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purple motes

Artifacts to help you imagine more.

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Highlights

  • Abelard castrated
  • Byzantine wife saves husband
  • Amphitryon & Geta duped
  • Chastelaine de Vergi tragedy
  • Aristotle’s advice to Alexander
  • Empress Theodora: woman leader
  • Tristan & Isuet
  • Xanthippe & Socrates
  • New Modern Sexism Scale

Luxorius

Luxorius wrote epigrams in Latin in Carthage, north Africa, early in the sixth century GC. Carthage was then under the rule of an east Germanic tribe known as Vandals, but the Vandals preserved traditional Roman beliefs and culture. Luxorius had high status among men in Carthage. His epigrams were highly regarded prior to the modern period.

Marina, love goddess as well as saint, is true heroine to men

Expanding poetic understanding of Saint Marina, Luxorius figured Marina as the traditional Greco-Roman love goddess Aphrodite. … Read the post Marina, love goddess as well as saint, is true heroine to men

praise of hundred-petaled rose underscores gender inequality

Luxorius’s 6th-century Latin poem in praise of the hundred-petaled rose highlights gender disparity in poetic treatment of vagina compared to penis. … Read the post praise of hundred-petaled rose underscores gender inequality

Cicero unpacked: piss on learned hypocrites to cultivate public fields

Cicero’s pithy words on education can be understood through the medieval Latin work Solomon and Marcolf and a lively poem of Luxorius. … Read the post Cicero unpacked: piss on learned hypocrites to cultivate public fields

Luxorius on women’s desire to compete with men

In 6th-century Roman North Africa, the poet Luxorius addressed women who desire more to compete with men than to have pleasurable sex with men. … Read the post Luxorius on women’s desire to compete with men

Luxorius: sixth-century African poet against dinner invitations

In a comical reversal, the host Blumarit’s extravagant hospitality pushed the poet Luxorius toward starvation. … Read the post Luxorius: sixth-century African poet against dinner invitations

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