Museum asks if we are classier than the Romans

Louise ParryBBC News, Hertfordshire
News imageSt Albans Museums Cartoons of Roman people with a man standing between themSt Albans Museums
Curator Andrew Deathe wants people to compare Roman society with modern Britain

The way humans compare their social status, even after death, is the subject of an exhibition exploring Roman society in Britain.

Superior: Inferior asks visitors to the Roman Verulamium Museum in St Albans, Hertfordshire to think about their own behaviour and assumptions, compared with the ancient culture.

"Romans usually showed their class and status through their occupation, their possessions and their property, which is just the same as modern British society," curator Andrew Deathe said.

He has created seven pairs of imagined Roman citizens to explore how they made their status higher or lower.

News imageSimon Maskell Cartoons of two Roman men and boysSimon Maskell
Illustrator Simon Maskell took his inspiration from Tintin to create imagined Roman characters

It includes "a couple of teenage tear-aways stealing statues from a temple".

But as one girl is a Roman citizen and the other a "free-born British girl", Mr Deathe said they would have been treated differently in law.

An audio account hears from "two dead women who appear as ghosts, comparing the goods they have been buried with in their graves".

"Even in death, people were looking at you and judging the situation you were in and measure their status against you," he explained.

The exhibit examines how people compare themselves and try to improve their social standing.

News imageSt Albans Museums Man looking at Roman exhibition at Verulamium museumSt Albans Museums
Visitors to the exhibition can decide whether the Roman characters were "superior" or "inferior" in terms of class

Mr Deathe hopes it will spark discussion about human behaviour and society.

"We encourage visitors to think about how we view class today and how they would measure themselves against the ancient citizens," he said.

"We’re all humans, so are we really that different from our ancestors?

"Like us, they had their preferences, dislikes, anxieties and differences, they just expressed them through different objects and technologies."

The exhibition runs until 11 November.

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