Pallakai (; singular pallake (παλλακή)) was the general name given to in ancient Greece.
Etymology
The word
pallake, "concubine," is of uncertain etymology. R. S. P. Beekes has suggested a
Pre-Greek origin and a connection with
Latin paelex, "mistress," which is also a loanword from a non-Indo-European Mediterranean language.
Status
Pallakai could be either free or slaves. A free
pallake was often a former
hetaira, a freedwoman, or a woman from a poor family; and almost always a foreigner, not a member of the
polis in which she lived.
[Blundell, Sue; Blundell, Susan (1995). Women in Ancient Greece. Harvard University Press. pp. 124–. ISBN 978-0-674-95473-1.] An enslaved
pallake would usually have been a captive of war. These women were allowed to be bought or sold just as any other slave in the Greek world. In
Aeschylus'
Agamemnon,
Cassandra plays the role of an enslaved
pallake, captured at
Troy and brought home to
Agamemnon's palace as his mistress, where they both are killed by
Clytemnestra.
Pallakai were accepted as part of Greek society. In "Against Neaera" the orator says:
Literature
There are many examples of
pallakai in literature and drama.
The most lengthy is the "Against Neaera" speech, in which a woman called Neaera and her husband are prosecuted for claiming citizen rights falsely for her and the children she bore to her husband. This was considered a very serious crime, especially in Athens, where citizenship was restricted to those with a citizen mother and father. The case made against her alleges that she was a pallake in Ancient Corinth and other cities before she came to Athens. The defense speech, however, does not survive, but one such possible defense may have been that she was a mistress rather than a prostitute, which was a normal social practice.
Another such example occurs in Antiphon's speech "Against the Stepmother for Poisoning." In this speech for the prosecution, it is alleged that a woman persuaded a pallake to poison her husband.
See also
External links