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Familia Caesaris

Familia Caesaris

Familia Caesaris

A Social Study of the Emperor's Freedmen and Slaves
P. R. C. Weaver
July 2008
Available
Paperback
9780521070164
$49.99
USD
Paperback

    The slave and freed slave classes are of the first importance for any study of the social structure of the Roman world in the first and second centuries AD. Among them the emperor's own slaves and freedmen, the Familia Caesaris, deserve special attention: this was the most important in status and the most mobile socially of all the groups in slave-born classes; it also had the greatest continuity of development and the individuals who comprised it can be identified and dated in sufficient numbers for significant statistical comparisons to be made of their family-relationships and occupations. The primary sources for this study are inscriptions - over four thousand of them - mostly sepulchral, brief, stereotyped and undated. One of Professor Weaver's main achievements has been to establish criteria for dating and interpreting this intractable material so that it can yield the social historian reliable statistical information. He shows how the Familia Caesaris differed from other sections of the slave and freedman classes and how even within it there was a considerable degree of social differentiation.

    Product details

    July 2008
    Paperback
    9780521070164
    344 pages
    232 × 156 × 9 mm
    1.49kg
    Available

    Table of Contents

    • Part I. Nomenclature and Chronology:
    • 1. Dated inscriptions
    • 2. Nomina and praenomina
    • 3. Status indication
    • 4. Cognomina and agnomina
    • Part II. The Family Circle:
    • 5. Age at manumission
    • 6. Age at marriage
    • 7. Status of wives
    • 8. Status of children
    • 9. The Senatusconsultum Claudianum and the Familia Caesaris
    • 10. Women in the Familia Caesaris
    • 11. The marriage pattern of slaves and freedmen outside the Familia Caesaris
    • Part III. The Emperor's Service:
    • 12. Vicars
    • 13. Liberti serous and liberti libertus
    • 14. 'Vicariani'
    • 15. The occupational hierarchy: some points of method
    • 16. Sub-clerical grades
    • 17. Adiutores: junior clerical grades
    • 18. Intermediate clerical grades
    • 19. Senior clerical grades
    • 20. Senior administrative grades: a rationibus, ab epistulis, etc.
    • 21. Freedman procurators
    • 22. Imperial freedmen and equestrian status: the father of Claudius Etruscus.
      Author
    • P. R. C. Weaver