In poor households, the wife had many more duties, as poor households had no slaves to assist with the work. Additional duties for a poor housewife would include shopping for food, making the family's clothing, and retrieving water. A poor housewife would be likely to acquire a job to assist with the finances of the household. These jobs could include acting as a wet-nurse, midwife or small-time market trader.
Housewives were kept in seclusion. They were not allowed to mingle with men in any setting. A housewife was not allowed to answer the door of her home or even be in the same room as male guests who visited. The houses' rooms also separated males and females. The wives, daughters, and female slaves lived upstairs, in rooms that were away from the windows and streets.
Religion was the one area of public life where women could participate freely. In Athens the priestess of Athena, the city's eponymous goddess, held much honor. She was consulted for major decisions and her words were well respected. During the Panathenaea, a festival to celebrate the birthday of Athena, the daughters of nobles who were virgins were chosen to carry sacred baskets in the procession. This choosing of virgin women was both an honor and an insult as the reputation of girls who were not chosen was put in doubt.
Prostitution flourished in Greece, specifically in Athens there were two types of prostitutes:
- Hetairai: considered the higher of two prostitute classes; they underwent extensive training and were considered professional sexual entertainers.
- Pornai: the lower of the two prostitute classes; they were often slaves, foreigners or metics.
- Prostitutes were also drawn on drinking cups as a form of pinups for male entertainment.
![](http://mitchellteachers.org/WorldHistory/AncientGreece/Images/WomenWashingClothesAthensTrans.jpg)
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