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Children in the Roman Empire

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Children in the Roman Empire Synopsis

Roman children often seem to be absent from the ancient sources. How did they spend their first years of life? Did they manage to find their way among the various educators, often slaves, who surrounded them from an early age? Was Roman education characterised by loving care or harsh discipline? What was it like to be a slave child? Were paedophilia and child labour accepted and considered 'normal'? This book focuses on all 'forgotten' Roman children: from child emperors to children in the slums of Rome, from young magistrates to little artisans, peasants and mineworkers. The author has managed to trace them down in a wide range of sources: literature and inscriptions, papyri, archaeological finds and ancient iconography. In Roman society, children were considered outsiders. But at the same time they carried within them all the hopes and expectations of the older generation, who wanted them to become full-fledged Romans.

About This Edition

ISBN: 9781107671225
Publication date: 15th September 2016
Author: Christian Laes
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Format: Paperback
Pagination: 352 pages
Genres: Ancient history
Social and cultural history
Age groups: children
European history