Thursday, February 28, 2019
Women Role in Athenian Society
Womens role in Greece can be seen when  champion first begins to do research on the subject. The subject of women in Greece is  mate with the subject of slaves. This is the earliest classification of women in classic society. Al g-forcegh women were treated  otherwise from city to city the basic premise of that treatment never changed. Women were  totally useful for establishing a bloodline that could carry on the family name and  lay down the proper  detain rites to the  save. However, women did form life long bonds with their husbands and found  enjoy in arranged marriages.Women argon defined as near slaves, or as perpetual minors in Athenian society (The Greek World, pg. 200). For women life didnt extend far from the home, which was thought to be their  sole realm of existence. Though they ranked higher than slaves did, they were treated in   legion(predicate) an(prenominal) of the same ways. Just like slaves, their mothers trained women as adolescents what their domestic duties w   ere. They were  undercover from all males, including those in their family. They lived in gynaikeion, which were womens a air divisionments in Athens (Daily  flavor in Greece, pg. 55). They were kept at home where they were taught the proper manners and duties of a desirable married woman. Marriage was the inevitable goal to which her whole life tended. To  take a breather a spinster was the worst  humiliate which could befall a  adult female (Everyday Life in Ancient Greece, pg. 82). However, it was seen as   more(prenominal) of a  bring low on her father who owned her until she was married.Although Athenian women were completely in  tutelage of their household and slaves, they didnt  ready much freedom. They rarely left the house, unless they were part of some sort of religious procession. They could  l matchless(prenominal) walk abroad in the streets if accompanied by a slave or other attendant. It was  out-of-the-way for respectable women to share the same social entertainments    as men. Even if caught in the courtyard of the house by a male visitor, they would return to the  retirement of their own apartments. Pericles once said, it was their business to be spoken of as  dwarfish as possible whether for good or ill (Everyday Life in Ancient Greece, pg. 82). This sentiment describes the extent of the importance of women in society. Marriage was their only major role in the lives of men.The betrothal was arranged by the parents as a strictly business contract. The parents choice of a suitable  coiffe for their bride was a matter of pride and status for the family. The grooms choice in bride was largely determined by the  list of dowry the bride would bring with her. Although the wedding was a happy ceremony, it was only the  stock of a womans loss of independence. Not only did women  take in no independent status in the eyes of the law she  ever remained under the supervision of a male. If her husband died, she was returned to her fathers or brothers home whe   re they would take charge of her.After the wedding, the married womans duties were centered on the management of the home. She would overlook the slaves, mend and  make water clothing for her family, usually done by spinning or knitting,  wander rugs and baskets for the home, or just fold and refold the clothing kept in the family chest. The married woman was also responsible for maintaining her attractiveness for her husband. A proper Athenian wife would adorn herself with jewelry and use rouge upon her husbands comer home. Sometimes she might spend an entire evening sitting  adjoining to the couch where her husband lay reclining.Most importantly the Athenian women were seen as fine upstanding matrons fit to bear a race of  clear athletes (Everyday Life in Ancient Greece, pg. 86). An Athenian man married  in the beginning to have children. These children were expected to care for him in his old age, but more importantly to bury him with the full appropriate rites (Daily Life in Gre   ece, pg. 57). Moreover, Athenian men married to have male children in order to  uphold the family line and guarantee him honors when he died. It was also a large disgrace for a man to be unmarried. Basically, Athenians married not out of  savour for  for each one other, but for religious and social convenience.All this aside, love was  considerable in Greek society. Although love was never a determining  ingredient in marriages, a lifelong bond and devotion developed between a couple as the years passed. We know that the Greeks of the fifth and  fourth century used the word eros (love) to describe the passion linking a husband and his wife (Daily Life in Greece, pg. 58). There are many instances in myth and history where husbands and wives in Greek society have sacrificed themselves for the sake of the other. They were bonded  together by their love of their family and by their dedication to each other through their family. Women were dedicated to the  gladness of their husband and    the well  creation of their children. Men were dedicated to providing for and supporting their family and raising noteworthy children. These common goals brought together the husband and wife like never before. It was this bond that sparked the beginning of a lifelong commitment to one another and the growth of their love for one another.Although women were not given formal rights, they were able to find pride and happiness in the mundane applications of their life. Women found pride in their children and satisfaction in their husbands happiness. I would like to leave you with closing remarks that  expand the bond between a wife and her husband.The greatest pleasure to me  bequeath be this, that, if you prove yourself my superior, you  go forth make me your servant and there  lead be no fear lest with advancing years your influence will wane nay the better companion you are to me and the better  defender of the house to our children, the greater will be the esteem in which you are h   eld at home and all will admire you, not so much for your good looks as for your good deeds in  practical life (Everyday Life in Ancient Greece, pg. 86).Atthis, who didst live for me and breathe thy last toward me, once the source of all my joy and now of tears, holy, much lamented, how sleepst thou the mournful sleep, thou whose head was never laid away from thy husbands breast, leaving Theios alone as one who is no more for with thee the hope of our life went to darkness (Everyday Life in Ancient Greece, pg. 87).  
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
 
 
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.