Heroes and Outcasts: Ambiguous Attitudes Towards Impaired and Disfigured Roman Veterans

Classical World: A Quarterly Journal on Antiquity 109 (1):91-117 (2015)
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Abstract

This paper will focus on physically impaired and disfigured soldiers and their perception in Roman antiquity from the late Republic until the early Imperial era (third century BC until third century AD). Based on case studies from literary sources, this paper aims to explore the integration of impaired and disfigured veterans into Roman civil society. The first part outlines the ambiguous attitudes shown towards these veterans, who were both praised and ridiculed, and seeks explanations. The second part argues that few impairments and disfigurements precluded veterans from holding political or religious office.

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