
Contents
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Associations and Social Life in the Roman City Associations and Social Life in the Roman City
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Private Munificence and Public Pleasures: Banqueting and Bathing Private Munificence and Public Pleasures: Banqueting and Bathing
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Sex in the City: Brothels, Bars, and Board Games Sex in the City: Brothels, Bars, and Board Games
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The Countryside The Countryside
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Bibliography Bibliography
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23 Social Life in Town and Country
Get accessGarrett G. Fagan(1963–2017) was Professor in the Department of Classics and Ancient Mediterranean Studies at Penn State University. A much-respected specialist in Roman society and culture, his publications include Bathing in Public in the Roman World (1999) and The Lure of the Arena: Social Psychology and the Crowd at the Roman Games (2011), as well as the edited and co-edited volumes New Perspectives on Ancient Warfare (2010); The Topography of Violence in Classical Antiquity (2016); and Archaeological Fantasies: How Pseudoarchaeology Misrepresents the Past and Misleads the Public (2006). He is missed.
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Published:06 January 2015
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Abstract
Epigraphy reveals important aspects of the social life of ordinary people and slaves in the Roman world, habitually overlooked by elite literary authors. Inscriptions dealing with the lower orders might appear to have no overt social filter but are often influenced by the epigraphic culture of the elite. The chapter argues that through public documents, such as the statutes of collegia, the commemoration of benefactions, gravestones, and graffiti, some commoners gain a voice. Inscriptions give scholars a better understanding of life in the countryside and among the urban plebs .
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