TY - BOOK ID - 17542588 TI - Women of Jeme : lives in a Coptic town in late antique Egypt PY - 2002 SN - 0472066129 0472096125 9780472066124 9780472096121 PB - Ann Arbor, MI : University of Michigan Press, DB - UniCat KW - Jeme (Extinct city) KW - Jeme (Ville ancienne) KW - Copts KW - Women KW - Human females KW - Wimmin KW - Woman KW - Womon KW - Womyn KW - Females KW - Human beings KW - Femininity KW - Egyptians KW - Ethnology KW - Social life and customs KW - Social life and customs. KW - Femmes KW - Coptes KW - Moeurs et coutumes KW - History KW - Sources KW - Histoire KW - Sources. KW - Women - Egypt - Jeme (Extinct city) KW - Jeme (Extinct city) - Social life and customs KW - Copts - Jeme (Extinct city) UR - https://www.unicat.be/uniCat?func=search&query=sysid:17542588 AB - Women of Jeme: Lives in a Coptic Town in Late Antique Egypt introduces the reader to the women in the ancient town of Jeme, a Christian enclave in Egypt that existed from 600 to 800 ce. Using texts documenting the women's activities, the physical remains of their possessions, and the writings of the local religious leaders, T. G. Wilfong traces the lives and careers of individual women and, through them, arrives at an understanding of the reality of women's lives in this place and time.Contrary to the submissive, demure ideals for women proposed by the religious writers of Christian Egypt, the evidence from Jeme points to a more complex, dynamic situation. Women were active in the home, but some also played important and visible parts in the religious and economic life of their community. A bishop's attempts to monitor the behavior of the women in his district, the intricate inheritance dispute between an aunt and her niece, one woman's pious donations of murals to a church, three women's agonized decisions to give up their children to the local monastery, and the transactions of a family of women moneylenders—all these episodes paint a vivid picture of life in a Coptic town. ER -