Charles L. Babcock, “The Early Career of Fulvia,” American Journal of Philology 86.1 1-32 / full text
Baharal, D., “The Portraits of Julia Domna from the Years 193-211 A.D. and the Dynastic Propaganda of L. Septimius Severus,” Latomus 51.1 (1992) 110ff.
B. Baldwin, “Women in Tacitus,” Prudentia 4 (1972) 83-101
A. A. Barrett, Agrippina: Sex, Power, and Politics in the Early Empire: Yale University Press (1996) / web link / bmcr
Elizabeth Bartman, Portraits of Livia: Imaging the Imperial Woman in Augustan Rome, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press (1998) / bmcr
E.E. Batinsky, “Julia in Lucan’s tripartite view of the Republic,” in Woman’s Power, Man’s Game. Essays on Classical Antiquity in Honor of Joy King edited by M. DeForest (1993)
R. A. Bauman, “The Rape of Lucretia, Quod metus causa and the Criminal Law,” Latomus 52.3 (1993) 550
R. A. Bauman, Women and Politics in Ancient Rome: Routledge (1992) / bmcr
Bauman, R.A., “Tanaquil-Livia and the death of Augustus,” Historia. Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte 43 (1994) 177-188
J. Bellemore, “The Wife of Sejanus,” ZPE 109 (1995) 255-266
M. T. Boatwright, “Matidia the Younger,” EMC 11.1 (1992) 19-32
B. W. Boyd, “Virtus effeminata and Sallust’s Sempronia,” Transactions of the American Philological Association 117 (1987) 183-201 / full text
D. Briquel, “Les femmes gladiateurs. Examen du dossier,” Ktema 17 (1992) 47-54
Dominique Briquel, “Les figures feminines dans la tradition sur les trois derniers rois de Rome,” Gerion 16 (1998) 113-142
R. Brown, “Livy’s Sabine Women and the Ideal of Concordia,” Transactions of the American Philological Association 125 (1995) 291-319 / full text
T. Cadoux, “Sallust and Sempronia,” in Vindex humanitatis. Essays in Honour of John Huntley Bishop edited by Bruce Marshall, Armidale, New South Wales (1980) 93-122
K. Christ, “Die Frauen der Triumvirn,” in Von Caesar zu Konstantin. Beiträge zur römischen Geschichte und ihrer Rezeption, München (1996) 85-102
J. M. Claassen, “The Familiar Other: The Pivotal Role of Women in Livy’s Narrative of Political Development in Early Rome,” Acta Classica 41 (1998) 71-104
Ronald G. Cluett, “Roman Women and Triumviral Politics, 43-37 B.C.,” EMC 17 no. 1 (1998) 67-84
A. Collaci, Galla Palcidia. La vita e i giorni, Firenze (1995)
M. Corbier, “Male Power and Legitimacy through Women: the Domus Augusta under the Julio Claudians,” in Women in Antiquity: New Assessments edited by R. Hawley and B. Levick, London and New York: Routledge (1995)
J. B. Curbera, “Venusta and her Owner in Four Curse Tablets from Morgantina, Sicily,” ZPE 110 (1995) 295
E. D’Ambra, Private Lives, Imperial Virtues: the Frieze of the Forum Transitorium in Rome, Princeton (1993) / web link
E. D’Ambra, “Mourning and the Making of Ancestors in the Testamentum Relief,” American Journal of Archaeology 99.4 (1995) 667 ff.
D. Delia, “Fulvia Reconsidered,” in Women’s History and Ancient History edited by S. Pomeroy, Chapel Hill (1991) 197-217
M.J. Ramirez Diez, “Presupuestos filosoficos y arquetipos literarios presentes en el personaje de Livia en los Anales de Tacito,” Estudios Classicos 106 (1994) 65-85
Suzanne Dixon, “Family Finances: Terentia and Tullia,” in The Family in Ancient Rome: new perspectives edited by B. Rawson: Routledge (1986, 1992)
G. M. Duval, “D. Junius Brutus, mari ou fils de Sempronia?,” Latomus 50 (1991) 608-615
K. P. Erhart, “A Portrait of Antonia Minor in the Fogg Art Museum and its Iconographical Tradition,” American Journal of Archaeology 82 (1978) 193-212
K. P. Erhart, “A New Portrait Type of Octavia Minor (?),” Getty Museum Journal 8 (1980) 117-128
Evans, Richard J., “Catiline’s wife,” Acta Classica. Proceedings of the Classical Association of South Africa 30 (1987) 69ff.
E. Fantham, “Aemilia Pudentilla: or the Wealthy Widow’s Choice,” in Women in Antiquity: New Assessments edited by R. Hawley and B. Levick, London and New York: Routledge (1995)
W. Fauth, “Ein römisches Frauenporträt bei Sallust (Coniuratio Catilinae 25),” AU 5,5 (1962) 34-41
Arthur Ferrill, “Augustus and his Daughter: A modern Myth,” in Studies in Latin Literature and Roman History 2 (1980) 332-346
T. Fischer-Hansen, J. Lund, M. Nielsen and A. Rathje, “Ancient Portraiture, Image and Message,” Acta Hyperborea 4 (1992)
S. Fischler, “Social Stereotypes and Historical Analysis: The Case of Imperial Women at Rome,” in Women in Ancient Societies edited by Leonie J. Archer, Susan Fischler and Maria Wyke, New York (1994) 115-34
M. Flory, “The Deification of Roman Women,” The Ancient History Bulletin 9.3/4 (1995) 127-134
M. Flory, “Dynastic Ideology, the Domus Augusta, and Imperial Women: A Lost Statuary Group in the Circus Flaminius,” Transactions of the American Philological Association 126 (1996) 287-306 / full text
Flory, Marleen, “Abducta Neroni Uxor: the Historiographical Tradition on the Marriage of Octavian and Livia,” Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association118 (1988) 343-359 / full text
Flory, Marleen B., “Livia and the history of public honorific statues for women in Rome,” Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 123 (1993) 287-308 / full text
Flory, Marleen Boudreau, “Sic exempla parantur: Livia’s Shrine to Concordia and the Porticus Liviae,” Historia 33 (1984) 309ff.
E. P. Forbis, “Women’s Public Image in Italian Honorary Inscriptions,” American Journal of Philology 111 (1990) 493-512 / full text
M. Fox, Roman Historical Myths: The Regal Period in Augustan Literature (Oxford Classical Monographs; Oxford: Oxford University Press (1996) / bmcr
Freyer-Schauenburg, Brigitte, “Die Kieler Livia,” Bonner Jahrbücher des Rheinischen Landesmuseums in Bonn und des Vereins von Altertumsfreunden im Rheinlande 182 (1982) 209-224
M. D. Fullerton, “The Domus Augusti in Imperial Iconography of 13-12 B.C.,” American Journal of Archaeology 89 (1985) 473-483 / full text
G.P.Goold, “The Cause of Ovid’s Exile,” Illinois Classical Studies 8 (1983) 84-107
Griffith, R. Drew, “The Eyes of Clodia Metelli,” Latomus 55.2 (1996) 381-383
Haley, Shelley P., “The Five Wives of Pompey the Great,” Greece & Rome 32 (1985) 49-59 / full text
J. Hallett, “Perusinae Glandes and the Changing Image of Augustus,” American Journal of ArchaeologyH 2 (1977) 151-71
J. Hallett, “Rapacious and Licentious Soldiery: Perusinae Glandes and Augustus’ Beseiged Mentula,” Helios 4 (1976) 57-58
Emily Ann Hemelrijk, Matrona Docta: Educated Women in the Roman Elite from Cornelia to Julia Domna, London and New York: Routledge (1999) [ISBN 0-415-19693-0] / bmcr
J. Hemker, “Rape and the Founding of Rome,” Helios 12 (1985) 41-47
F. Holztrattner, “Poppaea Neroins potens. Studien zu Poppaea Sabina,” Grazer Beiträge suppl. 6, Wien: Berger (1995)
J.C.Thibault, The Mystery of Ovid’s Exile, Berkeley (1964)
J.H. Corbett, J.H., “The Succession Policy of Augustus,” Latomus 33 (1974) 87-97
Jeffreys, Roland, “The Date of Messalla`s Death,” The Classical Quarterly 35 (1985) 140-148 / full text
A. Johner, “Mythe et théâtre. Le motif de la dame au char dans la légende royale de Rome,” Ktema 17 (1992) 29-38
P. K. Joplin, “Ritual Work on Human Flesh: Livy’s Lucretia and the Rape of the Body Politic,” Helios 17 (1990) 51-70
Joshel, Sandra R., “Female Desire and the Discourse of Empire: Tacitus’ Messalina,” in Roman Sexualities edited by Hallett, Judith P. and Skinner, Marilyn B., Princeton: Princeton University Press (1997) 221-254 / bmcr
S. R. Joshel, “Work Identity and Legal Status at Rome: A Study of the Occupational Inscriptions,” Oklahoma Series in Classical Culture 11, Norman: University of Oklahoma Press (1992)
M. Kajava, “Roman Upper-Class Children and Prosopography,” in Prosopographie und Sozialgeschichte. Studien zur Methodik und Erkenntnismöglichkeit der kaiserzeitlichen Prosopographie (Kolloquium Köln 24.-26. November 1991) edited by Werner Eck, Köln, Wien, Weimar (1993) 165-190
M. Kajava, “Roman Female Praenomina. Studies in the Nomenclature of Roman Women,” Acta Instituti Romani Finlandiae 14, Rome (1994)
M. Kaplan, “Agrippina semper atrox: a Study in Tacitus’ Characterization of Women,” Studies in Latin Literature and Roman History I edited by C. Deroux (1979) 410-417
D. E. E. Kleiner, Roman Group Portraiture: the Funerary Reliefs of the Late Republic and Early Empire (1977)
D. E. E. Kleiner, “Politics and Gender in the Pictorial Propaganda of Antony and Octavian,” EMC 11.3 (1992) 357-368
Diana E. E. Kleiner and Susan B. Matheson, I Claudia II: women in Roman art and society, Austin: University of Texas Press (2000) [Contributors: M.T. Boatwright, E. D’Ambra, D. Delia, A.E. Hanson, D.E.E. Kleiner, S.B. Matheson, A. Oliver, C.C. Vermeule III, R. Winkes and S. Wood] / bmcr
Kleiner, Fred S., “An extraordinary posthumous honor for Livia,” Athenaeum. Studi periodici di Letteratura e Storia dell’Antichità 78 (1990) 508-514
N. Kokkinos, Antonia Augusta. Portrait of a Great Roman Lady (1992) [My book ‘Antonia Augusta’ (London/New York: Routledge 1992) has now appeared in a paperback edition (London: Libri 20002), with an updated chapter of c. 15,000 words. Apart from a collection of new evidence (literary, documentary and archaeological), there are replies to most reviews that the book received in the last decade. This chapter may broadly be said to be a guide to recent work on Early Imperial Rome.] / bmcr
C. S. Kraus, “initium turbandi omnia a femina ortum est: Fabia Minor and the Election of 367 B.C.,” Phoenix 45 (1991) 314-25
J. Krause, Witwen und Waisen im Roemischen Reich I. Verwitwung und Wiederverheiratung, Stuttgart (1994)
J. Krause, Witwen und Waisen im Roemischen Reich II.: Wirtschaftliche und gesellschaftliche Stellung von Witwen, Stuttgart (1994) / web link
J. Krause, Witwen und Waisen im Roemischen Reich III: Rechtliche und soziale Stellung von Waisen, Band 18, Stuttgart (1995)
J. Krause, Witwen und Waisen im Roemischen Reich IV: Witwen und Waisen im fruehen Christentum, Stuttgart (1995)
Jens-Uwe Krause, Witwen und Waisen im römischen Reich, Stuttgart (1994/95, 4 volumes) / web link
Fridolf Kudlien, “Berufsmässioge Klageweiber in der Kaiserzeit,” RhM 138 (1995) 177-187
Christiane Kunst, “Adoption und Testamentadoption in der Späten Republik,” Klio 78 (1996) 87-104
F. S. L’Hoir, “Tacitus and Women’s Usurpation of Power,” Classical World 88.1 (1994) 5-26
F. S. L’Hoir, “The Rhetoric of Gender Terms: “Man,” “Woman,” and the Portrayal of Character in Latin Prose,” Mnemosyne Supplement 120, Leiden: Brill (1992)
W.K. Lacey, “2 BC and Julia’s Adultery,” Antichthon 14 (1980) 127-42
B. Leadbetter, “The ambition of Agrippina the younger,” Ancient History 25.1 (1995) 39-55
Leon, E.F., “Scribonia and her Daughters,” Transactions of the American Philological Association 82 (1951) 168-175 / full text
Barbara Levick, “The Fall of Julia the Younger,” Latomus 35 (1976)
Levick, Barbara, “Roman Women in a corporate State?,” Ktema 19 (1994) 259-267
Linderski, J., “Julia in Regium,” Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik, 72 (1988) 181-200
Linderski, Jerzy, “The Mother of Livia Augusta and the Aufidii Lurcones of the Republic,” Historia. Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte 23 (1974) 463-480
H. Lindsay, “A Fertile Marriage: Agrippina and the Chronology of Her Children by Germanicus,” Latomus 54.1 (1995) 3-17
MacMullen, R., “Women in Public in the Roman Empire,” Historia 29 (1980) 208-18 [reprint in R. MacMullen. Changes in the Roman Empire: Essays in the Ordinary. Princeton, 1990. Pp. 162-68]
R. MacMullen, “Women’s Power in the Principate,” Klio 68 (1986) 434-443
A.J. Marshall, “Ladies in Waiting: The Role of Women in Tacitus’ Histories,” Ancient Society (1984) 15-17
M. Mauch, Senecas Frauenbild in den philosophischen Schriften, Frankfurt a.M.-Berlin-Bern-New York-Paris-Wien: Peter Lang (1997)
Mayer, Roland, “What caused Poppaea’s Death?,” Historia 31 (1982) 248ff.
T. D. McClain and N. K. Rauh, “Sing of Woman’s Influence? The Dedications of the Stertinian familia at Delos,” Aevum 70.1 (1996) 47-67
J.I. McDougall, “Tacitus and the Portrayal of the Elder Agrippina,” EMC 25 (1981) 104-8
G. Miles, “The First Roman Marriage and the Theft of the Sabine Women,” in Innovations of Antiquity edited by R. Hexter and D. Selden, New York and London (1992)
G. B. Miles, “The First Roman Marriage and the Theft of the Sabine Women,” in Livy: Reconstructing Early Rome, Ithaca: Cornell University Press (1995) 179-219 / bmcr
T. J. Moore, “Morality, History, and Livy’s Wronged Women,” Eranos 91.2 (1993) 38-46
Ollendorff, Lotte, “Livia (37) Drusilla, Tochter des M. Livius Drusus Claudianus, Gattin des Ti. Claudius Nero, später des Augustus (Iulia Augusta), Mutter des Kaisers Tiberius,” RE. Paulys Realencyclopädie der classischen Altertumswissenschaft (1926) 900-924
G. M. Paul, “Sallust’s Sempronia: The Portrait of a Lady,” PLLS 5 (1985) 9-22
C.-M. Perkournig, Livia Drusilla – Iulia Augusta. Das politische Proträt der ersten Kaiserin Roms Roms, Wien (1995)
N. Purcell, “Livia and the Womanhood of Rome,” PCPhS 32 (1986) 78-105
A. E. Raubitschek, “Octavia’s Deification at Athens,” Transactions of the American Philological Association 77 (1946) 146-150 / full text
Rehak, Paul, “Livia’s Dedication in the Temple of Divus Augustus on the Palatine,” Latomus. Revue d’études latines 49 (1990) 117-125
J. Reynolds, “The funeral of Tatia Attalis of Aphrodisias,” Ktema 17 (1992) 153-160
Amy Richlin, “Julia’s Jokes, Galla Placidia, and the Roman Use of Women as Political Icons,” in Stereotypes of Women in Power edited by B. Garlick, S. Dixon, and P. Allen, Westport, Conn: Greenwood Press (1992)
Ritter, Hans-Werner, “Livias Erhebung zur Augusta,” Chiron 2 (1972) 313-338
C. B. Rose, “The portraits of Agrippina the Elder,” Journal of Roman Archaeology 9 (1996) 353ff.
L.W. Rutland, “Women as Makers of Kings in Tacitus’ Annals,” CW 72.1 (1979,) 15-29.
S. Stone, III, “The Imperial Sculpture Group in the Metroon at Olympia,” Mitteilungen des deutschen archäologisches Instituts, Athenische Abteilung 100 (1985) 377-391
Tina Saavedra, “Women as Focalizers of Barbarism in Conquest Texts,” EMC 18 no. 1 (1999) 59-77
G. Sabbah, “Castum, incestum: elements d’une ethique sexuelle dans l’Histoire d’Ammien Marcellin,” Latomus 53.2 (1994 317)
E.T. Salcedo, “El adulterio femenino en los Anales de Tacito,” in La mujer en el mundo antiguo edited by E.G. Gonzalez (1985) 289-97
L. Savunen, “Women and Elections in Pompeii,” in Women in Antiquity: New Assessments edited by R. Hawley and B. Levick, London and New York: Routledge (1995)
W. Scheidel, “Measuring Sex, Age and Death in the Roman Empire: Explorations in ancient demography,” Journal of Roman Archaeology, Supplementary Series 21 (1996) / bmcr
Shelton, J.-A., “Plinius the Younger, and the Ideal Wife,” Classica et Mediaevalia. Revue danoise d’Histoire et de Philologie 41 (1990) 163-186
D.C.A. Shotter, “Julians, Claudians, and the Accession of Tiberius,” Latomus 30 (1971) 117-23
Simpson, C.J., “Livia and the Constitution of the Aedes Concordiae. The Evidence of Ovid Fasti I.637ff.,” Historia. Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte 40 (1991) 449-455
P. Sinclair, “Tacitus’ Presentation of Livia Julia, Wife of Tiberius’ Son Drusus,” American Journal of Philology 111 (1990) 238-258 / full text
M. B. Skinner, “Clodia Metelli,” Transactions of the American Philological Association 113 (1983) 273-287 / full text
S. E. Smethurst, “Women in Livy’s History,” GandR 19 (1950) 80-87
Smith, J. Carington, “Pilate’s Wife?,” Antichthon. Journal of the Australian Society for Classical Studies 18 (1984) 102-107
Stern, E.M., “A glass head flask featuring Livia as Hera?,” Kotinos. Festschrift für Erika Simon. Hrsg. von Heide Froning, Tonio Hölscher, Harald Mielsch, Mainz: von Zabern (1992) 394-399
H. C. Stroud and R. S. Stroud, “The Empress Julia Domna at Epidauros Limera,” ZPE 105 (1995) 85-88
Suerbaum, Werner, “Merkwürdige Geburtstage: Der nicht-existierende Geburtstag des M. Antonius, der doppelte Geburtstag des Augustus, der neue Geburtstag der Livia und der vorzeitige Geburtstag des älteren Drusus,” Chiron. Mitteilungen der Kommission für Alte Geschichte und Epigraphik des Deutschen Archäologischen Instituts 10 (1980) 327-355.
R. Syme, “Princesses and Others in Tacitus,” GandR 28 (1981) 40ff.
R. Syme, Roman Papers (1978) 192-8
R. Syme, Roman Papers (1979) 912-36
Syme, Ronald, “Sallust’s Wife,” Classical Quarterly 28 (1978) 292-295 / full text
S. Treggiari, “Lower Class Women and the Roman Economy,” Florilegium 1 (1979) 65-86
D. Trout, “Retextualizing Lucretia: Cultural Subversion in The City of God,” Journal of Early Christian Studies 2.1 (1994) 53-70
E. R. Varner, “Domitia Longina and the Politics of Portraiture,” American Journal of Archaeology 99 (1995) 187-206
P. Walcot, “On widows and their reputation in antiquity,” Symbolae Osloenses 66 (1991) 5-26
P.G. Walsh, “Making a Drama out of a Crisis: Livy on the Bacchanalia,” Greece & Rome 43.2 (1996) 188-203 / full text
D. Wardle, “Caligula and his Wives,” Latomus 57 no. 1 (1998) 109-126
Watson, Alan, “The Death of Horatia,” The Classical Quarterly 29 (1979) 436-447 / full text
P. A. Watson, “Ancient Stepmothers: Myth, Misogyny and Reality,” in Mnemosyne Suppl. 143, Leiden (1995) / bmcr
K. E. Welch, “Antony, Fulvia, and the Ghost of Clodius in 47 B.C.,” Greece & Rome 42.2 (1995) 182-201 / full text
Wiseman, T.P., “The Mother of Livia Augusta,” Historia. Zeitschrift für Alte Geschichte 14 (1965) 333-334
Wiseman, T.P., “The Wife and Children of Romulus,” Classical Quarterly 33 (1983) 445-452 / full text
Wood, S., “Messalina, Wife of Claudius: Propaganda Successes and Failures of his Regime,” JRA 5 (1992) 219-234
Wood, S., “Memoriae Agrippinae: Agrippina the Elder in Julio-Claudian Art and Propaganda,” American Journal of Archaeology 92 (1988) 409-426. / full text
David Woods, “On the Death of the Empress Fausta,” Greece & Rome 45 no. 1 (1998) 70-86 / full text
Maria Wyke, Parchments of gender: deciphering the bodies of antiquity, Oxford: Clarendon Press (1998) [Introduction Maria Wyke; 1. Ithyphallic Males Behaving Badly; or, Satyr Drama as Gendered Tragic Ending Edith Hall; 2. `The Mother of the Argument’: Eros and the Body in Sappho and Plato’s Phaedrus Helene P. Foley; 3. Talking Recipes in the Gynaecological Texts of the Hippocratic Corpus Ann Ellis Hanson; 4. Controlling Daughters’ Bodies in Sirach Jon L. Berquist; 5. Austerity, Excess, Success, and Failure in Hellenistic and Early Imperial Italy Emma Dench; 6. Poisonous Women and Unnatural History in Roman Culture Sarah Currie; 7. Discovering the Body in Roman Oratory Erik Gunderson; 8. The Emperor’s New Body: Ascension from Rome Mary Beard John Henderson; 9. `Ordering the House’: On the Domestication of Jewish Bodies Cynthia M. Baker; 10. Playing Roman Soldiers: The Martyred Body, Derek Jarman’s Sebastiane, and the Representation of Male Homosexuality Maria Wyke; 11. Sowing the Seeds of Violence: Rape, Women, and the Land Carol Dougherty ] / web link
Maria Wyke, The Roman Mistress: Ancient and Modern Representations., Oxford: Oxford University Press (2002) [1. Part 1. Love Poetry Mistress and Metaphor in Augustan Elegy; 2. Written Women: Propertius’ scripta puella (2. 10-13); 3. The Elegiac Woman at Rome: Propertius Book 4; 4. Reading Female Flesh: Ovid Amores 3. 1; 5. Part 2. Reception Taking the Woman’s Part: Gender and Scholarship on Love Elegy; 6. Meretrix regina: Augustan Cleopatras; 7. Oriental Vamp; Cleopatra 1910s; 8. Glamour Girl: Cleopatra 1930s – 1960s; 9. Meretrix Augusta: Messalina 1870s – 1920s; 10. Suburban Feminist: Messalina 1930s – 1970s] / bmcr
L. Furn.e-van Zwet, “Fashion in Women’s Hair Dress for the First Century of the Roman Empire,” Bulletin antieke beschaving: Annual Papers on Classical Archaeology 31 (1956) 1-22