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Pompeian Brothels and Social History

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Title: Pompeian Brothels and Social History


1
Pompeian Brothels and Social History
  • By Thomas A. J. McGinn

2
Focus of the Study
  • To examine 20th Century scholarship on Pompeian
    brothels, its methods and assumptions, and above
    all the criteria used to identify them
  • Not to advance new candidates for brothels, but
    to suggest that not all brothels in Pompeii have
    been identified

3
What is a Brothel?
  • The broader the definition, the more the possible
    venues
  • McGinn a location with sex as its principal (or
    at least a major component of its) business, that
    allows two or more prostitutes to work
    simultaneously
  • According to literary sources, this definition
    applies to the Roman notion
  • Pompeian brothels were relatively small, so a
    distortion brought about by a wide range in the
    size of brothels is minimized

4
How to Identify Brothels in the Archaeological
Record
  • Della Cortes criteria
  • The design and layout of the establishment
  • The presence of erotic art
  • The presence of erotic graffiti

5
How to Identify Brothels in the Archaeological
Record
  • A. Wallace-Hadrills criteria
  • The structural evidence of a masonry bed set in a
    small cell of ready access to the public
  • The presence of paintings of explicit sexual
    scenes
  • The cluster of graffiti lauding bene futui, good
    sexual partners

6
Problems with these Criteria
  • Reliance on room layout provides no effective way
    to distinguish a brothel from an inn
  • Masonry beds only reveal purpose-built brothels
    prostitutes could have used wooden beds, which
    are less likely to have survived, or no bed at
    all
  • Erotic art was a ubiquitous feature of Roman
    social life
  • Graffiti can communicate jokes, insults, or idle
    boasting

7
Public Displays of Erotic Art
8
Public Displays of Erotic Art
9
Public Displays of Erotic Art
10
Public Displays of Erotic Art
11
Erotic Art from a Purpose-Built Brothel
12
Erotic Art from the Changing Room of a Suburban
Bath
13
Potential Brothels
  • Purpose-built brothels spaces intended,
    designed, and built to serve as brothels
  • Cellae meretriciae the most likely venues for
    prostitution at Pompeii
  • Cribs small, crude buildings or rooms, clustered
    in an alley or along a roadway, used by
    prostitutes who do not work in brothels
  • Baths and cauponae areas where prostitution
    certainly occurred but was not a major component
    of the business
  • Private dwellings parts of a house separate from
    the owners living area, such as a slaves
    quarters, often had separate entrances and many
    of the criteria found in brothels

14
The Purpose-Built Brothel
  • 5 simple small rooms on the ground floor, each
    with a masonry bed
  • Series of erotic paintings along the hallway
    connecting the rooms
  • 5 upstairs rooms accessible by a separate
    entrance-stairway and balcony
  • Latrine under the stairway with 100 graffiti,
    mostly erotic
  • Often the upstairs does not contain erotic
    paintings sleeping quarters for prostitutes, or
    it could be a separate operation

15
Moral Zoning?
  • Did the Romans keep brothels in certain areas and
    out of others?
  • Did they wish to isolate prostitution from elite
    women and children?
  • Were impure activities concentrated in hidden
    areas?
  • Were brothels segregated to lower class
    neighborhoods?

16
Moral Zoning?
  • Moral zoning was not common until the rise of
    Christianity
  • Roman cities tended to be fairly homogeneous
    socially
  • Brothels were rarely located at great distances
    from upper-class dwellings
  • Map of Pompeii shows that brothels were evenly
    distributed, except near the Forum, where
    regulation of brothels may have been successful

17
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18
Roman Perspective on Prostitution
  • Prostitution seen as an alternative or antidote
    to adultery
  • Prostitutes served to distract male lust away
    from respectable women
  • Erotic art was commonly on display and easily
    visible to elite women and children, in dining
    rooms and gardens
  • The Romans were much more open about sex than we
    are today and evidently had no concern keeping it
    out of the home and confined to a brothel
  • Prostitution may have been seen as a breach of
    upper-class decorum, but indecent behavior by
    members of the lower classes was to be expected

19
Roman Public Policy Toward Prostitution
  • Prostitution was tolerated limited regulation
  • Today, public policy involves repression of
    prostitution, which would have been foreign to
    the Romans
  • What policies were initiated ultimately failed
  • Although no brothels are located in the Forum,
    prostitution existed and was actually encouraged
    there
  • Roman policy on prostitution tended to make the
    activity as visible as possible
  • Prostitutes were meant to be humiliated

20
Demographics
  • Estimates of Pompeiis population 7,000 to
    20,000
  • 504 domus (private dwellings)
  • 34-35 brothels
  • Many of the clients of prostitutes probably were
    not citizens of Pompeii
  • Assuming an average of 4 prostitutes per brothel,
    and accounting for prostitutes who did not work
    at brothels, just over 100 prostitutes lived in
    Pompeii.

21
Future Work
  • Redefine the criteria for identifying brothels
  • More detailed examination of the physical remains
  • Reexamine the subtypes of brothels
    (purpose-built, caupona, and lower-class
    lodgings, etc.)
  • Analyze Pompeian brothels in the context of the
    Roman world (Ostia and Rome itself)
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