The Wedding Shroud - A Tale of Ancient Rome (59 page)

BOOK: The Wedding Shroud - A Tale of Ancient Rome
2.07Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
 

Lituus:
Crooked staff used by augurs to mark out a ritual space for the purpose of divination.

 

Lucumo:
An Etruscan king who was elected by aristocratic colleges rather than all citizens. He remained in office until his death. However, the exact nature of the Etruscan political power structure and its mechanisms has not yet been determined.

 

Maenad:
A priestess who followed the God Dionysus (Greek), Bacchus (Roman) and Fufluns (Etruscan) was reputed to dance in an ecstatic trance during Dionysian rites and who wore distinctive clothing such as leopard-skin cloaks.

 

Maru:
The name used for an Etruscan magistrate who may have headed a college of a religious cult. However, the exact nature of the Etruscan political and religious power structures and their mechanisms has not yet been determined.

 

Molles:
The pejorative Latin name given to men who were exclusively homosexual rather than bisexual.

 

Palla:
A long, rectangular-shaped cloak worn by women, it could be wrapped around the body and thrown over one shoulder or drawn over the head.

 

Patera:
A shallow dish used to make libations to the gods.

 

Patrician/s:
Wealthy landowners of noble birth who traced their ancestry to the original founders of Rome and claimed to have ‘divine’ blood. They held the highest positions of power during the time of the early Roman Republic.

 

People’s Tribune/s (Tribune of the Plebs):
Ten officials elected to protect the rights of
plebeians
as they held the power to veto elections, decrees of the
senate
and actions of magistrates. As such they could hinder the levy and funding of troops. It was the only political position a
plebeian
could hold in the early Roman Republic. Their person was sacrosanct and inviolate and as such, the death penalty could be inflicted on those who interfered with the exercise of their power.

 

Phalerae:
Gold, silver or bronze discs awarded for valour and worn on a breastplate during parades.

 

Plebeian/s:
Roman citizens that were not
patricians
, e.g. farmers, traders and craftsmen. They were denied the right to hold magistracies during the time of the early Roman Republic.

 

Pontifex Maximus:
The high priest of the College of Pontiffs, the most important religious position in Rome. Only
patricians
were entitled to hold this office during the time of the early Roman Republic.

 

Pornai:
Greek word for common prostitutes as opposed to flute girls who entertained men with music at
symposiums
as well as granted sexual favours.

 

Princip/Principes:
Etruscan aristocrats who held power to elect leaders and participate in government. However, the exact nature of the Etruscan political power structure and its mechanisms has not yet been determined.

 

Rhyton:
A bowl used for mixing wine and water.

 

Saeculum/Saecula:
Time period of variable length, the end of which was determined by omens.

 

Senate:
An advisory council consisting of ex magistrates but in effect the most powerful governing body in Rome. A senatorial decree (senatus consultum) had no formal authority but was generally always made into law.

 

Senator:
A member of the Roman Senate. Senators only qualified to be elected if they had previously held office as a magistrate and were wealthy. Senators were entitled to wear a toga bordered in purple and a tunic with a broad purple stripe.

 

Skene:
In ancient Greek drama, a building where costumes and props were kept and upon which background scenes were painted. It was located behind the stage platform.

 

Stola:
A long, sleeveless tunic with short straps worn over another tunic. It was the symbol of a married woman.

 

Strigil:
A metal instrument used to scrape off dirt from the skin.

 

Symposium:
A drinking party in ancient Greece where men met to discuss politics, philosophy and culture and were entertained by musicians, poetry, flute girls, games, athletic displays etc.

 

Tebenna:
A length of cloth worn by Etruscan men over a tunic.  It was similar in appearance to a toga but shorter.

 

Tesserae:
A game that was usually played with two dice shaken in a cup and then tossed onto a gaming table.

 

Thyrsus:
A staff of giant fennel tipped with a pine cone and entwined with ivy which was associated with the God Dionysus (Greek), Bacchus (Roman) and Fufluns (Etruscan).

 

Toque:
A high hat or cap with either a narrow brim or no brim at all.

 

Torque:
A necklace of twisted metal open at the front.

 

Univir:
A married Roman woman who did not remarry after she was widowed. Literally meaning ‘one man’; highly esteemed in the Republican Rome.

 

Zilath:
Chief magistrate of an Etruscan city with similar authority to a Roman
consul
. He was elected each year by aristocratic colleges rather than all citizens. However, the exact nature of the Etruscan political power structure and its mechanisms has not yet been determined.

 
AUTHOR’S NOTE
 

More than ten years ago I found a photo of a sixth-century-
bc
sarcophagus upon which a husband and wife were sculpted in a pose of affection. The image of the lovers intrigued me. What ancient culture acknowledged women as equals to their husbands? Or exalted marital fidelity with such open sensuality? Discovering the answer led me to the decadent and mystical Etruria and the war between early Rome and Veii.

When ancient Italy is mentioned most think of Rome as the dominant culture. Yet the Etruscans had built a sophisticated and extensive civilisation well before the Romans were fighting turf wars with other Latin tribes such as the Sabini, Volscii and Aequi. At one stage Etruscan Kings ruled Rome, the third and last of which was expelled after the tragic rape of Lucretia. In fact, at its height, Etruria and its settlements extended throughout the modern regions of Umbria, Emilia-Romagna, Tuscany, Lazio and part of Campania and also dominated trade routes stretching from the Black Sea to northern Africa.

The Etruscans were called Tusci or Etrusci by the Romans, and the Tyrrhenoi by the Greeks while referring to themselves as the Rasenna. Over the years there has been much conjecture as to whether they migrated from Asia Minor (first mentioned in the accounts of the Greek historian, Herodotus, who wrote of the legendary journey of the wily Prince Tyrrhenus), however it is now accepted that the Etruscans were indigenous to Italy.

Learning the two rival cities of Rome and Veii were situated only twelve miles apart across the Tiber gave me the idea of exploring the prejudices between the society of the hedonistic Etruscans and that of the austere emergent Rome. And so, the story of a marriage of a Roman girl to an Etruscan man was born.

Although recent archaeological digs are revealing more about the Etruscans, their civilisation has often been dubbed ‘mysterious’ because no literature has survived other than remnants of ritual texts. Instead, their world is revealed through their fantastic art.  Engraved mirrors, funerary sculpture and paintings as well as votives, furniture and utensils give us a glimpse into their world and, in turn, served as a rich vein of inspiration for episodes within the book. As for the authenticity of the scenes I describe, I have attempted to be consistent with current historians’ views, but ultimately I present my own interpretation of how Etruscans might have lived. 

In contrasting the two societies it was important to portray early Rome as opposed to the more familiar eras of the later Republic and Empire. Unfortunately, most of the history of both the nascent Rome and its Etruscan enemy comes from accounts recorded by historians many centuries later through the prism of their times. In effect, the conquerors of Etruria wrote about Etruscan history with all the prejudices of the victor over the vanquished.

Another source of knowledge about Etruscan culture is fragments of texts from contemporary travellers to their cities which were quoted by later historians. These Greek commentators (who came from a society that repressed women) often described the licentiousness and opulence of the Etruscans and the wickedness of their wives. The validity of these fragments is often critised by modern historians because of their authors’ prejudices. One notorious example is Theopompus of Chios, a fourth-century-
bc
Greek historian, who expressed his shock at the profligacy of the Etruscans.

Theopompus wrote, among other scurrilous observations, that his hosts had open intercourse with prostitutes, courtesans, boys and even wives at their banquets. Furthermore, ‘They make love and disport themselves, occasionally within view of each other, but more often they surround their beds with screens, made of interwoven branches over which they spread their mantles’ (Fragment from Histories Book 43 of Theopompus of Chios as quoted by Athenaeus in
The Learned Banquet
, Sybille Haynes,
2000,
Etruscan Civilization
, The J. Paul Getty Trust, pp 256–7).

From studying Etruscan tomb art, it is clear these people celebrated life: dancing in what appears to be ecstasy, and with wives dining in semi-transparent robes as they sat drinking wine next to their husbands. Many worshipped Fufluns, the Greek Dionysus and Roman Bacchus, whose later cult adherents were famous for indulging in debauchery. Yet Theopompus’ views seemed at odds with the commitment that is also depicted between Etruscan couples in funerary art. So which version was correct? In the end I concluded that his account couldn’t be completely discounted because the concept of a society that condones female promiscuity while also honouring wives and mothers is not necessarily contradictory. For while it can be erroneous to compare modern societies with ancient ones, it could be argued that this attitude to females occurs in many present-day Western cultures. With this in mind, I devised the concept of melding fidelity with sexual abandon through the act of ‘lying beneath the reed’.

To demonstrate why it was so extraordinary for the Etruscans to afford high status and independence to their women, I compared the equivalent attitudes of the Greeks and Romans to females in daily life. In doing so I described the lives of slave and courtesan, maid and matron through the Grecian Cytheris and Erene, and the Roman Caecilia and Aemilia together with the Etruscan Larthia and Seianta.

An understanding of the attitude to female sexuality was also needed. This research was fascinating to say the least. It soon became evident that Roman and Greek sexual morals involved a complex construct that makes our modern-day gender politics pale in comparison. Sex was seen from a frame of reference of male bisexuality rather than the polarities of heterosexual or homosexual love. Power and status was all important. There was an emphasis on class distinction and the dominance or passivity of participants rather than gender—that is, the concept of the lover and beloved. Women, freedmen and slaves were all considered on a lower level to freeborn men. Lesbianism was completely taboo, as the idea of a woman preferring another woman over a man was unthinkable. Accordingly, whether a woman might enjoy sex was irrelevant. The conception of children, preferably male, was the primary purpose
.
In the case of the Etruscans, however, I concluded that their men might vary to Greeks and Romans in their attitude to women’s sexual gratification as it’s established that they afforded women equal status. Certainly, the visible expressions of undying love, as depicted in funerary art, would seem to support this.

There is ample evidence to confirm that male sex was practised in Etruria as well as in Greece and Rome. Ancient historians speak of the Etruscan’s inordinate love for youths and boys, and Etruscan tomb art displays it. I doubt, however, that their men’s concern over status would have differed from the Greeks’ and Romans’; that is, aristocratic freeborn warriors could not be seen to be subservient to a male slave or freedman or, indeed, another freeborn man. Again, bisexuality was the defining force with sex between males, and it was not necessarily considered in the same way as we view gay sex today. In fact, homophobia was just as prevalent then as it is now. In Rome homosexuals were called ‘molles’, meaning soft. As for pederasty, as far as I am aware, there is no evidence either way as to whether this was observed in Etruria. Its culture, though, was heavily influenced by the Greeks, and in city-states like Athens, Sparta and Thebes noblemen were known to teach young freeborn boys of their civic and military obligations through this practice. Accordingly, in also portraying men’s sexuality in the book, I explored the ancient world’s rationale for pederasty, and the psychology and hypocrisy behind that custom.

Drugs such as qat and opium were used in the ancient world, together with aphrodisiacs containing poisonous ingredients like mandrake, or ‘mandragora’. Nevertheless, the ‘Catha’, ‘Zeri’ (meaning ‘serene’ or ‘free’ in Etruscan) and the love potion ‘Alpan’ are my own suggestions. ‘Magic’ toadstools were also used during religious ecstatic ritual, with their toxicity diluted via what I called ‘Divine Milk’—that is, the milk or urine of reindeers that had eaten the fungi.

BOOK: The Wedding Shroud - A Tale of Ancient Rome
2.07Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

The Wish List by Jane Costello
Shaking Off the Dust by Rhianna Samuels
Everything Left Unsaid by Jessica Davidson
Chasing Fire by Nora Roberts
Ring of Lies by Roni Dunevich
Danger for Hire by Carolyn Keene
Anticipation by Sarah Mayberry
Lark by Cope, Erica
The Survivors by Dan Willis