The war of the sexes: the origins of gender inequality

This post is by Ugo Bardi, an Italian Professor of Physical Chemistry, a member of the Club of Rome and the head of Italian ASPO (Association for the Study of Peak Oil). He wrote this in honor of International Woman’s Day, March 8th.

Slavery was probably abolished because it became less profitable with the advent of fossil fuels. Slavery has been replaced by Indentured Servitude with no Statute of Limitations on non-dischargeable student loans. Indentured Servitude is more cost effective than slavery since care and feeding are the individual’s responsibility. In a future without fossil fuels or alternate sources of energy will we return to slavery of some form?

The war of the sexes: the origins of gender inequality                                                                                         

 

Some time ago, I was chatting at home with a friend who is a researcher specialized in “gender inequality”. I asked her what were the ultimate origins of this inequality but we couldn’t arrive at a conclusion. So, I happened to have in a shelf nearby a copy of the “Malleus Maleficarum”, the book that Kramer and Sprenger wrote in the 16th century on the evils of witchcraft. I took it out and I opened it to the page where the authors dedicate several paragraphs to describe how evil women are. I read a few of these paragraphs aloud and my friend was so enraged that she left the room, without saying a word. Later on, she told me that she had done that to avoid telling me what she thought I deserved to be told just for keeping that book in my shelves. Maybe she was right, but the question of the origins of gender inequality remained unanswered (BTW, later on, we became friends again).

Why are women so commonly discriminated in almost all cultures, modern and ancient? Of course, there are plenty of studies attempting to explain the reasons. It is an interdisciplinary field that mixes history, anthropology, psychology, social studies, and even more; you can spend your whole life studying it. So, I don’t even remotely pretend to be saying something definitive or even deep on this subject. It is just that, after much thinking on this matter, I thought that I could share with you some of my conclusions.

So, here is a narrative of how gender inequality developed over the centuries in Europe and in the Mediterranean world. I hope you’ll find in it something worth pondering. So, let’s go back in time, way back; when does the phenomenon that we call “gender inequality” starts? You probably know that Marija Gimbutas has been arguing for a long time that the pre-literate ages in Europe were characterized by a form of matriarchy and by the predominance of the cult of a female goddess (or goddesses). That is, of course, debatable and it is hotly debated; there is very little that we have from those ancient times that can tell us how men and women related to each other.

However, when we move to the first examples of literature we have, then we see at least hints of a different world that involved some kind – perhaps – if not female dominance at least a more assertive role of women. Indeed, the first text for which we know the name of the author was written by the Sumerian priestess Enheduanna at some moment during the second half of the third millennium BCE. From these ancient times, there comes a very strong voice: the voice of a woman asserting the rule of the Goddess Inanna over the pantheon of male Gods of her times, hinting at an even larger role of female goddesses in even more ancient times.

If we follow the millennia as they move onward, it seems that the voice of women becomes fainter and fainter. In Greece, we have Sappho of Lesbos, renown for her poetry, but she comes from a very early age; the seventh century BCE. As the Greek civilization grew and was absorbed into the Roman one, woman literates seem to dwindle. Of the whole span of the Western Roman civilization, we know of a modest number of literate women and there are only two Roman female poets whose works have survived to us.

Both go with the name of Sulpicia and you probably never heard of them. As poetry goes, the first Sulpicia, who lived at the times of August, may be interesting to look at. The second one, living in later times, has survived in a few lines only because they are explicitly erotic. But the point is that it is so little in comparison with so much Greek and Latin literature we still have. Women of those times may not have been really silent but, in literary terms, we just don’t hear their voices. On the other side of the sexual barrier, note how the “Malleus Maleficarum” bases its several pages of insult to women largely on classical authors, for instance, Cicero, Lactantius, Terence, and others; as well as on the early Christian fathers.

It is not surprising for us to discover that, from the early imperial times to the early middle Ages, most writers were woman-haters. They thought that sex was, at best, a necessary evil that one had to stand in order to ensure the perpetuation of humankind; but no more than that. Chastity, if one could attain it, was by far the best condition for man and woman alike and, for sure, sex with a woman was only a source of perversity and of debasement. An early Christian father, Origen (3rd century CE) is reported to have taken the matter to the extreme and castrated himself, although that’s not certain and surely it never became popular.

With the decline and fall of the Western Roman Empire, there appeared something that had never existed before: the monastic orders. Never before so many men and women had decided that they wanted to live in complete separation from the members of the other sex. Read a book such as the “pratum spirituale” by 6th century CE the Byzantine monk John Moschos, and you get the impression that everyone at that time, males and females, were obsessed by sex; how to avoid it, that is. Chastity had never been considered a virtue before and, yet, now it had become the paramount one.

At least, however, it seems that women had gained a certain degree of independence, seeking for chastity in their own ways and with a dignity of their own. Reading documents from that age, you get the well-defined impression that men and women had somehow decided that they wanted to avoid each other for a while. It was a pause that lasted several centuries. But why did that happen? I think there are reasons, but to understand them we must go back to Roman times and try to understand what was the relationship between men and women at that age.

And we may find that it was deeply poisoned by a sickness that pervaded the society of those times: social inequality and, in particular, the institution of slavery. It is well known that the Roman Empire heavily based its wealth on the work of slaves. Their number is variously estimated as around 10% of the population, but it was larger in the richest regions of the empire. Probably, during the 1st century CE, some 30%-40% of the population of Italy was composed of slaves (1).

Slavery was an integral part of the Roman economy and one of the main aims of the Roman military conquests was capturing of large numbers of foreigners, who then were turned into slaves. Now, most slaves were male and were used for heavy or menial work, in agriculture, for instance. But many of them were female, and, obviously, young and attractive slaves, both male and female, were used as sex objects. Slaves were not considered as having rights. They simply were property. Caroline Osiek writes that (2).

To the female slave, therefore, honor, whether of character or of behavior, cannot be ascribed. The female slave can lay no claim to chastity or shame, which have no meaning. In the official view, she cannot have sensitivity toward chastity. Her honor cannot be violated because it does not exist. .. No legal recognition is granted to the sexual privacy of a female slave.

To have a better idea of how female slaves were considered in Roman times, we may turn to a late Roman poet, Ansonia’s (4th century CE) who had gained a certain notoriety in his times. He was not only a poet but an accomplished politician who had a chance to accompany Emperor Gratian in a military raid in Germania. From there, he returned with a Germanic slave girl named Bissula. He wrote a poem in her honor that says, among other things,

 

Delice, blandishment, play, love, desire, barbarian, but you baby beat the Latin girls Bissula, a tender name, a little rustic for a girl a little rough for those not used to it, but a grace for your master.

It is clear that Ansonia’s likes Bissula; we could even say that he is fond of her. But it is the same kind of attitude that we may have toward a domestic animal; a cat or a dog that we may like a lot, but that we don’t consider our equal. Bissula was no more than a pet in terms of rights. It is true that her master was not supposed to mistreat her, and we have no evidence that he ever did. But she had strictly no choice in terms of satisfying him sexually. In this sense, she had no more rights than those pertaining to a rubber doll in our times. In modern terms, we can say that she was being legally raped.

And nobody seemed to find this strange; so much that Ansonia’s’ poem that described this legal rape was considered wholly normal and it was appreciated. If we can still hear Ansonia’s’ voice, we cannot hear that of Bissula. Probably, she couldn’t read and write, to say nothing about doing that in proper Latin. So, what she thought of her master is anyone’s guess. Was she happy that she was getting at least food and shelter from him? Or did she hate him for having been one od those who had, perhaps, exterminated her family and her parents?

Did she ever dream of sticking a hairpin in Ansonia’s’ eye? Perhaps; but we have no evidence that she ever did. If she had done something like that, by the way, she would have condemned to death all the slave of Ansonia’s’ household. The Roman law practiced a strict interpretation of the principle of common intention and when it happened that a slave killed his/her master, it required that all the slaves of that master were to be executed. So, we cannot hear Bissula’s voice, just as we can’t hear the voice of the millions of sex slaves that crossed the trajectory of the Roman Empire, from its foundation to its end in the 5th century CE.

Exploited, without rights, probably turned to menial work whenever they got older and their masters lost interest in them, their voice is lost in the abyss of time and we can only imagine their plea. But, perhaps, we can get a glimpse of their feelings from their reflection on the other side; that of their masters who, in Imperial times spent pages and pages of their writings at insulting women. Yes, because the silent side, that of the slaves, was not without weapons in the war that the masters were waging against them. The masters may have expected gratitude from them, perhaps even love.

But they got only hatred and despise. Imagine yourself as Bissula. Do you imagine she could have loved Ansonia’s? And can you imagine how could she have taken some revenge on him? I am sure there were ways, even though we can’t say whether Bissula ever put them into practice. No wonder that so many men in these times accused women of treachery. In the war of the sexes, the women had to use guerrilla tactics, and apparently they were doing that with some success. If slavery turned woman slaves into sex objects, the resulting war of the sexes must have had negative effect also on free women.

They were not supposed to be legally raped as the slaves, but surely they could not ignore what their husbands were doing (and, by the way, free Roman women were not supposed to rape their male slaves and, if they did, they were not supposed to write poems about how cute their male sex dolls were). Very likely, this situation poisoned the male/female relations of generations of Roman citizens. Thinking of that, we cannot be surprised of the avalanche of insults that Roman male writers poured on women (want an example? Seneca in his tragedies [11 (117)]: “when a woman thinks alone, she thinks evil“)

That kind of poisoned relationship continued for a long time but, at a certain moment, not much later than Ansonia’s’ times, the Empire ceased to be able to raid slaves from anywhere, and then it disappeared. Slavery didn’t disappear with the Empire: we had to wait for the 19th century to see it disappear for good. But, surely, the whole situation changed and slaves were not any more so common. The Christian church took a lot of time before arriving to a clear condemnation of slavery, but turning people into sex toys was not seen any more as the obvious things to do. So, things changed a lot and we may understand how during Middle Ages men and women were taking that “pause.”

It was as if they were looking at each other, thinking “who should make the first move?” A shyness that lasted for centuries. And then, things changed again. It was an impetuous movement, a reversal of the time of hatred between men and women: it was the time of courtly love. With the turning of the millennium, the amour courtois started to appear in Europe and it became all the rage. Men and women were looking again at each other; and they were looking at each other in romantic terms: they loved each other. The love between man and woman became a noble thing, a way to obtain enlightenment – perhaps better than chastity.

From the Northern Celtic tradition, the legend of two lovers, Tristan and Iseult, bursts into the literary scene. And it was a dam that gave way. Lancelot and Guinevere, then Dante and Beatrice, Petrarca and Laura, Ibn Arabi and Nizham. West European and Mediterranean poets couldn’t think of anything better to express themselves than to dedicate them to noble women whom they love and respect. And we hear again the voice of women: and what a voice! Think of Heloise, pupil and lover of Abelard, the philosopher in a tragic love story that took place during the early 12th century.

Heloise burst onto the scene with unforgettable words: “To her master, nay father, to her husband, nay brother; from his handmaid, nay daughter, his spouse, nay sister: to Abelard, from Heloise. And if the name of wife appears more sacred and more valid, sweeter to me is ever the word friend, or, if you be not ashamed, concubine or whore.” What can you say about this? I can only say that my lower jaw falls down as I utter “Wow!!” It was a long journey from Heloise to our times. Long and tormented, just think that not much later than Heloise, the French mystic Marguerite Porte wrote her book “The mirror of the simple souls” in a style and content that reminds the works of the Sumerian Enheduana, four thousand years before.

And Marguerite Porte was burned at the stake for what she had written. And, some centuries later, the war against females continued with the various witch hunts, fueled by books such as “The Malleus Malefic arum” (1520). And think that it was only in the second half of the 20th century that women were generally considered smart enough that they were allowed to vote in general elections. But we have arrived somewhere, to an age in which “gender inequality” is considered something wholly negative, to be avoided at all costs. An age in which, at least in the West, the idea that women are equal to men is obvious, or should be. And an age in which using woman slaves as sex toys is (or should be) considered as an absolute evil. And yet, if history moves forward, it also moves along a tortuous road and sometimes it goes in circles.

The similarities of our times and Roman ones are many. Certainly, we don’t have slaves any more, not officially, at least. But that may not be so much a social and ethical triumph but a consequence of the fact that our society is much more monetized than the Roman one. The need for money can easily make a man or a woman the monetary equivalent of a slave of Roman times. We call “sex workers” those people who engage in sex for money; they are supposed to be free men and free women, but freedom can only be theoretical when, if you really want it, you have to pay for it by starvation. And while the armies of the globalized empire do not raid any more the neighboring countries to bring back male and female slaves, it is the global financial power that forces them to come to the West.

They have little choice but to leave countries ravaged by wars, droughts, and poverty. In general, the social equality that the Western World had been constantly gaining after the industrial revolution, seems to have stopped its movement. Since the 1970s, we are going in reverse, social inequalities are on the increase. Are we going to re-legalize slavery? It is not an impossible thought if you think that it was still legal in the US up to 1865. So, maybe the rich elites of our times would again turn women into sex objects?

Maybe they are doing that already. Think of Italy’s leader, Silvio Berlusconi. Enough has been diffused of his private life for us to understand that he behaved not unlike Ansonia’s with his female toys, except that, luckily for us, he has not imposed on us some bad poetry of his. So, is the war of the sexes going to restart? Are we going to see again the relations between men and women souring because of the deep inequality that turns women into sex toys? And maybe we are going to see the monastic orders returning and, perhaps, in a far future, a new explosion of reciprocal love?

It is, of course, impossible to say. What we can say is that the world empire that we call “globalization” is all based on fossil fuels and that it is going to have a short life; very likely much shorter than that of the Roman Empire. Maybe the cycle will not be restarting, maybe it will; we cannot say. Humankind is engaged in a travel toward the future that is taking us somewhere, but we don’t know where. Wherever we are going, the path is something we create with our feet as we march onward. ,

Author: Roy

80 year old retired AF officer with VA combat related disability, educated beyond my intelligence with three at taxpayer expense Degrees. I am a Deist (hedged Atheist) who believes man made god in his own image and what we call god is what I call mother nature. I agree with Bertrand Russel that with all these different religions they all cannot be right but they can all be wrong, same applies to economic theories.

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14 Comments
Anonymous
Anonymous
March 9, 2016 7:10 am

From the article:
“what were the ultimate origins of this inequality”

I’m gonna go with “What are chromosomes?” for the win Alex.

Who gives a shit about gender inequality? If this is the question that occupies your days and interrupts your nights then your life is far….far too easy and you have no right to bitch about anything. Man and woman are supposed to be partners and teammates who compliment each others strengths and weaknesses.

Watching these special snowflakes perish when the winds of change reach hurricane force is going to warm my cold black heart and spur me on to survive in their absence. If there is any natural justice in the world it is these elitist, club of rome cocksuckers who should experience a little olde tyme slavery first hand.

IndenturedServant
IndenturedServant
March 9, 2016 7:14 am

Anon above was I.

hardscrabble farmer
hardscrabble farmer
March 9, 2016 7:20 am

“Some time ago, I was chatting at home with a friend who is a researcher specialized in “gender inequality”. I asked her what were the ultimate origins of this inequality but we couldn’t arrive at a conclusion. So, I happened to have in a shelf nearby a copy of the “Malleus Maleficarum”, the book that Kramer and Sprenger wrote in the 16th century on the evils of witchcraft. I took it out and I opened it to the page where the authors dedicate several paragraphs to describe how evil women are. I read a few of these paragraphs aloud and my friend was so enraged that she left the room, without saying a word. Later on, she told me that she had done that to avoid telling me what she thought I deserved to be told just for keeping that book in my shelves…”

And there’s all the evidence you’ll ever need.

Storming off in a huff because your colleague quoted from a text in order to add to your understanding of a topic in historical context.

The absence of reason and logic in the face of emotion and feelings is greatest obstacle there is in “gender equality”.

flash
flash
March 9, 2016 7:45 am

I agree with HSF .After reading the so called “researcher” bitch storming off in a huff , I was done…plus a ten thousand word paragraph is a little much on these old eyes…I rate this not worth the read.

I you really want to learn about what makes a woman tick, you’ve got to find an honest objective one first. And Camille Paglia is just one such women. White knighting is not a new phenomena.

Men are run ragged by female sexuality all their lives. From the beginning of his life to the end, no man ever fully commands any woman. It’s an illusion. Men are pussy-whipped. And they know it. That’s what the strip clubs are about; not woman as victim, not woman as slave, but woman as goddess.- Camille Paglia

flash
flash
March 9, 2016 8:42 am

How dare this gender denier not recognize the other 49 distinct genders. #AllGendersMatter

Lauren Southern ‏@Lauren_Southern

I was just assaulted in the streets for saying there are only two genders. Covered in piss lmao. 10/10 good day.

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flash
flash
March 9, 2016 8:48 am

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flash
flash
March 9, 2016 9:33 am

OH CANADA…you silly bitch.

Canada Mandates Half of its Films Have Female Directors…
http://www.hollywoodreporter.com/news/canada-bankrolling-more-female-directors-873546

Thanks for the effort Roy, but feminasty just ain’t my cup of tea.

Anonymous
Anonymous
March 9, 2016 10:36 am

Women aren’t men and men aren’t women, they have different capabilities.

This is biology and they are different in both physiology and their instinctual roles in life because of it no matter how people like that Jenner thing want it to be.

Trying to make them “equal” really means trying to change that and homogenize gender roles and this has a highly detrimental effect on society (things like lowering physical standards for cops so females can qualify then having to increase training to include more reliance on using deadly force to compensate for it. And of course this reliance is taught to both sexes to avoid being sexist, which actually means you recognize there is a difference between them.).

overthecliff
overthecliff
March 9, 2016 12:08 pm

Self preservation being imperitive, I shall not engage in comments on this subject.

Persnickety
Persnickety
March 9, 2016 1:24 pm

IS-anon said: “Man and woman are supposed to be partners and teammates who compliment each others strengths and weaknesses.”

And really that is it, and anything more is just cataloging or pedantic bickering.

jamesthewanderer
jamesthewanderer
March 9, 2016 1:33 pm

Trying to make the sexes “equal” is as silly as trying to make every person “equal”.

Under the law (in America) all men (and women) are supposed to be equal; that is, the law is not supposed to prefer one person over another in any proceeding, only the truth matters. IN PRACTICE Hillary is still not arrested, let alone or indicted, for offenses that would bring the FBI down on our houses, offices and anywhere we went for the last decade. Eric Holder is not arrested, indicted, etc. for Fast & Furious (gun-running to druglords). Etc. Etc. ad infinitum the entire Fed government. Let’s not start on Islam, where a woman’s testimony is worth half that of a man…..

The truth is I couldn’t out-jump Michael Jordan at basketball ever, no matter what condition he’s in now. I couldn’t out-ski Lindsay Vonn, even with her knee problems. I couldn’t out-run Oscar Pistorius, and he’s got artificial feet! We are not equal, not any of us, and until we figure out how to LEARN, WORK and THINK to the best advantages FROM each of us, we will remain locked into stupidity.

We’ve been married since 1981; first partner for each of us. The likeliest reason we’ve made it is that we have figured out how to use each other’s strengths to compensate for the others’ weaknesses. There are those who only want to steal everything we have or could build, whether in business (banking mostly), government (all of them) or private society (the FSA). Keeping something worth having in the face of a perpetual theft onslaught keeps getting tougher (see ObamaCare, ZIRP / NIRP, NSA spying, runaway deficit spending, and so on).

Learn how to fend for yourself, you will eventually have to. Two together fend better than one alone. nd children raised by two do better than those raised by one (as long as the two are fully functional). Enjoy these days, they are better than those coming.

rhs jr
rhs jr
March 9, 2016 8:51 pm

Small correction. Males are produced when there is a gene present to produce testosterone; this gene can be on an X chromosome (SRY-negative 46,XX male with normal genitals, complete masculinization and infertility) or on an Autosomal chromosome. XX maleness is a rare syndrome with a frequency of 1 in 20,000-25,000 males. Also ref Keryotype 46 XX.

rhs jr
rhs jr
March 9, 2016 8:55 pm

PS: Testosterone also affects male brain development in numerous ways; we are different downstairs, upstairs and in between. Anybody that claims we are equal biologically is full of stupid.