Empress Theodora—Sinner or Saint?
The hooded gaze of an inscrutable Theodora (c.497- 548 CE) greets hundreds of thousands of visitors each year as they pay their respects to her […]
Empress Theodora—Sinner or Saint? Read More »
The hooded gaze of an inscrutable Theodora (c.497- 548 CE) greets hundreds of thousands of visitors each year as they pay their respects to her […]
Empress Theodora—Sinner or Saint? Read More »
The dominant paradigm was turned on its head when subjugated women were made autonomous by participating in a feminine fertility festival known as the Thesmophoria.
The Savagery of Citizen Wives Read More »
It should come as no surprise to most that the biblical writers were unfair to the gentler sex. After all, ever since Eve bit into
The Bible’s Bedeviling Bad Girls: Delilah, Jezebel And Salome Read More »
It is assumed with some authority that the Greek world’s most venerable feminine fertility festival—exclusive to upstanding citizen wives—had as its unequivocal founders a murderous
Demeter and the Danaids: A Subversive Alliance Read More »
Conjuring up mystical images of secret initiation rites held under cover of darkness, the Eleusinian Mysteries had a reputation as a dark and dangerous festival.
The Mysterious Eleusinian Mysteries Read More »
As any self-respecting Greek hero knows, sacking a city and raping its female inhabitants is hard work. So it is no wonder that after Agamemnon
Clytemnestra: Twilight of the Matriarch Read More »
“Let her be banished for life,” Augustus (63 BC-14 AD) is recorded as saying about the harsh exile of his only biological child, Julia, to
Augustus’ Draconian Marriage Laws And The Banishment Of Julia Augusti Read More »
In the Myth of the Minotaur, if not for the ministrations of the humble Princess Ariadne, Theseus—the Greek hero—would not have had a prayer. Although
Loves Of The Lady Of The Labyrinth: Ariadne Powerful Minoan Goddess Read More »
Long before her boat docked at the port of Brundisium in the winter of 19 CE, Agrippina (the Elder—14 BCE- 33 CE) might have known
Agrippina the Elder: The Woman Who Would Be Empress Read More »
In the Greek Peloponnese, high atop the summit on Arcadia’s Mount Lykaion (Wolf Mountain) lies an altar at one of the oldest and most revered
The Highest Altar: Human Sacrifice in Ancient Greece Read More »