Ancient Roman women Roman women's treatment depends on family background and family background. However, all social class Roman women should consider themselves to be the property of their fathers and husbands. Many Romans tell a story about a woman named Roman woman, Cornelia in the 2nd century BC. I will live together. She continued to brag about the most beautiful jewels at that time, and Cornelia was talking, and she told the lads until her children returned home from the classroom:
Ancient Roman and Chinese women are very different from Chinese women, but its treatment and role are very similar. In both cultures, they are protected by their father until they get married. When they got married, they stayed home and became wives, but they did not receive formal education and learned to manage their families. They should not humilify their families in any way, and they are not as good as men from the moment they were born. Chinese lady
INTRODUCTION: The role of women in ancient Rome is not easy to classify; in some respects women are better treated than women in ancient Greece, but in other respects women have very modest rights and privileges Absent. It seems obvious that Roman urban states have evolved from an early stage to a more complex society, and women are not necessarily limited to a secondary role. - The role of women in Jane Austen's "Pride and Prejudice" in the role of "Pride and Prejudice" is a true novel exploring the relationship between young men and women 200 years ago. It is not difficult for the reader to understand Jane Austen's view, but she showed her views in subtle ways. It not only tells about the loss and discovery of love, the wonderful story of the ultimate happy ending, it also tells a huge number of societies at the time.
One of the main obstacles in studying women's lives in ancient Rome is the question of surviving sources - all the information we can get is written by men. Therefore, almost everything we know about Roman women is filtered by how Romans are looking at women. Nevertheless, historians still can summarize the image of the lives of ancient Roman women. This is what they have learned. Ancient Roman women did not have a legal status equivalent to men. According to the law, girls and women in Rome, regardless of parents, husbands, legal guardians, are mostly within the men's jurisdiction. During her lifetime, women can transfer control from one man to another - most commonly from father to husband