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Paul Chrystal - How to Be a Roman: A Day in the Life of a Roman Family

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Paul Chrystal How to Be a Roman: A Day in the Life of a Roman Family
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How to Be a Roman: A Day in the Life of a Roman Family: summary, description and annotation

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How to be a Roman is a fascinating guide to day-to-day life in ancient Rome. Explore the early Empire through the eyes of a typical Roman family father, mother, son and daughter and discover the daily routine of each member of a bustling Roman household. The lives of Roman men and women differed considerably: when a Roman husband might be standing up to speak in the Senate, his wife may be giving birth to the familys heir. The education experienced by their sons and daughters would also vary depending on their sex and their parents expectations for their future. And a typical middle-class Roman family was not made up of the core relatives alone. Learn the daily routine of the various servants and slaves that would have dressed, fed and cared for their Roman masters, and meet the various merchants and tutors who offered the services that made the Roman way of life possible. All areas of life are covered in this comprehensive guide to life in ancient Rome: from getting dressed and eating breakfast to braving the busy markets and practising religion. There are parts of this daily routine that may seem startlingly similar to our own way of life, and of course there are areas that could not be more different (unless watching a gladiator fight or corresponding with a Roman general on the edge of Empire are usually included in your day-to-day routine)! This exciting book is aimed at 1218 year olds and will allow them to discover ancient Rome as experienced every day by citizens and slaves alike.

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First published 2017 Amberley Publishing The Hill Stroud - photo 1

First published 2017

Amberley Publishing
The Hill, Stroud
Gloucestershire, GL5 4EP

www.amberley-books.com

Copyright Paul Chrystal, 2017

The right of Paul Chrystal to be identified as the Author of this work has been asserted in accordance with the Copyrights, Designs and Patents Act 1988.

All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reprinted or reproduced or utilised in any form or by any electronic, mechanical or other means, now known or hereafter invented, including photocopying and recording, or in any information storage or retrieval system, without the permission in writing from the Publishers.

British Library Cataloguing in Publication Data.
A catalogue record for this book is available from the British Library.

ISBN 9781445665641 (PRINT)
ISBN 9781445665658 (eBOOK)

Typeset in 9.5pt on 12.5pt Sabon.
Origination by Amberley Publishing.
Printed in the UK.

C ONTENTS
Heracles and Omphale fresco Pompeii National Archaeological Museum of Naples - photo 2

Heracles and Omphale fresco, Pompeii, National Archaeological Museum of Naples, AD 4579. (Photographer: Stefano Bolognini.)

An early example of a dysfunctional family of sorts: Lydian queen Omphale kept Hercules as a slave. She bought him from Hermes, who offloaded him following an oracle that declared Hercules must be sold into slavery for three years. Hercules had consulted the oracle to find out what he had to do in order to purify himself, after he murdered his friend Iphitus and stole the Delphic tripod. Eventually, Omphale freed Heracles and took him as her husband. It was shameful for Heracles to serve an oriental woman like this, but there are many references to Heracles doing women's work, wearing women's clothes and holding a basket of wool while Omphale got on with her spinning. All of this would have been anathema to our family, as you will see on the following pages

I NTRODUCTION

This is a one day snapshot of day-to-day life in the early empire of ancient Rome, as seen through the eyes of a typical Roman household: husband, wife, son, daughter, and various slaves. It takes you on an exciting journey through the Romans daily routine from early morning to the middle of the night.

By following this Roman family through their day, this book explains many aspects of a typical Romans daily routine: work, play, religion, politics, school, military matters, eating, leisure, and bathing.

When you have finished the book, you will come away with a comprehensive picture of what life was like for the typical, relatively well-off family in Rome, and for their slaves. Using a family, as opposed to the usual Roman, is important because it allows us to shed light on the lives of Roman wives and mothers, and on girls so different from the lives of men and boys; slaves were, of course, different again. Casting a family enables us to give a broader view of the familys different, individual activities and attitudes.

The facts are the facts, so the information in the book is based on and taken from real evidence found in the extensive literature, inscriptions, archaeology, visual arts, and graffiti.

P ART O NE
T HE R OMAN D AY

We should first look at how the Roman day fits into the other parts of the Roman calendar. Here are the Roman months of the year:

Januarius (January) named after the god Janus: 29 days in the Republican calendar/31 in the Julian

Februarius (February) named after the Februa festivals, which were celebrated at the end of the Roman year: 28 days/28 days

Martius (March) named after the god Mars: 31/31

Aprilis (April) named after the Etruscan god Aprilis: 29/30

Maius (May) named after the goddess Maia: 31/31

Junius (June) named after the goddess Juno: 29/30

Julius (July) named after Julius Caesar, originally named Quintillis, the 5th month: 31/31

Augustus (August) named after Augustus Caesar, originally Sextilis, the 6th month: 29/31

September the 7th month: 29/30

October the 8th month: 31/31

November the 9th month: 29/30

December the 10th month: 29/31

Total Days: Republican calendar: 355; Julian calendar: 365

Each month was divided into the

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