The Mirror of Venus

Women in Roman Art

Dr Iain Ferris author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Amberley Publishing

Published:15th Aug '15

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Mirror of Venus cover

Though images of women were ubiquitous in the Roman world, these were seldom intended to be taken simply at face value. The importance of marriage, motherhood and political stability was often conveyed to the Roman people through carefully constructed representations of the women of the ruling house. Mythological representations were used to present moral and political lessons to the women of Rome. Roman society was, on most levels, male dominated and women’s roles were sometimes subordinate to political and cultural needs and imperatives. Images of mortal women – empresses and other female members of the imperial family, elite women from around the empire and working women from Rome, Ostia, Pompeii and elsewhere – are analysed alongside images of goddesses and personifications and of complex mythological figures such as Amazons. This is the first general book to present a coherent, broad analysis of the numerous images of women in Roman art and to interpret their meaning and significance, all set against the broader geographical, chronological, political, religious and cultural context of the world of the Roman republic and empire and of Late Antiquity.

ISBN: 9781445633725

Dimensions: 234mm x 156mm x 22mm

Weight: 577g

256 pages