Matrona Docta: educated women in the Roman élite from Cornelia to Julia Domna
by Emily Ann Hemelrijk, 1999
"The education of Roman women is veiled in obscurity"
Yes, the elite, noble were educated both at home and after marriage, which often came at a young age.
They had to be literate: read, write, calculate. they did.
They had to know literature: Greek - Roman, etc.
there were schools in Rome from the time of Caesar but mostly say 100-200 AD.
Women are mentioned as being literate, well read by most every Roman poet, writer and historian. That is noble women and women married to certain professionals: physicians, law practitioners, engineers, rich merchants etc.
Women did not "enter" into trades: professional or labor.
However, they assisted husbands daily in all areas.
What survives are the letters women of Rome wrote. That alone resolves your question. We have many, many examples.
We even have a few memoirs, autobios by Roman women: Agrippina (Minor) is the best known.
So, that is a good question. I am certain that the women of a family who gave architecture to Rome, helped in all aspects, if not public, the draftsmanship and such.
2007-04-09 10:51:32
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answer #1
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answered by cruisingyeti 5
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For a start there were no universities in Ancient Rome for men or women. But had there been, women would not have been allowed to attend. Only boys received any formal education. Women had few rights and were very much second class citizens. They received no education outside of anything they learned from their mothers.
2007-04-09 10:15:52
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answer #2
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answered by rdenig_male 7
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confident, its unlawful to discriminate and in certainty many universities will supply women and minorities further scholarships to pursue particular stages the place they are below represented as a results of suffrage, and discrimination that they've been concern to interior the previous witch placed them at a downside.
2016-10-21 11:18:06
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answer #3
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answered by millie 4
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