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Clodia of Rome
Clodia of Rome: Champion of the Republic | Douglas Boin
1 post | 1 read | 1 to read
A thrilling new history of the late Roman Republic, told through one woman’s quest for justice. One of Rome’s most powerful women, Clodia has been maligned over two thousand years as a promiscuous, husband-murdering harlot—thanks to her starring role in one of Cicero’s most famous speeches in the Forum. But Cicero was lying, in defense of his own property and interests. Like so many women libeled or erased from history, Clodia had a life that was much more interesting, complex, and nuanced than the corrupted version passed down through generations Drawing on neglected sources and deep, empathetic study of Roman lives, classicist Douglas Boin reconstructs Clodia’s eventful passage through her politically divided and tumultuous times, from her privileged childhood to her picking up a family baton of egalitarian activism. A widow and single mother, Clodia had a charisma and power that rivaled her male contemporaries and struck fear into the heart of Rome’s political elite. That is, until a sensational murder trial, rife with corruption and told here in riveting detail, brought about her fall from grace. For generations of women who came after her—including a young Cleopatra, who might have met a disgraced Clodia when she first came to Rome—Clodia’s story would loom as a cautionary tale about the hostilities women would face when they challenged the world of men. Freed from the caricature that Cicero painted of her, Clodia serves as a reminder of countless women whose stories have been erased from the historical record. In a Rome whose citizens were engaged in heated debates on imperialism, immigration, and enfranchisement, amidst rising anxieties about women’s role in society, Clodia was an icon—one worth remembering today.
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For centuries, Clodia has been vilified as a promiscuous woman who murdered her husband, all thanks to one of Cicero‘s most famous speeches during the trial of her ex-lover. The truth is in fact much more complex & nuanced & this book examines the contemporary evidence to remove the caricature & see the real Clodia underneath.

There's a great deal of well-researched history here about subjects such as voting procedures, careers in office,

OutsmartYourShelf through to skincare routines, & there were chapters about notables such as Sulla, & Spartacus to name but two, but not so much about Clodia directly. Clodia herself remains very much in the shadows as a lot of what the author posited about her daily life is gleaned from general sources about a wealthy Roman woman's life rather than direct evidence, as I assume it hasn't survived. 2mo
OutsmartYourShelf I think that Clodia should be viewed in this book as a window from which the reader looks into the heart of ancient Roman society & sees the misogynistic laws which allowed slander rather than the truth to be heard. It also highlights how the small but very real gains towards female independence & social mobility were snuffed out for the generations following immediately after Clodia, & how that patriarchal status quo was maintained. 2mo
OutsmartYourShelf For me, it was a really informative read in that context. 4🌟

My thanks to #NetGalley & publishers, W. W. Norton & Company, for the opportunity to read an ARC.

Full Review: https://www.goodreads.com/review/show/7575800603
Read 8th-11th Aug 2025

#ReadAway2025 @Andrew65 @DieAReader @GHABI4ROSES
2mo
DieAReader 🥳🤓Fantastic! 2mo
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