3.2 Roman home and family

Cards (108)

  • familia
    family
  • paterfamilias
    male head of the roman family
  • materfamilias
    female head of the roman family
  • filius, filia
    children
  • patria potestas
    the power of the father in the roman family
  • responsibilities of a paterfamilias
    -responsibility of life and death
    -provide for his wife
    -raising children
    -arranging marriages for his daughters and providing a dowry
    -religious head of family
  • who did the paterfamilias have responsibility over life and death?
    his wife, slaves, children, grandchildren up to adulthood
  • exposure
    abandoning a child so it is exposed to the elements and died
  • why might a child have been exposed?
    -disability or deformity
    -illegitimacy
    -if it was a girl and the family already had a number of children
  • when were men expected to marry?
    between the ages of 25-30
  • who introduced a law encouraging marriage and having children?
    Augustus
  • why was divorce an easy process? what were the disadvantages?
    the man could just order his wife to leave, but he would have to return the dowry
  • how did the paterfamilias have to raise his children?
    raise them to be good citizens of Rome and oversee their education, especially his sons
  • when would girls be married off?
    from puberty, so from 12 onwards
  • why were marriages often created?
    to create business or political alliances
  • what would the paterfamilias do as the religious head of the family?
    -lead worship of family shrine where the Lares resided
    -oversee offerings to gods at important moments (births, marriages, funerals, festivals)
    -undertaking sacrifices
  • responsibilities of a materfamilias
    -being loyal, modest, ensuring her reputation is maintained
    -overseeing social events
    -helping educate and bring up her daughters
    -managing household slaves and domestic chores
    -completing appropriate tasks like weaving
    -taking a role in events such as funerals and births
    -providing her husband with children
  • what happened in a failure to reproduce?
    divorce
  • responsibilities of a plebian woman
    -caring for the children
    -doing domestic chores without help of a slave
    -weaving cloth for family events
    -working (shopkeepers, nurses, seamstress)
  • patron
    a roman who gives financial or other support to a client in return for work or favours
  • client
    a roman who would attach himself to a wealthier patron in order to boost his income or business opportunities
  • patronage
    the system of clients and patrons in ancient rome
  • sportula
    a handout given to a client of food, goods or money
  • responsibilities of a patron
    -protect his client
    -help his client with problems if asked
    -provide them with sportula
    -welcome them into the house
    -invite them to dinner
  • responsibilities of a client
    -go to patrons house every morning to greet him
    -complete requested tasks
    -be respectful: address him as domine
    -do the patron favours such as campaigning in an election or accompanying him to the forum
    -attend dinner parties if requested
  • where was the client inscription?
    Pompeii, Vicolo di Balbo
  • why is the client inscription significant?
    shows a client supporting his patron in an annual election campaign
  • why was the patronage system so important?
    -assisted the poor in a world with no benefit system
    -way for individual gaining useful financial and legal advice for free
    -making business connections
    -rising up the social ranks
    -supported a slave once they were freed
  • when did clients meet their patrons?
    first thing in the morning
  • how could you become a client?
    being the son of a client
  • what kind of places would clients accompany their patrons to?
    forum, baths, law courts
  • how is the client treated at dinner and why?
    sat away from the host and given less impressive food as he is inferior to the other guests
  • how did the patron client system change over the years?
    the sportula became a small hand out of money
  • what did the client inscription say?
    Thalamus, his client, elects Publius Paquius Proculus duumvir with judicial power
  • In early roman times how were boys taught?
    at home by their father
  • what would fathers teach their sons?
    -their trade
    -basics of reading and writing
    -being a good roman citizen
    -roman values (pietas)
  • what did mothers teach their daughters?
    weaving
    managing a household
  • Pietas
    a sense of duty and loyalty to your family, the gods, the state and those under your command
  • where might have a teacher taught?
    hired space like a small apartment or back of shop
    public spaces like pavements and squares
  • what changed the roman education system?
    the influence of the greeks