{"id":4136,"date":"2023-03-31T18:11:10","date_gmt":"2023-03-31T17:11:10","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.learnancientrome.com\/?p=4136"},"modified":"2023-03-31T18:11:10","modified_gmt":"2023-03-31T17:11:10","slug":"what-did-children-call-elders-in-ancient-rome","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.learnancientrome.com\/what-did-children-call-elders-in-ancient-rome\/","title":{"rendered":"What did children call elders in ancient rome?"},"content":{"rendered":"

In ancient Rome, children called elders by their first names. There were no last names. The word for “elder” was also used to mean “parent.” So, children would say “my mother, Augusta” or “my father, Lucius.”<\/p>\n

There is no one answer to this question as different children in ancient Rome would have called elders different things. Some possible examples include “mother,” “father,” “grandmother,” “grandfather,” “uncle,” “aunt,” “cousin,” or “friend.”<\/p>\n

What did ancient Roman children call their parents? <\/h2>\n

The terms usually used to denote parenting were parens ‘parent’, pater ‘father’, and mater ‘mother’. These terms are still in use today, but have largely been replaced by the more gender-neutral terms ‘parents’ and ‘caregivers’. While the traditional terms may be more commonly used in certain contexts, such as when referring to one’s own parents, the more modern terms are generally preferred when discussing parenting in general.<\/p>\n

The plebeians were the lower class of people in Rome who mostly worked the land owned by the patricians. Some plebeians owned small plots of land, but this was rare until the second century BC. The plebeians were often farmers who worked the land to produce food for the people of Rome.<\/p>\n

What were the roles of children in ancient Rome <\/h3>\n