Re: continued...

Date: 2011-09-10 06:32 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] fpb.livejournal.com
It depends on what you mean by religious. If you read Dumezils' "Marriages Indoeuropeens" you will find that the threefold classification of Roman marriages had a wholly religious base, even though only the highest-ranking one - confarreatio - actually involved priests. The act as such changed the status of an individual in society in a way that reflected on their religious status - for instance, certain sacrifices could only be carried out by young people who were patrimi matrimi, having a set of married and living parents. (That must have caused a good deal of problems in the late Republic, when divorce was virtually universal among the upper classes, and explains why someone could be made flamen Dialis at seventeen, like the young Caesar - a few years more and you would find nobody with the necessary requirements. No, I was not aware that your specialization was in Roman studies, but I was perfectly well aware that you are a fellow historian, and had absolutely no intention to patronize. It's nice to be able to speak to someone who can be assumed to have actual knowledge rather than the frequent and dreadful synthetic assembly of factoids motivated by ill-digested ideology that one has most often to deal with - people who are ignorant but think, because they read the wrong books, that they are educated.

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