Posted in theology

A Day in the Life of A: Concubine

By Elizabeth Prata

When we think of a harem, artistic rendering like this may come to mind, beautifully adorned young women lounging languidly. And that may indeed been part of the harem girl’s day. But that’s not all it was.

“Girls of the Harem” (Italian artist Fabio Fabbi 1861-1946)

12Now when the turn came for each young woman to go in to King Ahasuerus, after the end of her twelve months under the regulations for the women—for the days of their beauty treatment were completed as follows: six months with oil of myrrh and six months with balsam oil and the cosmetics for women— 13the young woman would go in to the king in this way: anything that she desired was given her to take with her from the harem to the king’s palace. 14In the evening she would enter and in the morning she would return to the second harem, to the custody of Shaashgaz, the king’s eunuch who was in charge of the concubines. She would not go in to the king again, unless the king delighted in her and she was summoned by name. (Esther 2:12-14).

Xerxes

Xerxes was not a talented king. We read from the book From Cyrus to Alexander: A History of the Persian Empire by Pierre Briant:

The Year 479 and Xerxes’ Reputation: Traditionally, modern historiography has presented a terrible image of Xerxes’ personality and reign. This image was already fully fashioned in Rawlinson’s Five Great Monarchies, a work published in 1867: with Xerxes began the disorders of the harem, assassinations, and conspiracies; around him were unleashed the passions of the court princesses and the growing influence of the eunuchs, with the result that “the character of Xerxes sank below that of any of his predecessors.” The king was weak, easily influenced, immature in his appetites, egotistical, cruel, superstitious, licentious.

What is a Concubine?

Concubines are a term used to describe a King’s woman used for sexual intimacy, without being a lawful wife. Lexham Bible Dictionary defines concubine as “A woman who is conjugally related to man but holds a secondary or inferior status to his primary wife.” For many women throughout history, the position served as one of the highest she could achieve in terms of power and safety. Hagar and Keturah were concubines of Abraham. Romans also had concubines.

The Old Testament contains 37 occurrences of the word “concubine” (pilegesh).

Belshazzar had concubines, see Daniel 5:1-3. They were present at the great feast when the Hand appeared and wrote on the wall.

Saul had a concubine named Rizpah. (2 Samuel 21:11).

King Solomon had 300 concubines.

So did David. (2 Samuel 5:13)

Pharaoh took Abram’s wife Sarai into his palace as an intended concubine. (Genesis 12:15).

Judges chapter 19 describes a concubine degraded. In Patriarchal times a concubine had no authority in the family, and they could not share in the household government. Since they were not a legal wife, they could be sent away (example: Abraham and Hagar.)

Many kings in the Bible had concubines but Xerxes’ harem was the only one described with any detail, so we will focus on his harem for this essay. And Xerxes’ harem apartments have been excavated!

Harem excavation photos: Harem of Xerxes from the University of Chicago, Institute for the Study of Ancient Cultures. Caption is already contained in the photo. The ruins were excavated when the Oriental Institute of the University of Chicago sponsored an archaeological expedition to Persepolis and its environs under the supervision of Professor Ernst Herzfeld from 1931 to 1934, and Erich F. Schmidt from 1934 to 1939.

What was it like in a harem?

Harem might be a familiar word to us but since harems existed in ancient times in China, Japan, India, Assyria, Persian, and Egypt, their practices and characteristics differed from one culture to another.

A harem is a place where women are sequestered in order to separate them from the world. Once in the harem they had very little interaction with the outside world, unless they were dismissed or in some lucky cases, retired. The women in a harem could not see the outside world and the outside world, including family (if they lived nearby) could not interact with them.

Where did all these women come from? They got there in different ways. Mostly coerced. Normally in a harem there were different classes of women, different groups, living in separate quarters and heavily guarded for their safety and privacy. In Xerxes’ case they were separated by virgin vs. concubine.

The third group of harem women were concubines, beautiful girls (Plutarch, Artoxerxes, 27; Diodorus, 17.77.6; Esther 2.3) bought in slave markets (Herodotus 8.105; Plutarch, Themistocles, 26.4), or received as a gift (Xenophon, Cyropaedia, 4.6, 11; 5.1, 1; 5, 2, 9, 39) and tribute (Herodotus 3. 97), or collected from different parts of the empire (Esther 2.2-3;), and even captured from rebellious subjects (Herodotus 4.19, 32; Cf. Grayson, 1975, p. 114). (Source Iranicaonline.)

Harems were highly regulated

System and Restrictions: Harems typically operated as a system of segregated living quarters for women, often within a palace or residence. They were usually guarded by eunuchs or trusted servants to maintain the privacy and security of the women inside. Women in harems often had limited freedom and were subject to strict rules and protocols. (Source).

The throne hall in the background…you can imagine Esther walking from this large harem complex tot he throne room, not knowing if she was going to be executed. “And then I will go in to the king, which is not in accordance with the law; and if I perish, I perish.” Esther 4:16.

What did they do all day? Greek Philosopher Aelian in his Varia Historia, 12.1 wrote- “While still virgins, they were kept and groomed in the harem’s “first house of women” (Esther 2.9), and trained as musicians, dancers and singers in order that they might entertain their king or the magnate lord at banquets or throughout the night.”

Their education was much better than women usually receive outside the harem. They were instructed in all the arts but also reading and math. They were also taught manners and traditions. It was the ultimate charm school. If the concubine did not excel at her education she would likely have been assigned tasks such as cooking or laundry in the harem. Of course also we see in the Esther verses there was a strict beauty regimen. All this would have taken up her time during the day.

As we see in the Esther verses above, once the woman has ‘gone into the King’ she was moved to a different harem than the one she occupied with the other virgins. In the second house she probably would have been helping to raise any children running around from the union of the concubine and the king. And as in any large system of operations, the women would have been accomplishing tasks such as continuing their education, practicing their musical instruments, or serving others. We know that Esther was given 7 maidservants. (Esther 2:9).

Josephus said in his Antiquities, 6.200 that Xerxes had 400 concubines.

In order to house 400 women, their guards, eunuchs, and servants, the complex would have had to be large!

What happened to Concubines?

Aging and Weakness: The fate of women in a harem as they aged or became weaker depended on the specific circumstances and the attitudes of those in power. In some cases, older or weaker women in a harem may have been assigned roles as caretakers or advisors to the younger members. Others might have been granted some level of freedom or retirement within the palace. However, there are also instances where elderly or weak women were marginalized or had diminished status within the harem. (Source).

A large and ornate harem was often constructed to display the king or sultan or pharaoh’s wealth and power. It would have been highly decocrated

Some were executed. The wife/queen of the king or sultan often wielded much power, and any concubine caught in an intrigue that displeased the queen or the king could be executed. In the 1640s Ibrahim the Mad, an Ottoman king, was told by one of his favored concubines that one of the others had slept with an outsider. Ibrahim was furious. He had his eunuchs investigate, then torture his 200+ concubines in the harem but either the tale was false and it didn’t happen, or they refused to give up one of their own. So Ibrahim had all 280 women sewn into weighted sacks and drowned in the Bosporus Strait. That was definitely a case where an intrigue blew back into unfortunate heights.

In a harem full of women, whether the virgin harem or the concubine harem, rumors and jockeying for position was rife. We see from the verses below that virgins could be favored, and since that is true, there must have been intrigue to catch the attention of the eunuch in charge of them to gain even more favor. But Esther didn’t do that. She trusted God and in HIS favor, Esther rose to the top without her having to curry attention or otherwise plan intrigues.

Esther Finds Favor: So it came about, when the command and decree of the king were heard and many young ladies were gathered to the citadel of Susa into the custody of Hegai, that Esther was taken to the king’s palace into the custody of Hegai, who was in charge of the women. Now the young lady pleased him and found favor with him. So he quickly provided her with her cosmetics and food, gave her seven choice female attendants from the king’s palace, and transferred her and her attendants to the best place in the harem.

Conclusion

A harem was a busy place. The women were physically prepared, intellectually prepared, and prepared in the arts, charms, and traditions of their culture. They worked raising the children, teaching others, or serving others. Of course if they were chosen, they worked at night, too. Though they had access to better food, education, clothing and even oils, perfumes, and jewels they might not have had access to ‘on the outside’, life in a harem was not always easy. They existed at the whims of the king, and walked a tightrope of luxury vs. execution or abandonment. We know that Esther took her life in her hands by approaching the unstable king Xerxes without his calling for her. It was only by the providence of God she was not executed, as was the rule.

Though the story of Esther is mainly taught to show us the providence of God, it also shows me personally how a life of jockeying and intrigue, gilded cages and sinful jealousies can ruin a life, where even in that environment trusting God for His provision and His life plan for us is always best. Doing so doesn’t always give rise to queenly proportions as it did for Esther, but her demeanor was queenly even before Xerxes took her into his heart, because she is the daughter of THE KING of KINGS. Her reliance on God, peaceful attitude, and kindness shone out among the hundreds of other women in those harem apartments in ancient Persia.

Further Resources

Little Known Bible Characters: Harbonah the Eunuch

Posted in theology

A Day in the Life of: A Roman Centurion

By Elizabeth Prata

Today we have a scene in Luke. There was a centurion, not named, who had a slave who this centurion regarded highly. The centurion is only known by his profession, but his words are recorded. Further the centurion, a gentile no less, was commended by Jesus for his “great faith.”

Jesus Christ was very ready to show kindness to the centurion. He presently went with them (v. 6), though he was a Gentile; for is he the Saviour of the Jews only? Is he not also of the Gentiles? Yes, of the Gentiles also, Rom. 3:29. The centurion did not think himself worthy to visit Christ (v. 7), yet Christ thought him worthy to be visited by him; for those that humble themselves shall be exalted. (Source: Matthew Henry’s commentary on the whole Bible).

A Roman Centurio on a portrait medaillon of his grave, 2nd century A.D. from Flavia Solva. CC Wikipedia

We read actually of four centurion in the Bible.

  • Cornelius, a god-fearing centurion who Peter baptizes and is the pivot point of the beginning of the spread of the gospel to Gentiles (Acts 10–11).
  • A centurion who was present at Jesus’ crucifixion and identified Jesus as the Son of God, Mark 15:39 and Matthew 27:54, as innocent as per Luke 23:47.
  • A centurion whose slave Jesus heals from a distance, Jesus praises his faith (Matthew 8:5–13; Luke 7:2–10).
  • Julius of the Imperial Regiment to whom Paul was turned over, (Acts 27:1) and who “treated Paul with consideration and allowed him to go to his friends and receive care”. v. 3

Roman centurion were known as brutal military men in battle. They lived an orderly lifestyle. They were also known as ingenious engineers, fearless leaders, intelligent and brave.

AI generated illustration of a Roman Centurion

A Roman centurion carried the following equipment: a short sword called a Gladius as well as two spears called Pilum (plural, Pila). Body armor was fashioned from leather and a metal, usually bronze and iron. Metal hoops were tied to a leather harness, resembling later metal armor. He had a helmet called a galea topped with a crest, made of horsehair and sometimes dyed red. He had a shield called a scuta, which was large and heavy. His cape was held together across his neck by a brooch.

This shield is the only known surviving example of the examples known as a scutum. It was found at Dura Europos. Roman soldiers used round, oval, and rectangular shields as military evolution progressed. Source Wiki, CC

What was life like for a centurion?

A centurion was a soldier, but not just any soldier. He was a lifetime soldier, this was his life’s profession. He advanced through the ranks, accumulating authority along the way. A centuria was the smallest unit of a Roman legion. A legion was usually composed of 6,000 soldiers. Each legion was segmented into 10 cohorts, with each cohort containing 6 centuria. The centurion commanded about 100 men. If you wonder about the word centuria of 100 soldiers, and ‘century’ meaning 100, this is where we get the word from.

Here is a picture of it. All the soldiers in the illustration are a legion. Each colored column of men is a cohort. Each of the 6 squares in the cohort contain 1 centuria, with a centurion leading it. Source. The initials CT on the left mean Centurion. O is Optio, the centurion’s second in command.

The red box indicates the men a centurion would command.

Pause for a minute to think of the poor demon possessed Gadarene man in Mark 5:8-9. When Jesus asked the demon’s name, he said we are many, our name is legion. So that is about how many demons possessed the poor man!

The three main categories of ranks in a Roman legion were centurions, tribunes who commanded the cohort and were above a centurion, and prefects. Prefects administered things like a quartermaster does in our terms, but could command if senior officials were absent. The Legion Legate was the commander of the whole legion. We read of tribunes in the Bible. In some versions Acts 21 mentions it was a Tribune of a cohort who arrested Paul at the temple in Acts 21.

So the centurion has authority over 100 men. He himself is under authority to the Tribune who commands the cohort, and above him was the Legate who commanded the legion. See, I told you the life of a Roman was under layers of orderly hierarchical authority.

So when the Centurion said to Jesus, “For I also am a man placed under authority, with soldiers under myself; and I say to this one, ‘Go!’ and he goes, and to another, ‘Come!’ and he comes, and to my slave, ‘Do this!’ and he does it.'” (Luke 7:8). The centurion was saying he possesses authority to command men, and he is also under authority and must obey commands of those above him.

Centurions were paid more than a regular solider. Career opportunities to advance in rank awaited him, based on performance. They were supposed to be strict toward the men below them, and responsible for training them in the military arts, the success of which, the entire cohort and then the legion depended upon when action came their way.

From scripture we know that centurions helped maintain peace- they quelled riots and protected citizens (Acts 21:32 ESV). They accompanied prisoners, such as Centurion Julius sailing with Paul for Italy. They oversaw execution of criminals (Acts 23:47). This centurion who had asked for his slave to be healed, was the same one who built the city’s synagogue. (Luke 7:5). Idle soldiers tend to get into trouble, so, often the Roman army would have the soldiers build or repair buildings or roads in between battles. This kept the men in shape, in addition to the centurion training the men.

God used a centurion as the pivot in His plan to bring Jews and Gentiles together into one body under His New Testament Gospel. Cornelius the centurion of the Italian band is considered to be the first pagan convert after the Resurrection. (Some say it was the Ethiopian eunuch, but I side with Cornelius). He had been a God-fearer, the name Jews gave to Gentiles who worshiped Yahweh and held to the food laws. Cornelius was “a righteous and God-fearing man well spoken of by the entire nation of the Jews” (Acts 10:22).

The Lord graciously converted this centurion. He then brought Peter to Cornelius. The societal laws were now moot (Peter said it would have been unlawful to go to a Gentile’s house, but could go to Cornelius as per the vision, Acts 10:28), and that the food laws were now moot (Acts 10:11).

A Roman centurion living in Judea converted to the God of Israel! We serve a great, GREAT God.


Previous essays in A Day in the Life of:

A Day in the Life of: A Roman Centurion
A Day in the Life of: A Professional Mourner
A Day in the Life of: A Fisherman

A Day in the Life of: A Potter
A Day in the Life of: A Scribe
A Day in the Life of: A Shepherd
A Day in the Life of: A Tanner
A Day in the Life of: A Seller of Purple
A Day in the Life of: Introduction

Previous entries in another series I published are Little Known Bible Characters:

Iddo
The ‘list of offenders’
Trophimus
Eutychus
Harbonah the Eunuch
King Cherdolaomer

Posted in theology

A Day in the Life of a Seller of Purple

By Elizabeth Prata

What was a day in the life like for a person who lived in New Testament Bible times? It depended on what trade the person made their living. Let’s look at the woman of Thyatira, Lydia, a seller of purple.

Lydia is mentioned only a few times in the New Testament, in Acts 16:11-15, and v. 40. She was a worshiper of God, which meant that she was seeking a deeper spiritual life than the pagans around her, though not yet a proselyte. Proselyte was the name given by the Jews to foreigners who adopted the Jewish religion, but Philippi had a negligible number of Jews in the city, too few even to attain a quorum for a synagogue. It is all the  more remarkable that Lydia worshipped God in that Hellenistic Roman city.

Paul found her in Philippi with other women worshiping along the riverbank. It is here that it’s mentioned that she was a seller of purple cloth. (Acts 16:14.)

Lydia was originally from Thyatira, a bustling merchant city of guilds. It is likely that Lydia learned her trade there, though no mention is made of how or why she ended up in Philippi. David Elton Graves of Liberty University, from his article What is the Madder with Lydia’s Purple? A Reexamination of the Purpurarii in Thyatira and Philippi explains,

It appears that Lydia was not alone in Philippi carrying out her trade, as Antiochos from Philippi was the first dyer to be a benefactor to the city of Thyatira. There was a close connection with the dyeing trade of Philippi and Thyatira

In another clue as to the tie between the purple-dyers of Thyatira and the purple-dyers of Philippi, we read in New Testament Cities in Western Asia Minor: Light from Archaeology on Cities by Edwin M. Yamauchi,

In 1872 Professor Mertzides discovered in Philippi the following text in Greek inscribed on a piece of white marble: ‘The city honored from among the purple-dyers and outstanding citizen, Antiochus the son of Lykus, ad native of Thyatira, as a benefactor.’

This indicates perhaps that the purple-dyers may have also worked as a guild in Philippi as they did in Thyatira, and that their profession was held in high esteem since there was an inscription made and a benefactor to the trade.

Though purple dye can be made from the madder plant, the only true purple colorfast dye known at that time was produced by the murex snail, a marine mollusk. Debates continue as to whether Lydia used the Madder plant or the Murex, but either way, making purple dye was a difficult, costly, and time-consuming process. As a result, purple dye was purchased by royalty, elites, and the very wealthy, who used it to stripe a border of the hem of their garment, as the Senators did in Rome to their togas.

Lydia owned a house, which indicates she was probably a widow. The house was large enough to support Paul, Silas, and Luke and perhaps others with them, on Paul’s missionary journey. She also hosted the nascent church in her home. She impressed upon Paul to stay at her home, without a husband mentioned or other male with whom she needed to consult, the common practice for a woman at the time. This clue also tells us she was probably a widow. Lydia seems to have been shrewd in business, wealthy, and her own decision-maker. She likely ran in high circles since her clients would have been the richest.

So what was life like for a wealthy widow in southern Europe in the first century?

Philippi was a leading city in the district, according to Acts 16:12. A safe estimate of the population might be about 10,000-15,000. It lay on an important trade route and the city was patterned after Rome, though it was thoroughly Greek as well. Philippi was a wealthy city. It had a theater, a forum, and an arena in which games were held. It also had baths.

This wealth was shown by the many monuments that were particularly imposing considering the relatively small size of the urban area: the forum, laid out in two terraces on both sides of the main road, was constructed in several phases between the reigns of Claudius and Antoninus Pius, and the theatre was enlarged and expanded in order to hold Roman games. There is an abundance of Latin inscriptions testifying to the prosperity of the city. Wikipedia

A wealthy Israelite house (Source)

Lydia was converted to Christianity, as well as “her household”. A woman of her trade and standing, in such a wealthy city, no doubt would have servants. Lydia would have had many servants.

Servants, of course were a necessity – some wealthy country landlords could have had at least 50 living on their premises. According to the Mishnah (Ketuboth 5:5) – the more servants a woman had, the less she had to do herself. One servant liberated her from baking, two from cooking and breast-feeding. Four allowed her to “sit all day in a chair.” (Source)

In the morning upon awakening, if Lydia went to the baths, a servant would have put up her hair. Women did not go into public with their hair down, and they wore a head covering. Lydia’s house had more than one room, as the common people had. In fact, a woman of her standing would have lived in a house of upwards of 12 rooms, all around an open courtyard planted with shrubs and trees. Her furnishings would include a divan, upon which people of that era sat cross legged, and at night the diven was used as a bed. There were no special bedrooms in Oriental homes at that period.

Painting by Liotard, in the Louvre

Lydia then likely would have gone to the baths, with her hair up and her head covered. Women took their baths in the morning, men in the evening. The wealthiest could afford to have water piped into their home, so it is possible Lydia took her bath in her own home and didn’t need to venture out until she was ready to attend to her business. She’d be perfumed and her hair oiled.

No one is sure whether Lydia oversaw the actual purple-making process or if she was a vendor of already finished textiles in purple. If she managed a factory of dyers, that would have been an incredibly complex and busy job. Since making purple is labor intensive, she’d be boss of many employees. If the dye she handled was made from the murex, it would bring with it a host of issues. But first, here is the The International Standard Bible Encyclopaedia on purple-making:

Purple dye was manufactured by the Phoenicians from a marine mollusk, Murex trunculus. The shell was broken in order to give access to a small gland which was removed and crushed. The crushed gland gives a milky fluid that becomes red or purple on exposure to the air. Piles of these broken shells still remain on the coast at Sidon and Tyre. The purple gland is found in various species of Murex and also of Purpura.
Purple cloth was used in the furnishings of the tabernacle (Ex 25:4, etc) and of Solomon’s temple (2 Ch 2:14; 3:14); in the palanquin of Solomon (Cant 3:10); and in the hangings of the palace of Ahasuerus (Est 1:6). The kings of Midian had purple raiment (Jgs 8:26); the worthy woman of Prov 31:22 has clothing of fine linen and purple. Mordecai was clothed with purple by Ahasuerus (Est 8:15); Jesus by the Rom soldiers (Mk 15:17, 20; Jn 19:2, 5).

The gland secretes one drop of the liquid. One. Drop. It typically took about 10,000 shells to make a small amount of usable dye. Huge mounds of murex shells have been excavated from all around the Mediterranean.

Archaeological data from Tyre indicate that the snails were collected in large vats and left to decompose. This produced a hideous stench that was actually mentioned by ancient authors. (Aristotle, Vitruvius, and Pliny the Elder). Not much is known about the subsequent steps, and the actual ancient method for mass-producing the two murex dyes has not yet been successfully reconstructed; this special “blackish clotted blood” colour, which was prized above all others, is believed to be achieved by double-dipping the cloth, once in the indigo dye of H. trunculus and once in the purple-red dye of B. brandaris. (Source: The Mediterranean Sea: Its history and present challenges, edited by Stefano Goffredo, Zvy Dubinsky)

In fact, the process of making Tyrian Purple was so offensive, the Talmud allowed a woman to divorce her husband if he became a dyer after marriage, lol. Hence, one issue is that if her business, was factory oriented not end-product sales, would have been some distance outside the city. She’d need to rely either on a trusted manager, or oversee the operation herself. Either way, Lydia was busy all day either on site, at her vendor stalls along the marketplace in the Forum, or at home managing accounts. Or all three!

Roman fresco from the fullonica (fuller’s shop) of
Veranius Hypsaeus in Pompeii. Museo Archeologico Nazionale

In any case, whether Lydia was a maker and seller of purple textiles or a or a vendor only, she  was a busy woman, between managing her household, her servants, and her business. What is evident is that though she was likely both wealthy and busy, she put her faith first.

Pre-salvation, she worshipped God. She gathered at the prayer house by the river and communed with Him and fellowshipped with other worshippers. After salvation, she hosted Paul & Co. along with other believers as the church grew and services were held in her house.

The Bible is replete with warnings not to allow riches to corrupt one’s soul, (Psalms 62:10, Proverbs 11:28, Job 21:13, Ecclesiastes 1:3, Matthew 6:24 etc.) but Lydia was spared that wordly flaw, and she centered her faith and her life on Jesus.

Left, fresco depicting women preparing and drying sheep’s wool and other textiles in a fullonica, for dyeing.

Her daily routines were not filled with taking time to put on costly adornments (1 Timothy 2:9), nor to laze around all day in a chair. Lydia was busy. I suspect after her heart was opened to receive the Gospel, (Acts 16:14) she redoubled her efforts in business so that she could fund missions and host the church. Her purple-selling now had a purpose beyond worldly status. The vanity of the rich was now funding the spread of the Gospel.

Lydia’s story:

Therefore putting out to sea from Troas, we ran a straight course to Samothrace, and on the day following to Neapolis; 12and from there to Philippi, which is a leading city of the district of Macedonia, a Roman colony; and we were staying in this city for some days. 13And on the Sabbath day we went outside the gate to a riverside, where we were supposing that there would be a place of prayer; and we sat down and began speaking to the women who had assembled.

And a certain woman named Lydia, from the city of Thyatira, a seller of purple fabrics, a worshiper of God, was listening; and the Lord opened her heart to respond to the things spoken by Paul. 15And when she and her household had been baptized, she urged us, saying, “If you have judged me to be faithful to the Lord, come into my house and stay.” And she prevailed upon us.

[When Paul was released from prison, he did not go to the house of the Philippian jailer who had also converted, but straight to Lydia’s home:]

And they went out of the prison and entered the house of Lydia, and when they saw the brethren, they encouraged them and departed.