Lefkowitz: Influential Women
Lefkowitz: Influential Women
Lefkowitz: Influential Women
INFLUENTIAL WOMEN
When Greek colonists set up new cities in the then unknown frontier of
Italy, they were quick to compose myths that connected them to their
ancestors, and that gave their customs and their shrines legitimacy. So I
suppose it is no surprise that people who initiate new styles of govern
ment or patterns of Jiving - political colonists, we might call them also seek precedents in the prestigious civilisations of the past. Pro
ponents of slavery in the United States discovered Greek and Roman
writings that supported their views; so, of course, did the Abolitionists.'
Karl Marx found that the notion of free (rather than enforced) sale of
labour first occurred in the Roman army. 2 Most recently, and in some
ways most absurdly, feminists have come up with supposed evidence
for matriarchal societies, such as the Amazons, and have called atten
tion to extraordinary achievements of a few women, as if they set a
pattern that twentieth-century women could emulate and revive, and
fmally bring into full realisation'
But as Simon Pembroke has shown, there is no evidence whatever
for the existence of matriarchal societies in the ancient world, and the
myths about Amazon societies that have come down to us were origin-
ally designed only to indicate how bad things could be when women
got the upper hand 4 Similarly, at first sight, the ancient world may
seem to offer some encouraging examples of women who played
important roles in political life. When I observe that women neither had
nor sought political power, but worked tluough their husbands or
fathers or sons, people often object: what about Antigone or
Clytemnestra or Artemisia or Agrippina? But I believe that it is possible
to show in all these cases, as well as in many others, that women take
political action only under certain closely defmed conditions, and that
unless they do so at least ostensibly on behalf of a male relative, they
and others around them come to a bad end. I will begin by talking
about women in myth, as represented in specific works of literature,
because myths illustrate common attitudes more clearly and simply
than history; but history too can be shown to follow the patterns of
myth, in part because those were the only terms in which most writers
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for practical reasons offered women little opportunity to act as individuals outside the context of their families.
Ancient women could certainly be courageous, but they could not
be truly independent. Antigone herself is an example. In Sophocles'
drama, she contrives to bury her brother in defiance of an order by her
uncle Creon, the king of Thebes, that her brother Polynices, who had
attacked his homeland, should remain unburied. Denial of burial was a
traditional penalty for treason;' but Antigone has the moral sensibility
~as adopted t~e aggressive stance of an Orestes, 'a younger son reveng-
avenge or redeem her brother's death, but is seeking only to bury him
wtth appropriate rites for the dead. The difference may seem trivial to
us, but to the Greeks it was (and in remote villages still is) essential;
men avenge murders of kin, women prepare bodies for burial and sing
insist that 'she and her sister must now be women and not allowed out-
welcome to you, dear brother, since when each of you died I washed
and dressed you and poured libations on your tombs' (897-902). In the
fifth and fourth centuries (that is, in Sophocles' lifetime and for a
century afterwards), it was common belief that families were reunited
in death. 14 Special care was taken to bury family members in the same
plot, even if bones had to be exhumed from other localities and reburied. I do not think an ancient audience would have considered it
unusual or excessive when Sophocles' Electra laments over what she
supposes to be the urn that holds her brother's ashes: 'so now you
receive me into 'this house of yours, I who am nothing to your nothing,
so that for the rest of time I can live with you below; for when we were
above ground I shared the same things with you, and now I wish to die
and not be left outside your tomb' (El., 1165-69). When Antigone is
captured, even Ismene asks to die with her and to give the rites to their
dead brother (544-5). The guard who catches Antigone says that when
she saw the corpse of Polynices unburied, 'she wailed out the sharp cry
of an anguished bird, as when in its empty nest it sees its bed stripped
of its nestlings' (424-5). To us Antigone's or Electra's failure to distinguish between living and dead may seem strange; but to Antigone the
important link was not life but blood-kinship: 'my life died long ago, so
that I might serve my dead [family)' (559-60). Antigone says explicitly
that she would not have risked her life for a husband, or if she had had
children of her own; but without any other family, her first duty was to
her brother - wl)ether dead or alive does not seem to matter." Nor
does Ismene count as a reason for her to stay alive, because she is
female, and so not able to inherit or continue the family line. When
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53
her family: Penelope deceives the suitors (and so holds out for her
husband Odysseus) for three years before she is discovered unravelling
her weaving at night; Andromache defies Hermione and Menelaus in
order to protect her young son; lphigenia tricks the wicked king in
order to save her brother Orestes; Helen tells lies to rescue Menelaus. It
own intelligence and judgment: 'if I had put up with [?] my mother's
son having died an unburied corpse, that would have caused me pain;
but I am not pained by what I have done. If I seem to you to have
acted foolishly, then I have been accused of folly by a fool' (466-70).
To put it another way, Antigone must be female for the dramatic
action to occur in the first place, because only a mother or sister would
is important to note that in all these cases the women offer only passive
resistance. Apparently acts of treachery are acceptable in a woman only
law into her own hands. 18 After the fall of Troy, when all the Trojan
men are dead, Hecabe herself avenges the murder of her youngest son
Polydorus. He had been sent to Polymestor in Thrace for safekeeping,
but Hecabe discovers that Polymestor has murdered him, and when
Polymestor arrives in Troy with his young sons in the hope of collecting
more money, Hecabe and her servant women use their brooches to put
out Polymestor's eyes and to stab his sons to death. Polymestor asks
Agamemnon to punish Hecabe, but Agamemnon lets her get away with
her revenge. 'Alas,' Polymestor complains, 'it seems that I have been
nor land sustains a race like them' (1181-2), in other words, they are
monsters (cf. Aeschylus, Choephoroe, 585ff.). Semonides of Amorgos,
in his satire on women (fr. 7 West), identifies nine types of bad women,
but only one good type. Perhaps the low proportion of good women
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tunate lot of (all) women with the enviable life led -without exception
- by men (230ff).
I think that it is also possible to argue that the limitations that apply
to women in epic and in drama apply as well to the 'political' women in
Aristophanes' comedies. Lysistrata in particular is often cited as the
first liberated woman; but consider what she actually accomplishes. In
order to bring about peace, she summons all Greek women to a meeting
(they of course arrive late), and gets them to swear not to have sexual
intercourse with their husbands until the men agree to end the war
between Athens and Sparta. Her plan works, and then her organisation
of women disbands and the women go back to their husbands. So even
in the fantasy world of comedy, women only take action to preserve
and to return to their families. Women have intelligence and understanding, but speak out only in emergencies, and even then their models
are men. Lysistrata says, as she concludes the peace,' "although I am a
woman, I have intelligence" [quoting from a lost play of Euripides] ;19
for my own part, I do not have bad judgment. I have listened to many
speeches by my father and older men and so am not badly educated'
(Lysistrata, 1125-7). When in the Thesmophoriazusae the women meet
to attack Euripides, their proceedings are a burlesque.of the Athenian
men's assembly. Aristophanes realises that his audience would find the
very notion of women meeting together, making speeches and voting,
hllariously funny. 20
In the comedy Ecclesiazusae (or 'Women Meeting in the Assembly')
women in male disguise manage to infJ.ltrate the assembly and vote to
let women run the city, on the grounds that 'we [the assembly] ought
to turn the city over to women, for we use them also as guardians and
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might still ridicule the idea that women should be educated (Resp.,
452b), but nonetheless he incorporated into the model government of
his Republic equal education for men and women and common
marriages and children, so that women might" be able to be _compamons
of men and co-guardians of his ideal state (456b ). But even m his utoplll
Plato included the proviso that women, because their natures were
weaker, should be assigned lighter duties in wartime (he doesn't specify
what they would be).
Of course such socialistic theories, however much they were debated
21
in intellectual circles, were never practised, at least in Athens. In fact,
Aristotle claimed that the liberty permitted to Spartan women in the
days of Sparta's great military successes had by the middle of the
fourth century led directly to her defeat by the Thebans. Women, he
observed, had not been subject to the same restrictions as men under
the Spartan constitution, and so lived intemperate and luxurious lives,
can affect the course of political events only if they act through or on
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behalf of the men in their families. They can take independent action,
like Lysistrata, in an emergency, but then must retire when the problem
is solved. The earliest instance of such an event in history is recorded by
Plutarch in his treatise on the bravery of women. Early in the fifth
century, according to Plutarch, Telesilla of Argos, an aristocrat who
because of her weak constitution had been encouraged to compose
poetry ,25 when the Argive army had suffered a severe setback, organi~ed
the women of Argos to arm themselves and successfully defend their
city's fortifications against the Spartans (Mar., 245c-f). But as soon as
the crisis was over the women resumed their conventional roles; according to Herodotus (who doesn't mention Telesi!la) the Argive women
were married to slaves (6.83 .I), or as Plutarch insists, because they
deserved better, to the aristocratic citizens of the neighbouring cities. 26
Plutarch also preserves another dramatic instance of a woman's
political effectiveness in a crisis, this time as he says, from a period
much closer to his own time, the first century BC. 27 Aretaphila of
Cyrene was compelled to marry the tyrant who had murdered her
husband; first she tried to poison him, then survived torture when her
plot failed, and finally succeeded in getting rid of her tyrant husband
by marrying her daughter to his brother and persuading him to murder
his brother, and then contrived to have the ruler of a neighbouring state
capture her son-in-law and turn him and his mother over to the citizens
of Cyrene to be murdered. The people of Cyrene treated her like a
hero, and asked her to share in the government and management of the
city with the aristocrats, but she 'as if she had played in a sort of drama
or competed in a contest up to the point of winning the prize' returned
home to the women's quarters and spent the rest of her life working at
her loom in the company of her family (Mar., 257d-e).
Even if the original story of Aretaphila has been embellished by
Plutarch or his sources to the point where it conforms with the stan
dard pattern of women's behaviour in myth, it does indicate how
implausible it seemed even in the Hellenistic age that women should
share in the actual process of government (synarchein, syndioikein,
257d). It seems clear from papyri and inscriptions- the most authentic
contemporary evidence preserved about the role of women in public
life - that even when women were legally entitled to own property and
to make wills, they were welcomed as benefactors of cities and given
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28
and fourth centuries, who remained incognito ), due credit was always
given to the men in their families: 'Phile, daughter of Apollonius, wife
of Thessalus son of Polydeuces; as the first woman stephanephorus, she
dedicated at her own expense a receptacle for water and the water pipes
in the city [Priene]' (Pleket 5, I st cent. BC); 'the council and the
people, to Flavia Publicia Nicomachis, daughter of Dinomachis and
Procle . . . their benefactor, and benefactor through her ancestors,
founder of our city, president for life, in recognition of her complete
virtue' (Pleket 19, Asia Minor, 2nd cent. AD); Aurelia Leite, 'daughter
of Theodotus, wife of the foremost man in the city, Marcus Aurelius
Faustus ... she was gymnasiarch of the gymnasium which she repaired
and renewed when it had been dilapidated for many years ... She loved
wisdom, her husband, her children, her native city [Paras]' (Pleket 31,
AD 300).'9 (See further Van Bremen, this volume).
Philosophical theory, as so often, was based on and reinforced social
practice. Aristotle believed that women were capable of virtue and of
understanding, though he could not accept what Plato proposed, that
self-control, courage and justice were the same for women and for men.
Aristotle stated that 'man's courage is shown in commanding [or ruling,
archein] and women's in obeying' (Pol., !260a8). A treatise on women
written in the third or second century BC by Neopythagorean philo
sophers in Italy, in the form of a letter from one woman to another,
also assumes that women's capacity to govern was considerably less
than a man's: 'some people think that it is not appropriate for a woman
to be a philosopher, just as a woman should not be a cavairy officer or a
politician ... 1 agree that men should be generals and city officials and
politicians, and women should keep house and stay inside and receive
and take care of their husbands. But I believe that courage, justice and
intelligence are qualities that men and women have in common ...
vote in the assembly. The traditional female virtues were listed along
with their benefactions, and even though their own names are now
honorific titles, but never a real place on the town council or an actual
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and cousin of Arsinoe's adopted son Ptolemy III Euergetes, was praised
by Callimachus for the courage she showed as a young girl, which won
her her husband. 32 The unwritten law appears to be that the co-ruling
(synarchein) and co-management (syndioikein) unthinkable for
Aretaphila in conjunction with unrelated males (above, p. 56), is
available to women with husbands, fathers or brothers. Cleopatra VII
came to the throne with her brother. Then she enlisted the aid first of
Julius Caesar, who became at least for a short time her consort, to
remain on the throne by defeating her brother and installing a younger
brother as co-ruler. Then she used Mark Antony to stay in power,
though even when she sat with Antony on twin thrones she was
addressed as 'co-ruler with Caesarian', her son (allegedly) by Caesar
(Plut., Ant. 54) 33 For ordinary women also civil law ensured that men
had at least nominal control. Women in the Hellenistic age could draw
up contracts and make wills, but only with the consent of a male
guardian or lcyrios, usually a close relative. 34
Upper-class Romans in Cicero's day could claim that their wives
enjoyed greater social freedom than (certainly) women in Greek cities
(Nepos, Prae[., 6); the aristocratic Aretaphila of (Greek) Cyrene returned
to the women's quarters and saw only other women and members of
her family. Inscriptions and letters explain how women assisted the
men in their families in their political careers. A husband records in a
long eulogy of his wife (neither of their names is. preserved) how she
managed to have him brought back from exile in 43BC: 'you lay prostrate at the feet [of the triumvir Lepidus] and you were not only not
raised up, but were dragged along and carried off brutally like a slave.
But although your body was full of bruises, your spirit was unbroken
and you kept reminding him of [Augustus] Caesar's edict with its
expression of pleasure at my reinstatement, and although you had to
listen to insulting words and suffer cruel wounds, you pronounced the
words of the edict in a loud voice, so that it should be known who was
the cause of my deadly perils' -the husband even claims that his wife's
accusations helped contribute to Lepidus' downfal!. 35 The proscriptions
of the triumvirs apparently elicited similarly heroic behaviour on the
part of other aristocrats' wives: Acilius' wife (like a proper Athenian
woman, her own name is not given) bribed soldiers with her jewellery
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money' (Sallust, Catiline, 24-5) 38 We are told that one could use the
name of Gaia Afrania (a contemporary of Caesar's) who brought
lawsuits herself, without using (male) lawyers, to designate any woman
with low morals (Val. Max. 8.3).
In popular belief, not only was self-assertion on a woman's part
regarded as self-indulgence and licentiousness; crowds of women were
considered a public menace. Uvy has Cato complain of the women
seeking repeal of the Oppian law 'running around in public, blocking
streets, and speaking to other women's husbands'. In practice, women
were permitted to organise themselves into formal groups only for some
social or religious purpose, rather on the lines of a modern ladies'
auxiliary; for example, in the third century BC the matrons 'purely and
chastely' dedicated a golden bowl to Juno out of contributions from
their dowries (Uvy, xxvii. 37. 8-9). 39 Inscriptions from the Empire
record grants of money donated to women's organisations for public
services; and women apparently could meet to set rules of social con-
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Middle Ages and well into our own time. By the fifth century AD the
characterisation of Christian divinities had undergone subtle but impor
tant changes. In iconography Jesus, once kindly and approachable,
becomes more closely identified with and sometimes even indistinguishable from his Father. To receive his mercy, appeal must be made to his
Mother, who in the synoptic gospels is not at all an important or
influential figure. 44 Thus the model of the 'power behind the throne'
was incorporated into religion from the world of politics, and survives
not only in modern Christianity, but in notions of approved behaviour
for women in the twentieth century. 45
Notes
1. Wiesen (1976), pp. 199-212.
2. de Ste. Croix (1981), pp. 24-5.
3. Lefkowitz (1981), pp. 1399401; Cantarella (1981), pp. 19-34. That
grave~ of armed women from the fourth century BC have been found in the
Ukrame does not prove that the Sauromatians were matriarchal (Herodotus iv.
114-17); only that some women in that society were warriors as in ninetee~th~
century Russia; cf. David (1977), pp. 130, 148, 151.
'
4. Pembroke (1967, 1965); cf. Cartledge (1981), pp. !04 n. 126.
5. Lacey (1968), pp. 80-81.
6. Lacey (1968),pp. 54-5.
7:E.g., esp. Foley (1975), p. 36; Sorum (1982), p. 206; cf. O'Brien (1977),
pp. Xlll-XXX.
8. Sorum (1982), p. 207.
9. Heilbrun (1973), p. 9.
10. ~ole~ (1975), pp. 33-6. Heilbrun (1973), p. 10, cites an uil.identified verse
translation: ~ut to defy the State - I have no strength for that.' The Greek says
only 'do you mtend to bury him, when it is forbidden [by Creon] to the city?'
II. Campbell (1964), pp. 1934, 168-9; Alexiou (1974), p. 22; Daube (1972),
pp. 5-10. Alcmena refuses to sleep with Amphitryon until he has avenged her
brothers' deaths (Hesiod, Scut ., 15-17).
12. Cf. the behaviour of Mithridates (first century BC). He decreed that the
corpse of his. enemy Poredorix be left unburied, but when the guards arrested a
woman burymg the body, Mithridates permitted her to complete the burial and
gave her clothes for the corpse, 'probably because he realised that the reason
behir(d it was love' (Plutarch,Mora/ia, 259d).
13. Translations, unless otherwise noted, are my own.
14. Humphreys (1980), pp. 112-13; Lacey (1968), pp. !48-9.
15. Cf. the behaviour of Intaphernes' wife, who chooses to have her brother
spared rather than her husband (Herodotus, iii. 119.6), and of Althaea who brings
about the,_deat_h o.f h,er. son because he killed her brothers (Bacchylides, 5. 13644). The illogicality (m modern terms) of Antigone's argument and its similarity
to the Herodotean passage have caused scholars to question its authenticity e g
most recently, Winnington-Ingram (1980), p.145 n. 80; but cf. Lefkowitz ' .. ,
(198!a), p. 5, n. 8.
16. Daube (1972), pp. 6-7.
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her is that she often seemed to function literally as well ~ eof.a~a s) disliked
oaths, for example, being sworn to Justinian and Th d as ~~ra Ive Y as co-ruler,
too much should be made of this either: see Bury (1;~3~~~t::;,~l~of.though not
Further Reading
,
gu
a nno. Condmone e lmmagine della donna
1c l a greca e romano, Rome
Daube, D. (1972), Civil Disobedience in Antiquity Edinburgh
140
Lac;~ ~.K. (1968), The Family in Classical Greec~, London,
Auckland,
;:tz.: