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  2. Women in classical Athens - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_classical_Athens

    According to Shelley Haley, Pomeroy's work "legitimized the study of Greek and Roman women in ancient times". [21] However, classics has been characterised as a "notoriously conservative" field, [21] and initially women's history was slow to be adopted: from 1970 to 1985, only a few articles on ancient women were published in major journals. [22]

  3. Heroic nudity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heroic_nudity

    Heroic nudity or ideal nudity is a concept in classical scholarship to describe the un-realist use of nudity in classical sculpture to show figures who may be heroes, deities, or semi-divine beings. This convention began in Archaic and Classical Greece and continued in Hellenistic and Roman sculpture. The existence or place of the convention is ...

  4. History of nudity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_nudity

    Women and goddesses were normally portrayed clothed in sculpture of the Classical period, with the exception of the nude Aphrodite. In general, however, concepts of either shame or offense, or the social comfort of the individual, seem to have been deterrents of public nudity in the rest of Greece and the ancient world in the east and west ...

  5. Women in ancient Rome - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_ancient_Rome

    Exceptional women who left an undeniable mark on history include Lucretia and Claudia Quinta, whose stories took on mythic significance; fierce Republican-era women such as Cornelia, mother of the Gracchi, and Fulvia, who commanded an army and issued coins bearing her image; women of the Julio-Claudian dynasty, most prominently Livia (58 BC ...

  6. Women in Etruscan society - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Women_in_Etruscan_society

    Etruscan woman in terracotta, 74.8 cm (5th and 2nd centuries BC) Metropolitan Museum of Art. Women were respected in Etruscan society compared to their ancient Greek and Roman counterparts. Today only the status of aristocratic women is known because no documentation survives about women in other social classes.

  7. History of the nude in art - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/History_of_the_nude_in_art

    Classical art [Note 2] is the art developed in ancient Greece and Rome, whose scientific, material and aesthetic advances contributed to the history of art a style based on nature and the human being, where harmony and balance, the rationality of forms and volumes, and a sense of imitation ("mimesis") of nature prevailed, laying the foundations ...

  8. Nude (art) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Nude_(art)

    White women were represented as a sexual image, and they were the ideal sexual image for men during the Renaissance. White women, in most major works before the 20th century, did not have pubic hair. Black women normally did, and this created their image in an animalistic sexual way. [84]

  9. Gladiatrix - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Gladiatrix

    The Romans of the Classical period had no specific word for female gladiators as a type or class. [1] The earliest reference to a woman gladiator as gladiatrix is by a scholiast in the 4th–5th century, who mockingly wonders whether a woman undergoing training for a performance at the ludi for the Floralia, a festival known for racy performances by seminude dancers, wants to be a gladiatrix ...