De Cultu Feminarum

E101205

De Cultu Feminarum is an early Christian treatise by Tertullian that critiques female adornment and discusses modesty and morality in women's dress and behavior.

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Label Occurrences
De Cultu Feminarum canonical 1

How this entity was disambiguated

Statements (45)

Predicate Object
instanceOf Christian treatise
moral treatise
theological work
addresses Christian women
alternativeName On the Apparel of Women
On the Dress of Women
argues Christian women should avoid ostentation
outward adornment reflects inner morality
associatedWith Roman North Africa
surface form: North African Christianity
author Tertullian
criticizes cosmetics
elaborate hairstyles
jewelry
luxurious clothing
dateWritten early 3rd century
late 2nd century
discusses relationship between body and soul
sin and temptation
focusesOn sexual modesty
women’s behavior
women’s dress
genre moral exhortation
polemical literature
historicalPeriod Late Antiquity
surface form: Patristic era
influenced later Christian discussions of modesty
influencedBy early Christian ascetic ideals
language Latin
literaryForm prose
mainTheme Christian ethics
asceticism
female adornment
modesty
morality in women’s dress
numberOfBooks 2
partOf Tertullian’s moral writings
placeOfOrigin Carthage
preservedIn Latin patristic manuscripts
religiousTradition Christianity
studiedIn gender studies in religion
history of Christian ethics
patristics
theologicalPosition rigorist morality
theologicalTradition Latin Church Fathers
usesSource Biblical texts
Genesis account of the Fall

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Referenced by (1)

Full triples — surface form annotated when it differs from this entity's canonical label.

Tertullian notableWork De Cultu Feminarum