Events

Edward Cohen: “Roman Inequality: Affluent Slaves and Important Businesswomen”

Friday, March 29, 2024
11:00 am – 1:00 pm

Italian Academy, 5th floor seminar room

Edward Cohen
University of Pennsylvania

Roman Inequality: Affluent Slaves and Important Businesswomen

 

Friday, March 29, 2024
11:00 AM
Italian Academy, 5th floor seminar room

 

This lecture will explore how at Rome in the first and second centuries CE a number of male and female slaves, and some free women, prospered in business amidst a generally impoverished population, both free and enslaved, both male and female.
The presentation will focus on two anomalies to which only minimal academic attention has been previously directed: (1) the paradox of a Roman economy dependent on enslaved entrepreneurs who often achieved considerable personal affluence, although functioning within a legal system that supposedly deprived unfree persons of all legal capacity and human rights; (2) the incongruity of the importance and accomplishments of Roman businesswomen operating under legal rules that in many aspects discriminated strongly against women.

Edward E. Cohen is Professor of Classics and Ancient History (Adjunct) at the University of Pennsylvania. He is the author of many books and articles on ancient economic and legal history, including most recently Athenian Prostitution: The Business of Sex and Roman Inequality: Affluent Slaves, Businesswomen, Legal Fictions (both published by Oxford University Press).

Center for the Ancient Mediterranean
Columbia University
Department of Art History and Archaeology
  1200 Amsterdam Avenue
653-A Ext. Schermerhorn Hall, MC 5517
New York, NY 10027
 212-854-0200

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