This was many women in the first centuries of Christianity; however, in the case of the 2 Jo Ann McNamara, "Matres Patriae / Matres Ecclesiae: Women of Rome," in Becoming Visible: Women in European History, ed. Renate Bridenthal, Susan Mosher Stuard, and Merry E. Wiesner (Boston: Houghton Mifflin Co., 1998), 86. women examined themselves in this separately women used their work, instead from t h e i r worldly worldly position and of validating status, the these prevailing construction of gender within Roman society to accomplish tasks considered outside those boundaries while remaining well within them. liberating within Rather than merely finding Christianity, something these women found that t h e i r p o s i t i o n s as noblewomen enabled them to support the C h r i s t i a n movement from within the gendered sphere Roman society had imposed upon them. women sought not to liberate In other words, themselves because these their p o s i t i o n s a c t u a l l y provided an opportunity which was not available t o men (or to women who attempted to work outside those same gendered boundaries). Much has been done in recent years to h i g h l i g h t the importance of gender history. Perhaps the greatest c o n t r i b u t i o n to the f i e l d has been the emphasis on gender as 3 "relational history,"3 rather than continuing to For more on t h i s idea of gender as a r e l a t i o n a l h i s t o r y , s e e : Kathleen Canning, Gender History in Practice: Historical Perspectives on Bodies, Class, and Citizenship ( I t h a c a , NY: C o r n e l l U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s , 2006); Joan Wallach S c o t t , "Gender: A Useful Category of A n a l y s i s , " i n Gender and the Politics of History, ed. Joan Wallach S c o t t (New York: Columbia U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s , 1998); Mathew Kuefler, The Manly Eunuch: Masculinity, Gender Ambiguity, and Christian Ideology in Late Antiquity (Chicago: The U n i v e r s i t y of Chicago P r e s s , 2001). divide the historical narrative into male and female, as if men and women live from one another. and operate completely Men and women separate in the early Empire existed within socially-recognized limitations based upon their sex and the expectations of gender constructed around their biology. Barbara Hanawalt discussed the concept of gendered space in her *0f Good and 111 .4 Repute' Although Hanawalt dealt with the enforcement of gendered physical space through law and custom in medieval England, much of this concept is applicable to the Roman world as well. The term "gendered sphere" will be used in this work, and it encompasses more than just physical space. study, gendered spheres build upon For this Hanawalt's idea of gendered space, but extend beyond the physical to include mainly the political Roman political and social boundaries religio-political reality of the associated system. early Empire The with religio- maintained a disconnect between the power women could wield and the perceived will be impact upon the public explored throughout this life of society. work, the extent As to Barbara Hanawalt, y0f Good and 111 Repute': Gender and Social Control in Medieval England (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998). 4 which women recognized could wield sphere was influence dependent outside upon their the general stability of the Empire and the adherence of the emperor within the boundaries of his own gendered sphere - for even men were restricted required of them. the Roman world in what was expected and While it is appropriate to describe as divided into public and private spheres, it is not correct then to assume that only one gender other. was capable of exercising power in one or the The public and private spheres of Roman society were interdependent, and while men may have had priority in exercising legitimate authority in the public sphere, it did not mean women were completely excluded or incapable of exercising power or influence within it as well. Power and authority, although sometimes used interchangeably in English, are for the purposes of this study, two connected, yet separate concepts. Power is the ability to steer the course of events in society; to influence and direct how things are politically, socially, and culturally. legitimate exercise of power carried out Authority is the according stipulations of law, custom, and culture. to the In the early Empire, authority was exercised purposes reflect of this the study, Roman auctoritas, the political respectively. only by men. terms power concepts As will For the and potestas of be authority and discussed in further detail in chapter three, even women like Julia Mamaea, who Alexander essentially ran the Empire while her son, Severus, was too young to assume full power, did so only under his recognized legitimacy. her son's authority, exercise any power. authority of Mamaea would have been Apart from unable to Shortly before the army removed the Alexander in 235, Mamaea's power was criticized by the ancient historians as an abrogation of recognized delineation ideas of and accepted between power and two gendered genders authority actions. and were its The proper connection important to to the Romans, and the language of the ancient historians lends much to a fuller understanding of what was expected of men and women in the early Empire. The Heart of the Matter: Organization This study focuses on the ability of women, specifically noblewomen in the early Empire, to live and operate within expectations situations gendered in order boundaries to take for the purpose of and societal advantage assisting, and supporting the early Church. of their safeguarding, How these women were capable of carrying out this task sheds light upon Roman conceptions of marriage, virginity, masculinity, femininity, and law. homosexuality, The stability of the Empire, politically, economically, and socially, impacted the ability legitimate of these authority relationship and between Christian movement. women the to influence weighed imperial those heavily government in in the and the Crises created environments in which women with particular connections to imperial authority could wield power without expected gender overstepping behavior. For their example, in sociallythe second century, the seeming lack of masculinity part of crisis the of Commodus. unbeknownst which be gendered Marcia, of was man masculinity this able to Christian demonstrated the first expectations Because concubine, will Empire's during crisis, to wield women the the provoked a reign of emperor's power previously favor. a gendered emperor on the the in imperial throughout, of (princeps) late- was As crisis called in into question created both a fear of a general crisis by those in positions of authority political (most notably the army) and a peculiar opportunity for women close to the emperor to exercise considerable influence and power. The Third Century Crisis which engulfed the Roman Empire from 235-285, is beyond the scope of this study. However, the Crisis demonstrates the thesis of this work and so shall be briefly examined in an epilogue in order to better accentuate sources are Third the topic at hand. scant, it can be Century Crisis, two surmised Although the that during the empresses, Cornelia Salonina and Otacilia, could have influenced policies toward the Christian community while their husbands busied themselves with ensuring their legacy and the stability of the Empire. effective These gendered women response all by demonstrate Christian that women in positions of influence was governed by political, social, and economic forces beyond their control, and so each situation demonstrates something uniquely peculiar about the role of gender within Roman society in the first thematic, yet there three centuries of the Empire. The remains division a of relatively chapters is chronological approach. Each chapter examines how Christian women of the nobility were impacted by the construction of gender in relation to the religio-political system of the early Empire from 57-235. The starting point of 57 was chosen because of the trial of Pomponia Graecina - a noblewoman accused and tried for "foreign superstition" (a term whence this work takes its title) . The ending year of 235 marks the end of the reign of Alexander Severus and the beginning of the Third Century Crisis. This work examines the connection between gender and the exercise of power during times of crisis, particularly examination of because conclusions study the are the crises further Third of gender. Century drawn Crisis from demonstrated A the within is focus the greatest crisis the Empire had ever endured. brief included of this period of However, the sources available which focus explicitly on how women in unique positions of power used the crisis to influence imperial policies toward the Christians are too scant to make definitive conclusions, and therefore only possibilities can be offered. Each boundaries chapter were provides interpreted dominated society. examples and of enforced how by gendered a male- However, Christian women in positions of influence could, especially use the accepted during times of crisis, gender norms to the advantage of the Christian communities they sought to protect and support. In short, the gendered provided women of boundaries of particular the social early Empire status with opportunities of power and influence unknown even to most men. Chapter Domitilla, one two arraigned for beliefs. examines Pomponia women of the trial on account Graecina first and century of their Flavia who were religious The significance of their trials is connected to the Roman construction of gender in light of law and punishment. Restrictions on women's participation in the legal and political realms of Roman life, while sometimes tied to Roman {infirmitas tied understandings sexus), to the stability. actually relationship of prove between womanly to weakness be more gender and closely political Chapter two introduces how women functioned within the legal and traditional constraints of the early Empire and how gender provided the foundation for all other aspects of Roman life. Chapter three builds upon these Roman ideas of gender expectations by examining the role of the emperor as "first man." the princeps With this general understanding of what should be, the Roman construction of masculine and feminine is explored through the connection of three women to the imperial throne. wife of Nero (r. (r. 54-68), Marcia, concubine of Commodus 180-192), Severus Poppaea Sabina, and Julia (r. 222-235), Mamaea, each mother transcended of the Alexander traditional gender roles while remaining within gendered expectations during times of crisis. the uniqueness and In addition, each demonstrated complexity of what was expected of them on account of their gender and their relationship to the emperor. women The crises during the lives of these three were connected to the socially expected construction of masculinity on the part of the emperors. Because each emperor failed in his duty to exemplify what society considered to be masculine behavior, these women were able to policies. ability masculine disorder. exercise In of the essence, certain these feminine powers women sometimes over imperial demonstrated the to the subsume in order to avert or end a crisis of gender The relationship between the masculine and feminine is demonstrated boundaries of in the cases of these three women and sheds much light not only on the Roman construction of gender, but also understandings of homosexuality and the limitations of applying specifically gendered terms across gendered lines. The epilogue consists Third Century Crisis. central to conclusions the of analysis of the As mentioned earlier, this is not purpose drawn a brief from of this chapters study, two and however, three offer support in looking at crises which at first glance appear to be disconnected from gender. In this epilogue three empresses were brought into the spotlight: Otacilia, wife of Philip the Arab (r. 244-249), Cornelia Salonina, wife of Gallienus (r. 260-268), and Eutropia, wife of Maximian (r.286-305). The Third Century Crisis, unlike the gendered crises examined in chapter three, was exclusively political in the sense that it was not on account of a perceived lack of masculinity on the part conclusions drawn conjectured about the three Christian epilogue, about in whom this of the emperor. little work, is some From the things empresses known. can be in the These three empresses were in positions which could have enabled them to influence directly imperial policy toward the Christians by taking advantage of their relationship to their husbands imperial as government well as with the the preoccupation economic, military crises plaguing the Empire. of the political, and Because the crisis was different from the crises examined in chapter three, power by women close differently as well. to the emperor was exercised The emperors presented no absence of a masculine presence, and so there was no need for the feminine to assume Salonina, government's and that masculine Eutropia policies role. influenced toward the If Otacilia, the Church imperial under their respective husbands, then they did so within the bounds of what society considered normal feminine behavior. Scratching Beneath the Surfaces: Methodology The great difficulty in writing the story of gender in the ancient world is that women left few sources of their own. women, Because of the lack of sources written by conclusions have been written by men about women. drawn from the sources For this study, it is not only sources about women which unveil the intricacies of gender in the early Empire, but also the sources about men reveal much in understanding the relationship between masculine and feminine in the ancient world. Vocabulary emphasizing what the ancient authors considered to be socially desirable qualities within men and women permeates their writings. The task of the gender historian is to draw out these terms and define their meaning within the context of the author. This task of contextualization is important in the historical works because oftentimes the authors sought to transfer constructions of gender and socially acceptable behavior from their own time onto the past events of which they wrote. Roman law and ancient histories contribute the most to this study for uncovering within the early Empire. the gendered boundaries Laws as a source on the proper roles for each gender are somewhat limiting, however, in that they are more prescriptive than descriptive. As it has been aptly put, "for law... is about what people may or may not do, not what they actually do."5 The histories, from which most of the analysis of gender takes place for this 5 study, provide important insight into the Jane F. Gardner, Women in Roman Law and Society (Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1995 [Orig. 1986]), 3. expectations periods of and assumptions history which about are gender read back from into later earlier episodes of gender interaction. In under the the second law chapter, demonstrates the that exploration within of Roman women law and culture, women were treated differently from men because elite Roman writers believed that nature had endowed each sex with distinctive responsibilities. expected of qualities, abilities, and This chapter focuses less what the law each gender, but rather enforced the law upon men and women. a construction of Roman society on how Romans Although gender was (what it meant to act as a man or as a woman) it was nevertheless attached to what Romans could visibly demonstrate - sex. Chapter three explores examples of when the emperor failed to operate within his own gendered sphere. When emperors took on feminine qualities and abandoned their masculine role of political authority, women could sometimes influence or directly assume the masculine role which the historians society. The believed ancient was needed historians for a portrayed stable this usurpation of masculinity by a woman as a negative but sometimes necessary (albeit temporary) reversal of gender roles. In the epilogue, the opposite approach is examined. Rather than assuming the masculine, the women explored in this chapter expected of acted them. in strict The accordance crisis of with gender what explored was in chapter three is not the crisis which could have provided advantage to the women explored purpose of this epilogue is in the epilogue. to demonstrate The that the approach used in this study could apply to later periods of Roman history as well, although for the Third Century Crisis, the evidence is less conclusive. Although it is almost always portrayed in black and white by the ancient historians, gender was, in fact, a complex and multifaceted construction within Roman society. When in Rome: Cultural Contexts The women examined in this work were only able to wield the power they did because of what society expected of them as women. Roman culture traditions, but These expectations were cemented in through perhaps a number most of legal importantly, and moral through the pens of the historians who sought to connect understanding of gendered lines to nature. their As will be further explored in each chapter, Roman historians, such as Tacitus, Dio, and Herodian, immersed their narratives in gendered language. These historians emphasized the distinction between the genders, and they made clear what was expected of each, thereby creating a sort of propaganda to serve as both a warning to future emperors, and a moral lesson on what becomes of a society that neglects the natural order. Whether one was perceived as acting in accordance with his or her normative gender role was a foundation for how Romans judged the quality and morality of someone's life and work. Specifically, the princeps as first was man manhood of the Empire for all Roman men. to be the embodiment In his The Manly of Eunuch, Mathew Kuefler argued that "the notion of masculinity that is, what it meant to be a man - formed an integral part of the Kuefler's masculinity 6 intellectual purpose to the was to life of late connect development Kuefler, The Manly Eunuch: Masculinity, Christian Ideology in Late Antiquity, 1. of antiquity."6 this notion Christian Gender Ambiguity, of ideology. and Although distinct from the purposes of this work, Kuefler' s thesis is important in supporting the idea that Romans believed assignment was the proper essential exercise to a of stable one's and gender productive family, community, and empire. Roman historians interpreted the actions of emperors within the framework spheres. The of socially purposes constructed behind these gendered historical interpretations were twofold: first, the historians made their fellow Romans aware of their own places on the social ladder; second, the historians could explain the success or failure of those at the top of society within the framework of masculine leadership. life of Rome was dominated by men. The political While women could exercise some rights within the public realm, men assumed all legal authority in the political and religious areas of life. Roman Because men were the dominant force within the religio-political describe masculine. behavior system, associated Therefore, what the with was language that used arena appropriate for to was the proper exercise of political office was tied to what were believed to be masculine traits which could should) be found only in men. (or at least When women exercised these traits, their behavior could only be interpreted aberration feminine of the natural usurpation responsibility contributes perception is much of order. of an the heart to understanding explored idea inherently at gender This of in chapter of the masculine chapter the as an three and formation and two and the epilogue. The vita expression militaris (military life) was the ultimate of masculinity in Roman culture.7 As first man, the princeps was especially expected to exude this masculine quality, and the ancient writers were quick to demonstrate the inadequacy of those emperors who failed to live up to society's expectations of manliness. The ancient historians used gender as a method of evaluating the success and failure of current emperors by comparison to those in contemporaries stepped the of outside past, the their and impending gendered to forewarn doom for spheres. their those For who example, Boudicca's speech condemning the luxury and effeminacy of the Romans and their emperor (Nero, r. 54-68) most likely reflected Dio Elagabalus (r. 7 Cassius' 218-222) Ibid., 37ff; 275ff. assessment who reigned of the during emperor Dio's own 20 career. 8 Boudicca, who, usurped the legal authority in Tacitus' (imperium) summation, had restricted to men when she led a rebellion in Roman Britain, had taken on the preposterous female ruler denunciation gender monstrosity {dux of femina),9 Marcia, of a masculinized- Centuries later, Zosimus' Commodus' concubine, as masculine, was a masked insult of Commodus who, in the judgment of Roman masculinity.10 expectations, had failed in his own These examples and the idea of gender as a tool used by the ancient historians are further explored in chapter three. In the second century BC, Polybius had warned that When a state, after warding off many great dangers, achieves supremacy and undisputed sovereignty, it is evident that by the long continuance of prosperity, life will become more extravagant, and rivalry for office and in other spheres of activity, will become fiercer than it should. As the state of things goes on more and more, the aspiration of office and the shame of losing reputation which obscurity brings, together with the spread of ostentation and extravagance of living, will usher in the beginning of general deterioration.11 Cass. Dio lxii.6. Kuefler draws a similar conclusion: The Eunuch: Masculinity, Gender Ambiguity, Late Antiquity, 40-41. 9 and Christian Ideology Manly in l a c , Agr. xvi.l; xxxi. 4. See chapter 3 and also: Francesca Santoro L'Hoir, "Tacitus and Women's Usurpation of Power," CW 88, no. 1 (Sep.-Oct. 1994). 10 Zos., Historia Nova i.7. For more see my discussion in chapter 3. 11 Polyb., vi.57. Although Polybius neglected conceptions prophetic and femininity within his of Rome's historians did not. existence incorporate of masculinity warning lifestyle, to specifically future, the later Roman Extravagance, ostentatious dress and and a life in stark of a soldier contrast - all negative to the hard qualities in Polybius' admonition - were at the center of femininity in the Roman mind. For the Romans, the Greek empires had fallen because their men had abandoned their masculinity and succumbed to the comforts of a feminine life.12 By the mid-fourth century, Ammianus Marcellinus bemoaned the fact that the Romans military life {vita life {vita historians qualities of his day had abandoned' the militaris) mollitiae) .13 impart in favor of the effeminate The writings that the exercise by a man ensured femininity encouraged of the ancient of truly masculine a successful rebellion because reign, while society would naturally attempt to realign itself with nature. As much as Roman society expected its men to reflect the vita militaris, it expected its women to live out a 12 For an examination of what the Romans thought of the Greeks and their decline, see: J.P.V.D. Balsdon, Romans and Aliens (Chapel Hill, NC: The University of North Carolina Press, 1979), esp. ch. 3. 13 7Amm. M a r c , xxxi . 5 . 22 distinctly existence feminine in Roman existence. culture was A valid one which feminine fulfilled "unquestioned destiny"14 of marriage and childbirth. an This strict delineation of what was culturally appropriate for Roman women raises this 1) study: two why concerns did women, within the especially context of noblewomen, convert in greater numbers to Christianity than men in the first three centuries? Virgins fit into the Roman expectation of marriage and childbirth? and can and 2) where do the Vestal be These two concerns appropriately are closely treated by connected, examining the relationship between marriage, virginity, and femininity within both Roman and Christian cultures. In the first three centuries of Christianity, women converted in greater numbers to the new faith than men did.15 The Bremmer briefly first question, addressed of course, is this query16 and why? Jan summarily 14 Peter R.L. Brown, The Body and Society: Men, Women and Sexual Renunciation in Early Christianity (New York: Columbia University Press, 1988), 9. Robin Lane Fox, Pagans and Christians (San Francisco: Harper & Row Publishers, 1986), 310; Adolf von Harnack, Die Mission Und 15 Ausbreitung Des Christentums in Den Ersten Drei Jahrhunderten (Charleston, SC: BiblioLife, LLC, 2010 [Orig. 1915]), 68ff; Rodney Stark, "Reconstructing the Rise of Christianity: The Role of Women," Sociology of Religion 56, no. 3 (Autumn 1995): 232ff. 16 Jan Bremmer, "Why Did Early Christianity Attract Upper-class Women," in Fructus Centesimus: Melanges Offerts Bartelink a L'occasion de son soixante-cinquieme a Gerard J.M. Anniversaire, ed. dismissed the t r a d i t i o n a l explanations more credulous, or more receptive with emotional orgiastic, Bremmer concluded sexually, early upper-class that and/or Christianity women were to " r e l i g i o u s hysterical "intellectually, offered groups aspects."17 socially greater self-expression and possibilities women which were not provided to the degree by other c u l t s . " 1 8 patronage, that These p o s s i b i l i t i e s to same included for women, more o p p o r t u n i t i e s of i n t e l l e c t u a l nourishment and advancement, and sexual l i b e r a t i o n in the forms of divorce from t h e i r nonChristian husbands Furthermore, and/or a Bremmer claimed t h a t life of virginity. the decline of manus marriage in the e a r l y Empire, which allowed s i n g l e upperc l a s s women a b e t t e r chance at s e l f - s u p p o r t , to the disappearance public and p r i v a t e of life a clear in addition distinction between in the eastern portion of Empire contributed to the success of these the possibilities for women in e a r l y C h r i s t i a n i t y . 1 9 A.A.R. B a s t i a e n s e n , A. H i l h o r s t , and C.H. Kneepkens, I n s t r u m e n t s Patristica ( S t e e n b r u g i s : In Abbatia S a n c t i P e t r i , 1989). 17 Mentioned i n Bremmer ( I b i d . , 40f.) as argued by: Max Weber, Wirtschaft Und Gesellschaft. GrundriB Der Verstehenden Soziologie (1925) . 18 Bremmer, "Why Did E a r l y C h r i s t i a n i t y A t t r a c t U p p e r - c l a s s Women," 46. 19 For t h e d e c l i n e of manus m a r r i a g e , s e e : Susan E. Looper-Friedman, "The Decline of Manus-Marriage," Tijdschrift voor Rechtsgeschiedenis 24 While Bremmer's attempt to a d d r e s s t h e q u e s t i o n of why women seemed more i n c l i n e d to the Christian if the fact, question the religion and faith against completely can current kind centuries, one must what of that women advantages situation inexplicable Even answered. if it were it - remain silent and seem t o liberty, submit to contradict self-expression nature of Roman their has over rejecting and/or that that by would that women authority21 women liberation society or arguable husbands' a notion In spiritual Paul's entreaties ask choose r e l i g i o n because they believed i t them g r e a t e r patriarchal thorough implies their afford greater a definitively itself motivations.20 certainly be upon women c h o s e t h e i r out ever solely any is in the early question based emotional argument sought from converting the to Christianity. 55 (1987). For t h e d i s a p p e a r a n c e of p u b l i c and p r i v a t e i n t h e e a s t e r n Empire, as well as Rome i t s e l f , s e e : Bremmer, "Why Did Early C h r i s t i a n i t y A t t r a c t Upper-Class Women," 42, f o o t n o t e 13. 20 While s p i r i t u a l and emotional m o t i v a t i o n s a r e d i f f i c u l t t o a s c e r t a i n or e x p l a i n without e x p l i c i t mentions i n t h e s o u r c e s , one cannot deny t h a t they a r e c e r t a i n l y p a r t of t h e human c o n d i t i o n and e x p e r i e n c e . In a d d i t i o n , modern h i s t o r i a n s cannot presume t h a t c u r r e n t concepts of l i b e r t y and e q u a l i t y were shared or even understood by t h o s e who l i v e d two m i l l e n n i a ago i n a c u l t u r e which d i d not espouse such i d e a s . 21 Some examples from P a u l ' s l e t t e r s which d e l i n e a t e a submissive r o l e for women a r e : 1 C o r i n t h i a n s 1 1 : 3 , 9 ; Ephesians 5:22-24; C o l o s s i a n s 3:18; 1 Timothy 2 : 1 1 - 1 2 . Bremmer's idea that sexual liberation for early C h r i s t i a n women was exercised through e i t h e r divorce from t h e i r pagan husbands or voluntary v i r g i n i t y breaks down under closer scrutiny of the legal and cultural understandings of divorce and v i r g i n i t y in both Roman and Christian societies. essentially In two types Roman culture, of marriage: became part of her husband's familia other where the wife (sine manu).22 marriage there were one where the wife {cum manu), and the remained a p a r t of her By the end of the Republic, had become the Concerning divorce, predominant form of father's sine manu marriage. i t was undoubtedly more accepted in the Roman world to divorce one's husband than within the C h r i s t i a n community. Since Roman marriage was based upon the consent of both p a r t i e s , e i t h e r the husband or wife could i n i t i a t e a divorce and no cause had to be alleged for the a c t i o n . 2 3 22 A s t i p u l a t i o n which might have impacted For more on Roman m a r r i a g e s e e : Percy E. C o r b e t t , The Roman Law of Marriage (Oxford: Oxford U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s , 1930); J u d i t h Evans Grubbs, Women and the Law in the Roman Empire: A Sourcebook on Marriage, Divorce and Widowhood (London and New York: Routledge, 2002); Susan T r e g g i a r i , Roman Marriage: Iusti Coniuges from the Time of Cicero to the Time of Ulpian (Oxford: Oxford U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s , 1991) . 23 Up u n t i l t h e r e i g n of Marcus A u r e l i u s ( r . 1 6 0 - 1 8 1 ) , t h e paterfamilias was c o n s i d e r e d t o be a c o n s e n t i n g p a r t y t o t h e m a r r i a g e as w e l l , and h e l d t h e a u t h o r i t y t o i n i t i a t e d i v o r c e . See: Karl Galinsky, "Augustus' L e g i s l a t i o n on Morals and M a r r i a g e , " Philologus 125 (1981); Gardner, Women in Roman Law and Society, 81; 26 who d i v o r c e d whom i n sine manu m a r r i a g e , was i n cases where i f t h e wife or paterfamilias i n i t i a t e d the divorce, then claim the husband could sometimes a deduction o n e - s i x t h of t h e dowry for t h e c h i l d r e n . 2 4 course, to This could, of be argued as good r e a s o n for t h e woman a c t u a l l y refrain course, of from initiating the divorce herself. cum manu m a r r i a g e was s t a r k l y d i f f e r e n t marriage {sine manu) because in this case Of from a free divorce r e q u i r e d r e m a n c i p a t i o n of t h e wife by e x c l u s i o n from her husband's familia and a r e t u r n to her father's. This type of m a r r i a g e , however, had f a l l e n out of p r a c t i c e t h e most p a r t by t h e end of t h e R e p u b l i c . 2 5 R e g a r d l e s s of who d i v o r c e d whom, however, t h e s o u r c e s i n d i c a t e t h a t divorce somewhat rate among similar to Romans may statistics have in been the for at United a the level States Leo F. R a d i t s a , "Augustus' L e g i s l a t i o n Concerning Marriage, P r o c r e a t i o n , Love A f f a i r s and A d u l t e r y , " ANRN 2, no. 13 (1980); Susan T r e g g i a r i , "Divorce Roman S t y l e : How Easy and How Frequent Was I t ? " i n Marriage, Divorce, and Children in Ancient Rome, ed. Beryl Rawson (Oxford & New York: Oxford U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s , 1991), 32-34; 38. 24 T r e g g i a r i , "Divorce Roman S t y l e : How Easy and How Frequent Was I t ? , " 39. 25 On d i v o r c e i n cum manu marriage s e e : C o r b e t t , The Roman Law of Marriage, Gardner, Women m Roman Law and Society, 83f, T r e g g i a r i , "Divorce Roman S t y l e : How Easy and How Frequent Was I t ? , " 33ff. 27 today, which implies a somewhat commonplace occurrence within Roman society.26 In the first century, marriage, or more accurately, divorce and inheritance, became topics of interest in the legislation of Rome's indication, however, first that emperor. women who There wished is to no free themselves from their husbands found it more difficult to do so in light Augustus.27 of In the fact, new one marriage could laws argue imposed that by Augustus' legislation did little or nothing to discourage divorce, but rather only childbearing.28 divorce was to encourage remarriage and In the general picture, as a private act, free from most constraints of government regulation, yet Suetonius wrote that Augustus imposed a "limit" "divortiis 26 on divorce.29 modum imposuit" Suetonius' phrasing, however, could also be translated as Treggiari, "Divorce Roman Style: How Easy and How Frequent Was It?" 41ff. 27 Augustus' legislation was more concerned with connecting morality to the need for an increase in Roman birthrates: Galinsky, "Augustus' Legislation on Morals and Marriage," 132. 28 Gardner, Women in Roman Law and Society, 82f. 29 Suet., Aug. xxxiv. Judith Evans Grubbs interprets Suetonius' "modus" as a limit in the sense that Augustus tried to prevent men reluctant to marry from finding loopholes by betrothing themselves to girls under 12 and/or by having frequent marriages and divorces: Evans Grubbs, Women and the Law in the Roman Empire: A Sourcebook on Marriage, Divorce and Widowhood, 86. imposing a "set form" on divorce,30 rather than a limit on the frequency. Whether Augustus set limits, or merely a formula, is what known for sure is that the only occasions of divorce in which the government felt obliged to intervene were related to issues of property and intestacy. Examples which constituted an intervention on behalf the of imperial government included divorce between a freedwoman married to her patron, and when the wife was a proven adulteress. These two instances, however, are similar because they both relate to property and inheritance. In a marriage between a freedwoman and her patron, there was no separation of property between the husband and wife, and although it was a free marriage {sine manu), the two were legally connected to the property in a way that marriage did not usually connect husband and wife.31 In the second case, if a husband knew his wife had committed adultery, then under the lex de adulteriis, prosecuted he as a was leno obligated to divorce (pimp).32 A wife who her Iulia or be committed 30 This is what is argued by Jane Gardner, since she believes Augustus' legislation did not discourage divorce, but rather encouraged it: Gardner, Women in Roman Law and Society, 85. 31 Dig. 24.2.11; See also: Gardner, Women in Roman Law and Society, 82-83. 32 Dig. 24.2.11; See also: Treggiari, Roman Marriage: Iusti from the Time of Cicero to the Time of Ulpian, 454-57. Coniuges adultery could not be confident in knowing who the father of her sons was, and therefore the issue of inheritance is the key to understanding why the government felt compelled to intervene in these cases. Roman marriage in the Empire was not the union of two people or even two families, but rather an agreement between two families to produce heirs for the husband's posterity. Women contributed to through their relationship to men. was the paramount requirement Roman society only The procreative role and achievement of Roman women, and this was not legitimately realized outside of marriage. Because of this, marriage functioned as a foundation of Roman society because it provided the only environment in which legitimate heirs could be produced. Ensuring that women remained in their role as heir- producing contributors to society was a primary aspect of the laws of Augustus and his successors.33 While women enjoyed an equal status with their husbands in creating and ending their marriages, an unmarried woman was of little use to society because her purpose of childbearing 33 Evans Grubbs, Women and the Law in the Roman Empire: A Sourcebook on Marriage, Divorce and Widowhood, 87: "Augustus and his successors were promoting an imperial ideology that stressed marriage and child-bearing as the foundation for the state." was not being fulfilled. transfer of property understandings maintained The legitimacy of heirs and the of weighed divorce, separate heavily because property a in Roman married couple within the marriage. Separate property and separate families, the concept of marriage ensure as an of the sole purpose husband's was to was definitively demonstrated in the continued growth of sine Roman security whose patrimony manu the institution marriage in the early Empire.34 culture, contribution a to Roman woman's society was For first-century purpose the and greatest exercise of her biological ability to bear children. Early Christian literature on marriage married couples to remain married despite even in religious belief. In 1 encouraged disagreements Corinthians outlined the principles for a Christian marriage. 7, Paul First, Paul reiterated the Jewish understanding of marriage as the union of two people into one flesh35 - a concept of marriage quite foreign to Roman tradition and law. In emphasizing this, Christians were reminded not only that the married couple was inseparable, but neither exercised 34 Looper-Friedman, "The Decline of Manus-Marriage." Genesis 2:24; Matthew 19:4-6; Mark 10:7-10; 1 Corinthians 6:16; 11:11-12; Ephesians 5:31. 35 authority over his or her own body, for he or she was under the power of the other.36 Paul then outlined that, according to God, the wife was not to separate from her husband and the husband was not to divorce his wife.37 Based on this, Paul urged his own advice: if a Christian were married to a non-Christian, he or she should stay married and serve as an example of Christianity in hopes of eventually converting the unbelieving spouse.38 this letter, one can draw two conclusions. From First, the Corinthian Christians may have been unfamiliar with the traditional Jewish understanding of marriage, which was being urged by Paul in his Christian ministry. Paul encouraged Christians to remain married Second, to their pagan spouses because they were, in fact, divorcing them. This second point would seem to support Bremmer's argument that women were converting to Christianity and using divorce their husbands as a means and the society they represented. to liberate patriarchal themselves hierarchy of from Roman This interpretation, however, ignores the fact that Roman women were not required to 36 1 Corinthians 7:4. 1 Corinthians 7:10-11. Under Jewish law, only the husband could initiate a divorce. 38 I Corinthians 7:12-16; 1 Peter 3:1-2. 37 32 give a reason for divorce. society eliminated Christianity for 39 the the The ease of divorce in Roman need purpose for of a conversion attaining a to divorce. Furthermore, the Jews and Christians were certainly not exempt from Augustus' marriage laws which encouraged and required remarriage within eighteen months of a divorce.40 When it came to marriage, liberty, and the expectations of women, it could be said that while both Roman pagans and Christians capable set few restrictions on what women were of doing, they were quite restrictive in what they believed women should do.41 While virginity sexual liberation, could be interpreted as has been argued,42 as a form of the evidence suggests that those who chose a life of celibacy would do so not simply to eschew notions of patriarchal dominance, but rather because one truly believed in the sanctity of such an act. If virgins believed that their lives of chastity an 39 were act of rebellion against the male- Treggiari, "Divorce Roman Style: How Easy and How Frequent Was It?," 34. 40 Corbett, The Roman Law of Marriage, 250. 41 Jo Ann McNamara, "Sexual Equality and the Cult of Virginity in Early Christian Thought," Feminist Studies 3, no. 3/4 (SpringSummer, 1976): 148. McNamara is referring only to Christian Church Fathers. However, McNamara's conclusion regarding the early Christian view of women is nearly identical with Roman pagan views. 42 Fox, Pagans and Christians, 372ff, McNamara, "Matres Patriae / Matres Ecclesiae: Women of Rome," 92. dominated world, then they left nothing written of their own to indicate Christianity traditional have celibacy norms of nor exempted expectations and qualities. of such, would them from for women conversion Roman to laws and of marriageable age Christian women who sought to live a life did Roman so in stark culture, contrast however, to they the did accepted not escape those same cultural expectations within Christianity. As seen in the marriage laws and traditions of Rome, marriage destiny and of the all bearing Roman of heirs women. was While the normative virginity was a visible part of ancient religious practice, it was first and foremost an anomalous lifestyle.43 Religious virgins, such as the Vestals, were expected to marry after their tenure as virgins had ended. The religious celibates of antiquity "were the exceptions that reinforced the rule... [They]... heightened the awareness of contemporaries that marriage and childbirth were the unquestioned destiny of all other women."44 culture were aberrations 43 of Virgins, like the Vestals, in Roman neither gender whose Brown, The Body and Society: Early Christianity, 8. 44 Ibid., 9. male nor female. illegitimate Men, Women and Sexual They were existence was Renunciation in made temporarily religious purpose. legitimate only because of their In the eyes of the pagan majority, virginity was a temporary and atypical condition, which, while carrying situations, important would not religious have functions been in recognized some as a legitimate long-term lifestyle within the early Empire.45 Christians than the viewed surrounding voluntary Roman virginity culture literature of the early Christian differently did. Within the Fathers, there was a strong connection between the life of wife and that of virgin.46 fruitful While lifestyle virginity within could the be an Christian accepted and community, the institution of marriage took precedence over virginity, especially if the woman was already married.47 Paul's exhortation that in marriage the spouse has control over the other's body created problems for women who wished to live the celibate life after marriage. After all, if the husband maintained control over his wife's body, then she had no more right to withhold sexual relations from her husband, 45 than he had the right to withhold them from For more on virginity and gender in the Roman world, see Brown's summary in: Ibid., 5-25. 46 McNamara, "Sexual Equality and the Cult of Virginity in Early Christian Thought," 148f. 47 Ibid.: 148. McNamara cites examples of married women who endeavored to live a celibate life while married. her.48 This Christian conception of the inseparable bond between husband and wife, although quite different from the Roman construct of marriage, was very similar to the Roman understanding of the relationship between men and women in regard to virginity. Both Roman pagans and Roman Christians understood women to be inseparable from their relationship to men within society through the institution of marriage. The Christian understanding of virginity within the first century was far from the more systematized theology of the later centuries. sought to enforce encouraged through While Christians, like pagans, historical gender expectations women's paramount contribution procreation, they began also to to which society emphasize, contrary to pagan beliefs, that virginity was a lifestyle wholly compatible feminine. 48 a Christian understanding of This counter-cultural acceptance of virginity by Christians "threatened with to could be destroy interpreted gender as a concept barriers by which rejecting 1 Corinthians 7:3-5: "The husband should give to his wife her conjugal rights, and likewise the wife to her husband. For the wife does not have authority over her own body, but the husband does. Likewise the husband does not have authority over his own body, but the wife does. Do not deprive one another, except perhaps by agreement for a limited time, that you may devote yourselves to prayer; but then come together again, so that Satan may not tempt you because of your lack of self-control." traditional sexual and procreative roles that restricted women solely to relationships with men."49 acceptance have of virginity acted more as a suitable way of life may to expectations rather transferring the enforce than to gender unravel traditional submission and obedience Christ. However, the barriers them, expectations and by simply of wifely from a human husband to Jesus Through this new spiritual marriage, Christian women could contribute to the benefit of society aside from physical marriage and procreation. The experiences of female virgins within early Christianity are preserved only in the texts written by male clergy and female virgins historians.50 The sources as freeing themselves upon Eve and her descendents. from the described judgment No longer would they fear the pains of childbirth, for "[y]ou virgins are free from this sentence... with condition is equal."51 that of men your lot and your This notion of equality between men and women through virginity developed later in the theology to 49 of virginity that began dominate McNamara, "Matres Patriae / Matres Ecclesiae: Women of Rome," 92. A hole in the historical treasures of the Church which Elizabeth Castelli laments in: Elizabeth Castelli, "Virginity and Its Meaning for Women's Sexuality in Early Christianity," JFSR 2 (1986): 61-65. 51 Cyprian, De Habitu Virginum xxii (PL 461-462). 50 ecclesiastical discourse in the third and fourth centuries and seems to be a very narrow interpretation of the impressions of equality conveyed by Paul in the first century, when he wrote "...there is no male and female, for you are all one in Christ Jesus."52 In virginity, Christian women did not find a freedom from traditional expectations, but rather an enforcement of gendered boundaries now fully realized in a celestial relationship with a spiritual husband maintained under the rigors of physical and spiritual exercise and control. Christian virgins Christian were expected to act and dress as wives, and the imagery of their lifestyles was eventually portrayed as a spiritualized sexuality.53 Christian virginity did not provide a freedom from the bonds of man and woman, but rather a transference to the bonds of Godman and woman. legitimate life procreation within Christian outside the virgins, of although physical Christian living marriage community, could a and not escape the expectations that women were socially bound to marry and bear children because of their sex. Through the words of later Christian writers, the celestial realm 52 Galatians 3:28. Castelli, "Virginity and Its Meaning for Women's Sexuality in Early Christianity," 71ff. 53 became molded to the language of the physical. Even if liberation was what these women had sought, it came to nothing as virginity became merely a new Christian form of marriage shrouded in traditional gendered expectations. In gender better understanding and the conversion the connection between to Christianity, perhaps the question being asked should not be, "Why were women more attracted to Christianity were men, particularly faith in equal than men?" but noblemen, not drawn numbers to the women?" rather, to the This "Why new latter question, rather than the former, can be answered more conclusively nature based of this upon question the evidence is connected available. to the The political reality of the early Empire and the gendered construction of its religio-political system. the fabric of Roman society. Gendered spheres were The relationship between men and women was interwoven in daily life, however, in the carrying out of their culturally-understood duties, underlying place, and social understandings ability dichotomization of the only of further masculine and gendered purpose, perpetuated feminine. the This 39 connection between gender i s f u r t h e r the religio-political explored in chapter system two. The Kingdom of Heaven & The Kingdom of H i s t o r i c a l Contexts Caesar: W h i l e t h e Roman Empire emerged from t h e d u s t Republic, umbrella Christianity of was Second-Temple and taking shape Judaism. The of under first the the century w i t n e s s e d t h e e a r l y r a p i d g r o w t h of b o t h t h e Roman Empire and Christianity, movement attracted government. Roman but the little There authorities Christians, yet are within the as whole, a of attention examples C h r i s t i a n i t y a s an i n t e r n a l most p a r t , growth of from Christian the imperial interaction disputes affair the the between Romans about the Jews and regarded of t h e J e w s . 5 4 what Romans knew o r b e l i e v e d by For the Christians Arguments can be made for when C h r i s t i a n i t y and Judaism o f f i c i a l l y went t h e i r s e p a r a t e ways i n t h e eyes of t h e uninformed pagan. Many claim i t t o have o c c u r r e d a f t e r t h e d e s t r u c t i o n of t h e Jewish Temple i n 70, o t h e r s as l a t e as t h e Bar-Kokhba Revolt of 132-135. While many Jews may have been eager t o d i s a s s o c i a t e themselves from C h r i s t i a n s (and v i c e - v e r s a ) a f t e r t h e F i r s t Jewish War (66-70), i t i s more than p l a u s i b l e t h a t t h e pagans were not as a c u t e l y aware of t h e i n t r i c a c i e s of J e w i s h - C h r i s t i a n r e l a t i o n s i n t h e f i r s t c e n t u r y , and would have c o n t i n u e d t o r e g a r d C h r i s t i a n s as p a r t of Judaism. For more on t h i s , s e e : Marcel Simon, Verus Israel: A Study of the Relations between Christians and Jews in the Roman Empire, Ad 135 425, t r a n s . H. McKeating (London & P o r t l a n d , OR: V a l l e n t i n e M i t c h e l l & Co L t d . , 1996 [Orig. 1 9 4 8 ] ) . 40 in the first century was limited to rumor and assumptions about Judaism.55 Eusebius described first-century Tiberius. an explosion Christian movement of growth during the for the reign of Much like the Acts of the Apostles, Eusebius credited the early Church with gathering in thousands of fresh converts in the first decades of its inception, as the missionaries and Apostles went out to the far reaches of the known world.56 Eusebius claimed that "[i]n every city and village arose churches crowded with thousands of men, like a teeming threshing-floor."57 As the Christian movement gained momentum, it not surprisingly caught the attention of occasion. Not every encounter was hostile, however, and some the Christian purposeful Roman writers kindness imperial government.58 between 55 the imperial authorities even showered went on so upon far the more as and the to Church Two examples of the government than one allege by the interaction first-century For examples see: Robert Louis Wilken, The Christians as the Romans Saw Them, 2nd ed. (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2003) . 56 Acts 2:41; Euseb., Hist, eccl. iii.l. For an alternate interpretation which examines the growth of Christianity apart from mass conversions, see: Stark, "Reconstructing the Rise of Christianity: The Role of Women," 229-31. 57 Euseb., Hist. eccl. ii.3.2. 58 For example, Eusebius' assessment of Tiberius (Euseb., Hist. eccl. ii.2) . Christians important to this study take place during the reigns of Nero (r.54-68) and Domitian (r.81-96). What has become represents an Christians and century. known as the Neronian anomaly the within imperial authorities of between the first Because of this, Nero was termed the first persecutor of Christianity.59 Christians also relationship In short, Nero blamed the Fire of 64 on the Christians. between the persecution shed the on light not first-century the exercise of Nero's actions against the only on the relationship Church and the power by women emperor, but within the imperial court - namely, Poppaea Sabina, Nero's wife. During the reign of Domitian, Christian describe another first-century persecution.60 and the crowned later historians who relied Flavia Domitilla, Domitian's on sources Eusebius, History, his niece, as perhaps the most prominent victim of Christian persecution in the first century. agreement 59 The sources on Domitilla are not in full concerning her connection to the Christian E u s e b i u s s a y s Nero "was t h e f i r s t of t h e e m p e r o r s t o be p o i n t e d o u t a s an enemy of t h e t r u e God [...coq <xv rcpokoq onjTOKpaxopwv xf[q eiq TO 9elov eTjaefteiaq noXt\aoq avaSeixGeiTi. ] " ( E u s e b . , Hist, eccl. i i . 2 5 . 3 ) and " t h e f i r s t t o b e p r o c l a i m e d a s a f i g h t e r a g a i n s t God [...Qzo\ia%oc, ev xoiq \iaX\.a%a 7tpwToq avotKTipuxQei?-• • 1 " ( i i . 2 5 . 5 ) . 60 Euseb., Hist. eccl. iii.17-20. In this section of his History, Eusebius preserved a portion of the account by Hegesippus as well. movement; however, Domitilla's t r i a l in 95 provides the bedrock for understanding the r e l a t i o n s h i p between gender and the r e l i g i o - p o l i t i c a l system of the f i r s t century. Although t h e r e were instances of persecution in the second century, they were counter-balanced by times of peace and p r o s p e r i t y . Emperors," 61 Good prominent martyrs tolerance and Christian Church second growth of examples exist justice. century intermittent During the reigns of Rome's "Five alongside The Christianity's examples of interaction and Roman a u t h o r i t i e s was sporadic relationship the of Christian is and imperial between the throughout the localized. demonstrated movement most as well This by both as by the the examples of r e l a t i o n s between prominent bishops and the imperial government. The example connected to t h i s study concerns the reign of Commodus (r.180-192), who began h i s r u l e at the end of the Roman Golden Age. Eusebius painted the reign of Commodus as a time of great p r o s p e r i t y for the C h r i s t i a n Church: 61 The r e i g n of t h e f i r s t f i v e Antonine Emperors (Nerva, 96-98; Trajan, 98-117; Hadrian, 117-138; Antoninus P i u s , 138-161; Marcus A u r e l i u s , 161-180) has been termed t h a t of t h e "Five Good Emperors" thanks i n p a r t t o t h e p e a c e f u l s u c c e s s i o n of each, and t h e c o n t i n u e d s t a b i l i t y and p r o s p e r i t y under each. 43 During this same time in the reign of Commodus our circumstances changed to a milder one, and by God's grace, peace came to the churches throughout the world. And the word of salvation began to lead every soul of every race of men toward the devout worship of the God of the universe, so by this time those at Rome who were famous for wealth and family turned to their own salvation with their whole house and with all their relatives.62 Eusebius did not Commodus, but flourished to devote his a many point greater pages was "hedonism and lunacy likely the clear: degree Commodus than it had previously. to during reign of Christianity the time of Perhaps Commodus' own him"63 distracted from pursuing a policy of intolerance towards the Christians (or even paying Commodus' own prosperity, it any attention private life is never to was them the explicitly at reason stated. all). for One If this could argue, however, that Eusebius alluded to the reason when he mentioned that Romans of wealth and fame had converted along with their whole families. As will be further explored in chapter three, the key to Eusebius' passage may 62 lie in a closer examination of Marcia, Commodus' Euseb., Hist, eccl. v.21. As Paul Maier asserted in the commentary of his translation, Eusebius, The Church History, trans. Paul L. Maier (Grand Rapids: Kregel Publications, 1999), 204. 63 concubine, and the connection between her position and the Roman construction of gender in the second century. The relationship between the Church and imperial government within the third century took a dramatic shift on account of the Third Century Crisis. Christianity was no longer a tiny sect relegated to the frontiers of the Empire. During the third century, the Christian Church experienced periods of relative peace as well as intense empire-wide systematic government. It is during this century that there was a shift in imperial persecution policy by concerned the with imperial Christianity. The policies of Trajan and Hadrian which had created a curious disinterest in the Church on behalf of the government had shifted to a more hands-on approach. This emperor study before ends the with dawn Alexander of the Severus, Third the Century last Crisis. Alexander's relationship with his mother, Julia Mamaea, and her provides relationship important with the information Christian on gender and political authority. the movement, intersection of The overarching thesis which connects the religio-political system of the Empire to the construction the reign of gender, is demonstrated of Alexander, however, there is an through epilogue which briefly explores the relationship between gender and the religio-political system during the Crisis. The epilogue serves to further demonstrate the thesis of this work, although the evidence is less conclusive. The Odd Couple: Christianity & the Imperial Culture As Christians became more prevalent in the eyes of imperial law, the distinction of genders as seen in the cultures of Christians While the religious stark contrast construction and pagans became more obvious. beliefs to those of with masculine gender and of the Christians of their and feminine the in pagan neighbors, the expectations were were similar. associated There were certainly differences in practice - especially in ideas such as marriage, marital headship, virginity, and sexuality for example - but in the general expectations for men and women, Christianity seemed very much at home within Roman culture. Despite these agreements between Christians in and Christianity, could itself. attract pagans the early Empire, even when under the umbrella negative attention or of however, Judaism, violence against The relationship between Christianity and the Roman Empire was unpredictable. and economic either stability, neutral government. combined or Depending on political Christians hostile terms found themselves with the on imperial The purpose of this study is to show that, with external important factor government dealt in with forces, gender determining not only proved how to be the an imperial Christianity, but many aspects of life in the Empire. The survival of Christianity can sometimes seem an enigma, given community its whence relationship it sprang, and first then to to the the Jewish imperial government, which by the fourth century had made repeated attempts to eradicate it. Christianity's Historians have long credited structure, its cult of the martyrs, and even its doctrine as reasons for its survival in such a hostile environment.64 What these historians have neglected to examine, however, is how gender, especially the roles expected within Roman and Christian societies, was used by Christian women in unique positions of power to influence Amidst 64 the those crises in unique affecting positions the Empire of authority. throughout For a summation on these ideas, see: W.H.C. Frend, The EarlyChurch (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 1991 [Orig. 1965] ) . the latter centuries of its existence, the Christian Church embarked on an opposite trajectory from the one Dio had concluded from gold beginning about to the Empire. rust, of the the fourth Rather than Christian deteriorating movement by the century, had demonstrated that like gold, it could remain intact under fire, thanks to the assistance of women who used their gender to the advantage of the Church. position and CHAPTER II "PUNISH US AS YOU DO THEM"1 Gender, Law, and Culture: Pomponia Graecina, & Flavia Domitilla Purveyors of Foreign Superstition: The Connections of Pomponia & Domitilla to Christianity Christianity's proselytism partnered dominance of the Mediterranean predestined between the government. growing According Jewish to sect the Acts with Roman an encounter and the imperial of the Apostles, Paul's interactions with Roman courts may have occurred as early Christian as 50. 2 In involvement addition, Nero's indictment of in Great Fire 64 the of demonstrated that Christians were neither invisible nor This quotation is taken from Horentsia's speech given in 42 BC against the edict by the Second Triumvirate which sought to tax the property of the 1,400 wealthiest women in Rome. Although the Greek is the technical term "proscribe," I believe "punish" is a suitable translation as well: "ei |o.ev 8r\ xi KOU npoq rpcov, oiov vnb xcov dv5pwv, r|8iKfia9ou (t>axe, 7ipoYpd\j/axe KOU i\\iac, coc ZKeivovq." (App. B Civ. iv.32) 2 Acts 16:19-24. I have chosen the year of 50 based upon the fact that Paul's arrest in Philippi in Acts 16 follows the Council of Jerusalem (Acts 15), which is dated to around 49-50. Also, Paul's arrest and appearance before the governor L. Junius Gallio in Acts 18 soon after can be dated to 51, as Gallio's tenure as proconsul of Achaea was from 51-52. For more on the trials of Paul, see: Paul L. Maier, In the Fullness of Time: A Historian Looks at Christmas, Easter, and the Early Church (Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Publications, 1997 [Orig. 1991]); A.N. Sherwin-White, Roman Society and Roman Law in the New Testament: The Sarum Lectures, 1960-1961 (Eugene, OR: Wipf & Stock Publishers, 1963); Ben Witherington III, The Paul Quest: The Renewed Search for the Jew of Tarsus (Downers Grove, IL: InterVarsity Press, 1998). 48 49 impervious to the hard hand of Roman law. The encounters between the the government, Christian although movement much less and frequent imperial in the first century than later, centered mostly around the political implications political religious than of Christianity's rituals system. simply and requirements These juxtapose century enforce Judeo-Christian The elucidate trials Domitilla in government's of socio- Rome's however, civil do religion more against Two important trials in the the government's its laws in accordance constructions of encounters, Roman religious politics. first defiance attempt with traditional to gender in light of this new religious movement. of 95 Pomponia are attempts Graecina early to in examples address 57 of and the dissenting Flavia imperial religious opinion among its nobility in the first century. Little is known of Pomponia Graecina, apart from her brief mention in the Annals of Tacitus: And Pomponia Graecina, a distinguished woman, wife of A. Plautius, whose ovation after the British campaign I recorded earlier, and now arraigned for foreign superstition [superstitio externa rea] , was left to the judgment of her husband. Following the ancient practice, he held an inquiry in the presence of a family council to determine the fate of his wife, and declared her innocent. Henceforth Pomponia was 50 to live with long life and continuing sadness. For after Julia the daughter of Drusus had been done away by Messalina' s treachery, for forty years she dressed herself in sadness, existing in perpetual mourning; this was unpunished under the reign of Claudius, and soon became a title to glory.3 As Tacitus stated, Pomponia was the wife of Aulus Plautius, the man who had conquered Britain for Emperor Claudius in 43.4 She was also most likely the daughter of G. Pomponius Graecinus, a friend of Ovid, and Asinia, the half-sister to Drusus Julius Caesar, son of Emperor Tiberius and Pomponia's grandmother, Vipsania Agrippina.5 In addition, Pomponius Pomponia may Flaccus, as well have been as cousin to the niece several of noble families through her grandmother's brief marriage to the imperial family. mourning for her cousin Tacitus' Pomponia's 3 Her noble lineage and defiant 40-year history.5 rebellious In Julia earned her a mention fact, if it state of mourning were not in for for Julia, she T a c , Ann. xiii.32. Cass. Dio lx.19-21; lxi.30.2; Suet., Vesp. iv.l. 5 John Jackson, ed., Tacitus: The Annals, Books Xiii-Xvi, vol. 322, Lcl (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1937), 52 (footnote 1) • 6 Julia was the daughter of Drusus, the half-brother of Pomponia's mother. Julia was executed in 43 on orders of her uncle, Emperor Claudius, under the influence of his wife, Messalina. 4 may not have been mentioned by T a c i t u s fortunate, trial, however, although provides that she seemingly important was mentioned, referenced insight all.7 at into only the It since in is her passing, intricacies of gender, law, and r e l i g i o n w i t h i n i m p e r i a l Roman c u l t u r e . For the contribution Christian is negligible. from t h e s o u r c e s , activity; she l e f t with t h e Bishop of was never allow her movement at As f a r Rome martyred; presumed she no Christianity remains no c o n c l u s i v e relationship leader) ; externa was wherein l i e s h e r importance for superstition found no superstition; actually in which influence e v i d e n c e as t o whether superstitio 7 a position to this addition gather i n no m i s s i o n a r y (or any C h r i s t i a n held Pomponia's one can behind no evidence of r e a s o n t o c o n v i c t her of f o r e i g n foreign as Pomponia p a r t i c i p a t e d p o l i c y toward t h e Church; h e r t r i a l of large, to would imperial justifiable and t h e r e Pomponia's Christianity.8 study? she So The charge Pomponia being As w i l l be f u r t h e r d i s c u s s e d below, and i n subsequent c h a p t e r s , T a c i t u s , and o t h e r h i s t o r i a n s , o f t e n i n c l u d e d e x t r a i n f o r m a t i o n for t h e purpose of p r e s e n t i n g t h e n e g a t i v e or p o s i t i v e a s p e c t s of someone's p e r s o n a l i t y . In t h i s c a s e , Messalina i s T a c i t u s ' t a r g e t . 8 The c o n n e c t i o n of Pomponia t o C h r i s t i a n i t y was f i r s t made i n t h e s i x t e e n t h c e n t u r y by L i p s i u s and has become t h e t r a d i t i o n a l argument t o t h i s day. The ambiguity of t h e term could l e n d support for Judaism, I s i s and O s i r i s , and Druidism, as p o s s i b l e e x p l a n a t i o n s as w e l l . For more on t h e concept of superstitio, see p p . 82ff. 52 handed over to a family court, rather than an imperial one, provides regarding the important insight into Roman connection between gender, attitudes religion, and law in the first century of the Empire. A generation after Pomponia, another woman aroused the attention of the imperial authorities for religious reasons. Emperor Flavia Vespasian Domitilla through Domitilla the Younger.9 emperors, grandnephew Titus and was his the only granddaughter daughter of Flavia The niece of the two succeeding Domitian, of Vespasian, her Domitilla cousin, married the Flavius Clemens. On account of her relationship with the imperial family, and the deification of her mother by Domitian, Domitilla and Clemens' children were made heirs to the throne.10 Domitilla's apparent good fortune and intimate connection to the imperial throne was cut short, however, in 95: And the same year [AD 95] Domitian slew, along with many others, Flavius Clemens the consul, although he was a cousin and had as his wife Flavia Domitilla, who was also a relative of the emperor. The charge brought against them both was that of atheism [aGeotTixog] , a charge on which many others who drifted into Jewish ways [TOC TWV 'IOVSOUOOV r|0T|] were condemned. Some of these were put to death, and the rest were at 9 10 Suet., Vesp. iii. And also renamed Domitianus and Vespasianus: Suet., Dom. xv. 53 least deprived of their estates. only banished to Pandateria. n Domitilla was The account by the Christian historian Eusebius differs slightly, but ends in similar fashion: For the teaching of our faith shone so brightly in those days that even writers foreign to our belief wrote down the persecution and martyrdoms in their histories, and they even indicated the exact time, stating that in the fifteenth year of Domitian, Flavia Domitilla, who was the niece of Flavius Clemens, one of the Roman consuls that year, was banished with many others to the island of Pontia for professing Christ.12 The differences in the two accounts appear stark. In Eusebius' version, Domitilla is referred to as the niece of Flavius Clemens, not his wife, and her exile was to Pontia, not Pandateria.13 These inconsistencies have caused a divergence of interpretation on the importance and even the historicity of Domitilla.14 There are explanations, however, for the differences in these two sources. 11 The story of Domitilla, like that of Pomponia Cass. Dio, lxvii.14. Euseb., Hist, eccl. iii.18. 13 The location of Pontia as Domitilla's place of exile is repeated by Jerome in his Ep. cviii.7. It is possible that Jerome repeated what had become tradition, especially since Eusebius' immortalization of Pontia in his Historia Ecclesiastica. 14 These inconsistencies have been summarized by: J.B. Lightfoot, The Apostolic Fathers, Part I: S. Clement of Rome, 2nd ed., vol. I (London: MacMillan and Co., 1890), 34-51; James S. Jeffers, "Social Foundations of Early Christianity at Rome: The Congregations Behind 1 Clement and the Shepherd of Hermas" (PhD diss., University of California, Irvine, 1988), 246-47. 12 Graecina, provides understanding the historians connection with much between in the way gender, of politics, and religion in the early Empire. These two short passages have forever Domitilla within the debate about immortalized Christianity and nobility in the first century. The complexities involved with these properly interpreting two sources in ostensible disagreement compels one first to address this apparent problem before moving on to an examination of Domitilla in light of gender expectations and punishment in the early Empire. Because of the disagreement between the accounts of Dio and Eusebius, some historians have suggested that there may have been two different Flavia Domitillas, both of whom were related to Flavius Clemens and both of whom were exiled by Domitian.15 ubiquity of the name Domitilla this is not entirely unlikely.16 in the Given the Flavian family, A more logical and less complicated suggestion, however, is that Eusebius, or his 15 George Edmundson, The Church in Rome in the First Century (London: Longmans, Green and Co., 1913), 230ff; Lightfoot, The Apostolic Fathers, Part I: S. Clement of Rome, 42-45. 16 Flavia Domitilla [the Elder] was the wife of Vespasian, who named her daughter Flavia Domitilla [the Younger], who then named her daughter Flavia Domitilla as well. 55 17 original source, mistakenly transferred of n i e c e from D o m i t i a n t o C l e m e n s . m y s t e r y was s u r m i s e d by J . B . the fifth-century Acts Eusebius' account. of the relationship The s o l u t i o n Lightfoot Nereus when h e and to this connected Achilleus to In these Acts, Domitilla, a niece of Flavius Clemens, was banished to the i s l a n d of Pontia by Domitian for refusing pagan worship. In Dio's account, the r e l a t i o n s h i p between Domitilla and Domitian i s generic "relative,"18 Coemeterium Domitillae although daughter of interpretation the refers to her as Domitian's Because of t h i s , Domitilla as the Domitian's of to she i s also the granddaughter of Vespasian 19 and Q u i n t i l i a n " s i s t e r ' s daughter." 2 0 according the Dio's sister generic is an appropriate "relative."21 In E u s e b i u s ' s o u r c e i n t h i s example i s b e l i e v e d t o have been a h i s t o r i a n named B r u t i u s , t o whom E u s e b i u s s p e c i f i c a l l y r e f e r s i n h i s Chronicle. For more on t h e i d e n t i t y of t h i s B r u t i u s a n d how E u s e b i u s came t o r e l y on him, s e e b e l o w on p a g e 56 a s w e l l a s : L i g h t f o o t , The Apostolic Fathers, Part I: S. Clement of Rome, 4 6 - 4 9 . 18 C a s s . Dio l x v i i . 1 4 : KOU OCUTTIV avyyEvr\ EOCUTOV.; For a s i m i l a r d i s c u s s i o n , s e e : L i g h t f o o t , The Apostolic Fathers, Part I: S. Clement of Rome, 4 4 f . 19 J . B . L i g h t f o o t ' s r e c o n s t r u c t i o n of t h e s t o n e d i f f e r s s l i g h t l y from T h e o d o r Mommsen's, and r e a d s : "TATIA BAVCYL... [NV] TRIX SEPTVM LIB[ERORVM] DIVI VESPASIAN[I ATQVE] FLAVIAE DOMITIL[LIAE VXORIS EIVS, DIVI] VESPASIANI NEPTIS..." Both L i g h t f o o t ' s and Mommsen's t r a n s l a t i o n s a r e found i n : L i g h t f o o t , The Apostolic Fathers, Part I: S. Clement of Rome, 1 1 4 . 20 Q u i n t i l i a n r e f e r s t o D o m i t i l l a ' s c h i l d r e n as " s o r o r i s suae n e p o t e s " ( " t h e g r a n d c h i l d r e n of [ D o m i t i a n ' s ] s i s t e r " ) : Q u i n t . , Inst. iv.l. 21 For a more d e t a i l e d a c c o u n t on t h e r e l a t i o n s h i p D o m i t i l l a a n d t h e F l a v i a n E m p e r o r s , s e e : J e f f e r s , " S o c i a l F o u n d a t i o n s of E a r l y Eusebius' account, the r e l a t i o n s h i p between Domitilla and Clemens i s also " s i s t e r ' s daughter." 2 2 aptly asked, "Have confusion?" 23 The explanation we not here simplest for the As J.B. and the most difference Lightfoot key to the straightforward in Domitilla's r e l a t i o n s h i p s to Domitian and Clemens comes from simple clerical error - a transference daughter of Domitian's s i s t e r of Domitilla in Dio's account, as the to the daughter of Clemens' s i s t e r by Eusebius (or his source). 2 4 The difference in the place of e x i l e i s e a s i l y dismissed by the fact t h a t they are neighboring i s l a n d s which the imperial family used as places of e x i l e throughout first century, and t h e r e f o r e , effortlessly the transposed in the sources. In addition to Eusebius' Domitilla's also the relationship issues to concerning possible misconnection of Flavius the Clemens, omission of there are Clemens' execution and Eusebius' i n t e r p r e t a t i o n of Dio's reference to the "atheism" and "Jewish ways" of Domitilla C h r i s t i a n i t y a t Rome: The Congregations Behind 1 Clement and t h e Shepherd of Hermas", 250-54. 22 E u s e b . , Hist. eccl. i i i . 1 8 : z% aSeA.(t>f|c; yeyovmav <J>A.amou KXii^evxoq ( l i t e r a l l y : "born from t h e s i s t e r of F l a v i u s Clemens"). 23 L i g h t f o o t , The Apostolic Fathers, Part I: S. Clement of Rome, 45. 24 See f o o t n o t e 17. as 57 distinctly Christian. commandeered have the attention investigated discussion of This Flavia her of religious nearly Domitilla role in and history w h e t h e r s h e was a Jew o r C h r i s t i a n . Domitilla's difficulty religious with the precise favor of references Eusebius' however, support is the claim there older cited have been argument over of from her as and dates atheism Christian back last to century, lending D o m i t i l l a was i n f a c t a Jew.26 Eusebius' to or Christianity works the The a r g u m e n t terms the on written of 25 stems In The i n t e r p r e t a t i o n Judaism debate the The c o n c e n t r a t i o n these numerous who limited a definitions above.25 to the theory that either has (xoc toiv 'lox)8aicov i\Qr\) . interpreting has historians to convictions (dc0eoTri<;) and J e w i s h ways in all issue statements has been as references explored in This argument has been continued by h i s t o r i a n s i n t o t h e modern p e r i o d . Some of t h e more prominent h i s t o r i e s a r e : Giovanni B a t t i s t a De Rossi, La Roma Sotterranea Cristiana (Rome: 1865); Johannes Knudsen, "The Lady and t h e Emperor: A Study of t h e Domitianic P e r s e c u t i o n , " Church History 14, no. 1 (Mar. 1945); L i g h t f o o t , The Apostolic Fathers, Part I: S. Clement of Rome. 26 For example: H e i n r i c h G r a t z , Die Judischen Proselyten im Romerreiche unter den Kaisern Domitian, Nerva, Trajan und Hadrian (Breslau: 1883); Martin P. Charlesworth, "Some O b s e r v a t i o n s on R u l e r - C u l t E s p e c i a l l y i n Rome," HTR 28, no. 1 (Jan. 1935); E. Mary Smallwood, " D o m i t i a n ' s A t t i t u d e toward t h e Jews and J u d a i s m , " C Phil. 5 1 , no. 1 (Jan. 1956); Paul K e r e s z t e s , "The Jews, t h e C h r i s t i a n s , and Emperor Domitian," Vig. Chr. 27, no. 1 (Mar. 1973); Claudia S e t z e r , Jewish Responses to Early Christians: History and Polemics, 30-150 C.E. (Minneapolis, MN: Augsburg F o r t r e s s P r e s s , 1994) . detail elsewhere, so it is unnecessary to recite them in detail here. connect However, Eusebius' historians statements to a have attempted first-century understanding of both Judaism and Christianity. factors contribute to the difficulty to Roman Numerous for modern historians to determine definitively whether atheism and Jewish ways refer to either Christianity or Judaism. major factors, however, can be condensed into The five interrelated yet independent examples:27 1) the use of the terms "atheism" (aGeornc;) and "Jewish ways" (TOC XWV 'lo\)8aitov Ti'9r|) by first-century Romans; 2) the fiscus Iudaicus Domitianic persecution; the administration of under Domitian; 3) the details of the 4) the Christian cemetery of Domitilla; and 5) Eusebius' two passages about Domitilla. The terms aQe6xr[C, and TOC TWV 'Iou8oda>v T(0TI at face value seem certainly to assume Jewish proselytism on the parts of Domitilla and her husband.28 To first-century Romans, however, Jews 27 Christians and were virtually There is also an argument which connects Flavius Clemens with a certain Kati'ah bar Shalom mentioned in Talmudic writings as a senator who adopted Jewish ways. 28 It should be noted that the concept of proselyte for the Jews consisted of two categories: 1) full proselytes, who were circumcised and enjoyed full membership within the synagogue, and 2) God-Fearers (oePonevoi) , who embraced the monotheism and moral code of the Jews, and sometimes attended synagogue, yet were not fullmembers of the Jewish faith. It is usually assumed that Clemens and Domitilla were of this latter variety, rather than the former. 59 indistinguishable, and in most cases, the terms for one group applied also for the there are numerous sources other.29 in which Because of this, these terms are utilized by Romans against both Jews and Christians in the first century. someone who reviled Josephus the Jews denounced "as Apollonius atheists [dGeoucJ as and misanthropes,"30 while Polycarp, the Christian bishop of Smyrna, was condemned as an atheist of Romans in c.156.31 atheism,32 among {aQeoc,) by the crowds The wide-ranging usage of the term pagans in describing both Jews and Christians in addition to the general ignorance of the diversity of first-century Judaism by the majority of Romans, makes it difficult to take this terminology and to apply it definitively to either Christian or Jewish a conclusion with which Eusebius would no doubt disagree. 29 See footnote 54 in chapter 1. Josephus, Ap., ii.14 8. 31 The term atheist used by Romans is cited two times in The Martyrdom of Polycarp, with Polycarp redirecting the term back to the Romans once. See specifically: Martyrdom of Polycarp, iii.2 and ix. 2. 32 The terms used by the Romans in reference to the Christians range from atheism to superstition to "hatred of the human race" (Tacitus). Joseph J. Walsh examines these in his "On Christian Atheism." What is unique to Walsh's study is that he contends that contrary to common belief, atheism was not the primary reason for hatred of the Christians by their pagan neighbors, but rather a "melange of characteristics which irritated and affronted pagans" (268) . 30 60 The second issue which has occupied the attention of historians studying Instituted by Domitilla Vespasian after the Jewish Temple in AD 70, the fiscus Temple Tax paid by Jews for Iudaicus.33 fiscus is the destruction Iudaicus of the replaced the the maintenance of their Temple in Jerusalem, and acted as a form of tribute paid in return for the liberty of practicing their faith legally.34 the Jews to continue According to Suetonius, Domitian sought out those who lived as Jews but were not paying the Suetonius' the tax tax, and description is prosecution used of as Consul prosecuted of Domitian's a possible Clemens them vigorously.35 administration connection and his to wife, according to Dio, were denounced as living as Jews.35 33 of the who, The See: Smallwood, "Domitian's Attitude toward the Jews and Judaism," 2-4; Keresztes, "The Jews, the Christians, and Emperor Domitian," 510. 34 Cass. Dio, lxv.7.2; Josephus, BJ, vii.218. It was a dual punishment in that Jews now had to pay for the privilege to worship their God even though their Temple had been destroyed, and further so, the tax went to the maintenance of the Jupiter Capitolinus in Rome! 35 Suet., Dom. xii.2 which reads, "Praeter ceteros Iudaicus fiscus acerbissime actus est; ad quem deferebantur, qui vel inprofessi Iudaicum viverent vitam vel dissimulata origine imposita genti tributa non pependissent." 36 For the full argument see: Jeffers, "Social Foundations of Early Christianity at Rome: The Congregations Behind 1 Clement and the Shepherd of Hermas", 241-46; Keresztes, "The Jews, the Christians, and Emperor Domitian"; Smallwood, "Domitian's Attitude toward the Jews and Judaism"; Margaret H. Williams, "Domitian, the Jews and the 'Judaizers': A Simple Matter of Cupiditas and Maiestas?," Historia 39, no. 2 (1990). 61 sources convey involved that such successor, the harsh Nerva, had administration enforcement not only to of that end this tax Domitian's the unjust execution of the tax, but also to advertise his actions through coinage.37 directly linked persecution of This issue of the fiscus with the the next emperor factor Domitian at ludaicus is hand: the against either Christians or Jews. Historians have long debated the extent of Domitian's cruelty beyond the generality of the Empire to the Jews and Christians in particular.38 form of persecution by Domitian's Evidence of some government exists to support a Jewish persecution as well as a Christian one. Suetonius' report that Jews avoiding the fiscus 37 Domitian ludaicus vigorously prosecuted would certainly seem to L.A. Thompson, "Domitian and the Jewish Tax," Historia 31, no. 3 (1982): 329. 38 Suet., Dom. x; xii. Also see: Shirley Jackson Case, "Josephus' Anticipation of a Domitianic Persecution," JBL 44, no. 1/2 (1925); Gratz, Die Judischen Proselyten im Romerreiche unter den Kaisern Domitian, Nerva, Trajan Und Hadrian; Keresztes, "The Jews, the Christians, and Emperor Domitian"; Knudsen, "The Lady and the Emperor: A Study of the Domitianic Persecution"; Donald McFayden, "The Occasion of the Domitianic Persecution," AJT 24, no. 1 (Jan. 1920); Donald W. Riddle, "Hebrews, First Clement, and the Persecution of Domitian," JBL 43, no. 3/4 (1924); Smallwood, "Domitian's Attitude toward the Jews and Judaism"; Thompson, "Domitian and the Jewish Tax"; K.H. Waters, "The Character of Domitian," Phoenix 18, no. 1 (Spring, 1964); Williams, "Domitian, the Jews and the 'Judaizers': A Simple Matter of Cupiditas and Maiestas?" 62 support a general Empire.39 the the feeling In a d d i t i o n , Church in in Domitian's reign.40 explanation that of and "sudden alluded Rome their repeated persecution Flavius this that Clemens short, but he carried and/or 39 out Christians, against years of began with the had b e e n d e l a y e d and Jews or reverses of however, harsh the which c o n n e c t s w e l l w i t h an an Christians Domitilla, attack. because The organized and of descriptions of policy cause that were v i c t i m s lend support to the p r o b a b i l i t y kind the last initiated wife vicious some letter This l e t t e r and h i s Domitian's character the misfortunes either in a persecution during Domitian against to response by Jews from C l e m e n t of Rome t o Clement's have happened t o u s . " 4 1 assumption persecution the l e t t e r Corinth Christians of against was that Jews probably On t h e d i s c u s s i o n of a g e n e r a l p e r s e c u t i o n a g a i n s t t h e Jews, s e e : Case, " J o s e p h u s ' A n t i c i p a t i o n of a Domitianic P e r s e c u t i o n " ; McFayden, "The Occasion of t h e Domitianic P e r s e c u t i o n " ; R i d d l e , "Hebrews, F i r s t Clement, and t h e P e r s e c u t i o n of Domitian"; Smallwood, " D o m i t i a n ' s A t t i t u d e toward t h e Jews and Judaism"; Thompson, "Domitian and t h e Jewish Tax"; Waters, "The C h a r a c t e r of Domitian"; Williams, "Domitian, t h e Jews and t h e ' J u d a i z e r s ' : A Simple Matter of C u p i d i t a s and M a i e s t a s ? " 40 For an examination of 1 Clement i n connection with t h e Domitianic p e r s e c u t i o n and p o s s i b l e r e f e r e n c e s i n t h e New Testament, s e e : Riddle, "Hebrews, F i r s t Clement, and t h e P e r s e c u t i o n of Domitian." For t h e a u t h o r i t y on Clement, s e e : L i g h t f o o t , The Apostolic Fathers, Part I: S. Clement of Rome. 41 1 Clement, i . l , which b e g i n s : "Aiot xaq aicjnSiouc; KOU kiiaXXi\kovq yevonevaq TIJUV aun^opag KOCI 7tepv7ixcooeiq..." v i i . l a l s o a l l u d e s t o some kind of p e r s e c u t i o n as w e l l . 63 economic, rather than religious. Suetonius mentioned Domitian's "natural disposition" toward cruelty,42 and his financial straits confiscations which of he attempted aristocratic collection of the fiscus to property, Iudaicus.43 solve and a through rigorous Suetonius proclaimed that Domitian "was made insatiable through need and cruel through fear,"44 and this financial need and paranoia no doubt contributed to the downfall of Clemens and Domitilla.45 A Christian cemetery, uncovered by Giovanni Battista De Rossi in the middle of the nineteenth century, was built upon land donated by a Flavia Domitilla.46 Praedium and Domitillae Christian. This contains numerous graves, both pagan De Rossi assumed that while initially begun as a pagan burial ground, the descendents of Flavia Domitilla and her household converted to Christianity and Suet., Dom. iii. Suet., Dom. xii. 44 Suet., Dom. iii: "...quantum coniectare licet, super ingenii naturam inopia rapax, metu saevus." 45 For a brief account of Domitian's probable attitude toward the Christians, see: J.E.A. Crake, "Early Christians and Roman Law," Phoenix 19, no. 1 (Spring, 1965): 65-67. 46 De Rossi, La Roma Sotterranea Cristiana. This cemetery has been debated in numerous sources after De Rossi, and a few prominent ones are: Jeffers, "Social Foundations of Early Christianity at Rome: The Congregations Behind 1 Clement and the Shepherd of Hermas"; Smallwood, "Domitian's Attitude toward the Jews and Judaism"; Paul 43 Styger, Die Romischen Katakomben: Archaologische den Ursprung und die Bedeutung der Altchristlichen (Berlin: Verlag fur Kunstwissenschaft, 1933). Forschungen uber Grabstatten 64 continued to use the cemetery for their burials, thereby sanctifying the land for Christian reverence.47 it appears that Christian tombs became more Because common as time went on, the cemetery's connection to Domitilla is determined to be proof of her Christianity by many deserve some historians.48 Two passages by Eusebius attention. History of Caesarea The first passage is the one from Eusebius' mentioned above, in which Domitilla is branded a Christian and identified as the niece of Eusebius recorded nearly the same event in his Clemens.49 Chronicon but also gave some clues as to the identity of one of the authors he described as "foreign to our belief": Brutius writes that there were very many Christian martyrs under Domitian, among whom were Flavia Domitilla, granddaughter of the sister [ex sorore neptim]50 of Flavius Clemens the consul; she was banished to the island of Pontia, because she bore witness to being a Christian.51 47 Jeffers, "Social Foundations of Early Christianity at Rome: The Congregations Behind 1 Clement and the Shepherd of Hermas", 253-54. 48 G.B. De Rossi has become the father of this theory since the publication of his archeological findings in 18 65. He subsequently published articles defending this throughout the rest of the nineteenth century. His findings from the cemetery are summarized by J.B. Lightfoot, The Apostolic Fathers: S. Clement of Rome, 35-39. 49 Euseb., Hist. eccl. iii.18. 50 The grandchild of a sister could also be referred to with the generic "niece" or "nephew". 51 Jer., Chron, PL vol. 27, col. 603 (2110.16). With these two for the Christianity of Domitilla require no more evidence. The inconsistencies passages, between those Dio's who and argue Eusebius' accounts, namely the relationship of Domitilla to Clemens, and the place of Domitilla's Eusebius' part. exile, are dismissed as error on The unknown identity of the historian "Brutius," whom Eusebius cited as his main source, lends much weight to misinformed.52 the conclusion that Eusebius was In spite of this, Eusebius' identification of Domitilla as a Christian is accepted as accurate by many. on This is not to say, however, that no disagreement the religion of contrary, actually.53 examination of Domitilla remains - quite the It is for this reason that further Domitilla outside of this sphere of religious conviction has likely failed to take place. Examining the arguments surrounding Domitilla's religious persuasion has proven to be a digression that has stunted other interpretations of her importance to a fuller understanding of the role of gender in the political and religious institutions of the early Empire. 52 See footnote 17 for more on the identity of Brutius. For the debate surrounding Brutius and Eusebius, see: Crake, "Early Christians and Roman Law, " 65f; Lightfoot, The Apostolic Fathers, Part I: S. Clement of Rome, 46ff; Jeffers, "Social Foundations of Early Christianity at Rome: The Congregations Behind 1 Clement and the Shepherd of Hermas", 246f. 53 Almost exclusively, concerning historians Domitilla, conclusions yet regarding her discuss case conceptions this reveals of issue important punishment and gender within the early Empire - important conclusions that traditional have been unexplored because of the focus on Domitilla's religious affiliation. Domitilla's precise relationship to the emperor, her precise place of exile, her precise religious affiliation are all detours from what can be discovered about the relationship between religion, law, and gender in first-century Rome. In the larger picture, the religion of both Pomponia Graecina and Flavia Domitilla fails to be answered definitively by the sources available, so new questions must be asked. superstition Why was relegated to the matter of a family court, Domitilla's was brought before the emperor? Clemens exiled? executed for atheism, while Pomponia's while And why was Domitilla was only These questions require a different direction in the interpretation of the sources and explicit answers that provide a fuller incorporation of gender, religion, and politics within the framework of Roman history. The actions taken by the imperial government against Pomponia and Domitilla are the key to understanding the role of gender within the religio-political Empire. system of the early As will be elaborated upon below, Pomponia's and Domitilla's religious conversions were not a threat to the social and political order because of the existing understanding of gender within Roman culture and society. This connection between gender and societal order is also why noblewomen far outnumbered noblemen among the converts to Christianity in the early centuries. Battle of the Sexes: Gender and the Religio-Political System of Rome The question of why women converted to Christianity in greater numbers than men in the early centuries was briefly explored in the first chapter. however, demonstrated that perhaps The conclusion, a more historically sound way to examine this phenomenon lies not in asking why noblewomen noblemen not. converted, but rather why did more Part of the reason why noblemen were more reluctant to convert to Christianity (at least publicly) is found in the relationship between politics, religion, and gender Pomponia in Roman law and tradition. Graecina and Flavia Domitilla The trials of demonstrate the connection between gender and the religio-political nature of Roman law. The trials of Pomponia Graecina and Flavia Domitilla were carried out in different ways - Pomponia in a family court, and Domitilla in front of the emperor. It is prudent to concentrate first on Domitilla's trial, for it reveals why Pomponia's generation before. capital crime. unfolded the way it did a Flavia Domitilla was on trial for a Roman especially heinous disruption of order law because and treated they capital could stability. crimes lead to as the The punishment of these capital crimes "was pursued in the interests of the community,"54 and the sentence was death. While exile could be voluntarily exercised by the accused to avoid this punishment, execution was still the most common end to those who threatened the stability and security of the Roman state. In the case of Flavia Domitilla, she and her husband were both convicted of the same crime, yet Clemens 54 was executed, and Domitilla was involuntarily Richard A. Bauman, Crime and Punishment in Ancient Rome (New York: Routledge, 1996), 2. For additional resources on the differentiation of crimes in Rome, see: J.A. Crook, Law and Life of Rome, 90 B.C. - A.D. 212 (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1967) . 69 exiled. Why were these two punished differently for the same crime? In the first century, there were cases where women who participated less severely in crimes alongside men were punished than the men. This was not always the case, but it happened more than would be expected, and it certainly deserves more attention than it has previously been given. Examples of women involved in capital crimes include three women in the Conspiracy of Sejanus.55 those mentioned, Of six men were executed,56 one committed suicide,57 and the other survived the charges and lived.58 Two of the committed three women suicide.60 were The executed,59 conspiracy and against the other Caligula resulted in the execution of M. Aemilius Lepidus and his male co-conspirators sisters, 55 Agrippina and the the exile Younger and of the Julia emperor's Livilla for The main conspirators were: Sejanus himself, his wife (Apiacata) , his son and daughter, Livilla, Publius Vitellius, Pomponius Secundus, a poet, a historian, Carnulus, and Paconius. 56 Those executed are Sejanus, his son, the poet, the historian, Carnulus and Paconius. 57 Publius Vitellius. 58 Pomponius Secundus. 59 Sejanus' daughter, who was raped beforehand, since it was uncustomary to execute a virgin, and Livilla. Dio admits, however, that it is uncertain as to whether Livilla was executed or spared on account of her mother, Antonia, and then later starved to death by her mother (Cass. Dio, lviii.11.7). 60 Apiacata, Sejanus' wife, implicated Livilla before committing suicide herself. 70 their connection to Lepidus.61 The Pisonian Conspiracy against Nero led to the arrest of forty one, of whom four were women: Acilia, Caedicia, Claudia Antonia, and Acilia was neither acquitted nor punished,62 Epicharis. Caedicia was exiled, and Claudia Antonia and Epicharis were both executed (although Antonia is said to have been executed for refusing to marry Nero) .63 What these crimes all share, in addition to having women highly involved in their implementation, they were all attempts to murder an emperor. crimes of treason {crimen of maiestas directed 61 maiestatis). is that These were The Roman concept incorporated many more crimes than just those against the safety of the state.64 In the Cass. Dio, lix.22. Agrippina and Livilla were also accused of many "impious and immoral actions" by Caligula to the Senate. 62 T a c , Ann. KV.11: "Acilia mater Annaei Lucani sine absolutione, sine supplicio dissmulata." 63 Suet., Afer. xxxv.4: "Antoniam Claudi filiam, recusantem post Poppaeae mortem nuptias suas, quasi molitricem novarum rerum interemit." Epicharis' death is of special mention, since she first endured incredible torture before taking her own life, rather than give up the names of her fellow conspirators (Tac, Ann. xv.57; Cass. Dio, lxii.27.3). 64 See: Richard A. Bauman, The Crimen Maiestatis in the Roman Republic and Augustan Principate (Johannesburg: Witwatersrand University Press, 1967). The crimes listed by Bauman include, in addition to conspiracy against the state and collusion with the enemy: "to lose a battle; to disregard the auspices; to ill-treat prisoners of war; to leave a province without authority; to use violence against a magistrate; to interrupt a tribune; to lay false claim to Roman citizenship; to visit a brothel in an official capacity; to hold court while intoxicated, or dressed in women's clothes; to incite civil commotion; to falsify public records; to examples cited here, these crimes threatened the safety of the state, because they placed the life of the emperor in jeopardy. In all these cases, save the conspiracy against Caligula,65 there appears to be no differentiation between men and women This seems to be in their the respective punishments. situation in these crimes of treason, yet treason was not the only capital crime in Rome. In the case of Domitilla and Clemens, there was no murder conspiracy or political intrigue, yet their crimes still resulted in the highest form of punishment. the cases cited above, in addition to Unlike political and gender issues, this one involved religious questions that relate to the connections between gender and punishment in Roman legal practice. Ignoring the auspices was linked to the concept of atheism and was a capital crime. When one was charged with a capital offense in the mid- to late-Republic, he or she had the opportunity to enter into exile voluntarily in order to avoid the death publish defamatory pamphlets; and to commit adultery with the emperor's daughter" (viii). 65 Caligula's alleged incestuous relationship with his sisters may have played a part in his reluctance to have them executed (Cass. Dio lix.22) penalty.66 In exchange for retaining one's life, the accused lost his or her citizenship and any property left behind.67 connected Humanitas, to ideas a of Roman concept punishment, can which, resemble when modern notions ranging from chivalry to "civilized" punishment, may have played a part in encouraging an alternative to death as the penalty for capital crimes.68 This is not to say that the Roman state failed to execute its criminals. As in the case of many other female criminals in Rome, however, Domitilla received a fate far less severe than the men involved in the same crime.69 religious practices encourage a Did Roman legal and strict punishment between men and women? dichotomy of And if so, how and when was this distinction applied? Two theories can be deduced about why women sometimes suffered different punishments than men for the 66 Under the rule of L. Cornelius Sulla voluntary exile was officially guaranteed, according to the law. 67 For more on how exile worked within the Roman law, see: Mary V. Braginton, "Exile under the Roman Emperors," CJ 39, no. 7 (Apr. 1944); Crook, Law and Life of Rome, 90 B.C. - A.D. 212, 212-14; Bauman, The Crimen Maiestatis in the Roman Republic and Augustan Principate, 65-66; Bauman, Crime and Punishment in Ancient Rome, 1318. 68 Humanitas as an influential factor in encouraging exile over death is argued by Richard Bauman in his Crime and Punishment, esp. ch. 2. 69 Some examples include Fulvia and the men involved in the rebellion against Octavian; Julia the Elder and her lovers; Caligula's sisters, mentioned above. 73 same crime. 70 First, one could speculate that the Romans used gendered ideas of punishment in order to strengthen a sense of gender difference within society, which they saw as a continuation of what had always been done. Men were men, and women were women; different different roles, hence different punishments.71 and connected understanding answer. to the first of gender idea, and humanitas a basic could sexes, Second, cultural be the Perhaps a gentler form of punishment was deemed necessary for what Nature had failed to give the weaker sex {infirmitas sexus) .72 Both theories are compelling 70 Some general sources on Roman law are: Bauman, Crime and Punishment in Ancient Rome; W.W. Buckland, A Text-Book of Roman Law from Augustus to Justinian (London: Cambridge University Press, 1950); Crook, Law and Life of Rome, 90 B.C. - A.D. 212; J.A.C. Thomas, Textbook of Roman Law (Amsterdam: North-Holland Publishing Company, 1976). 71 Although concerned with a different field and time period, Diana Paton suggests this idea in examining the difference in flogging for male and female slaves in Jamaica: Diana Paton, No Bond but the Law: Punishment, Race, and Gender in Jamaican State Formation, 1780-1870 (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2004). While colonial slavery of the 18th and 19th centuries is far removed from first-century Rome, it is not improbable to assume that the Romans, like any other people, wished to maintain a stable and orderly society through legal and cultural mores concerning gender identity and roles. 72 For more on the discussion of women viewed as weak or incompetent in Roman law, see: J.A. Crook, "Feminine Inadequacy and the Senatusconsultum Velleianum, " in The Family in Ancient Rome: New Perspectives, ed. Beryl Rawson (Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 1987); Crook, Law and Life of Rome, 90 B.C. - A.D. 212; Suzanne Dixon, "Infirmitas Sexus: Womanly Weakness in Roman Law," Tijdschrift voor Rechtsgeschiedenis 52, no. 4 (1984); Jane F. Gardner, Being a Roman Citizen (New York: Routledge, 1993); Gardner, "Gender-Role Assumptions in Roman Law," Classical Views 39, no. 3 (1995); John Nicols, " P a t r o n a Duitatis: Gender and Civic Patronage," Studies in Latin Literature and Roman History, Collection Latomus 5 and provide l o g i c a l assumptions for the in punishment for men and women. differentiation However, as blanket explanations, each r e q u i r e s multiple exceptions in order to adequately address many instances of the punishment of women in the e a r l y Roman Empire. The idea that Romans distinguished different punishments for each sex as a way to reinforce a sense of gender d i s t i n c t i o n within society is a conclusion can be drawn from the Roman concept of moribus For Romans, formality; customs it custom was more was equivalent associated with to gender than just law. 73 that - custom. traditional Therefore, distinction and the place within Roman society were not merely t r a d i t i o n s , but also l e g a l l y binding s o c i a l p r a c t i c e s . customary roles consequences Jane Gardner sees the of men and women in rather differentiation.74 than Gardner relegated to a d i f f e r e n t Roman society causes argues that of women as gender were l e g a l p o s i t i o n because of t h e i r (1989); P. van Warmelo, " I g n o r a n t i a I u r i s , " Tijdschrift voor rechtsgeschiedems 22 (1954); Marlene M. Wethmar-Lemmer, "The Legal P o s i t i o n of Roman Women: A D i s s e n t i n g P e r s p e c t i v e , " Fundamma 12, no. 2 (2006). For an example from o u t s i d e t h e a n c i e n t p e r i o d , s e e : Marion A. Kaplan, Between Dignity and Despair: Jewish Life m Nazi Germany (Oxford: Oxford U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s , 1998). 73 Dig. 1 . 3 . 3 2 . For more on t h e Roman concept of custom as i t p e r t a i n s t o law, s e e : Gardner, Being a Roman Citizen, 88-89. 74 See: Gardner, "Gender-Role Assumptions i n Roman Law." and Gardner, Being a Roman Citizen, ch. 4. physical weakness in comparison to men during a time early in Rome's history when families were forming and needed protection from other families or clans.75 of men's physical paterfamilias strength, they construction and pertained on the role as and so it remained throughout the Kingdom, Republic, and Empire of Rome. legal took Because familia of the political to gender, In other words, the Roman formed customs and and these the basis of Roman practice as they practices and customs remained, even though much in society had changed from the time of the formation of the familia. The roots of gender differentiation demonstrate the Roman concept of mos maiorum, the "custom of the ancestors." In the fourth century, Ambrose wrote, "A woman is not inferior in her own person. It is because of her condition, not her nature, that she is subjected to man and ordered distinction to fear between him."76 genders In in explaining politics, stated simply that women were excluded state not because of a woman's rather this tenet Fritz Gardner, Being a Roman Citizen, Ambrose of Milan, Commentaria xvii: 399). in Roman Schulz from affairs of inherent weakness, "but of old Roman custom: public 75 76 the 108f. epistolam ad Ephesios life is v.32 (PL exclusively excluded the from business positions religio-political the way it had ancestors. of of man."77 the authority Women were the Roman within system because, to the Romans, it was always been Women and men - it was were a custom different; of the therefore, Romans enforced what they saw as a historical practice of gender. Men and women were given different opportunities and responsibilities within Roman society, and were also treated differently when it came to the execution of justice, because it was how it had always been done. A second theory on the Roman punishment of female criminals is a perceived notion of womanly weakness.78 infirmitas sexus was an accepted legal or If cultural construction concerning Roman women and their ability to participate in the public sphere, then this indeed may provide the most probable justification exile, her husband's execution, and for Domitilla's the treatment of Pomponia Graecina a generation earlier. This theory is predicated delineation gender 77 on within the assumption Roman society that is the supported within of the Fritz Schulz, Classical Roman Law (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1951), 183. 78 For more on this, see: Dixon, "Infirmitas Sexus: Womanly Weakness in Roman Law"; Gardner, Being a Roman Citizen, ch. 4; van Warmelo, "Ignorantia Iuris." cultural and legal traditions by examples of female ignorance and/or weakness and its foundation within the natural rests design. upon a A Roman culturally concept of accepted infirmitas limitation sexus of the intrinsic nature of women, rather than upon an idea of mos maiorum. The infirmitas examined by many sexus argument in Roman law has been historians, and a consensus on the proper use of the term in Roman society has for the most part been reached, although an agreement over its roots within Roman usage has not.79 Infirmitas sexus, and related ideas such as a woman's inexperience {imperitia) and {ignorantia her presumed ignorance of the law iuris),80 were Roman concepts tied mainly to a woman's physical This weakness, not mental weakness. clearly seen in the senatusconsultum Velleianum Velleianum. is most The sc attempted to discourage women from acting as intercessors for others in court, or in simplest terms, assuming a debt on behalf of someone else. from the senatusconsultum 79 Ulpian quoted which stated that legal action Crook, "Feminine Inadequacy and the Senatusconsultum Velleianum"; Dixon, "Infirmitas Sexus: Womanly Weakness in Roman Law"; Gardner, "Gender-Role Assumptions in Roman Law." 80 Dixon, "Infirmitas Sexus: Womanly Weakness in Roman Law," 357. not be given against women in these cases because "it is not right that they discharge men's [virilibus duties and be bound by obligations of this kind."81 officiis] In the minds of the Roman jurists, the law "brought aid to women who, because of the weakness of their sex inbecillitatem], had been overcome and thwarted by many incidents of this sort."82 women, [sexus whom apparently The law was intended to assist Roman comparison to themselves. men viewed as weaker in This womanly weakness is more closely connected to ideas of physical weakness, rather than mental, since the jurists also clarified that "the weakness cunning that of women [calliditas] they were [infirmitas , fully feminarum], deserved aware help"83 that women - not their demonstrating had the mental capacity necessary to manipulate the law for a purpose not intended by the lawmakers. defined an accepted The sc public practice Velleianum clearly of women that was grounded in what Romans believed was a woman's naturallygiven weakness in comparison to men. 81 Dig. xvi.l. Dig. xvi.l. 2. 2. 83 Dig. xvi.l.2.3; Cod. lust, iv.29.5. Evans-Grubbs writes that between 212-294, there are twenty imperial rescripts (ten of which to women) clarifying the intent of the sc Velleianum: Judith Evans Grubbs, Women and the Law in the Roman Empire: A Sourcebook on Marriage, Divorce and Widowhood (London and New York: Routledge, 82 2002), 57. The foundational assumption of infirmitas that women were weaker than men. sexus This argument proves unable to explain, however, women who certainly any conceptions of womanly is weakness defied through their actions, and were recognized as such by the (male) Roman writers of their time. How does a cultural understanding of a weaker sex explain prominent women throughout Roman history who defied both Roman law and understandings of feminine frailty?84 Velleianum, the Even in their explanation of the jurists acknowledged that women sc were fully capable of purposely misusing the laws intended for their protection.85 infirmitas sexus Much like the argument from custom, also fails to provide a blanket explanation for the differentiation in punishment between men and women in the Roman execution of justice, or even a specific justification in the case of Domitilla. What might better address the exile of Domitilla, and by extension, the trial of Pomponia Graecina, is a closer examination of all the aspects of her case which make gender an especially important issue. At the heart of both Dio's and Eusebius' accounts about Domitilla lies 84 For example: Fulvia (c.83-40 BC); Livia (58 BC - AD 29); Agrippina the Younger (15-59); Epicharis (d.65). 85 Dig. xvi.1.2.3; Cod. lust, iv.29.5. 80 the issue trial of religion of Pomponia a s - an this officially fact, practice very could legally sanctioned not the capable Romans different punishments because the political system collapse from f e m a l e destabilize the status religion was an was a problem For those intrinsically to political 86 and and in Given upon less neglect for not rival a a gender danger of S i n c e women actions could of The when in part rejection it not Roman of Roman interfered positions public of of duties, atheism.87 catchword Atheism used which was merely with political t i e d t o t h e s t a t e g o d s , was what c o u l d punishment charge, holding instituted based their law.86 religion the have integral and authority, the quo. politics, practice. was office, culture, public in power. crime t h a n male crime? could not hold p o l i t i c a l only of political of Roman relevant well. Roman women w e r e n o t exercising issue to ( a l t h o u g h t h a t d o e s n o t mean i t a were lead serious defame could a not Some r e c e n t p u b l i c a t i o n s on Roman r e l i g i o n a r e : James B. Rives, Religion in the Roman Empire (Maiden, MA: Blackwell P u b l i s h i n g , 2007); John Scheid, An Introduction to Roman Religion (Bloomington, IN: I n d i a n a U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s , 2003); V a l e r i e M. W a r r i o r , Roman Religion (New York: Cambridge U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s , 2006). 87 Adolf von Harnack, "Der Vorwurf des Atheismus i n den d r e i e r s t e n J a h r h u n d e r t e n , " TUGAL 28, no. 4 (1905): 1 1 . be used as a political tool) . In the case of Flavius Clemens and his wife, the charge of atheism inferred an incapability required of properly religious political figure obligations roles unable could ensuring of to bring and exercising the figures. A political carry divine out his religious punishment upon and instability within the Empire, hence the aforementioned reference as to disregarding the auspices a capital crime.88 The specific charge of "atheism" trial of Clemens and Domitilla [dcGeoxriTOc;] in the sheds light on the connection between it and the meting out of punishment in accordance society superstitio in with the the relationship early Empire. between Roman gender and conceptions of and atheism have garnered much attention by scholars attempting to ascertain how Romans indentified themselves within a religious milieu as well as contrary to those outside of it.89 88 Bauman, The Crimen Maiestatis Principate, viii. 89 In a general sense, the Roman in the Roman Republic and Augustan See: Stephen Benko, "Pagan Criticism of Christianity During the First Two Centuries A.D.," ANRW 23, no. 2 (1980); Crake, "Early Christians and Roman Law"; G.E.M. De Ste. Croix, "Why Were the Early Christians Persecuted?" Past and Present 26 (Nov. 1963); Harnack, "Der Vorwurf des Atheismus in den drei ersten Jahrhunderten"; L.F. Janssen, " ' S u p e r s t i t i o ' and the Persecution of the Christians," Vig. Chr. 33, no. 2 (Jun. 1979); Dale B. Martin, Inventing Superstition: understanding of atheism meant a refusal the existence goddesses. 9 0 of the plurality of to acknowledge Roman gods and As mentioned e a r l i e r , t h i s charge was levied against both C h r i s t i a n s and Jews on numerous occasions in the f i r s t three centuries. In the context of the first century, atheism was not the fundamental cause of hatred of the C h r i s t i a n sect by the pagan majority. numerous aspects particularly the] Christianity distasteful, separateness, secrecy, of aggressive Jewish o r i g i n s , disruption among that which proselytizing apocalyptic of f a m i l i e s . " 9 1 There were pagans were: "atheism, and polemic, expectations, These numerous t h a t Romans singled out C h r i s t i a n s and the lack of century sources which s p e c i f i c a l l y found [and reasons first- a t t r i b u t e atheism as the cause of contention between C h r i s t i a n s and Romans,92 complicate the connection between atheism and From the Hippocratics to the Christians (Cambridge, MA: Harvard U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s , 2004); William R. Schoedel, " C h r i s t i a n 'Atheism' and t h e Peace of t h e Roman Empire," Church History 42, no. 3 (Sep. 1973) ; A.N. Sherwin-White, "The E a r l y P e r s e c u t i o n s and Roman Law Again," JTS 3 (1952); Sherwin-White, "Why Were t h e E a r l y C h r i s t i a n s P e r s e c u t e d ? - an Amendment," Past and Present 27 (Apr. 1964); Joseph J . Walsh, "On C h r i s t i a n A t h e i s m , " Vig. Chr. 45, no. 3 (Sep. 1991); Robert Louis Wilken, The Christians as the Romans Saw Them, 2nd ed. (New Haven, CT: Yale U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s , 2003). 90 A.B. Drachmann, Atheism in Pagan Antiquity (London & Copenhagen: Gyldendal, 1922). Drachmann b l u n t l y d e c l a r e s on h i s f i r s t page t h a t for t h o s e i n a n t i q u i t y , atheism was " t h e p o i n t of view which d e n i e s t h e e x i s t e n c e of t h e a n c i e n t g o d s . " 91 Walsh, "On C h r i s t i a n Atheism," 256. 92 I b i d . : 257. 83 Christianity in the example of Flavia Domitilla and her husband. 93 The importance of the charge of atheism is not because of its identification as Christianity or Judaism, but rather, the character account connection and position of Clemens' between the charge of Flavius Clemens. execution was and the Suetonius' placed within the context of his passionate criticism against the general unjust cruelty of Domitian: Finally his [Domitian's] own cousin Flavius Clemens, who was a man of despicable laziness [contemptissimae inertiae] , whose sons, who were still very young, [Domitian] had openly named his successors, changing their former names and calling one Vespasian and the other one Domitian, suddenly on only a slim suspicion before the end of his consulship was done away with [by Domitian].94 Although brief, Suetonius' account ascertaining the motivation against his cousins in 95. "inertiae" the to describe underlying atheism, while connected more reasons his to behind why was political 93 The same could be said of superstitio against Pomponia Graecina. 94 Suet., Dom. xv. only was attack use character may Clemens Dio's in Domitian's Suetonius' Clemens' wife supplements of indicate executed for exiled - reasons understandings of gender, externa and Christianity rather than failed to give the legal execution to custom. because Domitian's Suetonius' he unjust It likely that Suetonius justification behind Clemens' was and is continuing evidence cruelty,95 arbitrary careful vocabulary his of however, draws connections between gender and the religio-political system of Rome. inertiae Translated strictly as "laziness," Clemens' would seem to indicate a lack of motivation not at all indicative of a threat to Domitian's claim of imperial authority. It is unlikely that a man bereft of any ambition would be such a threat to Domitian's reign to warrant execution. In this particular case, an insinuation that Clemens, as consul, had demonstrated a lackadaisical attitude in regard to his religio-political duties would certainly warrant the attention of the imperial government.96 Political life was the masculine life only in Rome. connection society, 95 to Not the political expected life was did politics gendered also serve norms deeply of as a Roman connected to For example: Suet., Dom., x; xii. This definition is alluded to in Elmer Truesdell Merrill, Essays in Early Christian History (London: MacMillan and Co., Ltd., 1924), 149f., when he suggests "absence of interest in public affairs." For more on possible renditions of inertiae, see: Jeffers, "Social Foundations of Early Christianity at Rome: The Congregations Behind 1 Clement and the Shepherd of Hermas", 239-40. 96 Rome's civil religious Domitian may have unjustly cruel in at system and culture. times appeared Suetonius' account, While irrational there are and also examples of his adherence to and enforcement of religious obligations, which he seemed to have emphasized to a greater degree than some of his predecessors. One obvious religious example, expectations which of stressed the early the gendered Empire, was Domitian's enforcement of laws concerned with the Vestal virgins. Suetonius provided the example of Cornelia, a chief vestal who violated her vow of chastity, and whom Domitian had buried alive, while her lovers were beaten to death with rods (save one ex-praetor).97 Domitian's care to "protect the gods from being dishonored"98 gives insight into why later, executed for atheism. in 95, Flavius Clemens was But if the crime of religious and political neglect warranted the execution of Clemens, why did Domitilla not share in her husband's fate? If Flavia Domitilla, as wife Christian or Jewish, her disconnect 97 of a consul, from the were religious Suet., Dom. viii.4. Suetonius explained that the ex-praetor was spared because he had confessed before the case was settled, and also because witnesses had failed to give any further information. 98 Suet., Dom. viii.5. and political disruption segments to Roman of society life. If, would bring little the consul however, himself were of a "foreign superstition" the connection between politics severely and religion hampered. punishments interpreted of The noblemen as perceived in the Empire discrepancy and -women potential could between could be the then instability. As be a woman, even a noblewoman, she had limited access to the public realm (and no recognized authority), so there was little need to worry about her impact upon the greater stability of the Empire. Romans may have understood that women remained outside the public sphere when it came to politics, and therefore interpreted their crimes as less destabilizing conspiracy, than a man's. these crimes However, in the cases of constituted a disregard of gendered boundaries by the attempt of a woman to usurp political authority by assuming the task of removing a man who exercised legitimate power. With this act, women then became just as threatening as their male comradesin-arms. were Even in the case of the Vestals, these women anomalous in the sense that they were intimately connected to the religio-political system, and therefore very foreign to the Roman conception of feminine especially also abrogated their childbirth, in the sense that responsibilities albeit Domitilla, because only they of marriage temporarily. a woman's voluntarily In the none), her beliefs case of religious duties were not intrinsically connected to her political life had and could stray from (since she the religio- political obligations of the state, and pose no real risk to stability. However, a consul's life was the state, and to unfasten himself from the religious segment, while clinging to the political, threatened an unraveling of the system that was deemed too important to ignore. In a case where religious beliefs would have whereas center his of humanitas to be wife consul inconsistent permanently could political would the be - to exercise with his civic duty, he removed simply life wished from be moved Rome. retained, In and the scene, away from this way any the too, possible interference on her behalf would be squelched as she now resided outside the inner circles of Roman policy. like Domitilla lacked the opportunity to infect Women the religio-political system because they remained outside of it, whereas men in power, like Clemens, did not. This idea is seen in the imperial interpretation of the Julian treason law in 397, in which the practice of not executing or disinheriting the daughters of traitors was encouraged because "the sentence ought to be milder in respect of those who, in view of the weakness of their sex [infirmitate sexus], we are confident are less likely to attempt anything."99 About this interpretation, Jane Gardner remarked: "It is unclear whether the emperors supposed women to be temperamentally too timid to attempt rebellion, or simply opportunity."100 presumed In the case of their lack Domitilla, the of latter seems to be the case. Flavia gender, Domitilla's and society. politics This situation were interplay exposes how religion, inseparable of Roman facets laws and of Roman customs provides evidence of a gendered dichotomy of punishment in regard to some capital crimes. The demonstration of the gendered nature of the religio-political system does not cover every case of capital punishment within the early Empire, but as Domitilla's exile shows, there are multiple factors integration of to gender consider difference Cod. lust, ix.8.5.3. Gardner, Being a Roman Citizen, 106f. in in assessing the Rome's execution of justice. The religio-political system of Rome perpetuated an important and impenetrable gender divide within the public illustrates, this sphere. As the divide prevented case of Domitilla a woman's religious deviation from being any true threat to the stability of the Principate in the first century because it excluded women from the positions which would have allowed their misconduct to pose a risk to the societal order. idea does not negate the concepts of moribus, or infirmitas sexus, This humanitas but rather incorporates them in and with the important position of religion as it concerns both politics and gender differentiation within Rome. This examination of the difference in punishment between Flavia Domitilla and Flavius Clemens informs an understanding of why Pomponia before Domitilla, court, rather than an imperial phrase priscum found Graecina, herself institutum in custom" could imply that front one. this of 38 years a family Tacitus used to describe which Pomponia Graecina endured.101 who the family the trial The use of "ancient private practice of a family trial was a relic of the past and falling out of 1 T a c , Ann. xiii.32. use as it came to be replaced by public trials.102 resorting examine to this Pomponia's seemingly crime antiguated is telling in The tradition regard to to how Romans viewed the potential risk of her crime infecting the established subject to the order of legal things. system While just continued to be under the potestas as men, women were many women of their fathers, and the imperial government recognized, to a certain degree, the authority behavior.103 sometimes of the Criminal assume concerns.104 family in matters punishing in which jurisdiction criminal families included could religious The case of Pomponia Graecina and the action taken by the imperial government in relation to her crime give important clues about the connection of gender to the religio-political structure of first-century Roman society. The Pomponia suspicions Graecina about seem the not religious to have convictions been of threatening enough to warrant a bypassing of familial authority with 102 See: Anthony J. Marshall, "Roman Ladies on Trial: The Case of Maesia Sentinum," Phoenix 44, no. 1 (Spring 1990): 53-54. 103 See: Jane F. Gardner, Women in Roman Law and Society (Bloomington and Indianapolis: Indiana University Press, 1995 [Orig. 1986]), 6-7; Marshall, "Roman Ladies on Trial: The Case of Maesia Sentinum," 53. 104 Gardner, Women in Roman Law and Society, 6-7.: See especially footnote 6, in which Gardner explains examples which dealt specifically with religion and inter-familial problems. the intervention of justice. Pomponia which Unlike stood either Plautius, of the state-controlled in the trial of Flavia alone in judgment. No suggest or hint her was superstition. administration ever that suspected of Domitilla, sources his survive husband, wife's Aulus foreign Furthermore, and perhaps most importantly, by 57, Plautius had ceased to be at the center of Roman political life. It had been fourteen years since his conquest of Britain, and ten since his tenure as governor there had political ended. life of This Roman distance society, of in Plautius addition from to the absence of any suspicion of religious departure on his part, made Pomponia a non-entity in the eyes of Roman law and order. to the guilty, The Senate saw fit to refer Pomponia's trial jurisdiction Pomponia's of her family, disconnect from because Roman even if religious observance stood little chance of impacting the greater good of the community and the stability attained by the fusion of the religious and political systems. Pomponia's trial was an affirmation and reinforcement of the distinction of gender within Roman society - women who violated the law, yet did not transcend their gendered sphere, were a problem too removed from the religio-political system to pose a threat to order. Pomponia's trial by her family was more than just Rome's way of demonstrating familial authority. Much the historical like how prestige virginity was of an enforcement of gender expectations within the Christian community, the family trial was Rome's way of enforcing the understanding of how women could and should remain outside the religio-political sphere of imperial culture, yet were still obligated to operate within the boundaries established by both culture and law. what Rome political had consistently life masculine of Roman endeavor. The trial enforced asserted: society Masculinity the was and a could to her biology not assume the was expected qualities distinctly femininity eyes of the Romans were mutually exclusive. according religio- A woman, who to be feminine, of masculinity upsetting the balance of nature. in the without In order to carry out masculine duties, the woman could no longer be considered a woman by society. If this were to happen, as in the case of those women who participated which balance could upset would need the to stability be of restored in capital the and crimes Empire, the the women responsible properly condemned for acting outside the limits of their gendered sphere.105 Separate but Not Equal: Conclusions The trials demonstrate that of both women were Pomponia able to and Domitilla deviate from the religious realm of the state more easily than men because their lives system, were which not was ancient Roman world. intertwined inseparable within from the political religion in the Failure to fully uphold one's civic religious duty was more flexible in the case of women because their actions could not immediately impact the political stability of the Empire in the same way that the actions of men could, since women were not part of official political authority. The one exception proves the rule is the Vestals.106 which The Vestals were much entwined within the religio-political system of Rome, and because so, they were aberrations of the feminine. contrast to social convention and expectation, In they refused to marry or bear children until after the age of 105 This idea is further explored in the next chapter. See chapter one for an examination of the Vestals as outside the masculine and feminine of Roman society. 106 thirty. They stood as examples of the abnormal in order to enforce what was expected and not expected of women in general society. It could be said that in practice, Vestals were held to the standards of what was expected of the masculine sphere in order to enforce what was expected of the feminine. The times during which Pomponia Graecina and Flavia Domitilla During lived times of were periods stability of the political status stability. quo of gender relations remained in force and the likelihood that women could push the boundaries proved minimal. instability, greater religion however, role within women could In times of sometimes the masculine-dominated and politics. When assume spheres this happened, a of even when women remained within their gendered spheres, the ancient writers were quick to demonstrate the dangerous precedent these women had set in regard to the balance of nature. As will be further demonstrated in the next chapter, stability, or the threat of its undoing, was a powerful impetus in enforcing or countermanding the understood roles of each gender within Greco-Roman society. Gender permeated all aspects of Roman life, and Christian women connected to men of power and authority found that they 95 could use this gendered system to the advantage of the Christian community. CHAPTER I I I Gendered C r i s i s : "UNSEX ME"1 Poppaea, Marcia, & J u l i a Mamaea Man i s t h e Head, b u t Woman i s t h e Neck: Introductions What d i d woman t o a c t it mean f o r a man t o a man, and a a s a woman i n t h e e a r l y Roman E m p i r e ? What as attributes were e x p e c t e d of a man and what were f e m i n i n e a woman? distinctively act This and therefore and e x p e c t e d of Romans knew t h a t what made men, men and women, women was t h e i r b i o l o g y , a man o r masculine b u t what d e t e r m i n e d who a c t e d a woman was e x p e c t e d was on a c c o u n t understanding stigmatized by During t h e f i r s t what of was gender was already three centuries, a of gender. reinforced biological the i n t e r a c t i o n or fact. between Taken from Lady Macbeth's famous passage in William S h a k e s p e a r e ' s "Macbeth", Act I , Scene 5, i n which she a t t e m p t s t o put a s i d e her f e m i n i n i t y so t h a t she can commit v i o l e n t a c t s t y p i c a l l y a s s o c i a t e d with masculine b e h a v i o r : "Come, you s p i r i t s ; That tend on m o r t a l t h o u g h t s , unsex me h e r e , And f i l l me from t h e crown t o t h e t o e t o p f u l l Of d i r e s t c r u e l t y ! make t h i c k my blood; Stop up t h e a c c e s s and passage t o remorse, That no compunctious v i s i t i n g s of n a t u r e Shake my f e l l purpose, nor keep peace between The e f f e c t and i t ! Come t o my woman's b r e a s t s , And t a k e my milk for g a l l , you m u r d ' r i n g m i n i s t e r s , Wherever i n your s i g h t l e s s s u b s t a n c e s You wait on n a t u r e ' s m i s c h i e f ! Come, t h i c k n i g h t , And p a l l t h e e i n t h e dunnest smoke of h e l l , That my keen k n i f e see not t h e wound i t makes, Nor heaven peep through t h e b l a n k e t of t h e dark, To cry 'Hold, h o l d ! ' " 96 as Christianity Poppaea Sabina, advantage impact and the imperial Marcia, and government Julia of her unique position Mamaea of power the course of the evolving evolved. each took in order to relationship between the imperial government and the Christian movement. The daughter of Titus Ollius,2 Poppaea not from humble origins. and Roman intrigue, noblemen Poppaea until Sabina was Through her influence, beauty, married and she married divorced Emperor important Nero in 62. 3 The depictions of Poppaea paint a mixed picture of her character, yet they all agree on her physical beauty and Nero's passion for her. light not powerful Accounts of her character shed only on how or why man in the she influenced Empire, but also the most demonstrate conceptions of gender within first-century Roman society and how those propaganda by conceptions the ancient could be used historians as a tool of as well as those vying for political power. Poppaea met an early death. The sources on her death agree that, whether intentional or not, the cause 2 Tactius explains that Poppaea took her name from her maternal grandfather, Poppaeus Sabinus, rather than her father, because of her grandfather's illustrious reputation and also on account of her father's friendship with Sejanus. T a c , Ann. xiii.45. 3 Although she was his mistress beginning around 58. was that Nero kicked Poppaea while she was pregnant.4 While accounts of the death of Poppaea are consistent, there was debate over Nero's intentions among the ancient historians, and there continues to be debate today.5 The slightly varied accounts of Poppaea's death are important because they demonstrate the ancient historians' use of gender as a normative tool for elite society. Poppaea Sabina may seem out of place for this study, for she was not a Christian, nor did she seem to show any favor to the Christian movement (quite the opposite, actually). However, the purpose of this inquiry is the examination of gender and Christianity policy toward the Christian movement. upon imperial Poppaea, while not a Christian herself, may have influenced imperial policy toward the Christians more than any Christian woman in the first within the two centuries. ancient The descriptions sources reveal independent yet dominant over Nero. and power within husband 4 allows the imperial some a woman Poppaea who was Poppaea's character government conclusions of vis-a-vis to be drawn about her her Cass. Dio lxxii.28.1; Suet., Ner. xxxv.3; T a c , Ann. xvi. 6. See: Roland Mayer, "What Caused Poppaea's Death," Historia 31, no. 2 (1982); Walter Ameling, "Tyrannen und Schwangere Frauen," Historia 35, no. 4 (1986). 5 influence over Nero's policies concerning both Christians and Jews. an Poppaea's relationship to the emperor provides interesting antithesis to Marcia, a second-century woman who wielded power in a similar fashion, yet in a very different direction. Not much is known of Marcia but that she was a freedwoman,6 and therefore of a different class entirely from Poppaea Sabina and Julia Mamaea. in his early fourth-century History of Emperor Commodus wealthy and Christianity.7 prominent Eusebius mentioned that during the reign (r. 180 - 192), whole households of influential Romans had converted to There is little evidence that any of the Christians ear of the emperor to whom Eusebius referred or the wherewithal had the to intervene on behalf of the Church in imperial policy. Nevertheless, there was one woman whose proximity to Commodus allowed her the freedom to exert influence protecting community 6 the Christian for the purpose in Rome. of Marcia Marcia's status as a freedwoman is taken from her name (Marcia Aurelia Ceionia Demetriade) as well as the reference in the Epit. de Caes. xvii.5 which refers to her as generis libertini. See also the footnote of C.R. Whittaker in the Loeb Classical Library for Herodian, i.16. 7 Euseb., Hist. eccl. v.21. 100 became the concubine of Commodus sometime around 182, 8 a f t e r t h e e x e c u t i o n of h e r p r e v i o u s l o v e r , Q u a d r a t u s , and then of the concubine, the later her emperor. 9 husband, With Marcia Eclectus, as the a emperor's C h r i s t i a n s i n Rome reaped t h e b e n e f i t s inside the walls demonstrated political Marcia in of Babylon's further instability to move servant of having an a l l y fortress. detail below, As will Rome's eventual under Commodus opened t h e way beyond the political and of imperial matters - including for gendered b o u n d a r i e s of Roman c u l t u r e and e x e r t her i n f l u e n c e variety be the in a eventual a s s a s s i n a t i o n of t h e emperor. Daughter of J u l i a Maesa and J u l i u s A v i t u s , s i s t e r of Julia Soaemias, and J u l i a the Domna, intricacies and n i e c e Julia of of Emperor Septimius Severus A v i t a Mamaea was no s t r a n g e r imperial life.10 Forming a to virtual This d a t e i s taken from E a r n e s t Cary, t h e Loeb t r a n s l a t o r of Cassius Dio ( l x x i i i . 4 . 6 - 7 ) . 9 Cass. Dio, l x x i i i . 4 . 6 - 7 . Marcia may have a c t u a l l y been Commodus' concubine b e f o r e t h e e x e c u t i o n of her husband (6 \ikv m l xov Ko^H-OSou npoKouoq, n 8e 71OCM.(XKTI eyeveto Kod xov EKXEKTO\) ^.exa xama yv\r\.) . This v i o l a t e d t h e custom and law, however, t h i s u s u a l l y d i d not s t o p most emperors from p r o c e e d i n g with t h e i r i n t e n d e d p l a n s . For a b r i e f examination of t h e i n t e r s e c t i o n between law and s o c i a l s t a t u s , s e e : P e t e r Garnsey, Social Status and Legal Privilege in the Roman Empire (Oxford: Oxford U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s , 1970). In a d d i t i o n , t h i s emphasis on Commodus' s c o f f i n g of l e g a l custom and t r a d i t i o n i s no doubt p a r t of t h e l i t e r a r y n a r r a t i v e on h i s unmanliness and inadequacy as a r u l e r (see my d i s c u s s i o n on t h i s b e l o w ) . 10 Cass. Dio l x x i x . 3 0 . 2 - 4 . 101 triumvirate of power behind the throne, Julia Mamaea, her sister Soaemias, and her mother Maesa, controlled the throne of the Empire from 218 to 235 and embodied to the fullest extent the idea of a ruling Roman empress. Severan women demonstrated the ultimate The exercise of gendered power during a time of crisis. Exerting their influence under Elagabalus then young the enjoyed the virtual emasculated Alexander autonomy emperor Severus, of rule their imperial male relatives. the behind Severan the and women robes of In the end, Julia Mamaea met an untimely death, when, as the ancients record, her abandonment of traditional femininity proved too much for the soldiers to accept, and she and her son, Alexander, were murdered in their tent in 235. Much like Poppaea Sabina, Julia Mamaea may seem out of place for this study, for no reliable sources indicate she held a preference for Christianity. Eusebius refers to her as a religious woman However, (Geoaepeaxatri yuvri) and mentions a meeting she called between herself and the renowned Christian scholar, Origen.11 Paulus Orosius claims she was indeed a Christian, but he is a 11 Euseb., Hist, eccl. vi.21; Jer., De vir. ill. liv. late source, and he mentions it only in passing.12 102 As will be examined further, Mamaea's own personal beliefs are but a fraction relationship between of the the evidence imperial demonstrating government and a the state of the Church in the early third century. Poppaea, Marcia and Mamaea demonstrate the ability of women to protecting exert their religious influence groups. for Looking the purpose back on of these women, Roman writers interpreted the actions of all three through the lens of gender. They described these women in similar fashion because they demonstrated the extent to which women could gendered sphere, bend while their culturally-constructed remaining within it. The understanding of how these women did what they did begins with recognizing the precise relationship each of these women had with her respective emperor. For Poppaea and Marcia, the relationship was sexual, and they dealt with their lovers on a somewhat equal footing in relation to age and wielded perceived her power insinuate, treaded feminine a 12 - Orosius, Historiae abilities. over her a thin line which adversum Julia young line son, who, between became more paganos Mamaea, vii.18. however, historians masculine delineated and as he matured. While influence Poppaea through the Marcia legitimate the authority Severan of their women ruled Julia directly through the guise of the legitimate of their and extended lovers, authority Mamaea, and sons, and because 103 their masculine of this, a brief examination of the relationship between Poppaea and Nero, and Marcia and Commodus must be done separately from examining Mamaea's relationship with Alexander. Mistresses and Concubines and Wives, Oh My!: Defining Terms of Relationships The Marcia precise to their implications imperial Through relationship regarding policies these respective two their regarding women, of Poppaea emperors one and had important to influence Christian movement. abilities the Sabina encounters concepts of mistress, concubine, and wife. the Roman In the Roman legal system, concubinage (concubina) was recognized as a position virtually analogous to that of a legal wife13 while a mistress, in a strict sense meaning a woman with 13 Beryl Rawson, "Roman Concubinage and Other De Facto Marriages," TAPA 104 (1974): 288. 104 whom a man could have sexual relations while also married to another woman, was neither legal nor honorable.14 When Nero met Poppaea Sabina, she was still married to Rufrius Crispinus, an equestrian who commanded the Praetorian Guard under Emperor Claudius, or to M. Salvius Otho - the stories differ in the sources. fact that enamored Poppaea with was married, her.15 Nero, Nero however, became would Despite the completely not marry Poppaea because he was married to Claudia Octavia16 and his mother Agrippina the Younger was against a divorce as well as the ascendancy of Poppaea to empress.17 It was not long though, before Poppaea became the mistress of Nero and then his wife shortly after his divorce from Octavia. There were two competing s t o r i e s for how Poppaea and Nero became eventual husband and wife. The f i r s t supported by Dio, and Tactius the Histories), Plutarch, Suetonius, story, (in r e l a t e d t h a t the a f f a i r between Nero and 14 Some examples of t h e L a t i n used for t h e s e women would be scortum or paelex - both of which could be t r a n s l a t e d as h a r l o t or prostitute. For a b r i e f survey on t h e Roman u n d e r s t a n d i n g of m i s t r e s s and concubine, s e e : J.A. Crook, Law and Life of Rome, 90 B.C. - A.D. 212 ( I t h a c a , NY: C o r n e l l U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s , 1967), e s p . ch. 4; Rawson, "Roman Concubinage and Other De Facto M a r r i a g e s . " 15 16 17 Plut., Galb. xix.2. Daughter of Emperor Claudius and step-sister to Nero. Plut., Galb. xix.2. 105 Poppaea began early, and after her divorce from Rufrius Crispinus, she married Otho as relationship with the emperor.18 a cover for her In the other version, Otho had been married to Poppaea first, and his boasting over her beauty and charms aroused the interest of the emperor, who Lusitania.19 basic then relocated Otho to be governor of Regardless of the competing versions, the framework is consistent in them all: Poppaea's relationship to Nero was first as an adulterous mistress, and then as wife, twelve days after Nero's divorce from the empress Octavia.20 The shift from mistress to wife requires particular attention used by in the mistress.21 marriage this case, ancient especially historians Describing to Nero, the the sources to the terminology for Poppaea's events after are by Tacitus and Suetonius in their In her time as mistress, however, the vocabulary varies. used as Poppaea's consistent account of Poppaea as wife of the emperor. role provide The terms valuable information on the intentions of the two historians and 18 Cass. Dio lxi.ll; Plut., Galb. xix.2,4; Suetonius, Otho iii.1-2; T a c , Hist. i.13. 19 T a c , Ann. xiii.46. 20 Suet., Wer. xxxv.4. 21 See chapter one for information on the concept of marriage within Roman society. their estimation of Poppaea's character. Suetonius uses interpreted however, as uses the amicam,22 Latin "mistress" in which this is context. scortum,23 principale 106 In his account, easily Tacitus, most directly translated as "chief harlot." the The difference in their terms may be connected to difference the authors.24 in Suetonius' intended purpose purpose of mentioning relationship to Nero before their marriage purely informational. His use of of the two Poppaea's seems to be "mistress" simply emphasizes the seguence of events and places the murder of Nero's mother into in the timeline in regard to the goings-on of Poppaea and Otho. Tacitus' purpose, on the other hand, may have been to demonstrate his distaste for Nero, Otho, immoral, and Poppaea, tyrannical, and all of whom conducting he described themselves inconsistent with their gendered boundaries. as in ways Tacitus may have used a more derogatory term for Poppaea in order to interpret the fall of the Julio-Claudian dynasty in line 22 Suet., Otho iii. 1. T a c , Hist. i.13. 24 Cass. Dio lxii.13.1 is the only other source which mentions Poppaea's status as mistress, but the term used, 7taXA,aKeux, is used for a variety of relational terms, and is dependent upon its context. For example, see its use with Marcia immediately following. 23 107 with his beliefs concerning the masculine and feminine power.25 of gender was foundational proper exercise of For Tacitus, the balance to a stable and productive society, and the confusion of gender roles was indicative of a rule in conflict with nature. was Marcia's official that concubine. of relationship There to Emperor are five mention Marcia as a concubine of Commodus. Commodus sources that Four of these sources are in Greek26 and one is in Latin.27 The term concubina Marcia's is relationship used to in the Commodus, Latin and source the Greek for equivalent of KaXkaKExa is used by the other four sources. This Commodus distinction is concubine of important. enabled surreptitiously therefore empress. Marcia's her than Marcia's to if conduct she were relationship legal status her business a legal to as wife a more and While a public figure, and one who had the power and opportunity to influence the emperor, Marcia was still social status, only Marcia 25 a freedwoman. was not capable Because of of her exercising Francesca Santoro L'Hoir, "Tacitus and Women's Usurpation of Power," CW 88, no. 1 (Sep.-Oct. 1994). 26 Cass. Dio, lxxiii.4.7; Hdn. i.16.4; Hippol., Haer. ix.12.10; Zos., Historia 27 Nova i.7. SHA Comm. xi.9, xvii.1-2. 108 authority that was accepted or even seen as threatening While some historians28 viewed her by the ruling elite. influence over Commodus as disruptive or inappropriate, others viewed her as the sober-minded influence against Commodus' more disturbing behavior.29 In short, Marcia was seen as an insignificant sexual partner of Commodus with no ability to personally disrupt state business to any great degree. Marcia was able to conduct an empress whenever she was in the presence of the emperor. At the same time, she was freed intrinsic to societal herself as from some of the expectations constraints of noblewomen. For instance, Herodian remarked that Marcia "was treated just like a legal wife with all the honors due to an empress apart from standing, the fire."30 sacred gender, and legal Marcia's status lower placed her social on the margins of a society which distinguished ability and role according to these criteria. able to create her own Because of this, Marcia was sphere - a socially-recognized limitation which regulated her existence in society. The uniqueness the 28 29 30 of Marcia's SHA, Comm. v i i i . 7 , x i . 9 ; Epit. Hdn. i . 1 6 . 4 ; i . 1 7 . 5 . Hdn. i . 1 6 . 4 . position de Caes. afforded xvii.5. her 109 opportunity to pursue a more involved role in the Roman Christian community as well as a relationship with the Bishop of Rome. more personal More importantly, in her position, she was able to operate according to the recognized gender customs of her day and at the same time stretch them to suit purposes deemed outside the purview of feminine power. The relationships respective reasons. to emperors of are Poppaea and important Marcia for to two their specific First, the language the ancient historians used explain the connections emperors was heavily steeped of these women in conceptions to their of gender. Second, the relationships between Poppaea and Marcia and their emperors reveal that neither their sex nor gender truly stood in the way of influencing the course of the imperial policies. connected to the male Ability to exert authority sex, but the exertion was of power, while shrouded in masculine terminology, was not. 110 The Son of Mamaea: Gendered Language in the Relationship between Alexander and Julia Mamaea The Severus relationship and his attention. appointment between mother Julia Julia Mamaea the emperor Mamaea had Alexander deserves engineered special Alexander's as Caesar under his cousin Elagabalus, and with the help of her mother, Julia Maesa, eventually the throne itself in the assassination of the emperor and his mother. Herodian presented Julia Mamaea's role in her son's reign as the natural triumph of the masculine over the feminine.31 Alexander and his mother together embodied the masculine, while Elagabalus assumed the role of femininity. into This picture, however, dissolved shortly Alexander's reign as the now feminine Mamaea attempted to overcome the now fully masculine Alexander. Because Alexander was only thirteen when he assumed the throne in 218, his mother and grandmother maintained control over the affairs of state through the guise of legitimate advisors. authority of Alexander and his imperial After the death of Julia Maesa in 226, Julia Mamaea continued on her own to dominate Alexander and the 31 Hdn. v.7.1-6. Ill governance of the Empire. Augusta, mother's Sources, such as the Historia diminish Alexander's status in relation to his authority by referring to Mamaeae32 - "Mamaea's Alexander."33 him as Alexander This "son of Mamaea" title was by no means official, but it demonstrates the subjection of Alexander to his mother's power. Early in Alexander's reign, the role of Julia Mamaea was one of protector34 and the insurer of his ascendancy into manhood.35 The historians portrayed the idea of women running the affairs of state through Alexander as a positive change from reign of Elagabalus, and a return to "moderate dignified government."36 In the accounts of Elagabalus, his character as emperor was defined by an aversion to the vita modesty. militaris, and a rejection of all Elagabalus' complete disregard for the public expectation of a masculine emperor encouraged a reassertion of masculinity upon the throne, which in this case only came in the person of a boy under the influence of his mother and grandmother. 32 SHA, Alex. Sev. iii.l; v.2; SHA, Aurel. xlii.4; SHA, Car. iii.4. Literally translated as "Mamaea's Alexander," it is commonly translated as "son of Mamaea" as it would be translated in common usage when the son is connected to his father's name for the purpose of identification. 34 Hdn. v.2-3. 35 Cass. Dio lxxx; Hdn. v.7.1-6. 36 Hdn. vi.1.1. 33 112 As Alexander matured, his duties became more in tune with the traditional emperor. In 230, expectations the Roman of a masculine Empire Artaxerxes, King of the Persians.37 was Roman invaded by At this point in time when Alexander's masculine traits should have been most obvious - a time of war - the domination of Mamaea over her son took on a negative connotation in the sources. Because of his education and upbringing, Alexander may have been able to position himself as an effective Roman general in the face of overwhelming enemies.38 Herodian painted Alexander as an emperor However, "completely dominated"39 by his mother during the time Rome needed an emperor-general. Herodian explained that the army recognized the problems associated with having so strong a feminine influence over the first man, and so they sought to remove Alexander from authority and replace him with one of their own.40 The depiction of Mamaea's domination over Alexander by the misogyny. 37 Roman historians They attributed represents the more failure of than simple Alexander's Hdn. vi.2.1. By 235, the Roman Empire had also been invaded by Germanic tribes in the north. 39 Hdn. vi.1.10. 40 Hdn. vi.8.3. 38 113 The war with the Persians reign to Mamaea's femininity. was not a complete Roman victory,41 even though the Roman army had been successful Persian incursion.42 in halting the bulk of the Herodian's account demonstrates the uneasiness with which Romans accepted Mamaea's domination over her Herodian son. relayed In his recounting a story of the Persian war, of how Alexander abandoned a complete victory by failing to send in his army when it was most possible opportune reasons for to do this, so.43 Herodian although both gives two reasons are connected to the idea of Alexander's lack masculinity: But Alexander caused them to fall by not leading the army to invade, whether through fear, in order not to risk his life and limb for the Roman Empire, or his mother may have stopped him because of her womanly cowardice and excessive love for her son. She used to blunt his efforts to act bravely [dv8peiav]44, convincing him it was other people's job to risk their lives for him, and not his to get involved in the battle. It was this which destroyed the Roman army.45 41 SHA, Alex. Sev. lv-lvii; Aur. V i c , Caes. xxiv.2; and Eutr., Breviarium viii.23 all describe the war as a complete Roman victory, however, archeology and Herodian's account demonstrate that while not unsuccessful, Alexander's war was not a stunning victory. 42 Hdn. vi.6.6. 43 Hdn. vi.5.8. 44 A term which refers explicitly to a man. See pp. 118ff for an examination of this term. 45 Hdn. vi.5.8-9. 114 This summation of Mamaea's influence over Alexander is starkly different from how she was portrayed earlier in Herodian's account as the purveyor of all things required for a proper masculine education.46 It was during this war that, in the accounts of the Roman historians, beneficial Mamaea's to Alexander's influence reign. ceased Although the to be emperor had now reached an age when he should be running his own affairs, he was "[c]ompletely dominated by his mother, [and] he did exactly as he was told."47 childhood, the sources emphasize that Even after his in all things, Mamaea directed Alexander's decisions, and he was either unable or unwilling to assert his own masculinity over and against his mother's influence.48 In 234, Alexander mounted an expedition against the Germanic tribes. The historians remark that although the war was an opportune time for Alexander to demonstrate the vita "everything militaris, in he accordance instead with his continued mother's to do advice."49 Her advice was "to abandon the war against the Germans 46 Hdn. "manly 47 Hdn. 48 Hdn. 49 SHA, v.7.1-6. See below for more on Alexander's education in exercises." vi.1.10. vi.1.8-10; vi.5.8-9; SHA, Alex. Sev. xiv.7; lx.1-2. Alex. Sev. IK.2. and return there."50 power to the East in order to display her 115 power The emphasis on Mamaea's desire to display her is connected to the traditional femininity and its "inherent greed."51 notions of In the end, the army grew tired of Mamaea's influence and finally killed both Alexander and his mother.52 The ultimate summation of the reign of Alexander and his mother was succinctly given by Herodian: So such an end took Alexander (and his mother) , after ruling fourteen years, which according to those he ruled, was blameless and without bloodshed. For murder and unjust cruelty were not part of his being, his inclination was toward humane and kind behavior. Indeed, Alexander's reign would have been completely successful, but for the blame brought on himself through his mother's love of money and her pettiness.53 The verdict was clear: Alexander's ruinous reign was not on account of himself, but rather Historians like Herodian and Alexander's own masculinity as power Mamaea wielded over him. fully assert his own authority 50 51 52 53 54 of Aurelius unable to his mother.54 Victor saw overcome the Because of his failure to as first man, Alexander SHA, Alex. Sev. lxiii.5. Hdn. vi.1.8; S52 Hdn. vi.8.3; SHA Alex. Sev. lxiii.5-6. Hdn. vi.8.3; SHA Alex. Sev. lxiii.5-6. Hdn. vi.9.8. See also SHA, Alex. Sev. lix.8; Aur. Vict., Caes. xxiv. joined the ranks of feminized Commodus, and Elagabalus. what was intents in and how men purposes like The proper distinction between appropriately demonstrated emperors 116 Nero, masculine like was or feminine Alexander, generally who for regarded is all as a masculine ruler, came to be despised as feminine because of his inability to remove himself from under the influence of his mother's feminine power. Gender is in the Eye of the Beholder: The Gendered Nature of Power & Authority in Historical Accounts of the Early Empire The well-known influence that Poppaea wielded over Nero forced ancient historians to mention her in their accounts of him. Poppaea's seeming lack of respect for the gendered boundaries encouraged men like Tacitus to comment on her actions through language that was heavily laden with gender. Tacitus' language in reference to Poppaea emphasized the distinction acceptable conducted Nero, of gender behavior. herself In in Tacitus' in a manner as emperor, held one's account, contrary the highest abilities Poppaea to her and most and gender. masculine 117 position in the Empire. In the ideal of Augustus, each emperor was protector, Romans. The imperial office was in name and essence, the the patron, and position of the first man {princeps), father of all the one to whom all men looked for an exemplar of masculinity. In the case of Nero, however, he was dominated first by his mother, and then his wife55 - his unwillingness to overcome their power combined with his debaucherous lifestyle was proof of his diminished masculinity.56 Tacitus' account of Nero and Poppaea may also be more than just a summation of disrupted gender roles. In addition to portraying Poppaea as a woman "possessed of all qualities character, "57 but and one who used her charms and beauty to attract the eye of the emperor so as to "establish her ascendancy,"58 Nero as a great tyrant. Tacitus characterized Tacitus' emphasis on Poppaea's domineering nature and Nero's utter disregard for selfcontrol and good governance may have been in order to cast Nero (and even Poppaea) in the light of a tyrant 55 par Examples of Agrippina's domination over Nero: Dio lxi.3-7; T a c , Ann. xiii.14. Examples of Poppaea's dominance: T a c , Ann. xiv.6061, 63-65; xv.61. 56 As will be elaborated upon further below, Tacitus held that a man under the power of a woman was devoid of any masculinity. L'Hoir, "Tacitus and Women's Usurpation of Power," 8. 57 T a c , Ann. xiii.45. 58 T a c , Ann. xiii.46. excellence. tyrants The similarities of old are greater reasonable.59 Perhaps between than Tacitus' 118 and Greek Nero seems emphasis historically on Poppaea's usurpation of power and Nero's misuse of authority are meant to serve distinctions. as a commentary The confusion on proper of gender gender roles are connected to the tyranny of Nero. In the next century, the ancient historians penned Commodus as Nero's moral heir. briefly in his account Zosimus mentioned Marcia of Commodus' reign and death: "Then Commodus the son of Marcus, who was addicted not only to tyranny but also unnatural power. After he had been Marcia, who had taken murdered on a manly Pertinax was chosen to rule."60 subtly conveyed what activities, assumed by his concubine [dcvSpeia] mindset, In this passage, Zosimus he saw as the unnaturalness of Marcia's actions within the predominantly Greek culture of the Eastern Empire. In its simplest av8pela means manliness or courage courage) 59 . definition, (specifically a manly- In fact, in both the Greek and the Latin, the For a brief study on the correlations between the tyrant Periander and Nero in regard to lifestyle and the death of their wives, see: Mayer, "What Caused Poppaea's Death." 60 Zos., Historia Nova i.7. 119 terms for courage contain the root av8peioc (avip/av8p-) in Greek and virtus other words, to exhibit courage was of "man" itself: {vir) in Latin. In by definition to exhibit qualities belonging to a man.61 The cultural understanding of courage in its Hellenic context comes mainly from the teachings of Plato and Aristotle. Aristotelian categorization of terms drove the understanding of what dv5peioc was and to whom the term could be a t t r i b u t e d . This manly courage was a v i r t u e which could belong only t o men. Women and slaves were excluded from the v i r t u e of otv8peia,62 for while they did have human v i r t u e , i t was d i s t i n c t from the v i r t u e of free men, because t h e i r s was to function in the role of obedience r a t h e r than as r u l e r . 6 3 Because the feminine form authority" 61 of the v i r t u e was "without (aKupog),64 For a r e c e n t look a t t h e complexity of t h e use of " m a n l i n e s s " i n a n c i e n t l i t e r a t u r e , s e e : Ralph M. Rosen and Ineke S l u i t e r , e d s . , Andreia: Studies in Manliness and Courage in Classical Antiquity (Leiden & Boston: B r i l l , 2003) ; Angela Hobbs, Plato and the Hero: Courage, Manliness and the Impersonal Good (Cambridge & New York: Cambridge U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s , 2000); Harvey C. Mansfield, Manliness (New Haven, CT: Yale U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s , 2006); Walter T. Schmid, On Manly Courage: A Study of Plato's Laches (Carbondale & E d w a r d s v i l l e , IL: Southern I l l i n o i s U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s , 1992). 62 Marguerite D e s l a u r i e r s , " A r i s t o t l e on Andreia, Divine and SubHuman V i r t u e s , " i n Andreia: Studies in Manliness and Courage in Classical Antiquity, ed. Ralph M. Rosen and Ineke S l u i t e r (Leiden & Boston: B r i l l , 2003), 187. 63 I b i d . , 195. 64 A r i s t . , Pol. i . l 3 . 1 2 6 0 a 2 0 - 2 4 . women could not properly display the of 120 manly ruling men virtue courage. Similarly, there were instances when failed to live up to their culturally-understood role of masculinity.65 The descriptions of Commodus' character and actions in nearly all the sources judge Commodus to be wholly ineffective as emperor debaucherous and unmanly lifestyle. described Commodus as "base, because The Historia shameless, lustful" even from his earliest years.66 Commodus' sexual biographers. lifestyle was of also his Augusta cruel, and In addition, disdained by his He is described as being "defiled of mouth... and debauched"67 - an allusion not only to his specific sexual acts, specifically, but his also acts his of homosexuality fellatio),68 on (or which more the 65 For a brief examination of what Roman nobility understood as masculine aristocratic behavior, see: Maud W. Gleason, "Elite Male Identity in the Roman Empire," in Life, Death, and Entertainment in the Roman Empire, ed. D.S. Potter and D.J. Mattingly (Ann Arbor, MI: University of Michigan Press, 1999). 66 SHA, Comm. i.7. 67 SHA, Comm. i.7. Mathew Kuefler translates this passage as "orally polluted and anally defiled" in order to better convey the impression of homosexual acts within the original Latin. See: Mathew Kuefler, The Manly Eunuch: Masculinity, Gender Ambiguity, and Christian Ideology in Late Antiquity (Chicago: The University of Chicago Press, 2001), 29. 68 The sources mention or allude to both fellatio and pederasty; both of these acts are connected to issues of virility, because the descriptions of Commodus' pederasty within the Historia Augusta imply that he is not the dominant male, but rather the passive Historia Augusta comments in further detail. 69 121 An accusation of f e l l a t i o , such as was also made against the emperors Nero70 and Elagabalus, 7 1 was dependent upon the c u l t u r a l understanding of v i r i l i t y and i t s connection to t r u e manliness. For Romans, v i r i l i t y was the expression of masculinity. In the sexual a c t , men were expected to be the b e n e f i c i a r i e s of pleasure - rooted in the Latin vir), servile Roman or servus male chose inconsequential, sex virile (rooted in the Latin - of a slave) . for (the while the p a r t n e r was the instrument of t h a t pleasure servilis ultimate was, The p a r t n e r t h a t a for the most part, so long as the c i t i z e n male was not the passive agent of a n o t h e r ' s pleasure. 7 2 This understanding of socially virility within the framework of accepted masculine and feminine behavior i s key for understanding the Commodus and overly sexual Elagabalus' eagerness illustrations inability to to govern. engage in behavior of Nero, Nero and Commodus' unbefitting of a male (feminine) p a r t n e r . See K u e f l e r ' s a r g u m e n t i n r e l a t i o n t o Elagabalus: Ibid., 88-91. 69 For e x a m p l e : SHA, Coram, v . 1 1 , x . 8 - 9 . 70 T a c , Ann. x i v . 6 0 . See a l s o : P a u l Veyne, " H o m o s e x u a l i t y i n A n c i e n t Rome," i n Western Sexuality: Practice and Precept in Past and Present Times, e d . P h i l i p p e A r i e s and Andre B e j i n (Oxford & New York: B a s i l B l a c k w e l l L t d , 1 9 8 5 ) , 3 0 f . 71 SHA, Heliogab. x x x i . 6 : E l a g a b a l u s p r e f e r r e d men who were " b e n e vasatorum [ w e l l - h u n g ] . " 72 Veyne, " H o m o s e x u a l i t y i n A n c i e n t Rome," 3 0 . Roman citizen natures. associated The each of imperial biographers them used with servile this image of servility as an image of femininity, and thus failure. The sources present the emperor Alexander as the converse to Elagabalus who was the successor to emperors like Nero and Commodus in all things base and unbecoming of a masculine leader. historians not did Because connect of this contrast, the Alexander's masculinity to images of sexuality in the same way as they portrayed the overtly sexual emperors, Nero and Commodus. above, Alexander was not relegated to As examined the ranks of feminized emperors because of his debaucherous lifestyle, but rather on account of his inability to overcome the power and influence of his mother - a trait which Nero shared until his matricide in 59. While Alexander never seemed to have carried on in any kind of homosexual or perceived feminine form of sexual conduct, his mother's domination of him left him just as emasculated as Nero and Commodus in the eyes of the army - the embodiment of masculinity. power long Alexander became after servile he had matured to his mother's to the point when he should have been the dominant force in that relationship. Although the relationship between Alexander and Mamaea was devoid of any sexual connotation, the construction of the relationship between sexual the virile and in nature, can nevertheless situation. be servile, while applied in this Alexander allowed his mother to continue the pursuit of her power and pleasure at the expense of his own inherent right to rule independently as first man, and to assert his role as ruler over and against her role as one who obeys.73 It is not only biological sex or sexual conduct which defined a person's gender in Roman society, but also the perception of his or her ability to remain within the expected boundaries of the defined gender of masculine or feminine. Hadrian serves as illustrate how independent constructions an homosexuality interesting and virility example to could be within the Roman mind. Even more than Nero and Commodus, Hadrian is associated with a long-term homosexual relationship. Antinous, the young male lover of Hadrian, accompanied the emperor on many of his travels until Antinous' untimely death in the Nile River in 130.74 73 Shortly after Antinous' death, Hadrian See pages 131-134 for a fuller explanation of the nature of femininity as one of obedience. 74 There is disagreement within the sources as to whether Antinous died by an accidental drowning or for the purpose of being a willing b u i l t a c i t y i n h i s memory, 75 124 and e l e v a t e d Antinous t o t h e rank of god. 7 6 Modern h i s t o r i a n s count Hadrian as one of Rome's Good "Five Emperors," 7 7 the ancient sources recounting the l i f e of Hadrian a r e not entirely favorable. Hadrian's It was A n t i n o u s , however, not however, relationship t h a t drew t h e i r e of h i s to biographers. The a n c i e n t h i s t o r i a n s p r e s e n t e d Hadrian i n much t h e same way as Nero and Commodus authority with not as as someone who wielded an i n d i v i d u a l and on account of man, a woman. but in conjunction Because of this, a n c i e n t h i s t o r i a n s d e s c r i b e d some of H a d r i a n ' s a c t i o n s gendered terms which p o r t r a y e d the emperor as Two examples emasculated instability instrumental him the in feminine and i n a d e q u a t e i n h i s r o l e as a m a s c u l i n e l e a d e r a t b e g i n n i n g of h i s his the reign. demonstrate in an i n t h e Empire. how H a d r i a n ' s effort to explain Plotina, Trajan's biographers perceived wife, was i n s e c u r i n g t h e t h r o n e for Hadrian upon t h e s a c r i f i c e on b e h a l f of t h e e m p e r o r ' s l i f e : Cass. Dio l x i x . 1 1 . 2 - 3 ; SHA, Hadr. x i v . 5 - 7 . 75 A n t i n o p o l i s , t h e r u i n s of which a r e near t h e modern-day c i t y of Sheikh ' I b a d a , Egypt. 76 Cass. Dio l x i x . 1 1 . 2 - 4 ; SHA, Hadr. x i v . 5 - 7 . 77 The f i v e c o n s e c u t i v e r e i g n s of Nerva (96-98), Trajan (98-117), Hadrian (117-138), Antoninus Pius (138-161), and Marcus A u r e l i u s (161-180), which saw t h e l o n g e s t c o n t i n u e d p e r i o d of s t a b i l i t y s i n c e t h e u n r e s t of t h e second c e n t u r y BC. 125 death of her husband in 117. 78 Hadrian's securing of the throne as heir to Trajan was successful only on account of Plotina, who, according to Dio, had been in love with Hadrian.79 Plotina did not live long into Hadrian's reign, and so her influence upon the affairs of state was limited to his ascendancy to the throne. In addition to having assumed power with the help of Plotina, Hadrian also upset the traditional balance between his personal life and the life of the Hadrian overemphasized state. the Later importance in his reign, of his private relationship with Antinous to the overall stability and security of the intersecting good his through aroused private his concerns historians. Empire. Hadrian's relationship declaration about his of insistence with the Antinous' virility by the of public divinity ancient Because Hadrian's ability to rule is by no means seen as inadequate as that of Nero or Commodus, the ancient historians relaying that upon Antinous' death, Hadrian "wept like a woman."80 The insinuation 78 is that only hinted Hadrian's at it by relationship to Antinous SHA, Hadr. i v . 1 0 & v i . l ; C a s s . Dio l x i x . l & l x i x . 1 0 . 3 - 4 . C a s s . Dio, l x i x . l . 80 SHA, Hadr. xiv.5: "Antinoum suum, deum per Nilum navigat, perdidit, quem muliebriter flevit." 79 126 demonstrated an inability to maintain the virile persona required to effectively relationship with govern Antinous the was Empire. by Hadrian's itself not a demonstration of a lack of virility, but rather, it was the crossover with the between affairs Hadrian's of public personal indiscretions administration that the ancient historians found unacceptable.81 Hadrian's combined with Hadrian's that to Because his dependence relationship image within Hadrian order early wrote clarify Hadrian's to Plotina's Antinous the histories his any upon to autobiography, rumors concerning actions were impacted such a degree own personal power perhaps his not in person.82 dangerous enough to cause the political instability that Nero's and Commodus' lifestyles did, the reaction of the Roman elite was relegated to rumor and their recordings in history, rather than rebellion or assassination. The conflict between the political and the personal was also Alexander. 81 the primary problem with Nero, Commodus, and As in Hadrian's case, the primary crisis was This situation is quite similar to the case of Domitilla in the previous chapter 82 Both Dio and the Historia Augusta make references to Hadrian's autobiography: Cass. Dio lxix.11.2; SHA, Hadr. vii.2. not the homosexual behavior of Nero and Commodus.83 reputation of unmanliness for both of these 127 The emperors extended far deeper than their insatiably diverse sexual appetites. overcame Nero and Commodus' own personal indiscretions their political about personae, the future which of in instigated unease the stability. Roman citizens were ruled by the free. turn Empire's The embodiment of the freest citizen of all was the princeps. To have a princeps who operated as the passive agent of another's pleasure or whim, was not only emasculating to the leader, but to those he led as well. although not on account of sexual Alexander too, passivity or homosexuality, operated as the passive agent of another's power and pleasure - his mother, Julia Mamaea. A truly free man, as embodied within the princeps, was not bound by any other's will. In Roman society, a manly life was a combination of both military and political experience.84 Commodus 83 For an examination of homosexuality and the perception of manliness in Roman society see: Craig A. Williams, Roman Homosexuality: Ideologies of Masculinity in Classical Antiquity (Oxford & New York: Oxford University Press, 1999). 84 For further reading consult: Kuefler, The Manly Eunuch: Masculinity, Antiquity, Gender Ambiguity, 37-55. and Christian Ideology in Late succeeded in neither of these two endeavors. 5 Commodus voluntarily associated with pleasure.86 neglected ruling in his order In fact, responsibilities to further pursue Part of this pleasure involved his love of gladiatorial combat, in which he actively participated to the detriment of his noble rank.87 Commodus' homosexual lifestyle combined with his abandonment of the masculine responsibility to rule in order to pursue the feminine quality of pleasure and extravagance was not interpreted as manliness by Romans of the time.88 Commodus was not the first or last emperor to be forever remembered in the literature so unmanly as to be judged inadequate to rule, however, his voluntary emasculation did provide a unique opportunity for a reassertion of the masculine, albeit not necessarily in the form of a male. Zosimus' commentary on Marcia can be interpreted as a culturally understood (and justified) aberration 85 Dio refers to Commodus as the "greatest coward" in lxxiii.13.6. SHA, Coram, v. 4. 87 Cass. Dio, lxxiii.15-21; SHA, Comm. ii.9. 88 For an examination of extravagant wealth and dress and their connection to unmanly character, see: Kuefler, The Manly Eunuch: 86 Masculinity, Gender Ambiguity, and Christian Ideology in Late Antiquity, 59ff. In this passage, Kuefler is writing about Elagabalus, but the description is applicable to Commodus: "So the concern about wealth spent on clothing, then, while framed in the traditional language of effeminacy, was intimately related to anxiety about the exercise of political power" (59). of 129 In times of instability, gender roles in time of crisis. it was sometimes necessary for women to take on the role of protector or hero for the good of the community. Jeremy Mclnerney examined this phenomenon in the context of Plutarch's concluded descriptions that masculinization, in times of Greek notable society women. permitted and therefore defeminization, of crisis in order He to reestablish the of women stability: "[T]he restoration of order is finally made possible by the elimination of the female."89 the very Hellenized ancient Greek Eastern Roman construction, Zosimus, who lived in Empire, av8peia, a time of relative to applied Marcia, instability the who intervened during under Commodus. This application of dcvSpeia to Marcia is more than an understanding of a woman with manly virtues - it is the complete masculine. of manly replacement of the feminine by the If it was understood to be a simple function attributes by a woman, then the Greek term oa^poyuvoc; (man-woman) would have been more appropriate.90 89 Jeremy Mclnerney, "Plutarch's Manly Women," in Andreia: Manliness and Courage in Classical Antiquity, Studies in ed. Ralph M. Rosen and Ineke Sluiter (Leiden & Boston: Brill, 2003), 334. The straightforward combination of man (avip/dv8p-) and woman (yuvn) . As used by Valerius Maximus concerning Maesia of Sentinum's defense of herself in court: Memorial Deeds and Sayings viii.3.1. 90 According to Zosimus, Marcia's actions possessed 130 no feminine q u a l i t i e s w h a t s o e v e r ; t h e y were p u r e l y m a s c u l i n e and t h e r e f o r e i n c a p a b l e of b e i n g a t t a c h e d t o any p e r s o n or o b j e c t which l a c k e d t h i s Given the use of quality. dcv8peia as m a s c u l i n e (and thereby d e s t i n e d t o r u l e ) , how t h e n i s one t o e x p l a i n t h e use of t h e term for Marcia? is simple: fashion, because the The r e a s o n i n g i n t h e Greek c o n t e x t Commodus f a i l e d situation where none e x i s t e d . called for to rule in a masculine a manly response Marcia assumed t h a t r o l e through t h e p u r g i n g of h e r feminine v i r t u e s i n favor of t h e m a s c u l i n e for With the the purpose of reestablishment remained m a s c u l i n e , domestic reestablishing order of feminine the of order order, remained household and stability. masculine feminine, was a g a i n again and reflected the in t h e g r e a t e r o r d e r of s t a t e . 9 1 P l i n y t h e Elder a l s o used t h e term for h e r m a p h r o d i t e : P l i n . , HN v i i . 3 . 3 4 . For more on t h e s p e c i f i c q u a l i t i e s of avSpoyuvoq i n a n c i e n t w r i t i n g s , s e e : Anthony J . M a r s h a l l , "Roman Ladies on T r i a l : The Case of Maesia Sentinum," Phoenix 44, no. 1 (Spring 1990); Wayne A. Meeks, "The Image of Androgyne: Some Uses of a Symbol i n E a r l i e s t C h r i s t i a n i t y , " H i s t o r y of Religions 13, no. 3 (Feb. 1974). 91 This i s one of Mclnerney's c o n c l u s i o n s i n h i s examination of P l u t a r c h ' s t r e a t m e n t of women: t h e sphere of i n f l u e n c e a p p r o p r i a t e for women i n Greek c u l t u r e was a r e f l e c t i o n of a masculine conception of o r d e r e x t e n d i n g from t h e household t o t h e s t a t e . I b e l i e v e t h i s argument, with a l i t t l e tweaking, i s e x a c t l y what Zosimus i n t e n d e d t o convey ( i n t e n t i o n a l l y or not) through h i s d e s c r i p t i o n of Marcia. See Mclnerney, " P l u t a r c h ' s Manly Women," 341f. 131 While Marcia's the analysis actions context, the Hellenized,92 is Roman was not of Zosimus' understandable world, the commentary within although Greek world. a on Greek extensively Was the Greek conception of gender and virtue the same as the Roman? In the monograph on Pertinax within the Historia Augusta, there is an exchange between the newly acclaimed Emperor Pertinax and the consul, Falco: When Pertinax had returned thanks to Laetus, the consul Falco said, "We understand what sort of emperor you will be from this: that we see Laetus and Marcia, the instruments of Commodus' crimes behind you." Pertinax replied to him, "You are young, Consul, and do not understand the necessity of obedience [parendi] . They obeyed [paruerunt] Commodus in the beginning, but against their will, and as soon as they had an opportunity, they showed what had always been their desire."93 The author of the Historia Augusta, rather than explaining away Marcia's actions as an aberration of her gender, attributed Praetorian obedience Prefect, while to both Marcia also mentioning desires to act against Commodus. and their the innate Because both Laetus and Marcia possessed the same qualities, both are praised by 92 This is especially true in regard to the Roman world in which Zosimus lived and wrote. 93 SHA, Pert. v. 2. 1 Pertinax (as well as virtually the entire populace) 94 for The Historia their deeds. {pareo)95, obedience Marcia because Augusta rather the author than attributed an act of bravery (virtus) sought to emphasize fulfillment as a good Roman woman. to Marcia's As a woman, Marcia would have been under the power of another man, and like the Praetorian Prefect, Laetus, she was under the power of the princeps. The Historia Augusta Pertinax an acceptable remained obedient until conveyed through the words of image of a it became Roman woman: imperative against an imbalance in the natural order. to she react The Romans attempted to enforce a clear distinction of gender roles within society, including a cultural understanding of what was expected of those in higher station in regard to their gender. connections The Historia Augusta and Zosimus between Marcia's participation assassination and the masculinity of drew in Commodus' such an act. Zosimus bluntly attributed the absence of femininity and Marcia's usurpation of masculinity with his use of the term dvSpeia. 94 95 The Historia Augusta more subtly SHA, Comm. xvii.4; xviii.lff. The Latin pareo can also be translated "to submit." drew a 133 connection between the obedience of Marcia and that of Laetus - associating them both to honorable service under the reign of Commodus, and then with the act of regicide in order to realign the natural order.96 Although with much more detail, the accounts of Dio and Herodian also imparted this Greco-Roman association of the masculine with the reassertion of gender balance. Dio presented conspirators, and unsuccessfully Herodian's Marcia one a through attempted history, as to Marcia confidant whom poison the of the conspirators Commodus.97 discovered death In warrants signed by Commodus containing her and Laetus' names.98 reaction, listed Marcia and them. Zosimus informed plotted In much the the presented two others names were of Commodus with Historia Augusta and assassination same way Marcia as the a woman whose In who had assumed masculine identity in order to murder her lover, Dio and Herodian demonstrated feminine to reassert the natural 96 the that masculine order the was subjugation necessary of things. in of order the to Like a puppet, SHA, Comm. xvii.2 mentions that Laetus and Marcia worked together to first poison Commodus, and then after that failed, they enlisted the help of an athlete to strangle him. 97 Cass. Dio, lxxii.22.4. 98 Hdn. i.16-17. Dio' s Marcia was able to act only through the actions of the men involved. The male conspirators administered the poison through Marcia - the third person plural for 8i8coM-i (to give) is used for the action." Upon the discovery of the death warrants, Herodian quoted Marcia: U A drunkard shall not get the better of a sober woman."100 Through these words, Marcia's femininity was asserted, and then in her actions it was affirmed as she then relied on the male conspirators to carry out the task by taking advantage of her close relationship with the emperor.101 Although not overtly attributing masculine qualities to Marcia, Dio and Herodian both asserted the same premise as Zosimus: masculine in the feminine order to bring must be about overcome the by natural the order, which had been lost under a feminine emperor. Alexander Severus succeeded an emperor very similar in actions and lifestyle to Nero and Commodus. Roman association Elagabalus abandoned 99 was his the of men epitome masculinity. with the vita of an emperor To ensure the In the militaris, who had continued C a s s . D i o , l x x i i . 2 2 . 4 : ((xxpnocKOV 5itx xf|<; Mocpiciac; ev Kpeaov (toeioii; ocuxco e'8coKav. 100 Hdn. i . 1 7 . 5 . 101 Hdn. i . 1 7 . 8 . influence and power of the Severan women, Julia 135 Maesa convinced Elagabalus to appoint his cousin, Alexander as his Caesar and successor in 221. 102 and Mamaea teachers placed who Alexander "trained him in Once appointed, Maesa under the the tutelage exercises of of self- control, introducing him to wrestling schools and manlyexercises [xoiq avSpwv yu^vocaioic]... and both a Latin and Greek education."103 In other words, an education in everything that was contrary to Elagabalus' lifestyle and behavior. The phrase "manly exercises" deserves brief special attention. Herodian used a slightly varied term almost immediately after recounting that Elagabalus had become furious at what he saw as the corruption of his cousin. Elagabalus brought "[r]idiculous charges against them [the teachers], that they were corrupting his adopted son by not teaching allowing him him to dance prudence dcv8pa)v 8i8acKOVX£C] . "104 statements embodied 103 104 is was Hdn. v.7.5. Hdn. v.7.6. the go in [aa>(j)povi£ovxec] and At the insinuation contrary or to what heart that the a frenzy, manly of both but arts [xoc of these what Elagabalus Romans considered masculine, and it would be through Alexander that the throne would return to the ideal of first man of Rome. The Historia Augusta between Elagabalus clothing Elagabalus as a especially the act emphasized woman and in of the difference Alexander, describing comparison.105 cross-dressing, in Clothing, was a powerful image of gender corruption - corruption that was thought to infect other aspects Alexander embodied the femininity in by authority existed decoration."106 Maesa and dress in Very Mamaea of rule antithesis declaring manliness simply, were imperial that well. Elagabalus' "the imperial [virtute], Herodian preparing of as was Alexander not saying to in that "act as Roman as possible"107 - for to be Roman was to be a man. Despite the immersion of Alexander into everything that was masculine, he failed to fully emerge as the idealized princeps. This was not, however, on account of Mamaea's assumption of the masculine into herself, but rather the 105 SHA, Heliogab. xxiii.3-5;xxvi.1-2; Alex. Sev. xl-xli;. For more on the idea of cross-dressing and transvestitism and their connection to femininity, see: Kuefler, The Manly Eunuch: Masculinity, Antiquity, 106 Gender Ambiguity, 55-61. and Christian Ideology in Late SHA, Alex. Sev. xxxiii.3. Robert L. Cleve, "Severus Alexander and the Severan Women" (Ph.D. diss., University of California, Los Angeles, 1982), 150. It should be noted, however, that Cleve fails to fully consider the underlying gendered tone of Herodian's wording. 107 137 perception that her own femininity continued to consume all that Alexander was and could have been. Roman boys, mother Alexander until he was was under old the enough Like all tutelage to of take on his the paterfamilias. responsibilities of manhood and become a However, Herodian claimed that Alexander never achieved full manhood in the eyes of the Romans, because Mamaea's femininity had prevented it and forced him to remain forever a boy.108 Unlike Zosimus' account of Marcia, which cast Marcia in the light of replacing her own femininity with masculinity in order to bring order and stability to the state, the ancient historians painted Julia Mamaea as the ultimate feminine who, through her womanliness, brought the illusion of order until she was brought down by the army. The femininity clearly shown in Dio's of the account Severan of the women is battle most which brought on the end of Macrinus' reign and the beginning of Elagabalus' . Led by a eunuch named Gannys and the young Elagabalus, the forces under their command achieved victory through expectations. 108 Hdn. vi.9.5. the reinforcement of In his retelling, Dio records: gendered 138 Now in the battle Gannys made haste to occupy the pass in front of the village and skillfully positioned his troops, despite the fact he was without military experience and had lived in luxury. But fortune is of such great help in all things that it shows favor to the ignorant. However, his army made a weak fight, and if Maesa and Soaemias (for they were with the boy) had not leapt down from their chariots and into the fleeing men restraining them from further flight with their lamentations, and had not the boy drawing a sword, the one girded to his side, been seen by them on his horse about to charge the enemy in a maneuver that seemed divinely inspired, they would not have stood their ground. Even so they would have turned back, if Macrinus had not fled after seeing them offer resistance.109 Mamaea does not figure prominently in this story, but she may have been present since she was part of the conspiracy to overthrow Macrinus which set together out from the camp shortly before.110 In this account, three aspects deserve special attention: first, the leader of Elagabalus' army was a eunuch; second, the Severan women halted the retreat through their lamentations; and third, Elagabalus, still a boy, rallied his troops by displaying the actions of a manly general. 109 Cass. Dio lxxix.38.3-4. This is evident by the fact that Macrinus had the Senate condemn not only Elagabalus, his mother Julia Soaemias and grandmother Julia Maesa, but also Alexander Severus and his mother Julia Mamaea (Cass. Dio lxxix.38.1); see also: Cleve, "Severus Alexander and the Severan Women", 102-03. 110 Eunuchs, gender but division because of of of their biological gender rejection sex, within Roman of not demonstrated society 139 only that was concretely defined as only male and female. the not as No longer men, and certainly not women, eunuchs were a category of "other."111 to a In Roman culture, the castration of a man led loss of "virility masculinity."112 [av8peioc] , In relation role in the battle described expected gendered sphere. in a moral and which is to say, to Dio's account, Gannys' above was outside of his Since he was "[ujnmanly both anatomical sense,"113 Dio could not attribute true masculine qualities to the eunuch. good fortune Even [xvjcn] could not ascribe true manliness to the eunuch's efforts in battle, and only the intervention of the Severan women kept the army from fleeing after Gannys had made a weak fight and failed to turn the tide in favor of Elagabalus.114 For Dio, false masculinity had failed and only the proper exercise of traditional gender roles would ensure the safety and survival of the Empire. 111 Kuefler, The Manly Eunuch: Masculinity, Christian Ideology in Late Antiquity, 32. 112 Gender Ambiguity, and Ibid, quoting from Oribasius, Collectio medica 22.2.14. Ibid., 35. 114 For more on the concept of masculinity and military life (vita militaris) see my first chapter and: Ibid., 37ff & 275ff. 113 The second and t h i r d connected. At the battle, masculine presence. had only women. one there chariots of the affirmation imperial that and the Severan restrained that definitive the the of t h e i r womanly but rather contrast to sources, Elagabalus instance, men Severan leapt through rather how through own f e m i n i n i t y . emotion. 1 1 5 but would be women This womanly he would mounted h i s expected from Dio a t t r i b u t e d the the be horse first victory turn the - an not the natural expression manly persuasion. later their The Severan women tears was from assertion Maesa and Soaemias h e l p e d battle, (avSpsioc) , 115 no connection, h e l d back t h e s o l d i e r s with t h e i r as was account I t was not through t h e u n n a t u r a l of m a s c u l i n i t y of Dio's Led by a eunuch and a boy, t h e army other presence lamentations. tide of I t was a t t h e moment when t h e army most needed a masculine their aspects 140 are In portrayed courage complete in the and exuded dcvSpeia man. of So i n Elagabalus this and For more on t h e concepts of gender and emotional r e s t r a i n t , s e e : P e t e r R.L. Brown, The Body and Society: Men, Women and Sexual Renunciation in Early Christianity (New York: Columbia U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s , 1988), 12ff; Robert A. R a s t e r , Emotion, Restraint, and Community in Ancient Rome (Oxford & New York: Oxford U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s , 2005); Hans van Wees, "A Brief H i s t o r y of T e a r s : Gender D i f f e r e n t i a t i o n in Archaic G r e e c e , " i n When Men Were Men: Masculinity, Power and Identity in Classical Antiquity, ed. Lin Foxhall and John Salmon (New York: Routledge, 1998). his forces to the traditional assertion of gender roles within Roman therefore society. a Dio was staunch a strict moralist supporter of an and established construction of gender identity and division within Roman society.116 Because of his aversion to the confusion of gender roles, Dio included the role of the Severan women and Elagabalus within his History. It was not with reluctance that Dio recorded the actions of those at the battle,117 but rather this story conveyed precisely what Dio had intended - women as feminine and men as masculine is what proper brings roles order of the and stability Severan women to and society. Elagabalus The were emphasized and praised, as the cowardice of Macrinus was scorned. Even Edward Gibbon recognized the gendered nature of Dio's account: Antoninus [Elagabalus] himself, who, in the rest of his life, never acted like a man, in this important crisis of his fate approved himself a hero, mounted his horse, and, at the head of his rallied troops, charged sword in hand among the thickest of enemy; whilst the eunuch Gannys, whose occupations had been confined to female cares and the soft luxury of Asia, displayed the talents of an able and 116 See: Cleve, "Severus Alexander and the Severan Women", 102ff; Fergus Millar, A Study of Cassius Dio (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1964). 117 As Robert Cleve implies in Cleve, "Severus Alexander and the Severan Women", 102. 142 experienced general... Macrinus might have obtained the victory, had he not betrayed his own cause by a shameful and precipitate flight. His cowardice served only to protract his life a few days, and to stamp deserved ignominy on his misfortunes.118 Here, for one brief moment of Elagabalus' performance in the spotlight, he stood out as the masculine representation of the princeps; the embodiment of first man, leading the army to victory against a usurper who had shown his true cowardly nature in the face of Roman manliness. This picture of Elagabalus was short-lived, however, as even Dio referred to him almost immediately after as the "False Antoninus."119 In returned masculine the end, peace to Rome, not by the and harmony through the were temporarily assumption feminine, as with Marcia, but affirmation of the traditional of the rather through the order of things. Alexander's reign which followed Elagabalus' as a return again to natural order, was ended as well on account Mamaea's of misaligned femininity, encouraged, was, in gendered which the the end, boundaries. ancients seen as the Julia admired and reason for Edward Gibbon, The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, 3 vols. (New York: Everyman's Library, 1993 [Orig. 1776-1788]), Vol I, 160. 119 Cass. Dio, lxxx. 143 As noted above, Alexander's downfall by the historians. it was Mamaea's brought about feminine dominance his assassination over Alexander by the army. that As an admirer of Alexander, Herodian had to explain why such a contrast to Elagabalus would have been overthrown by the army, and his answer explicitly condemned the emperor's mother, who, through stunted the emperor's her womanly ability influence to fully and power, exercise his on either the Marcia or masculine role as first man.120 Tacitus actions or was not perceived able to comment masculinity of Julia Mamaea, because he had died in the early second century. A Tacitean interpretation of Marcia and Julia Mamaea can be asserted, however, in the light of Tacitus' summation of Poppaea. All three women conducted themselves in a manner contrary to the Roman understanding of gender. By taking on the role of ruler through their influence over Nero, Mamaea Commodus, each made and Alexander, women out of Poppaea, their men. Marcia, The and three emperors were feminine because each allowed himself to be dominated by a woman - a dux explored 120 this concept Hdn. vi.8.3; vi.9.5; femina. Francesca in Tactius' Annals L'Hoir demonstrating Tacitus' linguistic skills in asserting that the women of the Julio-Claudian emperors appropriated masculine power for themselves dux femina strictly This to masculine {femina),122 of dux, and against good of gender association.121 naturalness term over emphasize power of the order and the Tacitus used the usurpation {dux) leader of by a the woman thereby attributing femininity to the concept femina.123 while at the same time masculinity to was an especially preposterous Tacitus' Roman readers, since dux concept; she was more for would, in most cases, refer to a male military commander. monstrous construction A dux than just femina was a a masculine woman, "she was an aberration—an unnatural woman."124 Much like Zosimus on Marcia, and Dio and Herodian on the Severan women, Tacitus interpreted Poppaea's life and actions in gendered political words history in terms of Rome. connection with within The his narrative selection explicit of social on the specific concepts illuminates the understanding of traditional gender norms within 121 122 123 124 the Roman Empire. Furthermore, the L ' H o i r , " T a c i t u s and Women's U s u r p a t i o n of P o w e r , " 2 5 . I b i d . : 6. I b i d . : 8. Ibid. : 23. use of 145 gendered words also conveys an understanding of ancient forms of political commentary. Tacitus' overemphasis on the lifestyle of Nero conjures images of tyrants past, confining example the of emperor to unprecedented Poppaea, Marcia, emperors is well and be forever tyranny. Mamaea documented The upon and remembered as an influence of their provides respective an excellent source for examining the use of gendered terms used by the Roman historians for the purpose of asserting and defending the construction of gender in the Empire. Power and Boundaries: Gender and the Ability to Influence Imperial Policy Poppaea, Marcia, their limitations and while Mamaea exuding were able a great to deal observe of power over their respective emperors. The histories of these three are women are what they because of the interpretation of their actions by later male historians. Poppaea, Marcia, and Mamaea's influence necessitated an explanation by historians as to how an emperor could be so easily coerced by a mere woman. Was the susceptibility of the emperors to these women's counsel a cause of or reaction to these women? And what can be 146 further said concerning the perceptions of incompetence, instability, and moral depravity associated with Nero and Commodus in this regard? Alexander proves to be an exceptional case, since he is portrayed in the sources as the polar opposite of morally depraved emperors such as his cousin Elagabalus. However, as will be explored below, Dio's personal beliefs and account of the Severan women reveal how Romans attempted to explain what they saw as an aberration of expected gender roles. There is no doubt among the sources that Nero was infatuated with Poppaea and allowed her certain liberties as well as influence because of his love for her and her beauty. Attention to beauty looms large in descriptions of Poppaea. Her beauty was so well known that she was credited with introducing the practice of bathing in milk to stave off wrinkles,125 and even a style of cosmetics was later termed "Poppaean. "126 wherever she went127 and her Extravagance followed her obsession with physical appearance was so great that after looking in the mirror 125 J u v . , v i . 4 62. Cass. Dio, l x i i . 2 8 . 1 ; P l i n . , HN x x v i i i . 1 8 3 . 127 Two sources c i t e t h a t she had shoes of gold made for t h e mules t h a t drew h e r : C a s s . Dio, l x i i . 2 8 . 1 ; P l i n . , ffl x x x . 1 4 . 126 147 128 one day, she prayed for death before her beauty faded. Her second husband, Marcus Salvius Otho, was said to have gained fame and prestige only through such a beautiful and dignified woman.129 his marriage to On account of her beauty and intrigue, she quickly caught the eye of Nero. With her beauty and Nero's love, Poppaea was able to manipulate her husband into acquiring what suited her. Her sway over Nero impacted both the Jews and Christians during times that threatened Empire. Poppaea their emerges as the standing within the first empress to have influenced imperial policies toward Christianity, albeit not always community. in the best interests of the Christian An interpretation of the sources on Poppaea through the lens of Rome's conception of gender elicits important information not only on how and why Poppaea did what she did, but also on the complexity of how she is remembered by the historians who wrote on her activities and motivations. The imagery evoked by the characterizations of Poppaea Sabina creates a dichotomy of interpretation of 128 129 Cass. Dio, l x i i . 2 8 . 1 ; T a c , Ann. x i i i . 4 5 . P l u t . , Galb. x i x . 2 . who Poppaea these actually images perception capable of were was and created. Poppaea of adding that to what On one connotes or preserving purpose side there positive some some is a qualities integrity reign of Nero; to this end, the accounts of to the of Josephus, Plutarch, and, to some degree, Tacitus agree. The other side of the debate conjures images of a woman destined to dominate her feminine intrigue gender roles; husband and through Dio demonstrate the Cassius her overthrow and Tacitus of cruelty and traditional emerge as the vain and staunchest purveyors of this thinking. Dio selfish painted woman a picture obsessed of with Poppaea her own as a beauty.130 In addition, Dio recounted that Poppaea was responsible for Nero's murder of his mother, Agrippina: "Sabina on learning of this persuaded Nero to get rid of his mother, alleging that she was plotting against him."131 The "this" to which Dio refers, is mentioned in the previous paragraph about Agrippina: As if it were not enough that there were stories that she [Agrippina] had seduced her uncle Claudius with her trickery, licentiousness, glances, and kisses, she then 130 131 Cass. Dio l x i i . 2 8 . 1 . Cass. Dio l x i i . 1 2 . 1 . 149 applied her efforts to enslaving Nero in a similar way. Whether this indeed truly happened or whether to fit her character it was invented, I do not know; but I say what everyone is saying, that Nero had a mistress who looked like Agrippina of whom he was very affectionate, and when he played with her and showed her off, he would say that he wanted intercourse with his mother.132 Connecting these two passages from Dio, one can decipher the underlying theme of the Hellenic interpretation of gender norms. Dio not only drew attention to Poppaea's ability to emasculate Nero by imposing her own masculine nature to {dux lead femina), but he also emphasized Nero's failure as a leader by adding the sexual taboo of incest to Nero's crimes. Under Roman incest was a grave moral sin [nefas] law and .133 custom, Nero was guilty of this immorality and therefore outside the law of the gods and man. Dio Nero. attributed After the further death nefarious of sexual Poppaea, Nero deeds to was so distraught, that upon learning of a woman who resembled Poppaea, he sent for her and kept her by his side.134 This alone would not have aroused too much disgust among 132 Cass. Dio lxii.11.4 For a summary of incest within the laws of Roman marriage, see: Susan Treggiari, Roman Marriage: Iusti Coniuges from the Time of Cicero to the Time of Ulpian (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1991), esp. 37-39. 134 Cass. Dio lxii.28.2. 133 the public. However, after this woman, Nero 150 found a young boy who also resembled Poppaea in appearance, whom he called Sporus, and had him castrated and then treated "in every way like wife."135 a Dio highlighted the complexity of this "marriage," pointing out that Nero was at the time also "married" to a man named Pythagoras, who performed the role of husband to the emperor while Sporus was to be the replacement for Nero's wife.136 Nero's very public display of his homosexuality - going so far as to perform marriage ceremonies - conveyed the servility of the emperor, associated princeps. with rather the than vita the militaris virility and the and ocv8peia office of The accounts of Commodus and Elagabalus over a century later further elucidated the problems of such a lifestyle for an emperor. Dio used Nero's sexual practices as evidence of the emperor's inability to rule as a man should rule - he was dominated by women, and his sexual appetite was beyond what 135 136 was expected and Cass. Dio l x i i . 2 8 . 2 - 3 . Cass. Dio l x i i . 1 3 . 1 - 2 . lawful for a virile (masculine) man. The public displays of Nero's lack of masculinity connected to his debaucherous lifestyle demonstrated to the populace that Nero was allowing his personal pleasures to spill out over his public responsibilities, including a duty to exude the qualities of a just and sensible ruler. Much as in the case of Commodus explored above, Nero's failure to assuage the public's fear of an emasculated emperor under the power of his mother or wife only accelerated his removal from the throne. Tacitus, however, while also harsh on the memories of both Nero and Poppaea, had a slightly alternate interpretation of the legacy of Nero. Annals The description of Poppaea found in Tacitus' demonstrates the two sides of the empress in a very succinct manner: She was a woman of all advantages except an honest spirit. As one might expect, her mother, surpassing all the beautiful women of her day, had given her equal fame and looks; her wealth to the distinction of her birth. Her conversation was courteous, her nature not harsh: she paraded modesty and enjoyed playfulness; she rarely went out in public, and then with her face partly covered, so as not to satisfy the one looking, or rather because it was so becoming of her. She never used her As will be elaborated upon further below, Tacitus held that a man under the power of a woman was devoid of any masculinity. For more on this, see: L'Hoir, "Tacitus and Women's Usurpation of Power." 152 fame sparingly, she did not distinguish between husbands and adulterers; but not vulnerable to her own or another's faults, where profit was present, there she transferred her desire.138 Tacitus' account of the two sides of Poppaea's character is unique. The other accounts mentioning her are either exclusively negative lifestyle, influence, or positive about or actions. her In this character, account of Poppaea, Tacitus balanced each quality behavior with its opposite. In his examination of Otho's usurpation of the throne during "Year of the Four Emperors,"139 Tacitus said that astrologers had convinced Otho the stars were in his favor to rebel and take the throne from Galba.140 Tacitus described the astrologers as "a race of men untrustworthy by the powerful, deceitful to the hopeful, who in our state will Immediately always be forbidden and after Tacitus' condemnation restrained."141 of astrologers, he associated Poppaea with the same group that had urged 1J8 Tac, Ann. xm.45. 139 Upon the death of Nero in 68: Galba (Jun 68 - Jan 69), Otho (Jan 69 - Apr 69), Vitellius (Apr 69 - Dec 69), and Vespasian (69 - 79). 140 141 Tac, Hist. 1.22. T a c , Hist. 1.22; for more on astrology within Rome, see: Frederick H. Cramer, Astrology m Roman Law and Politics (Philadelphia, PA: American Philosophical Society, 1954); Ramsay MacMullen, Enemies of the Roman Order: Treason, Unrest, and Alienation m the Empire (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1966), esp. ch. 4. 153 Otho to act: "Many of these astrologers, the worst tools for an imperial plans..."142 behavior memory in spouse, supported Poppaea's secret After commenting earlier on Poppaea' s deviant (as he saw association it) , Tacitus with not then only resurrected the her untrustworthy advisors, the astrologers, but also of Otho. The main purpose of this passage may well have been an attempt to kill four birds with one stone. Tacitus presented Otho in a negative light because of his affiliation with the astrologers, whom he tagged as un-Roman. Associated with these un-Roman astrologers was also Poppaea, who was the wife Nero. and feminine influence first over Otho and then In one swift motion, Tacitus subtly laid the claim that Otho, Nero, Poppaea and the astrologers were all unRoman: the astrologers because of their foreignness and deceit; Poppaea because of her association with them as well as her usurpation of masculine authority (which he had condemned earlier); Otho because of his association with the astrologers as well, and his association with Poppaea; and Nero, because of his emasculation by Poppaea. This apparent side comment unfolds into a much broader condemnation of Nero, Poppaea and Otho as unRoman 142 Tac. , Hist. i.22. 154 because of their associations with things which Tacitus argued were completely importantly, the unRoman upsetting - of astrology and more traditional gendered of the historians to write boundaries. Josephus, the earliest about Poppaea, compliments historian of was the mentioned by far the empress. the most The favor of generous in first-century Nero that his Jewish Poppaea enjoyed in addition to her use of influence to benefit the Jewish people. In his Life, Josephus told the story of Jewish priests who had built a wall onto the Temple in order to obscure King Agrippa' s view into the interior. After ignoring priests, a command including to disassemble Josephus, were sent procurator Felix to appear before Nero. "Through him [Aliturus]143 the wall, the to Rome by the Josephus wrote: I was introduced to Poppaea, Caesar's wife, and I took the earliest opportunity to ask her to free the priests. Having received large gifts from Poppaea in addition to this favor, I returned to my own country."144 143 The relationship between Josephus and A Jewish actor whom Josephus had befriended in Puteoli, and who was a favorite of Nero. He is mentioned just before the meeting between Poppaea and Josephus. 144 Josephus, Vit. 16. Poppaea story is much in his clearer Jewish in Josephus' Antiquities: retelling "Nero, of the after the hearing, not only agreed with what they [the priests] had done, but also agreed to leave the building as it was. This was done for his wife Poppaea, who was a worshipper of God Jews."145 [GeoaePtig] and requested these favors for the How does 9eooepSi<; fit into the understanding the relationship between Poppaea and Josephus (or all Jews)? The interpretation of Poppaea's motivation for assisting Josephus during his visit to Rome hangs on the translation of OEOOEPTIC. ©eoaePr^ is a compound word: the combination of Qeoc, (god) and ae|3o|i(xi (feel awe; worship) . Most literally, Beoaepric; means: worshipper of a god or very religious, but the interpretation of BeoaePtiQ may go beyond its literal translation.146 Because of Poppaea's apparent relationship to Josephus and the Jews in this passage, it would not be irrational to conclude that Poppaea was a Jewish proselyte, and to translate GeoaeP^ as such. 145 Josephus, AJ xx. 195. The authors of the three major translations of Josephus' Antiquities all translate Qzoatfiryc, differently: William Whiston, ed., The Works of Josephus, 16th ed. (Peabody, MA: Hendrickson Publishers, Inc., 1987): "a religious woman"; Louis H. Feldman, ed., 146 Josephus: Jewish Antiquities, Books Xviii-Xx, vol. 433, Lcl (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1965) : "worshipper of God"; Paul L. Maier, ed., Josephus: The Essential Writings (Grand Rapids, MI: Kregel Publications, 1988): "sympathetic to the Jews." However, GeooePriq by i t s e l f has n o t h i n g t o do with Judaism or t h e Jewish God; i t was a word used t o d e s c r i b e anyone who was i n any s e n s e devout or r e l i g i o u s . 1 4 7 In f a c t , if Josephus had wanted t o emphasize t h e s t a t u s of Poppaea as a proselyte have or even a God-Fearer, used God). 1 4 8 the term, he would most (|)o3o'U|U£VOi TOV Geov Placed w i t h i n i t s context (those likely who of t h e o t h e r fear account of Josephus as w e l l as o t h e r Roman h i s t o r i e s , however, is more probable sympathizer: teaching of she that Poppaea recognized monotheism, was and in fact appreciated although she was it a Jewish the Jewish not a Jewish proselyte.149 One could certainly argue that Poppaea was s y m p a t h e t i c t o t h e Jews only because of h e r fondness Josephus, acquainted. as a Jewish 147 with whom she had just recently for become And p e r h a p s Josephus merely i n s e r t e d 0eocepT|c; compliment to priests from a religious prison. woman who helped Her possible save affiliation For a very h e l p f u l summary on t h e use of Geooepiiq, s e e : Louis H. Feldman, "Jewish ' S y m p a t h i z e r s ' i n C l a s s i c a l L i t e r a t u r e and I n s c r i p t i o n s , " TAPA 81 (1950). I t s only use i n t h e C h r i s t i a n S c r i p t u r e s i s i n John 9 : 3 1 , as a g e n e r i c r e f e r e n c e t o t h o s e who worship or c a l l upon God. 148 As used i n Acts 13:16 & 26. 149 A p r o s e l y t e would have been a G e n t i l e who a t t e n d e d synagogue and p r a c t i c e d t h e Jewish f a i t h . Poppaea's b u r i a l wishes i n T a c , Ann. x v i . 6 c o n t r a d i c t t h e wishes of a follower of Judaism. with Judaism, regardless however, of what does her not alter motivations the were, influence shielded Jews from imperial harm. wished to or not, Poppaea became fact 157 that Poppaea's Whether she a protectress of the Jewish people - at least in the eyes of Josephus. Alongside Josephus, Plutarch also supported the perception of Poppaea as a woman with positive influence and intentions. Plutarch was the second earliest historian who wrote directly about Poppaea and had little in words to say of Poppaea's character. concentrated his short biography of While Josephus Poppaea on her ability to add dignity and justice to the reign of her husband, Plutarch's account presents Poppaea both as a woman capable of using her beauty to her advantage, and also as a victim of imperial masculine behavior over and against her more temperate character. Plutarch described Poppaea's second husband, Otho, as a man corrupted by luxury and the pursuit of pleasure, whose only marriage.150 150 great attribute was Poppaea's hand in In his account of Galba, Plutarch detailed Plut., Galb. xix.2. By the time that Plutarch is describing, Poppaea and Crispinus had already been divorced and Poppaea was already dead. On Otho's less than reputable behavior, see also: T a c , Hist, i.13; Cass. Dio lxii.ll. 158 what he saw as the moral corruption within the relationship between Nero, Otho, and Poppaea: Nero was in love with Poppaea while she was still with Crispinus, but since he respected his wife and feared his mother, he used Otho to make advances toward her.... But at any rate Otho first seduced Poppaea himself and corrupted her with hopes of Nero's love, and convinced her to leave her husband. However, after she had become his wife, he was not pleased to share her, and was unwilling to give Nero a share, but Poppaea herself was not grieved, they say, at their rivalry. For she would shut out Nero, it is said, even in the absence of Otho, either to keep his pleasure in her from fading away, or, as some say, she did not want to be weighed down in marriage to the Emperor, but was not against being his lover, out of pure sexual indulgence.151 In this short passage, Nero and Otho were the actors upon Poppaea. It was not until she was corrupted by the circumstances that Poppaea engaged in any actions of her own. In product Plutarch's of malleable her and account, environment easily - molded Poppaea her was feminine into a very much nature a was disreputable personality on account of the men involved. Even if one takes Plutarch's insinuation of Poppaea's feminine naivete into mind, there is confusion over the proper attribution of masculine and feminine in 151 Plut., Galb. xix.2, 4-5. the relationship between Nero and Poppaea. 159 In Plutarch's account, Nero was a sort of conglomeration of feminine and masculine qualities. He pursued and conquered his desire, Poppaea, although she first married Otho, carried on a sexual affair and then eventually married Nero. Yet at his the same mother. time, Nero was under the control of He feared the wrath and displeasure his mother would afflict upon him if he should divorce Octavia and marry Poppaea. Shortly thereafter, during their affair, Nero fell under the power of Poppaea, who convinced him to kill his mother and divorce Octavia, after which, they were wed twelve days after his divorce.152 wife, Poppaea continued to dominate Nero.153 not appear to have been emperor after all. a helpless victim While his Poppaea does of a manly Based solely on Plutarch's account, Poppaea emerges as a woman who feigned feminine fragility in the face of two feminine men, and once victorious in her marriage to the emperor, reasserted her own manlyfemininity in order to attain what she wished through the 152 For a deeper understanding on the motivations of Nero in his relationship with his mother, Poppaea and others during this time, see: Robert S. Rogers, "Heirs and Rivals to Nero," TAPA 86 (1955). 153 T a c , Ann. xiv. 60-61, 63-65; xv.61. 160 power of Tacitus' the emperor - or so one could assert from Annals: And Poppaea received access [to Nero] first by flattering words and cunning, pretending that she was too weak to resist her passion and had been captured by Nero's beauty; then as Nero's love grew strong, turning to arrogance.154 Whether the sources on Poppaea agreed or disagreed on her character, they most certainly agreed on her ability to influence Nero in his imperial duties. Of everything Nero, the event that transpired that had the during greatest the reign of impact upon Christianity was the Great Fire of Rome in 64. The blame attributed questions to the Christian movement invites about the possible involvement of Poppaea because of her close affiliation with Judaism. caught fire. In 64, the city of Rome The sources that mention the Fire of Rome vary on the extent of the fire's damage; nevertheless, the fire was severe enough to render many homeless and to rouse the action.155 minority T a c , Ann. T a c , Ann. population In sect the of to end, call Nero Judaism upon placed called xiii.46. xv.38-41; Cass. Dio lxii.16-18. the the emperor blame for upon Christians, a and thenceforth, Christians have made use of the 161 term "Neronian P e r s e c u t i o n . " Although Poppaea was never implicated by the sources in any sort of connection to t h i s i n c i d e n t , i s i t at a l l inconceivable t h a t a woman with at l e a s t some f a m i l i a r i t y with Judaism 156 sect to against Nero could in his have mentioned quest to blaming the emperor? persuade the populace capable of such an If Poppaea's i n t e r e s t was deep enough, she no doubt knew of the d i f f e r e n t friendship with parties Josephus might within have toward the p a r t y of the Pharisees. 1 5 7 it irreconcilable The Poppaea who emerges from the sources was a woman fully act. an was through Poppaea's influence Judaism, inclined and her her more On the other hand, that Nero Gessius Florus as Procurator of Judaea in 64. 158 appointed Florus' corruption and lawless exercise of power pushed the Jews The Great F i r e o c c u r r e d i n t h e same year as J o s e p h u s ' v i s i t t o Rome. H. S t . J . Thackeray, i n h i s Loeb t r a n s l a t i o n of Josephus' Vita, p l a c e s t h e v i s i t of Josephus t o Rome i n 61, r a t h e r than 64. The year 61 i s u n l i k e l y , however, s i n c e Josephus mentioned t h a t he had j u s t t u r n e d t w e n t y - s e v e n , which would be 64, s i n c e h i s b i r t h was i n 37. Furthermore, i n r e c o u n t i n g of t h e v i s i t i n Vita 16, Josephus c a l l e d Poppaea t h e wife (yuvoaia) of Nero, which was not t h e case u n t i l 62. 157 The s e c t of which Josephus was a member. The P h a r i s e e s were not on t h e b e s t of terms with e i t h e r t h e Sadducees or t h e C h r i s t i a n s (Nazarenes). 158 Josephus, AJ xx. 252. to revolt in 66. Antiquities, his Poppaea 162 According to Josephus' timeline in 159 this had met and event helped occurred shortly Josephus. This after being the case, Poppaea was either ignorant of Florus' incompetence and greed, people and or he their truly did relations not with understand the the Empire. Jewish Perhaps Josephus' attribution of BeooepT^ upon Poppaea was more on account of her immediate action of assisting the Jews because of her new friendship with Josephus, rather than on her understanding of and adherence to Judaism. While it is inconclusive whether Poppaea assisted the Jews on account of her friendship with Josephus or her own personal religious convictions, it is irrefutable that her freedom direct of the intervention priests in and integrity of the Jewish Temple. the the case ensured protection of the the Josephus' summation of Poppaea was no doubt heavily colored by his own short and personal experience with her in this particular incident. Of all empress, 159 those who Josephus recorded seems to the be life and deeds the only one of the who had Josephus, AJ xx.252; Josephus, BJ ii. 277-283; T a c , Hist. v.10. 163 a c t u a l l y met h e r i n t h e f l e s h . t o mention Poppaea's deviant T a c i t u s was t h e behavior and t h e first first 160 to c a s t h e r i n t h e mold of a woman o b s e s s e d w i t h power and c a p a b l e of continuing the unnatural after his mother's death.161 of Poppaea as a e x p l a i n e d by h i s usurper dominance over This gendered can, of interpretation course, s u b t l e polemic a g a i n s t Nero be easily the exercise of l e g i t i m a t e m a s c u l i n e a u t h o r i t y by a woman. Marcia s t a n d s out among some of t h e o t h e r women in churchmen least one Haeresium, this in study Rome i s reliable because her connection documented with source. Hippolytus In mentioned his Christian to specificity Refutatio Marcia actual in at Omnium in his condemnation of C a l l i s t u s : But a f t e r a t i m e , t h e r e b e i n g i n t h a t p l a c e [ S a r d i n i a ] o t h e r m a r t y r s , Marcia, b e i n g a Godl o v i n g woman and a concubine of Commodus, and having wished t o do some good work, summoned b e f o r e h e r t h e b l e s s e d V i c t o r , who was a b i s h o p of t h e Church a t t h a t t i m e , and asked him what m a r t y r s were i n Sardinia;... Then Marcia, having o b t a i n e d h e r r e q u e s t from Commodus, gave t h e l e t t e r of freedom t o a c e r t a i n H y a c i n t h u s , an e l d e r l y eunuch. 1 6 2 160 Of a l l t h o s e who wrote on or merely r e f e r e n c e d Poppaea, T a c i t u s i s t h e f o u r t h t o d e s c r i b e her i n such a manner. Those who wrote b e f o r e him were: P l i n . , HN x x v i i i . 1 8 3 ; xxx.140, Josephus, AJ x x . 1 9 5 ; Vit. x v i , and P l u t . , Galb. x i x . 2 - 5 . 161 And even b e f o r e , as Dio claimed she was t h e one who encouraged t h e a s s a s s i n a t i o n of A g r i p p i n a . 162 H i p p o l . , Haer. i x . 1 2 . 1 0 - 1 1 . According to Hippolytus, not only did Marcia summon the Bishop of Rome for a personal visit, but she also used her influence over the emperor to secure the release of Christian prisoners in Sardinia. This passage raises two important questions: First, what was the likelihood that a woman in an intimate relationship with the emperor could call upon and meet the leader of a minor religious sect; and second, would Marcia have been able to convince Commodus to grant her wish of freeing the prisoners from Sardinia? The first question can be placed into the context of Marcia's legal and social status examined above. enjoyed close immense influence association emperor who may with have and power Commodus. been in by Women contact Marcia virtue of her close to the with Christian leaders before the fourth century are not improbable, and the third century provides another important example for this study. During the reign of Alexander Severus (222- 235) , Origen is said to have met with the empress Julia Mamaea,163 and perhaps 163 Euseb., Hist. eccl. around the same time, Hippolytus vi.21.3. corresponded with "a certain queen." 164 empress, Marcia, as a concubine, did not command political power. 165 an Unlike automatically Much like the case of Domitilla examined in the previous chapter, Marcia remained outside the political sphere and was therefore freer to engage in activities which would have placed men in the same situation into serious jeopardy. The answer influencing to whether Commodus' deconstructing sources. the Some interpretation while as others language of of are will the can and was be tone sources Marcia's not. Marcia inferred in are the the image in with of of by available kind relationship While capable their Commodus Marcia as manipulative or controlling comes through in some degree in nearly completely described 164 all the sources, the smitten Marcia with as her fact that Commodus was is Commodus' prominent. "favorite,"165 Herodian and Dio For more on this, see my discussion below, as well as: Brown, The Body and Society: Men, Women and Sexual Renunciation in Early Christianity, 151f; Christian K.J. von Bunsen, Hippolytus and His Age, 2 vols. (London: Longman, Brown, Green, and Longmans, 1854), 276. 165 Hdn., i.4. 166 claimed that because of Commodus' love for her, she was able to do anything she wanted.166 Some of the sources gave unflattering for Commodus' love for Marcia, who explanations showered him with flattery167 and vulgar sexual attraction168 which allowed her to gain control of his mind.169 In all, the sources are in general agreement that Marcia was able to use her beauty, charm, and position as concubine to influence and direct the attentions of the emperor, much in the same way Poppaea had done in the previous century. Dio gave an example of how Marcia used her power: "The tradition is that she was a supporter of the Christians and did many good things for them."170 over Commodus and affection These attributions of sway for Christianity lend credence to the opportunity for Marcia to act on behalf of the Christian community in Rome. As maintain concubine to contact with the the emperor, Bishop Marcia of Rome was able and use to her status and gender to position herself as protectress of 166 C a s s . D i o , l x x i i i . 4 . 7 : "...axe icai 7tapa tw Ko|U|u6§a> Ttav 8woc|a.evTi." Commodus' passion for Marcia is also mentioned in SHA, Comm. xi.9. 167 SHA, Comm. v i i i . 6 . 168 169 170 Epit. Epit. de Caes., de Caes., C a s s . Dio, xvii.5 xvii.5 lxxiii.4.7. 167 the Christian community there. her to maintain Commodus, through Christian Church a close which with she eyes Marcia's gender allowed sexual was and relationship able ears to with provide the within the deep recesses of the imperial government. Marcia's eyes and ears were used not only for the Church, however. Praetorian In Prefect, Commodus.171 192, Q. Marcia Aemilius conspired Laetus, the murdered Marcia proved to be influential not only for the benefit of helping her Christian for and with guiding the course of imperial friends, but also succession. In addition, with her success in securing the freedom of the Christian future prisoners in Pope Callistus patroness who used Sardinia, I, Marcia society's which acted included the in a role of a expectations of gender to protect a minority group.172 Marcia's patronage was not especially unique, given some early examples of female patrons in the first two 171 Cass. Dio, lxxiii.22.4-6; Epit. de Caes., xvii.5; SHA, Comm. xvii.1-2; Hdn., i.17.1-11; Zos., Historia Nova i.7. 172 Marcia's role is similar to later stories of Jewish women who used their gender to obtain the freedom of family and friends in Nazi Germany. See: Marion A. Kaplan, Between Dignity and Despair: Jewish Life in Nazi Germany (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1998). 168 centuries. 173 Her r o l e as p r o t e c t r e s s , however, was q u i t e unique and r a t h e r ironic. While the C h r i s t i a n maintained a s t r i c t l y male e c c l e s i a s t i c a l well as an understanding vessel," 1 7 4 the Roman protection of a woman qualities generally protector. The protection afforded the qualities woman by hierarchy, as the relied upon whom needed to they in a Rome woman with a benefited who as "weaker Christians associated Church q u a l i t i e s of a man.175 of church the assume masculine from the exhibited the The f a i l u r e of Commodus to exude Roman society expected of its princeps disrupted the gender hierarchy and forced a woman to take on male r e s p o n s i b i l i t i e s in p r o t e c t i n g the C h r i s t i a n s . Eusebius described the s t a t e of C h r i s t i a n i t y a t the beginning of the third century as a time "[w]hen 173 Some examples of e a r l y p a t r o n e s s e s of t h e C h r i s t i a n movement can be deduced from c o n t e x t , but t h e i r numbers p a l e i n comparison t o t h e t h i r d and f o u r t h c e n t u r i e s . I am i n c l u d i n g i n my l i s t women who opened t h e i r homes for t h e use as e a r l y c h u r c h e s . P o s s i b l e examples from t h e S c r i p t u r e s a r e : Lydia (Acts 1 6 ) ; Phoebe (Romans 1 6 ) ; P r i s c a (Romans 1 6 ) ; Chloe can be i n f e r r e d from 1 C o r i n t h i a n s 1:11; Nympha (Colossians 4 ) ; Apphia (Philemon 1 ) . 174 1 Peter 3:7. 175 Marion Kaplan makes a similar observation when she notes that women assumed masculine roles in their attempt to getting their husbands and fathers released from prison. The irony was that while the Nazis attempted to enforce strict gender guidelines for society they in turn disrupted the gender hierarchy of the Jews, forcing women to take on male responsibilities in protecting the home and family. Nazi See: Kaplan, Between Dignity Germany, esp. ch. 2. and Despair: Jewish Life in [Septimius] Severus was stirring up persecution the churches."176 By the reign against of Alexander Severus, beginning in 222, the relationship of the Church to the imperial government appears to have taken a turn for the better. During purported meeting and Mamaea. the reign between of the Alexander, Christian there writer was a Origen, Eusebius wrote: The emperor's mother, Mamaea by name, was a religious woman [Qeoae^eaxd%r\ yuvn] if ever there was one, and when Origen's fame had reached everywhere, including her own ears, she was eager to be honored with the sight of the man and to test his understanding of divine things which was the wonder of all. She was then staying in Antioch, and sent a military escort to bring him to her; he stayed with her for some time showing her many things for the glory of the Lord and the excellence of divine teaching, he then hurried back to his customary duties.177 Paulus reign Orosius, writing of Alexander, about wrote: two "his centuries after [Alexander's] the mother Mamaea, a Christian, made it her business to hear from the presbyter Origen."178 Despite Orosius' claim, it is unlikely that Mamaea was indeed a Christian. The term used possible by Eusebius, GeoaePeoxaxri, suggests interpretation of Mamaea's interest in Origen. 176 177 178 Euseb., Hist. eccl. vi. 1. Euseb., Hist. eccl. vi.21. Oros. , Historiae adversum paganos vii.18.7. a 170 Very similar to the term 0EOOEPTIC, which Josephus had used in describing understood within Poppaea, its Geoaepecrcaxri context. In can its be most best basic definition, the term has a generic connotation of being religious. It is not specifically Christian, in much the same way that GeooepTi? is not specifically Jewish in the context Orosius' of Poppaea claim that Sabina. Mamaea comment in his History the Christian movement. While was not as precise a Christian, as Eusebius' connected Mamaea more closely to In his recounting of the end of Alexander's reign, Eusebius wrote: After reigning thirteen years, the Roman emperor Alexander died and was succeeded by Maximinus. Hostile to the house of Alexander, since it consisted for the most part of believers, he started a persecution and ordered only the leaders of the church to be put to death as being responsible for the teaching of the Gospel.179 Alone, this comment by Eusebius would seem to imply some kind of preference for the Christian faith by Alexander and his mother. Lampridius brings Eusebius' account and his use of the term BeooePeoxdcxri into context. He writes that Alexander "respected the privileges of the Jews and 179 Euseb., Hist. eccl. vi.28. allowed the Christians Historia Augusta to exist 171 The unmolested."180 goes on to demonstrate that Alexander had an interest not only in Christianity, but in religion in general.181 the images "Christ, Alexander erected temples that contained of the Abraham, character."182 deified Orpheus, Because religion, Christianity position politically of Mamaea's in and others this general found itself under Alexander and Mamaea.183 interpret emperors the in addition of for through things all the a influence religious tolerance for of on purposes, Alexander, encouraged all far protective in better eye of This is perhaps the best way to practical image same interest the treatment Christianity during the reign of her son. was, the to beliefs, an running her including Since Mamaea the interest environment of of Empire in all relative Christianity and Judaism. 180 SHA, Alex. Sev. xxii.4. Some e x a m p l e s of C h r i s t i a n i t y ' s s t a t u s u n d e r A l e x a n d e r s e e : SHA, Alex. Sev. x x i i . 4 ; x x i x . 2 ; x l i i i . 6 - 7 ; x l v . 7 ; x l i x . 6 ; l i . 7 . 182 SHA, Alex. Sev. xxix.2. 183 SHA, Alex. Sev. xliii.6-7 explains that Alexander wished to build a temple to Christ, however, this does not mean Christianity held any kind of favored position, since Lampridius then mentions that Hadrian had wished to do the same; an emperor who is never connected to any devotion of Christian belief. 181 172 This idea of a relative tolerance for all beliefs may explain Julia Mamaea's meeting with Origen, as well as the vague certain queen reference to Hippolytus' [paoiA,i8a] . "184 letter "to The simplest explanation of the identity of this certain queen is Julia Mamaea. interest in Christianity, attention of writers. Severina this things religious, would one There is the also by Hippolytus unknown Severan historians to the diminutive form early carved has Severa garnered Church's of most a connected queen" would named imply the prolific letter into a marble been Her specifically, have a mention "certain of including undoubtedly of a to a slab, and by later above. The young girl, a rather than someone of Mamaea's age, and so one theory connects the Severus.185 two letters However, to this a daughter explanation of is Alexander needlessly complicated, and it is more likely that Julia Mamaea, who had already demonstrated an interest in Christianity would have been the intended recipient (whether actual or honorary) of Hippolytus' letter. The letter's content is an explanation of Christ's resurrection, and may be an 184 185 H i p p o l . , Sermonum Fragmenta i i i . Bunsen, Hippolytus and His Age, Vol I , 27 6. 173 Regardless answer to a question by the unknown Severina. of to whom the letter was intended, it serves as another possible example demonstrating that the Christians during Alexander's reign enjoyed the imperial throne. was markedly a peculiar relationship with The peace during this short period different from what they had experienced under either Septimius Severus beforehand, or Maximinus Thrax thereafter. surmised from The Mamaea's cause for interest this in change can religion, and be her influence over Alexander. Although spanning the course of three centuries, the accounts of women who physical Marcia, shared similarities beauty, individual motivations. Josephus, Victor, Poppaea, Poppaea, Marcia, in her Mamaea reveal three and differences in their character, personal through through and Mamaea, and her her and assistance assistance interest to to Bishop in Origen, became protectresses through the manipulation of gender roles in relation to their respective emperors. and Mamaea provided through whom stability Without the perceived stable and Poppaea, Marcia, examples order femininity could of be masculinity projected. of Nero and Commodus, which created an environment of uncertainty, Poppaea and Marcia would not have been able to assert their 174 own conveyance of masculinity into action on behalf the Jews and Christians as well as other issues in which they took interest. If not for Alexander's age, Julia Maraaea's ability to increase and maintain her power throughout his reign might have come to naught. women took advantage of their able the to manipulate religious careful However, because these circumstances, they were course of movements within the machinations within their events Empire, concerning through established the gendered boundaries. Gendered Legacies Across the Centuries: Conclusions Poppaea, Marcia, and Mamaea all had influence over their respective emperors, and all three took advantage of that privilege. the intentions of It is impossible to know for certain each of these women, especially regard to the survival of the Christian Church. in Poppaea and Mamaea were less connected to Judaism or Christianity than Marcia was to the Christian community in Rome, and yet each course of wielded influence Christian which history. greatly However, impacted the regardless of their religious intentions or motivations, 175 three all women demonstrated that the gendered boundaries of Roman culture could be utilized in a manner unnecessary for a man, yet profoundly profitable for a woman. Gendered language permeated Poppaea's actions and personality. the accounts about Mostly on account of Tacitus, who was the first to address Poppaea in great detail, Poppaea's portrait in the annals of history has been limited with the stigma of a usurper of masculine authority and a corrupter of good morals and good sense. Josephus' kindly portrayal of Poppaea as a benefactor and protectress of the Jewish people is a nice counterbalance to Tacitus, but it was, however, only a brief mention in a very long history. In addition, while Poppaea was indeed a protectress of the Jews, she was unlikely a Jew herself. Whatever one may wish to say about the personality or motivations of Poppaea, one can certainly not disregard her influence over Nero and her ability to push against the Roman understanding of gendered spaces. Poppaea wielded influence comparable to that of an imperial advisor without ever leaving the confines of an empress' palace. 176 Unlike influence Poppaea, Marcia imperial was policy. not able Instead, to change because of or her gender and Christianity, she was able to take advantage of her position and protect the Church without the use of imperial policy. Marcia's rank, gender, and personal abilities allowed her to circumvent the political process and take up community a in traditional role Rome as - protectress a understanding role of of which what was the Christian transcended the expected the of feminine within both Roman and Christian cultures, while also remaining well within those gendered boundaries. Marcia neither created nor violated any laws because it was not necessary. The uncertainty and instability connected with Commodus' reign created an environment in which Marcia fortunate could situation operate without for Church the impairment which - a resurfaced again, and to a much greater degree, in the midst of the Third Century Crisis. Just before the Empire was plunged into that crisis, the Severan women demonstrated that ideas of gendered boundaries could be blurred in the face of an unexpected and unwanted emasculation of the first man. blatant disregard for what Romans Elagabalus' considered masculine behavior for the princeps cost him his life, and 177 on account of the maneuverings of his grandmother and aunt, provided the way for his antithesis to ascend the throne. With high hopes for Alexander the boy to become Alexander the man, the maturation Mamaea. as army they and Senate tolerated the eagerly rule awaited of his his mother, In the end, Mamaea found herself as not only a protectress of religious tolerance, but also of her own son. Given the accepted division of gender culture, however, her role as protectress in Roman of Alexander was short lived because her control had failed to allow his ascendancy into manhood in the eyes of the army. The end the of the Severans Church as well, became more proved as the stringent to be problematic laxity in the of later religious part of for regulation the third century. As seen in the previous chapter in the examples of Pomponia Graecina and Domitilla, stability, or the threat of its undoing, was a powerful impetus in enforcing or countermanding the understood roles of each gender within Greco-Roman society. In the case of Poppaea, the Empire was still new and had emerged from the stable rule of Claudius, whose predecessor had disrupted constancy and 178 reveled in Because rule, of men extravagance, Claudius' and constructed immorality, return women to dignified conformed conceptions of cruelty.186 and and to their gender. The durable sociallylack of volatility brought no need for a woman to break free of her mold of femininity and assume the masculine role. In much the same way, there was little reason to debate the proper duties of the masculine and feminine during the time of Marcia at the end of the second century because those on the interior of the Empire witnessed unprecedented prosperity and peace during what has been termed the Golden Age of Rome.187 effectively, stability governed within and protected political The men, who ruled the populace. life provided an The atmosphere conducive to stability between genders within society. The reigns of Nero and Commodus, while not at the degree of calamity that befell Rome in the third century, were not interpreted by the ancient historians as steady and archetypal examples of how an emperor was to conduct himself, disorder, 186 and therefore, gender disorder in the emerged. midst of After political Elagabalus, Claudius (r. 41 - 54) was proclaimed emperor after the assassination of Caligula (r. 37 - 41). 187 The reign of the Five Good Emperors (96-180) described above. 179 Alexander was a return to the traditional expectations of masculine-enforced stability and order. However, in order to bring about this positive change, the feminine Elagabalus had to be removed by someone exuding the masculine qualities he lacked. capable of The solution was Alexander, albeit he was too young to truly embody the Roman ideal of princeps. role through the masculinity. image of Julia Mamaea assumed this her son and potential his When Alexander became old enough to assume the role of princeps independently, the failure of Mamaea to relinquish her unsavory dominance over the masculine became problematic for the stability of the Empire, in the opinion of the Roman historians. The response was the elimination of both by the institution which was the epitome of masculinity - the army. To the Romans, masculinity to order. emperors within the femininity was equal to tyranny; The emphasized femininity of some sources elucidates not only what Roman society considered to be feminine nature, but also the propagandistic motivations of the Roman historians. The perceived lack of stability on account of the reigning emperors in each case drew the public eye away from the activities of the women examined in this chapter, allowing them to constructed limitations. in most cases step outside their 180 socially It is only after the fact (and long after the fact) that their actions were reflected upon and then interpreted by the ancient historians within gender-specific Mamaea are three attempted male the expectations. examples to explain and female confines of how of the Poppaea, the divisions Marcia, Roman of and historians and defend the distinctiveness of in an imperial culture that, in their eyes, failed to uphold the traditional balance. CHAPTER IV 'THEY WILL BE YOUR SUPERIORS' Conclusions Survey a l l t h e laws with which your forefathers restrained womanly license and made them s u b j e c t t o t h e i r husbands; even with a l l t h e s e b o n d s you c a n b a r e l y c o n t r o l t h e m . What o f this? I f you s u p p o r t them t o s e i z e t h e s e bonds one by one and wrench themselves free and finally to be p l a c e d on p a r i t y with their h u s b a n d s , do you t h i n k t h a t you w i l l be a b l e t o e n d u r e them? As s o o n a s t h e y b e g i n t o b e y o u r e q u a l s , t h e y w i l l be your s u p e r i o r s . 1 The women political examined equals connected. It nonetheless able None of authority these in to could to the be a work men argued, assume women (although this with exercised 1 could by whom however, superior case were that positions legitimate be made no they they of means were were power. political for Julia The response of M. P o r t i u s Cato t o t h e r e q u e s t t o r e p e a l t h e Oppian Law i n 195 BC. Recorded i n Livy, Ab Urbe Condita x x x i v . 3 . 1 - 3 : "Recensete omnia m u l i e b r i a i u r a quibus l i c e n t i a m earum a d l i g a v e r i n t maiores v e s t r y p e r quaeque eas s u b i e c e r i n t v i r i s ; quibus omnibus c o n s t r i c t a s v i x tamen c o n t i n e r e p o t e s t i s . Quid? Si c a r p e r e s i n g u l a e t e x t o r q u e r e e t e x a e q u a r i ad extremum v i r i s p a t i e m i n i , t o l e r a b i l e s vobis eas fore c r e d i t i s ? Extemplo, simul p a r e s e s s e c o e p e r i n t , superiores erunt." 181 182 Mamaea). 2 What these women demonstrated was that, because of the gendered spheres constructed and enforced within imperial society, they did not have to become the equals of men in order to exercise power. on the surface to religio-political be gendered What appeared limitations within the system of imperial Rome could in fact be manipulated into opportunities of influence and power during times of instability or crisis. The influence which these women wielded was unique to their position and gender. No Christian man would have been able to be so intimately connected to the emperor and exercise the influence that these women did. Men of power and authority in imperial Rome were too intricately connected to the civil surreptitiously full force of religion to for Church the imperial law Clemens demonstrated in strongly what delineated 95. have - been without as the able to attracting case of the acceptable the Flavius Gendered boundaries was work which social behavior of men and women within the public sphere were encouraged and enforced not only by men, who appeared to 2 Cleve argues that the Severan women did not merely exercise power through the authority of the men connected to them, but rather they exercised legitimate political authority. He is in the minority opinion: Robert L. Cleve, "Severus Alexander and the Severan Women" (Ph.D. diss., University of California, Los Angeles, 1982). be the greatest beneficiaries traditions, but also by women. of such laws 183 and Some women, such as those examined in this work, discovered the benefits of power that women could wield because of their exclusion from the religio-political system. Authority was a strictly within imperial Roman society. av8peioc and virtus masculine construction Masculine terms such as demonstrated the underlying connection between the construction of gender and language. It was not the purpose of this study to examine in depth why Roman society without developed providing a these strictly masculine feminine alternative terms (or incorporating the feminine within the masculine words). Regardless of how or why these terms came about, by the time of the early Empire, they nonetheless reflected what had become an Roman society. inherent mark of gender division within Although "gender history" as a field of modern historical interpretation is still relatively new, writers since the ancient period have recognized gender as an important element in historical discourse. When these women appeared to exceed the boundaries of their gendered sphere, the memory of their actions 184 were forever penned as contrary to the forces of nature. The ancient historians and writers saw an undisputed link between the gendered When emperors norms and historical exuded the qualities manhood, the Empire flourished. consequence. and expectations When emperors of failed, and women attempted to fill the void, disaster followed, even when temporary the actions of the women brought about return to what the historians understood a was the natural order - as in the cases of Marcia and Julia Mamaea. The application of gender to politics as they relate to stability is a recurrent examined in this study. theme among the women Men were to be masculine to be true men; women were to be feminine to be true women. Since men were the rulers in the Roman Empire, when they failed to successfully display masculine qualities, they were considered ill-qualified for their leadership role. In order emperor, to the remedy masculine the situation had to of remove reassert the masculinity of his office. capable of removing the feminine an the effeminate emperor and If a woman were emperor, her classification could not be the same as his; it would be confusing for a man who was considered feminine (bad) to 185 be removed by a feminine woman, for they shared the same gender category - the hero cannot be of the same quality as the villain. So it followed that a feminine emperor could only be displaced by a masculine force, hence the attribution of masculinity to the woman capable of carrying out such a task. The simplest interpretation of the Roman construction of gender roles, in regard to the specific instances of Nero, Commodus, Elagabalus, and Alexander, is that connote masculine specific male and female Greek and feminine connection did not to physical necessarily reflections (although Tacitus might disagree). understanding of masculine as one who rules of The and feminine as one who obeys is theoretically a construction which woman. exists outside of the biological However, the construction sex of man and of gendered concepts was developed along biological lines: men were masculine, women were feminine - according to the Romans. or at least should The questions which and which the Roman historians be, remained sought to answer, were: what did it mean to be masculine? to be feminine? they And what did it mean 186 When described women intervened, their womanliness the as ancient being historians consumed by the masculine qualities necessary to accomplish their task. Femininity remained absent from the construction of the ideal ruler or leader. respectful Even in the case of Alexander, while Mamaea was not portrayed in the same masculine nonetheless language as Poppaea and Marcia, she was an impediment to the proper exercise of masculinity by the princeps - who the Romans began to see as a boy unable to take his proper role of man. Because of this, a change in leadership was necessary in order to stabilize the proper balance between gender and good governance. One major conclusion can be drawn from the gendered language and interpretations that the ancient historians used. As government gender the and relationship the expectations Christianity Christian did in order created gendered norms. not. to avoid between community Women did the imperial evolved, not the dominance flee the to of male- As seen in examples of marriage and virginity, Christianity continued the enforcement of similar gendered spheres: women were expected to marry and bear children, while men continued to publicly direct 187 the affairs of state and religion. Even women who made vows of perpetual virginity were called brides of Christ and were expected to bear celestial children through their religious devotion. Until the adoption of Christianity by the emperors in the fourth century, the Church partially depended on the Roman against construction imperial of gender harassment. to provide Although these a defense gendered boundaries and the effectiveness of a woman's influence was religious dependent upon the political and environment in which they existed, Christianity survived, in part, because norms. of the enforcement of these gendered EPILOGUE "POWER IS LIKE BEING A LADY"1 Otacilia, Cornelia Salonina, & Eutropia Identity Crisis?: Introductions and Limited Sources Poppaea Sabina, Marcia, and Julia Mamaea had demonstrated that in a crisis which placed the gendered boundaries in demonstrate masculine question, women, femininity, roles of could who were assume the princeps. and After expected preserve the to the reign of Alexander, the Empire was plunged into the Third Century Crisis. From 235 to 285, the Empire experienced a torrent of political, economic, military, and religious instabilities exemplified by the ascension of roughly fifty emperors, of whom only twenty-two were officially recognized by the Senate. During the centuries before, the gender crises under the emperors Nero, Commodus, and Alexander were catalysts for the assertion of the masculine expectation of the princeps by the women most closely associated with those emperors. 1 During the Third This phrase is taken from a quote by Baroness Margaret Thatcher, "Power is like being a lady. If you have to tell people you are, you aren't." 188 Century Crisis, unrelated cases. to the the heart of masculinity of the instability the emperor in 189 was most However, the political turmoil may have allowed certain women close to both the emperor and the Christian movement to influence political instability attention of the establishments. policy toward that engrossed military, Two the imperial policies because women and political, may Christians have diverted and impacted through the of the the religious imperial assertion of ordered gendered boundaries during a time of uncertainty and disorder in the political arena. Cornelia Salonina were Christian Otacilia Severa and empresses who had the opportunities to take advantage of their gender to attain a significant influence through means unavailable to most men. In examining the possible influence these two women had over their husbands and the religio-political policies of the imperial government, it is difficult to ascertain their personal effectiveness. Since neither of these two women left behind any writing of her own, and because, compared to the women thus far examined, much less has been preserved on these two empresses by contemporary sources, the conclusions reached can only be based on indirect evidence. 190 connecting Nevertheless, these women to their actual and probable actions can shed much light gender on and understanding its boundaries crisis and peace. the Roman within construction times of of political As will also be further explored and specifically demonstrated in the case of a third woman, Eutropia, who is examined at the chapter, these gendered limitations conclusion of this fluctuated with the perceived stability of the Empire. Marcia Otacilia Severa was the wife of the emperor Philip I the Arab (r. 244-249) and the mother of Philip II, who co-ruled with his father from 247. Not much is known of Otacilia's background, but it is assumed she was of the Severan passing mentioned family, reference that in after primarily Eusebius' Philip's on the basis Historia.2 ascension, of a Zosimus he placed an officer named Severianus as commander of the troops in Moesia and Macedonia.3 Severianus was either Otacilia's brother or father, a fact which supports Eusebius' claim 2 Euseb., Hist, Severa. 3 Zos., Historia eccl. vi.36. Nova i.19. Eusebius refers to Philip and his wife, 191 that she was of the Severan family.4 associated Otacilia's husband Eusebius directly Philip with Christianity, although not to the extent that the later historians, who had built on his history, would. Julia Cornelia Salonina was the wife, daughter-inand mother of emperors.5 law, Her husband, Gallienus (r. 260-268) began his rule as co-emperor with his father, Valerian (r. 253-260) in 254. That same year, Salonina was elevated to the titles of Augusta and Mater [Mother of the Camps]. 6 been connected with Castrorum Like Otacilia, Salonina has long Christianity and has enjoyed a special place in early Christian literature. Saints Philip and Gallienus?: Philip's & Gallienus' Associations with Christianity During the reigns of the Philips and Gallienus, the Christians enjoyed relative peace in their to 4 the imperial government. The apparent relationship tranquility Zosimus' term is KT|8£(UII<;, a term used for a connection by marriage, and can be a brother-in-law or father-in-law. 5 Wife of Gallienus (r. 260-268); daughter-in-law of Valerian (r.253260); mother of the Caesars, Valerianus, Saloninus, and Marinianus. 6 Not much is known about the title, but it was especially employed by the Severan dynasty, no doubt to connect itself to the loyalty of the army. For more, see: Barbara Levick, Julia Domna: Syrian Empress, ed. Ronnie Ancona and Sarah Pomeroy, Women of the Ancient World (New York: Routledge, 2007), 42ff. 192 enjoyed by the Christian movement during these reigns is notable because the sources indicate that the tolerance was in marked contrast regimes. Christians harassment during to the enjoyed these previous freedom reigns because or following from imperial the imperial governments of the Philips and Gallienus chose either to purposely ignore the movement persecution already in progress. relationship imperial state between government of connecting the the can Church it to to be is actively halt Some insight about the Christian during what or community surmised by and the examining the these specific known about reigns the and imperial household. Given the tumult of the Third Century Crisis, it is not surprising that there empresses during this time. the possible influence is little written on the However, with great caution, Otacilia and Salonina had upon their respective emperors can be deduced, as well as an understanding of how this influence protected the Christian movement during unprecedented times of social, political, and economic upheaval. In describing the state of imperial affairs in relation to the Church in the mid-third century, Eusebius wrote: It is beyond our ability to describe fully in worthy detail, that before the persecution of our day, the honor and freedom for the pious word toward the God of the universe proclaimed through Christ, was accorded by all men, Greeks and non-Greeks; and sure signs came from the rulers who granted favors to our people, entrusting them to govern provinces, freeing them from the agony of sacrificing because of their friendly opinion. What is necessary to say about the imperial houses and of all the rulers? Their households - wives and children and servants - came together to practice openly the divine word and faith to their face; these they regarded with prominence and more favorably than their fellow-servants, like the famous Dorotheus, who surpassed all in his devotion and faithfulness to them, and was more highly honored than rulers and governors. Together with him was the famous Gorgonius and all those like them who had been deemed worthy of the same honor because of the word of God; and each church leader was honored by every governor and leader. How can one describe the multitudes that gathered and the masses who in every city gathered on the famous concourses? Because they were no longer satisfied with the old buildings, more spacious churches were built in all the cities. And as these things progressed with the times and day by day increasingly grew in greatness, no envy could hinder them, nor was any evil spirit able to slander or prevent them with human schemes, so long as the divine and heavenly hand was looking out for and keeping watch over, as a worthy object, its own people.7 7 Euseb., Hist, eccl. viii.1.1-6. 194 According to survival, the peace prosperity. and reigns of Eusebius, while Church Philip the enjoyed a Given the Arab Empire struggled substantial what and is known for period of about the Gallienus, Eusebius' summation of the Church should not immediately be written off as embellishment by an inherently biased Christian author. The son of an Arab sheikh, Philip married Otacilia probably some time around 2378 and had at least child, a son, Marcus Julius Philippus Severus. one From 242- 244, Philip served as Prefect of Mesopotamia during the Persian campaign of Gordian III (r. 238-244), and after the death Prefect of the co-Praetorian 243, Philip took Timesitheus' place. III died, soldiers. and Philip was Timesitheus9 in Soon after, Gordian proclaimed Emperor by the Historians then and now still debate the role Philip played in each of those deaths, if, indeed, any.10 8 Epit. de Caes. xxvni.3 says Philip II was killed at age 12, which places his birth at about 237 or 238. 9 An equestrian who was father-in-law to Gordian, and co-Praetorian Prefect with Philip's brother, Priscus. 10 While many classical authors contend that Philip engineered the death of Timesitheus and the Emperor Gordian III, others are silent. Some recent historians have asserted Philip's innocence and proposed that later pro-Decius and/or pro-Constantine propaganda has encouraged a negative image of Philip the Arab. For the traditional view, see Lukas de Blois, Christian Korner and H.A. Pohlsander; for the revisionists see: John York, Jr. and Yasmme Zahran. 195 Philip's five-year reign is most noted for his overseeing of the millennial celebrations for in Philip and his 249, and son were the his celebrations Philip's army family Philip, emperor, were put of last major proclaimed were whom to the he ousted had sword, in 248.X1 task as Rome Decius from just and emperor, emperor, power.12 recently the These and Philip made five-year co- reign of the Philippi was ended.13 When describing the ascension of Philip the Arab in 244, Eusebius wrote: When after six whole years Gordian brought his government of the Romans to an end, Philip, together with his son Philip, took up rule. Rumor is [Kaxe^ei Xoyoc,]14 that he, being a Christian, wished on the day of the last paschal vigil to join with the multitude m the prayers at the church, but he was not permitted 11 The millennial celebration should have taken place m 247. However, an invasion of the Danube provinces forced Philip to postpone the festivities for a year. 12 Lukas de Blois, "The Reign of Philip the Arabian," Talanta 10/11 (1978-1979); Christian Korner, Philippus Arabs: Em Soldatenkaiser in der Tradition des Antonimsch-Severischen Prmzipats, vol. 61, Untersuchungen zur antiken Literatur und Geschichte (New York: Walter de Gruyter, 2002); H.A. Pohlsander, "Philip the Arab and Christianity," Historia 29, no. 4 (1980); John Marvin Jr. York, "The Image of Philip the Arab," Historia 21 (1972); York, "Philip the Arab: The First Christian Emperor of Rome" (Ph.D. diss., University of Southern California, 1964); Yasmme Zahran, Philip the Arab: A Study m Prejudice (London: Stacey International, 2001). 13 There is some disagreement among the original sources as to how the Philippi were actually killed - whether in battle or murdered but it is not of concern in this study. 14 See below for more on the flexibility of this phrase. Similar to Maier's translation, I have emphasized the usage of Xoyoq in this context as uncertainty on Eusebius' behalf by utilizing the translation "rumor." 196 to enter by the one presiding at the time, until he confessed and joined with those who were judged to be in sins and were occupying the place of penitence. For otherwise, had he not done so, he would never have been received because of the many charges against him. And it is said that he eagerly obeyed, displaying by his actions how genuine and pious was his disposition toward the fear of God.15 This story raises important questions about the relationship of Philip to the Christian movement as well as the validity Eusebius' has record, consumed reign. of Eusebius' a debate nearly all account. about Philip's literature Because of Christianity concerned with his Four issues are central to this debate: 1) the accounts of Eusebius and those who followed him; 2) the letters of Origen; 3) the bones of St. Pontian; and 4) the persecution of Christians in Alexandria. The likelihood that a Roman emperor in the mid-third century would openly embrace the Christian faith by publicly confessing his sins to a Christian congregation is small. Eusebius' text reveals that the author shared this skepticism. Following the first sentence, Eusebius writes, "tomov Kocxexei Xoyoc, Xpicraocvov..."16 The translation of this the 15 16 short passage Euseb., Hist. eccl. Euseb., Hist. eccl. differs vi.34. vi.34. amongst three major 197 In his 1932 English translations of Eusebius' Historia. translation for the Loeb Classical "Kocxexei Xoyoc," translated Williamson, in his as 1965 Library, "it is J.E.L. Oulton recorded".17 translation (now G.A. the Penguin Classic), chose "there is reason to believe";18 while Paul Maier, in his 1999 translation wrote, "word has it".19 Williamson and Maier's translations are somewhat similar: they both imply a sense of uncertainty on the part of Eusebius - almost a warning about what Eusebius himself believed concerning the Oulton's translation credibility of claim.20 the seems to imply the existence of a definitive historical record - a record which has failed to turn up in any other pre-Eusebian source. Placed within the context of the Third Century Crisis and his later caution stories about the is understandable. imperial couple, Eusebius' Later writers, like Paulus Orosius, were not as skeptical as Eusebius: "He [Philip] 17 J.E.L. Oulton, ed., Eusebius: The Ecclesiastical History, Volume II, vol. 265, LCL (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2000 [Orig. 1932]). 18 G.A. Williamson, ed., Eusebius: The History York: Penguin Books, 1989 (Orig. 1965)). 19 Paul L. Maier, ed., Eusebius: The Church Kregel Publications, 1999). of the Church (New History (Grand Rapids: 20 As argued in Korner, Philippus Arabs: Em Soldatenkaiser in Der Tradition Des Antoninisch-Severischen Prmzipats, 261: "Durch die Hmweise KOCTEXEI ^oyoi; und Xiyzxai vermerkt Eusebios ausdrucklich und wiederholt, dass er e m Gerucht wiedergibt." 191 was the first of all the emperors to be a Christian 21 Jerome, too, was sure of Philip's Christianity; however, he believed Philip II to be the first Christian emperor, not his father, Philip I.22 Eusebius' account offers more evidence that connects Philip to the Christian movement as well, and gives evidence to the notion that perhaps it was not Philip's Christianity that has earned him mention in the annals of Christian legend, but rather the old adage of the "good old days." When introducing the reign of Decius who immediately followed wrote: "Because of his Philip as (r. 249-251), emperor, [Decius'] hostility to Philip, he began a persecution against the churches."23 explicit reference Eusebius to Philip's There is no Christianity in this sentence; however, there is an insinuation that Philip's reign was connected to the Church. Even with this implication, Eusebius made no claim that Philip himself was a Christian, only that Decius persecuted the church on account 21 of his hatred toward Philip. Furthermore, Oros. , Historiarum Adversum Paganos Libri VII, vn.20.2; "hie primus lmperatorum omnium Christianus fuit." Orosius then goes so far as to claim that during the millennial celebrations in Rome, Philip did the celebration in honor of Christ and the Church1 22 Jer., De vir. i l l . liv. The reasons for the inconsistency in relating Christianity to either Philip I or his son, Philip II, is explored below beginning on page 202. 23 Euseb., Hist. eccl. vi.39.1. 199 Eusebius used the ambiguous phrasing, prefacing the story of Philip mentioned History. God Kaxe/ei XoyoQ in earlier in his Why would Eusebius, who undoubtedly held that was using consummation the Roman of Empire Christianity's to bring triumph, about the deliberately avoid connecting that triumph to Philip the Arab? would argue that Eusebius had a "tendency Some to omit or gloss over anything which might detract from the glory of Constantine as the first Christian emperor."24 However, there are more probable reasons for Eusebius' reluctance to brand Philip as the first Christian emperor. Writing in the late-fifth century, Zosimus, who was no friend Historia to the Christians, Nova nation."25 Philip's as "a native He then sloth, proceeded greed, lust nepotism, and cronyism.26 poor treatment Christianity.27 Philip's 24 York, Zos., 26 Zos., 27 York, Zahran, 25 of Philip introduced Philip of Arabia, to give a in his worthless an account of for power, incompetence, Some have argued that Zosimus' was in reaction to Philip's It is difficult to know for certain if Christianity was a motivation for Zosimus' "Philip the Arab: The First Christian Emperor of Rome", 96. Historia Nova i.18. Historia Nova i.19-23. "Philip the Arab: The First Christian Emperor of Rome", 89f, Philip the Arab: A Study in Prejudice, 109f. summation of Christianity Philip's is reign, neither especially explicitly alluded to within the Historia since mentioned Nova. 200 Philip's nor even The majority of Zosimus' account of Philip is devoted to his ineptitude as a ruler, and it is blamed on his Arabian origin, rather than his religious convictions. Zosimus' love of Decius as the pagan ruler par is very apparent within History his understanding and Philip's excellence forms a personal focal point relationship to for the Church. As mentioned above, Eusebius' account of Decius was quite the opposite of Zosimus' and insinuated that Decius had begun his persecution against Christianity because of Philip's connection to the Church.28 Shortly after making this assertion, Eusebius quoted from a letter written by Bishop Dionysius Antioch, reigns of in which from Philip Alexandria the described to as motivation Philip the Arab. Euseb., Hist, Euseb., Hist. eccl. eccl. Bishop Dionysius Decius reign that had been kinder to us." 29 embody to for "the Fabius of the change of change from These two statements attributing Christianity The dichotomy between vi.39.1. vi.41.9. the to the reigns of 201 Philip and Decius, at least in regard to the relationship between the Church and the imperial government, no doubt encouraged many Christian writers to look with nostalgia back to the persecution.30 days before the first systematic The comparison of Philip to Decius is key to understanding the later portrayal of Philip by the Christian authors who followed Eusebius. The pagan historian Zosimus demonstrated his bias in opposite fashion to the later-Christian writers by emphasizing that even before the end of Philip's reign, the after soldiers the recognized common effortlessly good surpass that Decius better him military experience."31 in than "both would Philip and political look would excellence and This was no doubt on account of the fact that Decius was "a man of distinguished family and rank besides being adorned with every virtue."32 comparison between especially by relationship 30 the reigns Christian between the of authors, implies Christian This is also argued in: Korner, Philippus Soldatenkaiser in der Tradition Prinzipats, 260-76. des 31 Philip and some community Arabs: Decius, kind and Ein antoninisch-Severischen Zos., Historia Nova i.21. Zos., Historia Nova i.21. This pro-Decian history is also supported by Zonaras, albeit he is not as pro-Decius as Zosimus 32 (Zonar., Epitome Historiarum xii.19) The of the 202 imperial family. that Philip Church and There is nothing reliable to indicate personally imperial was the connection government, but there between the is, however, much that lends credence to the idea that there was a relationship between his wife Otacilia and Christianity. In recording the list of writings of Origen's later life, Eusebius claimed that "[a] letter of his [Origen's] to the emperor Philip himself is extant, another to his wife, Severa, and various other letters."33 The letters of Origen not unique. Justin to the Martyr, emperor and Melito empress of are Sardis, Apolinarius of Hierapolis,34 and certainly many others, wrote letters and treatises addressed demonstrating addressing to the Roman emperors, thereby little else than a Christian practice of their works to the sitting emperors. The existence of these letters is not an indication of any kind of intimate relationship between writers and the imperial government. Origen's Jerome. the The true value of letters lies in the interpretation In his De Viris Illustribus, Christian of them by Jerome made a peculiar statement that Origen "sent letters to Emperor 33 34 Euseb., Hist. eccl. vi.36.3. See: Euseb., Hist. eccl. iv.18, 26-27. Philip, the Christian, still first and extant to of his the Roman mother today."35 rulers 203 become to [mater/pir\zr\p] , which Further down the page, are Jerome remarked: "It is unnecessary, however, to speak of the cruelty of the persecution, which was raised against the Christians under Decius, because he had violent rage against the religion of Philip, whom he had slain."36 As stated above, Eusebius claimed that Origen wrote letters to "to the emperor Philip himself, and another [ya\iE%y\] Severa."37 wife The nouns for mother to his and wife used by each source are not ambiguous, and therefore, it is difficult to interpret them in a fashion reconciles the two sources with each other.38 there are conjectures that can be made based that However, on other evidence. After Philip his quickly proclamation as emperor secured peace with east and headed to Rome. the by the Persians army, in the If Philip were a Christian and since he spent the majority of his reign in Rome, then it seems logical to assume some kind of relationship between 35 Jer., De vir. i l l . liv. Jer., De vir. i l l . liv. 37 Euseb., Hist. eccl. vi.36.3. 38 As was done in the case with Flavia Domitilla's relationship to Clemens and to Domitian in chapter two. 36 204 the emperor and the Church in Rome would have existed. However, aside from a medieval legend, according to which Philip was baptized by the Pope St. Fabian around time of stands the out millennial that hints celebrations,39 at any only connection one story between emperor and the Christian community in Rome. the the The account involves the Roman Bishop Fabian and his effort to move the bones of his martyred predecessor St. Pontian. Pontian was exiled from Rome to Sardinia in 235 where he later died.40 Fabian wished to Pontian to Rome, but according return the to Roman relics of law, moving a grave required an official permit and an animal sacrifice to the gods.41 This would, of course, problematic for a Christian bishop. have proved Not only would the bishop have had to attain an official legal document, but he would also have had to violate foundational principles of his faith by participating in a pagan sacrifice. is possible that Philip allowed the Pope to move It the grave without fulfilling the pagan rituals according to 39 ActaSS, 40 Liber 41 St. Fabiano (20 January). Pontificalis, xix.2. York, "Philip the Arab: The First Christian Emperor of Rome", 10809. 205 the law - hence Philip's continued decline in popularity among the pagan majority.42 There however. is room As there for is a no more feasible record of explanation, Philip giving permission to the see of Rome to move the buried remains of the martyr Pontian, the argument that permission was given is problematic. Philip's permission was not necessary for the action to be completed - only for the action to be completed legally. martyrs and persecution the later who refused The stubbornness of the leaders to during hand the over Diocletianic the Christian Scriptures, or in some cases replaced them with clever decoys, are but a few examples of Christian defiance of secular authority. Christians "obey God rather than men."43 had been commanded to The simple reasoning that the returned bones indicate that it must have been done according to the law is to assume a connection between the Church and imperial authority that the evidence does not support. This relationship is further complicated by events in Alexandria around the end of Philip's reign. 42 43 ibid. Acts 5:29. 206 Eusebius preserves a letter written by Dionysius of Alexandria Dionysius to Fabius, described Christians in Bishop firsthand Alexandria of the in late Antioch, in persecution 248 or which against early 249. Dionysius wrote that "it was not with the imperial edict [of Decius] that the persecution began against us, but it preceded it by a whole year."44 This incident proves to be problematic in establishing Philip's reign as a model of Christian asserted integration that Christianity it is that the in imperial precisely is lacking, given because Christians singled out for persecution.45 the rule. in Some of have Philip's Alexandria were However, this explanation many times Christians were persecuted under the previous pagan emperors. If the persecution was as terrible as Dionysius described, why would Philip, a rumored Christian, or at least a Christian sympathizer, not carry out punishment against those who started it? Indeed, there appears to be no involvement whatsoever on the part of the emperor either in instigating the persecution, or in dealing with its 44 45 aftermath. One could argue that the millennial Euseb., Hist, eccl., vi.41.1. York, "Philip the Arab: The First Christian Emperor of Rome", 73- 74; Zahran, Philip the Arab: A Study in Prejudice, 123. 207 celebrations or the revolt of Pacatianus in Moesia kept the emperor too busy. celebration ensuring would order in However, it is unlikely that the have his prevented realm - as the emperor Philip had from already postponed the games which were to occur the year before, thanks to an invasion of the Danube provinces.46 As for the Pacatianus rebellion, Philip remained at Rome, having dispatched Decius instead.47 Furthermore, throughout the five-year reign of Philip, nothing was done to alter the legal standing of the Christians.48 What then can be said about Philip's connection to the Christian Church? When all the evidence is brought together, Jerome's small reference to Philip may hold the most logical answer - an answer which, perhaps unbeknownst to him, incorporates Roman understandings of gender and culture. the religio-political Jerome indicated, system of imperial contrary to Eusebius, that Origen had written letters to Philip and his mother, not Philip and his wife. that 46 Decius carried Korner, Philippus antoninisch-Severischen Study in Prejudice, 47 Furthermore, Jerome also indicated out a persecution against the Arabs: Ein Soldatenkaiser in der Tradition des Prinzipats, 248; Zahran, Philip the Arab: A 119. York, "Philip the Arab: The First Christian Emperor of Rome", 75. Timothy D. Barnes, "Legislation against the Christians," JRS 58, no. 1 and 2 (1968): 43. 48 Christians on religion,49 not further account of his a hatred of Philip himself.50 evidence Philip I Emperor and to demonstrate Christianity, Philip to hatred whom a one Origen Philip II, son of Philip I. 208 Philip's for With no connection can assume wrote was between that most the likely Otacilia's Christianity is not debated, yet she is rarely seen as the impetus behind the treatment of Christians husband and son. during the reign of her Like the case with Julia Mamaea and Alexander, Otacilia may have used the authority of her son, and perhaps environment movement also conducive her to husband, growth in for in the Third Century Crisis. ensuring the an Christian When Christians looked back on the reign before the persecutions of the third century, they saw Philip as a stark contrast to the first systematic persecution under Decius. explanation pined to was to Philip attribute I. the However, attribution of Christianity The simplest days for which the absence they of an for Philip within Eusebius' account combined with Jerome's emphasis on the importance 49 J e r . , De vir. desaeviret..." ill. 50 eccl. Euseb., Hist. l i v : "...eo quod i n r e l i g i o n e m P h i l i p p i vi.39.1: "oq 5TI TO\J npoq <S>iXmnov e.%0ovq evem... 209 of Philip II, encourages an alternate explanation for the Philippan Peace of Christianity. Eusebius was not shy in asserting that things were peaceful for the most part during the mid-third century for the Christian movement. indulge his readers in He was also not eager to what he understood to be unsubstantiated rumors about the religious convictions of the Roman emperor Philip I. Relating these two points, Eusebius' account, in connection with the later accounts which built off of Historia, his implies a possible intervention by the empress Otacilia in the policies of her husband and her son. Through this connection, the exercise of gendered boundaries becomes prevalent even in the absence of gendered language in the sources. be surmised reign of Philip, that the but the Philips, more Church enjoyed peace It can during the not on account of a Christian logically on account of a Christian Otacilia. Following Aemilianus the Senate Augustus. the deaths of Trebonianus Gallas and in 253, Valerian assumed the throne and had appoint his son, Gallienus, Caesar and co- The persecution of the Christian Church that had begun under Decius was reignited during the reign of 210 Valerian.51 Roman In 260, however, Valerian became the first emperor to be captured in battle subsequently executed by the Persians. and was From 260 to 268, the Empire was ruled by Gallienus, who, Eusebius wrote, "ruled more prudently and immediately persecution against us by an edict."52 ended the Eusebius recorded the edict: The Emperor Caesar Publius Licinius Gallienus Pius Felix Augustus to Dionysius and Pinnas and Demetrius and the other bishops. I have commanded that the acts of kindness of my bounty be proclaimed throughout all the universe, in such manner that they [nonChristians] should withdraw from the places of [Christian] worship, and therefore you may also use the decree in my rescript so that no one may trouble you. And according to the power allowed to you to accomplish this, which has been conceded by me for a long time, and therefore Aurelius Quirinius, who is my chief minister, will observe the decree given by me. 53 This edict afforded the Christians freedom to worship and returned their property. Eusebius also provided In a addition letter from to the edict, Dionysius of Alexandria to Hermammon and the Church in Egypt in which 51 For some brief accounts on the persecution of Valerian, see: Euseb., Hist, eccl. vii.10-12; Christopher J. Haas, "Imperial Religious Policy and Valerian's Persecution of the Church, A.D. 257260," Church History 52, no. 2 (Jun. 1983); Paul Keresztes, "Two Edicts of the Emperor Valerian," Vig. Chr. 29, no. 2 (Jun. 1975). 52 Euseb., Hist. eccl. vii.13. 53 Euseb., Hist. eccl. vii.13. he described the reign of Gallienus in relation 211 to Christianity: For I see, that indeed those ungodly [emperors], once well-known, after not much time have become nameless, but he who is more hallowed and filled with more love for God has passed seven years, and now at this time is finishing a ninth year, in which we may keep the festival.54 These two sources indicate that Christians noticed a shift in the relationship between the imperial government and the Christian community. Begun by Gallienus, Christians experienced freedom from imperial persecution for the next forty years. The question which historians must ask in relation to this edict toleration?" is: "Was Gallienus' edict one of Given the record of this edict within the Christian historical tradition, it was more than likely not an edict of toleration.55 Christian history, Lukas In the greater narrative of de Blois correctly summarized the reign of Gallienus: "The time of Gallienus was by no means 54 as great a turning point in the history of the Euseb., Hist, eccl. vii.23. Lukas de Blois, The Policy of the Emperor Gallienus, ed. J.G.P. Best, A.B. Breebaart, and M.F. Jongkees-Vos, vol. VII, Studies of the Dutch Archaeological and Historical Society (Leiden: E.J. Brill, 1976), 177-81. Especially this remark: "Had Gallienus issued an edict of toleration his reign would have been of far greater significance for the various aspects of Christian life" (180). 55 212 church as the time of Commodus Constantine the Great."56 organization recognition laity, of of this the the is and the Severi or of Concerning the nature of the Christian distinction certainly communities between true. If and the the clergy the policy and of Gallienus was not one of toleration in the sense of the later centuries, then what was the purpose of his edict? There are currently two ways of interpreting this edict. One, espoused through his by a number prescript, historians,57 Gallienus the Christian communities Empire. of officially holds that recognized as legal entities within the On the other side, Lukas de Blois argued that Gallienus' policy simply "acknowledged openly what most of his predecessors Christian had acknowledged communities possessed tacitly: that the churches and cemeteries of their own and had the use of goods and buildings in the possession of rich community members."58 Gallienus' motivations debated. A multitude religious reasons sudden 56 57 58 kindness can toward behind his decree can be of political, philosophical, and be the used to Christian explain Gallienus' communities Ibid., 179. See those cited by de Blois: Ibid., 181 (fn 31). Ibid., 181. after his father's capture and execution. 59 213 Connected to any theory, however, is that nearly, if not all, instances of popular uprisings against Christian communities accompanied by general riots or insurrections. Blois' account of Gallienus summarized the were Lukas de debate by conglomerating the different theories into an estimate of Gallienus' possible motivations: Gallienus put an end to Valerian's persecution of the Christians because he wanted to allay a source of trouble in the empire, because he wanted to win over the large group of Christians in the eastern parts of the empire from Macrianus60 and because he wanted to prevent them from becoming pro-Persian. Moreover, the persecution of Christians was ill-suited to his conception of his emperorship and he may well have feared the vengeance of the Christian God.61 While this summation of Gallienus' possible motivations is seemingly all-encompassing in regard to the multiple theories which have been offered over the centuries, it still neglects one important aspect of Gallienus' life that could well have had some influence over his reign his Christian wife, Cornelia Salonina. 59 Ibid., 181-85. Macrianus was a usurper who was acclaimed emperor by the army in Mesopotamia after Valerian's capture by the Persians in 260. He was defeated by Gallienus in 261. 60 61 Blois, The Policy of the Emperor Gallienus, 185. During the reigns of both Philip the Arab and Gallienus, it is undeniable that the Christian communityat-large enjoyed a time of relative peace and from interference by the imperial government. argued that because of the Third Century focus of the emperors was concentrated freedom It can be Crisis, the on the economic and political aspects of imperial rule, and therefore the Christians seemingly slipped under the radar - avoiding the attention emperor was authority of the far too and interpretation imperial government occupied survival. neglects a in because ensuring However, commonality his this the own narrow shared by both Philip and Gallienus: both emperors had Christian wives. The coincidence is too strong to simply ignore, and as can be supported reasonable to by assume the that sources these available, women were it is able to project an influence over their husbands that ensured an environment conducive to communities in the Empire. growth of the Christian 215 She's a Lady: Femininity and the Exercise of Power in the Third Century Crisis The distinctive emphases on the peace and stability of Christianity during the reigns of Philip the Arab and Gallienus by Eusebius and other early Christian writers implies something assumption that beyond the mere emperor was coincidence Christian. or an This is especially true, given the historical tradition that the wives of each of these emperors were Christians. Otacilia Severa and Cornelia Salonina provide interesting perspectives into Century Crisis. demonstrate gender Although relations within the scant, the sources Third available that these two empresses took advantage of their femininity as defined by Roman culture, and through it, exercised considerable control over imperial policies concerned with Christianity. Unlike the women examined in chapter three, Otacilia and Salonina did not attract the ire spheres of and later writers thereby giving by bending reason to their be gendered accused of disregarding what was a proper exercise of one's gender. Instead, if each one exercised influence through her emotional attachment to the emperor, then in the eyes of 216 the Romans, these women acted as women ought to act in order to manipulate their husbands to follow their wills. There are numerous examples in Roman history where women asserted themselves over and against a male- dominated religio-political system and sealed their fates in the annals of history as transgressors proper behavior for a woman.62 of what was Then there are numerous other examples of women who asserted themselves over and against a male-dominated religio-political system and sealed their fates in the annals of history as paragons of feminine virtue and honor.63 defiance, ancient influence, historians to or It was not the acts of seduction pen which indelibly examples of iniquity within society. caused these the women as Rather, it was how the historians interpreted the actions of these women as either in accordance with, or in socially-expected gendered spheres. Cornelia Salonina historians because 62 as did Otacilia defiance of, Otacilia Severa and did not earn the ire of the Poppaea, and Marcia, Salonina their and Julia effectively ancient Mamaea, carried out For example: Sempronia (wife of Catiline), Agrippina the Younger, and Marcia. For more, see: Richard A. Bauman, Women and Politics in Ancient Rome (New York: Routledge, 1992) . 63 For example: the Sabine Women, Lucretia, Verginia, and Livia (wife of Augustus). See also Bauman cited in the previous footnote. 217 their tasks of Christian patronage within the boundaries of what Empire. was expected of women in the third-century The fact that these women lived and operated in one of the most unstable periods of Roman history also gave advantage to their task at influencing imperial policy. It is unlikely that Philip I was a Christian, yet Christians seem to have enjoyed a remarkable peace during his reign. Jerome provided a hint as to why with his emphasis a Christian on empress Otacilia. Philip Philip II and his mother the Assuming Jerome is correct, and it was II and Otacilia who were the Christians in the imperial family, suppositions can be made concerning the relationship between the Church and imperial government as well as the extent to which Otacilia could exercise the limitations of her gendered sphere for the advantage of the Christian community. There are two issues which connect imperial Christianity to the family which were mentioned above, but they must be reexamined in light of Otacilia's influence: 1) Origen's letter to Otacilia and a Philip; and 2) the persecutions at Alexandria. Origen's letters to Otacilia and Philip are reminiscent of his meeting with Julia Mamaea roughly a decade or so earlier. 218 Eusebius described Mamaea as a 64 "religious woman" (GeoaePeoxaxTi yuvri) .65 There is no mention of Otacilia as a religious woman, nor even one directlyclaiming her Christianity. Otacilia's Christianity asserted based on the letters of Origen. of Otacilia's Christianity, although This assertion based upon written evidence, can be affirmed by context. and Otacilia as the intended is recipients little Philip II of letters make more sense given that Otacilia's Origen's influence over her own child would be greater than over any other person. Besides general assumptions, Cornelia and the Gracchi, Agrippina the Younger and Nero, and the Severan women and their demonstrative Roman of literature. children a mother's suffice hold However, even as over her if the examples children letters in were addressed to Philip I, the conclusions remain the same. Otacilia's context of Christianity the can relative be assumed peace for based the upon the Christians, Origen's letters recorded by Eusebius and Jerome, and the Roman understanding of gendered spheres. 64 See chapter 3. Euseb., Hist, eccl. De vir. i l l . liv. 65 vi.21; Jerome used "religiosam feminam" in his 219 The Christian Church enjoyed some type of imperial favor during the reign of Philip I and his son. By the third century, the Christians were no longer an unknown entity within the Empire. For the imperial government to be to completely oblivious the growing numbers and strength of the Church is inconceivable and contrary to sources demonstrating an increasing familiarity imperial authorities through the centuries.66 Christianity can be assumed because it by Otacilia's makes sense, whereas Philip's can be questioned because it does not. This explanation, of course, raises the concern that the reasons for which Philip's Christianity is denied - peace of the Church, Origen's letters, Eusebius' references Otacilia's is demonstrated affirmed. thus far, the However, religious as has been convictions of a noblewoman were of little consequence to the stability of the religio-political system of the Empire. The gendered understanding of religion and politics in Roman society allowed a certain level of freedom in regard to religion for empresses, while the emperors' lives were inseparable from Third 66 the religio-political Century Crisis, much system. In like crises the As seen in Pliny's letters to Trajan (c.111-113). addition, of the gender explored in chapter three, could have provided 220 an opportunity for women like Otacilia to wield considerable influence over issues most considered to be disconnected from the important problems connected to the political, economic, and military stability of the Empire. It would not be until the reign of Decius, and even more so during the reign of Diocletian, that Christianity shifted from being unconnected to the Crisis, to being the problem which the government believed it had to address. Regardless shrewdness, a of Otacilia's woman's intelligence ability to or political influence imperial policy was always limited to outside forces. construction of gender created too many The Roman obstacles for women to be considered recognized sources of legitimate power. This limitation is seen especially in the incident at Alexandria during the end of Philip's reign. Dionysius, the Bishop of Alexandria, wrote an aforementioned letter to Fabius, Bishop of Antioch, about the persecution of Decius that followed Philip's reign. In the letter, Dionysius gave clues to the circumstances surrounding the problems in his city: It was not with the imperial edict [of January 250] that the persecution began among us, but preceded it by a whole year, and that prophet and maker of evils for this city, whoever that one was, set in motion and stirred up the heathen multitude against us, fanning the flames of their native superstition. Provoked by him and every unholy power, they conceived that the only pious form of worship was the thirsting for our blood.67 Two details from Dionysius' letter connect the incident at Alexandria with Otacilia and her influence during the reign of her husband and son. Alexandria and First, the persecution in definitely began during not Decius. Second, the reign of the instigator Philip of the persecution was not the imperial government. The imperial edict to which Dionysius referred is the one issued by Decius in January 250, which required all Roman citizens to sacrifice to the gods in an effort to appease Empire.68 them and end As mentioned the crises above, this afflicting the is a stain on the record of Philip as an emperor who favored, or even just tolerated Christians. demonstrative gendered of the influence However, limitations during the this incident is of imperial power and Third Century Crisis. Philip, like all the emperors during the Third Century Crisis, 67 68 spent the majority of his reign Euseb., Hist. eccl. vi.41.1-2. Barnes, "Legislation against the Christians," 43f. attempting to consolidate his power and survive long enough to die a peaceful death. instability five His reign was plagued with unrest and - two major attempted successful.69 usurpations, also not the of the last frontier of which and was Given this volatile atmosphere, it is not surprising that uprising invasions Philip was unable to control a popular against the surprising, Christians that in Alexandria. Otacilia, It is regardless of her level of influence, was unable to have an impact either. The limitations of Philip and Otacilia in protecting the Christian community source of the violence. in Alexandria stem from the Dionysius poetically referred to the instigator of the riot as a prophet who conjured up evil in the city against the Christians. Whether he is referring to an actual person or a demon is not certain. What matters in this example is that the participants in the violence against the Christians were the people of Alexandria, not the government. During this time of crisis, Otacilia was no more capable of controlling the local populations than her husband or son. provided 69 many opportunities for the While crises manipulation During Philip's reign, there were invasions of Pannonia and Moesia, as well as five usurpers to the throne: Pacatianus, Jotapianus, Silbannacus, Sponsianus, and Decius. of 223 gendered boundaries, they did not create unlimited ones. The political crisis of the third century proved too great for the empress to protect Christians in all parts of the Empire, especially places in which Christians made up a significant minority. In addition, persecution Alexandria into this better demonstrates incident context. that places The Decius' persecution Decius may have built perceived popular sentiment and such sentiment even experienced in the army. in off possibly This makes the statements of Eusebius and Jerome more understandable - Decius may indeed have hated Philip and the Christians. Because of the outbreak of popular persecution in Alexandria, Decius may have sensed a general feeling of hatred against the minor religious group and had seen the reign of his predecessor as the cause of the instability connected to Christianity's conflict with the pagan masses. Connecting Philip to the instability which the Christians seemed to provoke no doubt incited Decius' personal hatred toward Philip, and later-Christian writers built up that hatred dichotomy relations. in between an the effort two in to emphasize regard to a distinct Church-State 224 Dionysius but rather in predecessors more."70 for described as Gallienus opposition someone to "who is as a Christian, his third-century holier and loves God Other than this brief assertion of his tolerance Christianity, there are no branded Gallienus a Christian. Otacilia, not there are no references made that In addition, much like specific ancient references to Salonina's Christianity either, although she has always been counted as a Christian.71 The emphasis on the peace enjoyed by the Christians, specifically in the halting of the Decian and Valerian persecutions, in conjunction with what is Gallienus known and possibility of concerning his wife, the relationship lends evidence Salonina's Christianity to between support and a the possible pro-Christian influence over imperial policy. Salonina is only referenced in relation to her husband, and in all cases the purpose is to demonstrate that Salonina distraction."72 70 was a woman "whom Gallienus loved to During Gallienus' reign, the Christians E u s e b . , Hist. eccl. v i i . 2 3 : "6 8e oauotepoq KOU 0iXo0ecoTepoq" A reference which emphasizes the Christianity of Salonina through coinage: William Smith and Samuel Cheetham, eds., A Dictionary of Christian Antiquities (Hartford: The J.B. Burr Publishing Co., 1880), 1274f. 72 SHA, Gallien. xxi.3 ("quam is perdite dilexit"). This is echoed in Epit. de Caes. xxxiii.l; Aur. Vict., Caes. xxxiii.6. 71 acquired a reprieve from Valerian's persecution, and entered a period of about forty years of r e l a t i v e peace between the Church and the imperial government. Although the sources are not e x p l i c i t , conjecture can be made t h a t on account of his love for measures to end the suffering Empire. This e s p e c i a l l y Salonina, Gallienus took of the C h r i s t i a n s in h i s seems probable when taken in conjunction with the other p o s s i b l e p o l i t i c a l motivations mentioned above. By the reign of Gallienus, the C h r i s t i a n s may have numbered s l i g h t l y more than one m i l l i o n , or roughly two percent of the t o t a l population, and they were growing. 73 Two percent of a population i s not a large minority, but they had already penetrated the upper echelons society 7 4 and the majority of these C h r i s t i a n s lived the eastern p a r t of the Empire, where Gallienus 73 of in needed Rodney S t a r k , " R e c o n s t r u c t i n g t h e Rise of C h r i s t i a n i t y : The Role of Women," Sociology of Religion 56, no. 3 (Autumn 1995): 229-31; S t a r k , The Rise of Christianity: A Sociologist Reconsiders History ( P r i n c e t o n , NJ: P r i n c e t o n U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s , 1996), 6-7. Stark e s t i m a t e s t h e g r o w t h - r a t e of t h e C h r i s t i a n s t o be about 40% per decade (3.4% per y e a r ) , which i s roughly e q u i v a l e n t t o t h e growth of Mormonism t o d a y . 74 In a d d i t i o n t o b i s h o p s , p r e s b y t e r s , and deacons, V a l e r i a n ' s e d i c t of p e r s e c u t i o n i n 258 a l s o s p e c i f i c a l l y t a r g e t e d s e n a t o r s , e q u e s t r i a n s , matrons, and i m p e r i a l c i v i l s e r v a n t s . See: W.H.C. Frend, The Rise of Christianity (Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1984), 326f; Haas, " I m p e r i a l R e l i g i o u s P o l i c y and V a l e r i a n ' s P e r s e c u t i o n of t h e Church, A.D. 257-260"; K e r e s z t e s , "Two E d i c t s of t h e Emperor V a l e r i a n . " support in his struggle against the usurper, Macrianus.75 Given this political situation and his previous policies of appeasing border peoples, Gallienus may have ended the persecution Christians in order to gain in the East.76 have been very the Salonina's support of the role in this may similar to Poppaea' s in defense of the Jews in Fire of Rome in 64. 77 If Gallienus were looking for upper hand in his war may have proven a way Macrianus, informing which was to gain then the Salonina Gallienus suffering policies. She may of the at the have Macrianus were to grant growing valuable religious hands further of his suggested concessions against in movement father' s that if to the Christians, the Christians would put their support behind the usurper similar to how the Palmyrene Empire had granted concessions to the Jewish community after it had broken away from the Roman Empire (260-273).78 Otacilia and Salonina's influence upon their respective emperors is purely speculative in the absence 75 Blois, The Policy of the Emperor Gallienus, 183f. Ibid., 183; Jean Moreau, La Persecution Du Christianisme Dans L'empire Romain (Paris: 1956), 104. 77 See chapter 3. 78 Fergus Millar, "Paul of Samosata, Zenobia and Aurelian: The Church, Local Culture and Political Allegiance in Third-Century Syria," JRS 61 (1971); Blois, The Policy of the Emperor Gallienus, 183. 76 227 of explicit historical evidence. known about the enforcement However, given what is of gendered spheres within Roman society, it is not unlikely that these women were able to sway their husbands' tolerance toward the Christian Church through the means of marital affection. The physical closeness of both Otacilia and Salonina to their husbands intellectual could imply closeness a as level well. of emotional Unlike the and women examined in chapter three, Otacilia and Salonina did not have to assume qualities in what order contrary, Otacilia the to and Romans considered reestablish masculine stability. Salonina were able to On the influence the policies of their husbands precisely because they had exercised their femininity in accordance with traditional Roman expectations. Roman women's place was the Roman home. could square exercise and had considerably more more freedom opportunities for While they in the public education than their Greek sisters, the primary duty for Roman women was to enter into marriage, for it "completed the female, invested her with a social presence, and saved her from her innate incompetence."79 228 During the instability of the Third Century Crisis, Christianity in the eyes of most emperors was insignificant to the more pressing matters of insurrection, invasion, and economic collapse. Because of the increasingly unstable political situation, it is possible that Otacilia and Salonina were able to wield their influence through the shared affection with their husbands over a seemingly irrelevant matter in the Empire. The attempts of emperors like Decius and Valerian to eradicate the Christians for the purposes of ending the crisis had failed, and it was not until the ascension of Diocletian and the return to stability that Christianity's effectively Decius, and elimination ending the seemed more instability. significantly confirmed consistent Beginning under with under Diocletian, Christianity was no longer insignificant to the health of the Empire. As the Romans Do: The Continuity of Gendered Spheres in the C h r i s t i a n Era After the ascension of Diocletian in 285, the Empire moved toward s t a b i l i t y as i t reorganized and i n t e n s i f i e d 79 Eve D'Ambra, Roman Women (Cambridge & New York: Cambridge U n i v e r s i t y P r e s s , 2007), 12. See a l s o c h a p t e r two a b o v e . the role and power of the imperial office. 229 As part of Diocletian's Crisis and Empire, he bring plan stability initiated what to end and has the Third peace been back termed against the Christians in 303. Century to The the Great Persecution In the short period of time between the end of the Third Century Crisis and the beginning of the Christianization of the Empire under Constantine, Christianity suffered under persecution even though there were Christian potential influence and power. Emperor Maximian women in positions Eutropia was the wife of (r. 286-305), 80 and mother of Maxentius and Fausta, the wife of Constantine 337). of Emperor (r. 306- Her husband co-ruled with Diocletian and helped enforce the policies against the Christians. The case of Eutropia demonstrates the limitations of gendered influence when stable society is reasserted and crisis is ended. Eutropia's reign as empress was outside the Third Century Crisis. attempted reassert to eradicate Rome's devotion Diocletian's policies the to Christian its which movement traditional and civic religion had ended fifty years of instability, economic ruin, war, and uncertainty. 80 If Eutropia had attempted to Maximian also proclaimed himself Augustus again from 307-310. 230 intervene on behalf of the Church in an effort to protect it from persecution, then would not her efforts have been interpreted as an attempt to undo the very stability her husband helped combined establish? An with the realization longer an insignificant Empire (and perhaps even absence of instability that Christianity institution within the problem was no the connected Roman to the instability), prevented Eutropia from taking advantage of the unique abilities which her gender and position had afforded to the Christian empresses before her. Most of the history concerned with Eutropia concentrates on her activities after the end of the civil wars and the ascension of Constantine as sole ruler of the Empire. The most well known story of Eutropia concerns her travels to the Holy Land, where she visited Mambre81 - visited by the place three where, strangers.82 in Genesis, Eutropia's Abraham complaint was to Constantine that the holy site had been defiled by pagan idolatry prompted Constantine to erect a Christian church in 11 12 that place. Euseb., Vit. Const. Genesis 18:1-21. Thus, Eutropia iii.52-53. affirms the proper 231 function of gendered spheres in the budding Christian era of the Roman Empire.83 Much like Helena, the mother of Constantine, Eutropia demonstrated the changing role that femininity would play in imperial politics in a post-Constantinian era. Church With no the beginning longer of the Christianization, required the assistance of protect it from the hard hand of imperial law. women the to However, women in unique positions of power and influence would now provide a patronage previously unknown to the Church. Christianity did not attempt to alter the legal and social standing of women from that of previous centuries within the Roman Empire. In fact, as was demonstrated in the Christian ideal of virginity, in most cases Christian ideology maintained and enforced traditional gender roles. longer feared Christian with were considered In an era when Christianity no government women what reprisal close ties and to oppression, the imperial government now exercised power through active patronage of Christian churches and shrines. exercise arouse 83 political the Euseb., Vit. guile condemnation Const. which of iii.52-53. No longer needing to sometimes Roman threatened writers seeking to to 2 maintain the balance of gendered spheres, Christian women like Eutropia and Helena publicly asserted their roles of patronesses for the Christian Church. These women, who were excluded from both political and religious roles of authority, could piety.84 As noblewomen fulfilled contributors wield power benefactors to both through their prayers their of the gender secular and with and financial their purses Church, roles Christian as religious and obedient societies assistance. 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