introduction
i. masculinity in Imperial Rome
ii. one's sexual behavior as one's essence
iii. expectations of women
conclusion: the Roman notion of gender
coda: foreign affairs and the senatorial body
1. The wall painting is from Pompeii, Region VII, and can be found in Kellum, 175.
2. Suetonius, Life of Augustus, 96 (tr. Robert Graves)
Before Actium,
[Augustus] was about to board his ship and give the
signal for hostilities to begin, when he met a peasant
driving an ass, and asked his name. The peasant replied: "I
am Eutychus ("Prosper") and my ass is called Nicon
("Victor")."
3. Tacitus, Annals, p.232
Publius Suillius Rufus
accused [Asiaticus] of corrupting the army and using
bribes and sexual entanglements to commit the soldiers to
unbounded atrocities. Adultery with Poppaea Sabina was a
supplementary charge. Another was effeminacy. At this
accusation, the prisoner found his voice: "Ask your sons,
Suillius," he said. "They will confirm my
masculinity."
4. Songs of Priapus (anonymous, first century), no. 26 (tr. W. H. Parker)
O citizens, Romans, I
pray you please,
There must be a limit -- I'm brought to my knees;
For passionate women from hereabout
Importune me nightly and tire me out...
I used to be hale and lusty and strong,
And able to deal with the thieves that did wrong;
But now I am in a most dangerous state,
And shudder and cough and expectorate.
5. Tacitus, Annals, p.250
For Claudius, home again,
soothed and a little fuddled after an early dinner, ordered
the 'poor woman" (that is said to have been his phrase) to
appear on the next day to defend herself. This was noted.
His anger was clearly cooling, his love returning. Further
delay risked that the approaching night would revive
memories of conjugal pleasures.
6. Foucault, History of Sexuality, p.43 (tr. R. Hurley)
As defined by the ancient
civil or canonical codes, sodomy was a category of forbidden
acts; their perpetrator was nothing more than the juridical
subject of them. The nineteenth-century homosexual became a
personage, a past, a case history, and a childhood...
Nothing that went into his total composition was unaffected
by his sexuality. It was everywhere present in him: at the
root of all his actions because it was their insidiously and
indefinitely active principle; written immodestly on his
face and body because it was a secret that always gave
itself away. It was consubstantial with him, less as a
habitual sin than as a singular nature. ...Homosexuality
appeared as one of the forms of sexuality when it was
transformed from the practice of sodomy onto a kind of
interior androgyny, a hermaphroditism of the soul. The
sodomite had been a temporary aberration; the homosexual was
now a species.
7. Aulus Gellius, Attic Nights, 1.5 (tr. E. Gunderson)
It is said that
Demosthenes [the Greek orator] in his dress and the
rest of his care for his body was splendid, attractive and
too polished. And so these "refinements" gave rise to
insults from his rivals and adversaries as "dainty little
cloaklets" and "soft little frocks." Nor was he spared foul
and unworthy names; indeed he was even called too little a
man and "of polluted mouth."
8. Polemo, Physiognomy (Gleason, p.395)
You may recognize
[someone who is really feminine] by his
provocatively melting glance and by the rapid movement of
his intensely staring eyes. His brow is furrowed, while his
eyebrows and cheeks are in constant motion. His head is
tilted to the side, his loins do not hold still, and his
slack limbs never stay in one position. He minces along with
little jumping steps; his knees knock together. He carries
his hands with palms turned upward. He has a shifting gaze,
and his voice is thin, weepy, shrill and
drawling.
9. "Anonymous Latin Physiognomy" (Gleason, p.408)
For it is by the
twitching of their lips and the rotation of their eyes, by
the haphazard and inconsistent shifting of their feet, by
the movement of their hips and the fickle motion of their
hands, and by the tremor of their voice as it begins to
speak, that effeminates are most easily revealed.
10. Tacitus, Annals, pp.249-50
The execution of
accomplices was ordered: Titius Proculus -- appointed
Messalina's guard by Silius -- Vettius Valens, who
confessed, and two further members of the order of knights,
Pompeius Urbicus and Saufeius Trogus. The same penalty was
visited on the commander of the watch, Decrius Calpurnianus,
the superintendent of a gladiator's school, Sulpicius Rufus,
and a junior senator, Juncus Vergilianus. ...Plautius
Lateranus escaped the death sentence owing to an uncle's
distinguished record. So did Suillius Caesoninus, because of
his own vices -- at that repulsive gathering, his had been
merely a female part.
11. Tacitus, Annals, p.200
His criminal lusts shamed
him. Their uncontrollable activity was worthy of an oriental
tyrant. Free-born children were his victims. He was
fascinated by beauty, youthful innocence, and aristocratic
birth. New names for types of perversion were invented.
Slaves were charged to locate and procure his requirements.
The y rewarded compliance, overbore reluctance with menaces,
and -- if resisted by parents or relations -- kidnapped
their victims, and violated them on their own account. It
was like the sack of a captured city.
12. Polemo, Physiognomy (Gleason, p.390)
In the masculine there is
something feminine to be found, and in the feminine
something masculine, but the name "masculine" or "feminine"
is assigned according to which of the two
prevails.
13. Matron depicted as Venus, Tomb of the Manilii, Rome; now in the Vatican museums; 1.17m; marble. It can be found in D'Ambra.
14. Tacitus, Annals, p.250
[Her mother, Domitia
Lepida] urged Messalina to await the executioner. "Your
life is finished," she said. "All that remains is to make a
decent end." But in that lust-ridden heart decency did not
exist. Messalina was still uselessly weeping and moaning
when the men violently broke down the door. ...Then for the
first time it dawned on Messalina what her position really
was. Terrified she took a dagger, and put it to her throat
and then her breast -- but could not do it. And so
[an] officer ran her through.
15. Tacitus on Agrippina, Annals, various
Actually, Agrippina knew
no feminine weaknesses. Intolerant of rivalry, thirsting for
power, she had a man's preoccupations. (p.212)
The youth [Nero Caesar] was accused not of actual or
intended rebellion but of homosexual indecency. Against his
daughter-in-law Tiberius dared not invent similar charges,
but attacked her insubordinate language and disobedient
spirit. (p.196)
Agrippina, resentful as ever, became physically ill. When
Tiberius visited her, at first she wept long and silently.
Then she broke into embittered appeals. "I am lonely," she
said. Help me and give me a husband! I am still young
enough, and marriage is the only respectable consolation.
Rome contains men who would welcome Germanicus' wife and
children." Tiberius recognized the political implications of
this -- but did not want to show either anger or fear. So
her persistence remained unanswered. (p.184)
From Tiberius came an outburst of filthy slanders, accusing
her of adultery with Gaius Asinius Gallus, and asserting
that she had wearied of living when Asinius died.
(p.212)
16. Tacitus, Annals, p.225
At this time, too, Sextus
Papinius -- son of a man who had been consul -- hurled
himself headlong to a sudden and undignified death. The
blame fell on his mother. Long divorced, she had indulged
his extravagances to a point at which death was his only
escape. Charged in the senate, she prostrated herself before
the senators and made a long and piteous appeal, pleading
especially the anguish which anybody, particularly a weak
woman, must feel at a bereavement such as hers. However, she
was banned from Rome for ten years, until her younger son
had passed the dangerous years of youth.
17. Tacitus, Annals, p.167
I find that this Marcus
Lepidus played a wise and noble part in events. He often
palliated the brutalities caused by other people's
sycophancy. And he had a sense of proportion -- for he
enjoyed unbroken influence and favour with Tiberius. This
compels me to doubt whether, like other things, the
friendships and enmities of rulers depend on destiny and the
luck of a man's birth. Instead may our own decisions play
some part, enabling us to steer a way, safe from intrigues
and hazards, between perilous insubordination and degrading
servility?
18. London Times, 2/6/98
Corriere della Sera
said that Caesar's subjects were not scandalized by his
peccadilloes, but saw them as "a source of national pride".
What really mattered -- as with Mr Clinton -- were his
political abilities and achievements.
Bibliography
Barbara Kellum, "Phallus as Signifier," Sexuality in Ancient Art, ed N. Kampen (Cambridge, 1996), 170-83
Michel Foucault, History of Sexuality: An Introduction, trans. R. Hurley (Pantheon, 1978)
Eve D'Ambra, "Calculus of Venus: Nude Portraits of Roman Women," Sexuality in Ancient Art, ed N. Kampen (Cambridge, 1996), 219-32
Maud Gleason, "Semiotics of Gender," Before Sexuality, ed J. Winkler et al. (Princeton, 1990), 389-415
Ramsey Macmullen, "Roman Attitudes to Greek Love," Historia 31 (1982), 484-502
Amy Richlin, "Not Before Homosexuality," Journal of the History of Sexuality 3 (1993), 523-73
Aline Rousselle, "Body Politics in Ancient Rome," History of Women in the West, ed Pauline Schmitt Pantel (Harvard, 1992), 324-336