A Cabinet of Roman Curiosities: Strange Tales and Surprising Facts from the World's Greatest Empire

J. C. McKeown (Professor of Classics, Professor of Classics, University of Wisconsin, Madison)

A Cabinet of Roman Curiosities: Strange Tales and Surprising Facts from the World's Greatest Empire
Format
Hardback
Publisher
Oxford University Press Inc
Country
United States
Published
20 November 2010
Pages
272
ISBN
9780195393750

A Cabinet of Roman Curiosities: Strange Tales and Surprising Facts from the World’s Greatest Empire

J. C. McKeown (Professor of Classics, Professor of Classics, University of Wisconsin, Madison)

Here is a whimsical and captivating collection of odd facts, strange beliefs, outlandish opinions, and other highly amusing trivia of the ancient Romans. We tend to think of the Romans as a pragmatic people with a ruthlessly efficient army, an exemplary legal system, and a precise and elegant language.
A Cabinet of Roman Curiosities shows that the Romans were equally capable of bizarre superstitions, logic-defying customs, and often hilariously derisive views of their fellow Romans and non-Romans. Classicist J. C. McKeown has organized the entries in this entertaining volume around major themes–The Army, Women, Religion and Superstition, Family Life, Medicine, Slaves, Spectacles–allowing for quick browsing or more deliberate consumption.
Among the book’s many gems are:
- Romans on urban living: The satirist Juvenal lists fires, falling buildings, and poets reciting in August as hazards to life in Rome.

  • On enhanced interrogation: If we are obliged to take evidence from an arena-fighter or some other such person, his testimony is not to be believed unless given under torture. (Justinian)
  • On dreams: Dreaming of eating books foretells advantage to teachers, lecturers, and anyone who earns his livelihood from books, but for everyone else it means sudden death

  • On food: When people unwittingly eat human flesh, served by unscrupulous restaurant owners and other such people, the similarity to pork is often noted. (Galen)

  • On marriage: In ancient Rome a marriage could be arranged even when the parties were absent, so long as they knew of the arrangement, or agreed to it subsequently.

  • On health care: Pliny caustically described medical bills as a down payment on death, and Martial quipped that Diaulus used to be a doctor, now he’s a mortician. He does as a mortician what he did as a doctor.

For anyone seeking an inglorious glimpse at the underside of the greatest empire in history, A Cabinet of Roman Curiosities offers endless delights.

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