Breastfeeding Animals and Other Wild “Nurses” in Greek and Roman Mythology

<p>Both literary and material evidence strongly suggest that wet and dry nurses played a central role within the ancient world. A peculiar declination of the figure of the Greek and Roman wet-nurse are animal nurses, recalled by both literary texts and iconography. There are plenty of ancient...

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Main Author: Giulia Pedrucci
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Ediciones Complutense 2016-12-01
Series:Gerión
Subjects:
Online Access:http://revistasculturales.ucm.es/index.php/GERI/article/view/53745
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spelling doaj-c9b7edf6b0d8484abac1e77b48bb9e082020-11-25T01:29:14ZspaEdiciones ComplutenseGerión0213-01811988-30802016-12-0134030732310.5209/rev_GERI.2016.v34.5374550339Breastfeeding Animals and Other Wild “Nurses” in Greek and Roman MythologyGiulia Pedrucci0Università degli Studi di Bologna<p>Both literary and material evidence strongly suggest that wet and dry nurses played a central role within the ancient world. A peculiar declination of the figure of the Greek and Roman wet-nurse are animal nurses, recalled by both literary texts and iconography. There are plenty of ancient legends concerning abandoned children breastfed by animals, such as Romulus, Telephus, and Zeus. These breastfeeding animals can be ascribed to the category of the “adjuvant” that is central in the myths concerning the biography of divine and legendary founders and kings. Adjuvants can be animals, either domestic or wild, or human beings, and mostly figures socially excluded belonging to specific social groups: shepherds, swineherds, washerwomen, slaves and even prostitutes. They could be also nymphs who live, like animals, in natural habitats (where babies are usually abandoned). Our aim is to suggest that those babies with an extraordinary future in front of them inherit something from their animal and/or wild nurses via milk.</p>http://revistasculturales.ucm.es/index.php/GERI/article/view/53745amamantamiento animalniñerasnodrizasmaternidadmitología griega y romana
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Giulia Pedrucci
spellingShingle Giulia Pedrucci
Breastfeeding Animals and Other Wild “Nurses” in Greek and Roman Mythology
Gerión
amamantamiento animal
niñeras
nodrizas
maternidad
mitología griega y romana
author_facet Giulia Pedrucci
author_sort Giulia Pedrucci
title Breastfeeding Animals and Other Wild “Nurses” in Greek and Roman Mythology
title_short Breastfeeding Animals and Other Wild “Nurses” in Greek and Roman Mythology
title_full Breastfeeding Animals and Other Wild “Nurses” in Greek and Roman Mythology
title_fullStr Breastfeeding Animals and Other Wild “Nurses” in Greek and Roman Mythology
title_full_unstemmed Breastfeeding Animals and Other Wild “Nurses” in Greek and Roman Mythology
title_sort breastfeeding animals and other wild “nurses” in greek and roman mythology
publisher Ediciones Complutense
series Gerión
issn 0213-0181
1988-3080
publishDate 2016-12-01
description <p>Both literary and material evidence strongly suggest that wet and dry nurses played a central role within the ancient world. A peculiar declination of the figure of the Greek and Roman wet-nurse are animal nurses, recalled by both literary texts and iconography. There are plenty of ancient legends concerning abandoned children breastfed by animals, such as Romulus, Telephus, and Zeus. These breastfeeding animals can be ascribed to the category of the “adjuvant” that is central in the myths concerning the biography of divine and legendary founders and kings. Adjuvants can be animals, either domestic or wild, or human beings, and mostly figures socially excluded belonging to specific social groups: shepherds, swineherds, washerwomen, slaves and even prostitutes. They could be also nymphs who live, like animals, in natural habitats (where babies are usually abandoned). Our aim is to suggest that those babies with an extraordinary future in front of them inherit something from their animal and/or wild nurses via milk.</p>
topic amamantamiento animal
niñeras
nodrizas
maternidad
mitología griega y romana
url http://revistasculturales.ucm.es/index.php/GERI/article/view/53745
work_keys_str_mv AT giuliapedrucci breastfeedinganimalsandotherwildnursesingreekandromanmythology
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