Page 16 - Manual of Roman Everyday Writing Volume 2: Writing Equipment
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16| MANUAL OF ROMAN EVERYDAY WRITING                                                                      VOLUME 2:  WRITING EQUIMENT | 17

                                                                                          Different kinds of writing are often associated with different social
                                                                                          status. The kind of writing most readers of this manual will have
                                                                                          encountered first and most extensively are literary texts and thus
                                                                                          writing in the sense of composing. This kind of writing represents
                                                                                          only a small portion of writing in the Roman period and, in most
                                                                                          cases, it happened in a specific, well-educated and high-status
                                                                                          environment. Children of the upper social strata, boys and girls
                                                                                          alike, were commonly educated to read and write with proficiency
                                                                                          but for the majority of the population the availability of such
                                                                                          education varied greatly across the empire and was dependent on
                                                                                          opportunity and financial means.

                                                                                          Writing documents involved a second person who was writing down
                                                                                          what was dictated, often a slave or a freedman. Scribae in public
                                                                                          administration and teachers were often of similar social status.
                                                                                          The apparent contradiction of low status and a skill considered
                                                                                          to be empowering has drawn much attention to the role of the
                                                                                          scribae, the great potential for upward social mobility it entailed
                                                                                          and the influential individuals it created (see e.g. Hartmann 2020).
                                                                                          Similarly, in the military, literacy offered a clear advantage with
                                                                                          regard to career prospects (e.g. Haynes 2013, 323–328).

















                                                                                            Fig. 6: Funerary relief from Rome (Italy) showing a butcher’s wife,
              Fig. 5: Roman tombstone of a boy that shows him holding writing                      presumably engaged in bookkeeping, 140/150 CE.
                equipment, Metz (France). Carte archéologique de la Gaule                  Skulpturensammlung Dresden, inv. Hm 418. © Skulpturensammlung,
                57.2: Metz, 2005, 185. Musée de la Cour d’Or, inv. 75.38.53. ©              Staatliche Kunstsammlungen Dresden, photo by H.-P. Klut / E. Estel.
                Laurianne Kieffer, Musée de La Cour d’Or, Metz Métropole.
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