Maesia: A Woman Goes to Court
Name: Valerius Maximus Date: 1st century CE Region: Unknown Citation: Memorable Deeds and Sayings 8.3.1 |
During trial, Maesia of Sentinum
pleaded her own defense to the praetor Lucius Titius in front of a large crowd.
She performed the proper methods and procedures with both professionalism and
passion. She was acquitted of all charges. Because she had a man’s soul in a
woman’s body, she was called the “Androgyne.”
Maesia Sentinas
rea causam suam L. Titio praetore iudicium cogente maximo populi concursu egit
modosque omnes ac numeros defensionis non solum diligenter, sed etiam fortiter
executa, et prima actione et paene cunctis sententiis liberata est. Quam, quia
sub specie feminae virilem animum gerebat, “Androgynen” appellabant.
Valerius Maximus [1st century CE] Little is known about the life of
Valerius Maximus except that he wrote during the reign of the emperor Tiberius.
His work, Memorable Deeds and Sayings, is a collection of examples from
Roman and world history categorized by theme for the purpose of rhetorical
exercises.
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