Infamia

{{Short description|Loss of social standing in ancient Roman law}}

{{for multi|the album by Babasónicos|Infame (album)|the TV series|Infamia (TV series)}}

{{redirect|Putita|the swear word in Spanish|Spanish profanity}}

In ancient Rome, {{lang|la|infamia}} (in-, "not", and fama, "reputation") was a loss of legal or social standing. As a technical term in Roman law, {{lang|la|infamia}} was juridical exclusion from certain protections of Roman citizenship, imposed as a legal penalty by a censor or praetor.{{cite book|last=McGinn |first=Thomas A. J. | title=Prostitution, Sexuality and the Law in Ancient Rome| publisher=Oxford University Press| date= 1998| page= 65ff}} In more general usage during the Republic and Principate, {{lang|la|infamia}} was damage to the esteem (aestimatio) in which a person was held socially; that is, to one's reputation. A person who suffered {{lang|la|infamia}} was an {{lang|la|infamis}} (plural {{lang|la|infames}}).

Consequences

{{lang|la|Infames}} shared some conditions of status with slaves: they could not provide testimony in a court of law, and they were liable to corporal punishment.{{cite book | author=Edwards, Catharine| author-link=Catharine Edwards (historian) | title=Unspeakable Professions Public Performance and Prostitution in Ancient Rome | publisher = Princeton University Press| date=1997 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=1ZPC3TqBZEQC&pg=PA66 | isbn= 9780691011783 | page= 73}} They could not bring lawsuits to the court on behalf of themselves or others, and they could not run for public office.Berger, Encyclopedic Dictionary of Roman Law, s.v. infamia, p. 500.

The ''infames''

{{lang|la|Infamia}} was an "inescapable consequence" for certain kinds of employment, including that of undertakers, executioners,{{Cite book|last=Bond|first=Sarah|url=http://dx.doi.org/10.3998/mpub.9934045|title=Trade and Taboo|date=2017|publisher=University of Michigan Press|isbn=978-0-472-00361-7|location=Ann Arbor, MI|doi=10.3998/mpub.9934045 }} prostitutes and pimps, entertainers such as actors and dancers, and gladiators.{{cite book | author=Edwards, Catharine| title=Unspeakable Professions Public Performance and Prostitution in Ancient Rome | publisher = Princeton University Press|date= 1997 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=1ZPC3TqBZEQC&pg=PA66 | isbn= 9780691011783|page= 67}} The collective infamia of stage performers, prostitutes, and gladiators arose from the uses to which they put their bodies: by subjecting themselves to public display, they had surrendered the right of privacy and bodily integrity that defined the citizen.Edwards, "Unspeakable Professions," pp. 66–67. The {{lang|la|infamia}} of entertainers did not exclude them from socializing among the Roman elite, and entertainers who were "stars", both men and women, sometimes became the lovers of such high-profile figures as Mark Antony and the dictator Sulla.

Charioteers may or may not have been infames; two jurists of the later Imperial era argue that athletic competitions were not mere entertainment but "seem useful" as instructive displays of Roman strength and {{lang|la|virtus}}.Bell, Sinclair W., "Roman Chariot-Racing: Charioteers, Factions, Spectators", in P. Christesen and D. Kyle (Editors), Wiley-Blackwell Companion to Sport and Spectacle in Greek and Roman Antiquity, January 2014, pp. 492–504, citing Ulpian, Digest, 3. 2. 4, {{doi|10.1002/9781118609965.ch33}} The low status of those who competed in public games in Rome stands in striking contrast to athletics in Greece, where Olympic victors enjoyed high honors.Zahra Newby, "Greek Athletics as Roman Spectacle: The Mosaics from Ostia and Rome," Papers of the British School at Rome 70 (2002), p. 177. A passive homosexual who was "outed" might be subject to social {{lang|la|infamia}} in the colloquial sense without being socially ostracized, and if a citizen he might retain his legal standing.{{cite news|last=Richlin |first=Amy |author-link=Amy Richlin |title=Not before Homosexuality: The Materiality of the cinaedus and the Roman Law against Love between Men|work=Journal of the History of Sexuality|volume= 3|number=4 |date=1993|pages= 550–551, 555ff }}{{cite book | last=Edwards |first=Catharine| title=Unspeakable Professions Public Performance and Prostitution in Ancient Rome | publisher = Princeton University Press | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=1ZPC3TqBZEQC&pg=PA66 | isbn= 9780691011783|page= 68| year=1997 }}

Religious infamy

In late antiquity, when the Roman Empire had come under Christian rule, infamia was used to punish "religious deviants" such as heretics, apostates, and those who declined to give up their own religious practices and convert to Christianity.Sarah Bond, "Altering Infamy: Status, Violence, and Civic Exclusion in Late Antiquity," Classical Antiquity 33:1 (2014), pp. 1-30

The modern Roman Catholic Church has the similar concept of infamy.

See also

References

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