Below you will find pages that utilize the taxonomy term “Vestal Virgins”
The Vestal Virgins: Rome's Sacred Women
The Vestal Virgins were the most socially privileged women in Rome and, simultaneously, subject to a punishment for a specific transgression — unchastity — that no other Roman citizen faced: burial alive. The combination of exceptional status and exceptional vulnerability was not a paradox in the Roman religious framework but a logical consequence of what the Vestals were understood to represent. Their virginity was not a personal moral choice; it was a civic necessity. The sacred fire they tended in the Temple of Vesta was, in Roman religious understanding, the eternal flame of Rome itself, and its maintenance by women who were themselves unbreached vessels was what kept Rome’s divine favor intact. When a Vestal was unchaste, it was not a private transgression but a public catastrophe that had to be addressed with proportionate ritual severity.