Newly translated excerpts--some of which are available in English for the first time--are taken from a wide range of Latin prose and verse literature, ethical and agricultural handbooks and codes, legal texts, inscriptions, and other epigraphical material from the second century B. C. to the sixth century A. D. Taken together, they constitute an indispensible resource for the study of Roman domestic and social history, providing an intimate glimpse inside the Roman household.
c1991. Definitely an academic book but readable for all that. Nice layout in that the additional notes are on the same page which means that you do not have to keep going backwards and forwards. There are some great anecdotes as well even if you are not that 'in' to history. Interestingly, it seems that some of the Benedictine rules were based on good ol' Roman principles. I am not quite sure of what to think about one of the paras ie " Egnatius Maecenius killed his wife by beating her with a stick for being drunk on wine. Not only was he not summoned to court for doing this, but he was not even criticised by anyone: all right thinking men considered that she deserved what she got because of her lack of self-control. It is agreed that any woman who drinks without restraint puts any virtue she may have at risk and risks falling prey to every vice. - Valerius Maximus 6, 3.9"