03/06/2026
Roman Girlhood: What Girls Learned, Played, and Dreamed in Ancient Rome.
Long before marriage, motherhood, and the responsibilities expected of Roman women, there was childhood.
Across the Roman Empire, girls grew up in very different worlds. Some spent their days in elegant villas, learning letters, music, and poetry under the watchful eyes of tutors and family members. Others learned practical skills in workshops, marketplaces, and rural estates, where work itself became a form of education. Yet despite these differences of wealth and status, many shared the same experiences of friendship, curiosity, play, and family affection.
This episode explores the often-overlooked world of Roman girlhood, revealing how girls were educated, what they learned, the games they played, and the expectations that awaited them as they approached adulthood. Wax tablets, dolls, ball games, weaving, household training, literacy, and family life all formed part of a childhood that was far richer and more complex than ancient sources sometimes suggest.
Within Roman homes, sisters and brothers grew up together, friendships flourished in courtyards and streets, and mothers passed down the knowledge that would prepare daughters for the next stage of life. Education could mean reading poetry in a luxurious garden, learning household accounts in a merchant’s home, mastering textile production in a workshop, or understanding the rhythms of agriculture on a rural estate.
As the years passed, childhood slowly gave way to adult expectations. Toys were set aside, responsibilities increased, and girls entered a society that often defined their future long before they could choose it for themselves.