. . . March 1994
SEX IN HISTORY [CONT'D.] If not strictly democratic, then, Romans were surely monogamous. Sure, they marriedlike most despots didstrictly monogamously. But they seem to have matedlike most despots didstrictly polygynously. I'll pick up with the Latins, again. This sort of gossip tends to get more malicious as time goes on. Fabulous stories are told about Commodus, Marcus Aurelius's successor and son. According to the infamous Scriptores Historiae Augustae, he "rioted" in the palace, at banquets and in the baths, "along with 300 concubines gathered together for their beauty and chosen from both matrons and harlots, and with minions, also 300 in number, whom he had collected by force and by purchase indiscriminately from the common people and nobles solely on the basis of bodily beauty." This would be absolutely incredible to meas it has been to most credible historiansif it weren't so consistent with the gossip told about so many other emperors in so many other empires.
It's consistent, too, with evidence in connection with Roman slavery. Estimates suggest slaves made up about two-fifths of the population of Italy alone in the third century BC, and maybe one-fifth of the population of the whole Roman empire in the first century AD. Few historians have suggested, however, that owners might have been their fathers. But sexual access to slave women was taken for granted by mastersLatin literature, art and architecture is full of such allusionsand taken at risk by other men. Most compellingly, masters provided vernae, the "homeborn" slaves those women bore, with: wet nurses (some vernae, called collacteri, were nursed together with legitimate daughters and sons); pedagogi and educatores, childminders and teachers (some of whom, again, minded and tutored legitimate children); a peculium, or allowance (legally indistinguishable from the one allotted to legitimate sons); early manumission, or freedom; substantial legacies or, in default of a legitimate heir, even the bulk of an estate; high positions; terms of affection; and a place for their remainsand for their children's and their children's children's remainsin the masters' family tombs.
The medieval evidence is sketchier. But to me it paints a similar picture. Gregory of Tours starts his 6th-century History of the Franks: "I recount for you … the holy deeds of the saints and the way in which whole races of people were butchered." Among other things, King Guntram is said to have killed his second wife's half-brothers for making "hateful and abominable remarks" about the queen; and King Chilperic, having levied "extremely heavy" taxes, is supposed to have punished people who plotted to kill the collector by "having them tortured and even put to death out of hand." In England, William of Malmesbury's 12th-century Chronicle of the Kings of England tells more horrible stories. Hardecanute, in the 11th century, reputedly ordered Worcester plundered and burned because of two of his tax collectors were killed there; and Henry I, in the 12th century, punished transgressions among his court "by a heavy pecuniary fine, or loss of life."
Bishops, of whom Gregory of Tours was one, were no betterparticularly to those who opposed them. Gregory describes two, Salonius and Sagittarius, who were "no sooner raised to the episcopate than their new power went to their heads." Gregory says they sent a mob to attack another bishop having a birthday party; they beat their own congregations with sticks; and, overall, "with a sort of insane fury they began to disgrace themselves in peculation, physical assaults, murders, adultery and every crime in the calendar."
Medieval polygyny? Certainly not. Everybody, even the most eminent of medieval historians, knows that polygyny was stopped by the Catholic Church. I don't think so. I think Jack Goody, who wrote a famous book called The Development of the Family and Marriage in Europe, was right: I think the quarrel between church and state in the Middle Ages was about marriage (which has to do with things like inheritance and succession), not about mating (which has to do with sex). I think the sketchy evidence suggest medieval priests and lords, cardinals and kings, quibbled about marriage, and went about their merry polygynous ways.
Literary sources raise the possibility that young women were kept apart in gynaecea or chambres des dameswomen's quarters or ladies' chamberswhere they entertained the lord of the house (and no one else) and made shirts. Even census records suggest, as the eminent medievalist David Herlihy put it, that "women tended to congregate in the households of the powerful, even on monastic estates." Down to the nitty-gritty level, if parish records from late medieval Tuscany and England are right, rich men's houses held more women and children than poor men's houses. It was as late as 1840 when Alexis de Tocqueville, in Democracy in America, wrote: "I go back from age to age up to the remotest antiquity, but I find no parallel to what is occurring before my eyes." He meant, of course, the fall of kings and rise of the common man. I won't chronicle the rise of democracy in modern Englandto tell you the truth, I haven't got that far. But I'll hint that polygyny might have declined, nice and gradually, at about the same time.
Lawrence Stone, the world's authority on the sex lives of the British upper class, scrutinized six early modern diaries. They leave the distinct impression that sex was easy to get. Respectable married women may have been relatively hard to come by, but actresses were accessible; so were "shirt and ruffle makers," high-class whores, women in brothels and women on the street. Last, but not least, "there were the poor amateurs, the ubiquitous maids, waiting on masters and guests in lodgings, in the home, in inns; young girls whose virtue was always uncertain and was constantly under attack." Stone adds: "These last were the most exploited, and most defenseless, of the various kinds of women whose sexual services might be obtained by a man of quality."
What about us? Has the United States been, from the beginning, a two-strictly-monogamous-parents-plus-kids populist democracy? Not really. In the debate over the US Constitution, for instance, Alexander Hamiltonfuture secretary of the treasury said, according to James Madison's Notes: "Let one branch of the Legislature hold their places for life, or at least during good behavior. Let the Executive also be for life." Even moderates like Madison in The Federalist Papers said things like: "Liberty may be endangered by the abuses of power…; the former, rather than the latter, is apparently most to be apprehended by the United States."
In 1787, at ratification, voting rights were determined by stateand limited in most by sex, race, and wealth. In Virginia, suffrage was given to white men over 21 who owned 50 acres of improved land, or a town lot, or were employed as artisans in Richmond or Williamsburg; in South Carolina, voters were white men over 21 worth at least £500 worth of land. Property qualifications were gone within about a generation. But not until nearly a hundred years later, in 1870, did the 15th Amendment let men vote regardless of "race, color or previous conditions of servitude"; 50 years after that, in 1920, the 19th Amendment extended suffrage to women.
Loath as I am to spread slander about our forefathers, let me suggest that the membership in the early American aristocracy may have had its sexual privileges, too. Well-to-do pre-abolition US households hired servants or owned slaves. There was gossip about miscegenation. Charles Lyell, for instance, noticed in his Travels in the United States that "the anxiety of parents for their sons, and a contant fear of their licentious intercourse with slaves, is painfully great"; and a sister of Madison is said by Arthur Calhoun to have remarked, "We southern ladies are complimented with the name of wives, but we are only the mistresses of seraglios." After abolition, the household staffs of American aristocratslike those of English aristocratsshrank. Rich men might have had to leave home more often, at least.
Which reminds me. Have you ever heard the one about Thomas Jefferson? Ben Franklin? George Washington? Apocryphal stories never end.
Laura Betzig, co-director of the Evolution and Human Behavior Program, is the author of many scholarly articles and the study Despotism and Differential Reproduction, A Darwinian View of History (Aldine, New York, 1986).
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