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Divine Women
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did anyone watch this. I saw about three quarters of last nights programme, i believe it's in three parts, and would like to see the rest. Hosted by Bettany Hughes, who is an excellent presenter. If anyone did watch it, what are your thoughts.
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For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.I watched the first episode, and to be honest I found it a bit thin. I also found it irritating to have people on screen make unsubstantiated claims that went unchallenged, notably the Indian academic who stated that Dhurga's cult must have developed from the existence of tribes of fighting women.
Xena, warrior princess...?
Xena, warrior princess...?
i thought it was quite balanced and a good example of how women can get shoved out of history, when there is evidence enough to explain their role in ancient society. Last nights covered a good deal of ground, Christianity and it's beginnings, but how woman were revered, i.e the Vestal Virgins. But if they fell off the pedestal so to speak the punishment was death. That part had me reaching for the off switch. I didn't, but one unlucky individual who supposedly took a lover, or maybe more, was taken down to the deepest vault possible, and left there to die. Such was the fate of these girls, women if they strayed. perhaps they needed to be sacrificed to the appease the Gods. Very interesting, and will do a catch up if possible.
Interesting Em - I will watch on i-player, but I'm intrigued that the killing of a vestal was presented as a sacrifice in the programme. Sacrifices to the gods were only of the best and most beautiful, and the Romans were opposed to human sacrifice per se.
Judicial killing did not bother them at all - so the slow painful death of a 'heretic' would fit the scenario you describe - not a sacrifice.
Judicial killing did not bother them at all - so the slow painful death of a 'heretic' would fit the scenario you describe - not a sacrifice.
Hi Em, I watched the programme on iplayer so am in a better position to talk about its points. I thnk it held together much better than the first in the series.
Re. the VVirgins, I think the programme only cited one instance of a VV being done to death, and the reason cited sounded as much like a political fit-up as anything done from religious conviction. Publicly humiliating and giving an awful slow death to a member of a leading senatorial family would send out a powerful message to anyone plotting a coup.
I thought the discussion of women in early Christianity was very well done.
Re. the VVirgins, I think the programme only cited one instance of a VV being done to death, and the reason cited sounded as much like a political fit-up as anything done from religious conviction. Publicly humiliating and giving an awful slow death to a member of a leading senatorial family would send out a powerful message to anyone plotting a coup.
I thought the discussion of women in early Christianity was very well done.