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Girls And Women In Greek Religion Summary

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From the two readings Girls and Women in Classical Greek Religion by Matthew Dillon and Vestal Virgin, Sibyls, and Matrons by Sarolta A. Takacs both talk about what women’s roles were in Roman and Greek Religion. In Chapter 6 of Girls and Women in Classical Greek Religion, the author talks about prostitution and how women became of it and how it was viewed in the Greek Religion. In Chapter 4 of Vestal Virgin, Sibyls, and Matrons, the author explains the Vestal Virgins and their role in the Roman religion. Women from both readings played a huge role in each religion from being a prostitute to being a virgin however they both had different views of sexual fornication outside of marriage, religious practices, and worshipped a different goddess. Different views of fornication of women from …show more content…

Back to the topic of sexual fornication we already know their views of it, therefore their views played different key roles in what religious practices they did in both Roman and Greek religion. Men used prostitutes as a safeguard against adultery so this benefited women by making money. Prostitutes practiced prostitution because it was a monetary affair. “A worshipper needed money to buy a cow to sacrifice or to purchase something made of precious metal to dedicate in a temple” (Dillon 183). Women still went to festivals, sacrifices and temples even if they were prostitutes they were not excluded from these religious practices. Vestal Virgins did not perform any sexual fornication outside of marriage because they were to remain in the Virgin state. They practiced this to remain sexual abstinence especially before marriage and outside of marriage because doing such thing was punishable by being buried alive. Vestal Virgins wanted to insure that they were able to bear children; their duty was to keep the fire in the temple of Vesta burning and this symbolized

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