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University of California Press

About the Book

Women's virginity held tremendous significance in early Christianity and the Mediterranean world. Early Christian thinkers developed diverse definitions of virginity and understood its bodily aspects in surprising, often nonanatomical ways. Eventually Christians took part in a cross-cultural shift toward viewing virginity as something that could be perceived in women's sex organs. Treating virginity as anatomical brought both benefits and costs. By charting this change and situating it in the larger landscape of ancient thought, Virgin Territory illuminates unrecognized differences among early Christian sources and historicizes problematic ideas about women's bodies that still persist today.

About the Author

Julia Kelto Lillis is Assistant Professor of Early Church History at Union Theological Seminary in the City of New York.

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In Early Christianity, “Physical” Virginity Meant Many Different Things

By Julia Kelto Lillis, author of Virgin Territory: Configuring Female Virginity in Early Christianity“Bodily” or “physical virginity” is one of the most used yet unclear phrases about virginity in academic and popular speech. Most who use it simply assume others know what they mean. For instance
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Table of Contents

Contents

Acknowledgments
Notes to the Reader 
Abbreviations for Series and Reference Works

Introduction: Ancient and Present-Day Meanings for Virginity

PART ONE. Virginity with and without Virginal Anatomy 

1. Testing, Showing, and Perceiving Virginity in Antiquity
2. Mary’s Forms of Virginity in Early Christian Writings

PART TWO. Christian Conceptualizations of Virginity in the Fourth Century

3. Virginity of Body and Soul: Fourth-Century Christian Configurations
4. Sealed Fountains: The Imagery of Fourth-Century Christian Virginity Discourse

PART THREE. The Cost of Anatomized Virginity for Late Ancient Christians

5. Perceptible Virginity: Its Usefulness and Consequences
6. Augustine of Hippo and the Problem of Double Integrity

Conclusion: Variety Persists

Bibliography
Index 

Reviews

"An exciting and essential addition to the ever-growing body of scholarship on the body in antiquity."
Bryn Mawr Classical Review
"Lillis offers a sophisticated study that enhances historians’ sensitivity to an intellectual history of virginity."
Plekos
"This book is consummately well conceived, researched, written and produced."
 
THE CLASSICAL REVIEW
"Lillis’s sophisticated treatment of this important subject will no doubt be useful to scholars exploring topics of sex, gender, the body, and late antique piety."
 
Catholic Historical Review
"Taking her cue from modern conceptions of virginity, Julia Kelto Lillis offers welcome correctives designed to stimulate discussion among scholars and a wider public. Lillis lays out the territory of meanings associated with female virginity in the late ancient world to demonstrate that it meant many different things."—Susanna Elm, Sidney H. Ehrman Professor of European History, University of California, Berkeley

"Virgin Territory provides detailed analyses of a wide variety of Christian and ancient Mediterranean texts across different discourses, each centered on bodily, sexual, or anatomical virginity. By covering such a large territory, Lillis teases out numerous local maps, revealing how early Christian authors conveyed very different ideas about what virginity of the body and virginity of the soul are and how these individual conceptualizations changed over time."—Sissel Undheim, Professor of Religion, University of Bergen

"Metaphorical, discursive, diagnostic, and ultimately impossible to define, women's virginity was a major fixation in late antiquity. Lillis captures the full complexity of this deeply imagined condition. It is undoubtedly the most refined and sophisticated understanding of this important topic to date."—Maia Kotrosits, author of The Lives of Objects: Material Culture, Experience, and the Real in the History of Early Christianity

Awards

  • AHA Prize in History prior to CE 1000 2024 2024, American Historical Association
  • NAPS Best First Book Prize 2024 2024, North American Patristics Society