{"id":31774,"date":"2023-12-27T10:00:05","date_gmt":"2023-12-27T09:00:05","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/?p=247257"},"modified":"2023-12-27T23:12:59","modified_gmt":"2023-12-27T22:12:59","slug":"reviving-roman-voices-mary-beard-on-the-remarkable-life-of-one-woman","status":"publish","type":"rss_feed","link":"https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/bbchistory\/rss_feed\/reviving-roman-voices-mary-beard-on-the-remarkable-life-of-one-woman\/","title":{"rendered":"Reviving Roman voices: Mary Beard on the remarkable life of one woman"},"content":{"rendered":"<p class=\"rssexcerpt\"> The remarkable story of one Roman woman, pieced together from fragments over many centuries, reveals insights into family life more than 2,000 years ago. Mary Beard gives voice to the long-silent Turia <\/p><p class=\"rssauthor\">By Professor Mary Beard\n                \t\t<\/p><p class=\"rssbyline\">Published: Wednesday, 27 December 2023 at 09:00 AM<\/p><hr class=\"no-tts wp-block-separator\"\/><?xml version=\"1.0\" encoding=\"UTF-8\" standalone=\"yes\"?>\n<!DOCTYPE html PUBLIC \"-\/\/W3C\/\/DTD HTML 4.0 Transitional\/\/EN\" \"http:\/\/www.w3.org\/TR\/REC-html40\/loose.dtd\">\n<html><body> <p>During the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/roman\/servile-wars-what-when-spartacus\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">civil wars<\/a> that tore the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/roman\/roman-republic-guide-how-senate-plebeians-citizenship-women-democratic-fall-end\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">Roman Republic<\/a> in the middle of the first century BC, leading to the birth of the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/roman\/roman-empire-history-facts-map-timeline-peak-when-start-when-split-how-long-tetrarchy\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">empire<\/a>, one Roman woman was facing her own crises \u2013 both public and private.<\/p>\n<p>Usually known to us as \u2018Turia\u2019, she was born into a high-ranking family and by the late 50s BC had become engaged to be married. It was obviously a \u2018good match\u2019 with a man of prospects.<\/p>\n<p>But before the wedding could take place, not only had her fianc\u00e9 suddenly quit <a href=\"https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/general-history\/rome-history\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">Rome<\/a> to fight under <a href=\"https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/roman\/battle-pharsalus-when-what-happened\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">Pompey the Great<\/a> \u2013 in other words, on the losing side in the war against <a href=\"https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/roman\/julius-caesar-emperor-who-biography\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">Julius Caesar<\/a> \u2013 but, tragically, her mother and father had also been murdered in their remote house in the country.<\/p>\n<p>Turia moved in with her future mother-in-law, but seems to have been largely left to cope with her problems alone, or with the help of just her sister. She managed to take vengeance on her parents\u2019 murderers and successfully fought off some of her own relations who contested her inheritance. At the same time, she sent supplies to her absent fianc\u00e9, selling off some of her own jewellery to do so.<\/p>\n<p>Things looked up, albeit briefly. Although Julius Caesar was victorious in the war against Pompey, he pardoned his enemies and allowed them to return to Rome, so Turia and her fianc\u00e9 were eventually able to get married. But worse was to come.<\/p>\n<p>Just a few years later, after <a href=\"https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/roman\/death-julius-caesar-what-we-know-ides-of-march-brutus-cassius-et-tu\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">Caesar\u2019s assassination<\/a> in 44 BC, the junta who ruled the city put a price on her husband\u2019s head, and he was forced to leave the city again. It was only thanks to Turia\u2019s intervention on his behalf with Lepidus, one of Rome\u2019s so-called \u2018ruling three\u2019 (alongside <a href=\"https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/ancient-egypt\/cleopatra-love-affairs-julius-caesar-mark-antony\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">Mark Antony<\/a> and Octavian, the future emperor <a href=\"https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/roman\/the-bloody-rise-of-augustus\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">Augustus<\/a>), that he was allowed back \u2013 but not before she had been horribly insulted and beaten black and blue by some of the regime\u2019s apparatchiks.<\/p>\n<p>Peace finally came to Rome more than a decade later, under its first emperor, Augustus \u2013 who by then had cannily reinvented himself as a responsible elder statesman. The marriage of Turia and her husband lasted 41 years, with only one major disappointment: they did not have any children.<\/p>\n<p>Eventually, in despair, Turia suggested that her husband divorce her, so that she herself could find him another wife who might be able to produce an heir. Her idea seems to have been for a curious m\u00e9nage \u00e0 trois in which all their property remained jointly held, managed by her, and they would share the children of the new wife between the three of them.<\/p>\n<p>But the husband would hear nothing of this scheme. Turia, after all, had remained faithful to <em>him<\/em> when he was in exile \u2013 why would he forsake her now?<\/p>\n<h2>Pieces of the puzzle<\/h2>\n<p>This is a rare story of a real woman\u2019s life in ancient Rome. We know of it only thanks to the speech of praise given by the husband at Turia\u2019s funeral, which he then had inscribed on two marble panels, almost certainly displayed on the facade of what must have been a vast tomb. All we can say about her comes from there.<\/p>\n<p>We do not know exactly where the monument originally stood, because it was later broken up and the material recycled into other buildings. Fragments of the inscription have been discovered over the past few centuries all across the city: a couple of pieces in a Christian catacomb, one in an abbey wall, another unearthed during works on the sewers near modern Trastevere, yet another languishing unrecognised in a museum storeroom.<\/p>\n<p>Other parts have come down to us only in manuscript copies made in the 17th century, recording fragments of the inscrip- tion that were then known but have since been lost again.<\/p>\n<p>Reconstructing the text and, thus, the story of Turia\u2019s life has been like doing a giant jigsaw puzzle. We have so far \u2013 there may be more pieces to come, if we are lucky \u2013 discovered slightly more than half of what was once written. The original text ran to almost 200 lines, covering the panels that were originally 2.5 metres tall and just under 1 metre wide \u2013 making it the longest Latin inscription created by a private individual to have survived anywhere in the Roman world.<\/p>\n<p>Sadly, missing elements include the actual names of the couple, both husband and wife. \u2018Turia\u2019 is a conjecture by an 18th-century antiquarian. It is almost certainly wrong, but the name has stuck \u2013 and the whole document is generally known as the <em>Laudatio Turiae<\/em>, or <em>Praise of Turia<\/em>.<\/p>\n<p>Of course, none of this gives us the woman\u2019s own view of her life. What we have is what the husband chose to say about Turia at her funeral, and how he chose to have her permanently commemorated on the tomb, which he no doubt paid for. It was almost bound to be laudatory: funeral speeches, then as now, are not the place for criticism and complaint.<\/p>\n<p>As well as the more striking and unusual episodes in her life mentioned above, there is plenty of praise for the stereotypical qualities that were the clich\u00e9s of Roman womanhood \u2013 the kind of thing that almost any Roman husband would have wanted to be said about his wife.<\/p>\n<p>\u201cWhy should I list your private qualities?\u201d he remarks at one point: \u201cYour modesty, your obedience, your kindness, your good nature, your devotion to weaving, your honouring of the gods without a trace of superstition, your inconspicuous dress, your restrained appearance.\u201d<\/p>\n<h2>Taking the initiative<\/h2>\n<p>All this is very much in line with another famous Roman tombstone made a few hundred years earlier, which summed up the qualities of another dead woman more succinctly: \u201cShe was charming in her conversation, elegant in her bearing. She kept house; she wove wool.\u201d The same sentiments can be found on many more memorials erected from one end of the Roman empire to the other.<\/p>\n<p>But even if the <em>Praise of Turia<\/em> doesn\u2019t give us Turia\u2019s own perspective, some parts of it do challenge the standard view of how a woman in ancient Rome was supposed to behave. The scheming exploits of such larger-than-life characters as Augustus\u2019s wife Livia are one thing, memorably reimagined in Robert Graves\u2019 1934 novel <em>I, Claudius<\/em> and probably fictional.<\/p>\n<p>But here is a rich but relatively ordinary woman who is actually praised for taking the initiative, in the public world, to bring the murderers of her parents to justice. (That crime alone is a chilling glimpse of the lawlessness of Italy at the period \u2013 though, to be fair, we don\u2019t know anything of the circumstances of the crime or of its perpetrators: gangland brigands, exploited servants or those with a private grudge?) And she receives even more praise for taking on her own relatives in the inher- itance dispute, then pleading in person for her own husband\u2019s return before one of the junta \u2013 even getting beaten up in the process.<\/p>\n<p>How typical was this? We cannot be sure. In one famous case, a female orator of the same period, Hortensia, is said to have addressed the junta publicly to protest against a tax imposed on women\u2019s wealth during the civil wars after Caesar\u2019s assassination. She was partially successful, and the number of women liable to the tax was reduced.<\/p>\n<p>In these cases involving Hortensia and Turia, though, such an act was probably very much a wartime phenomenon. It is quite common, even in societies where women are usually confined to the home, for women to take the initiative or be forced into the limelight in periods of crisis, especially when men are absent on campaign.<\/p>\n<p>That power does not usually last: for example, most of the women in Britain who found jobs driving buses or lorries during the <a href=\"https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/second-world-war\/10-things-you-probably-didnt-know-about-the-second-world-war\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">Second World War<\/a> lost them again in peacetime. So too, Turia \u2013 after filling the power vacuum while her husband was fighting overseas or was in exile \u2013 almost certainly returned to domes- ticity when \u2018normality\u2019 was restored.<\/p>\n<p>And there are all kinds of puzzles about the story told in the <em>Praise of Turia<\/em> that go far beyond the tantalising anonymity of the couple concerned.<\/p>\n<p>It is not clear, for example, <em>how<\/em> she took \u2018vengeance\u2019 (or secured \u2018justice\u2019 \u2013 the exact word is lost from the stone) for the murder of her parents. It is hard to imagine, bearing in mind Roman rules, that she stood up and publicly pleaded in a courtroom \u2013 though that is close to what Hortensia did.<\/p>\n<p>Maybe it was something much closer to paying a private hit squad: that was probably how, in practice, most Roman disputes and vendettas were settled. Despite the fame of Roman law, such \u2018self-help\u2019, as it might euphemistically be called, would have been more common.<\/p>\n<p>For me the most puzzling and memorable part of the <em>Praise<\/em> is the section on the couple\u2019s infertility. It is no surprise that the husband puts that down entirely to his wife. Most Roman men assumed that, if a couple failed to have a baby, it was due to some deficiency in the woman, not the man. But why did he make such an issue of it in his speech, with all the details of the proposed divorce and m\u00e9nage \u00e0 trois? Rather than sheer clumsiness, it was very likely a sign of the times.<\/p>\n<p>Augustus was still on the throne when Turia died. As part of his personal reinvention from bellicose warlord to elder states- man, he placed enormous emphasis on promoting the family and the Roman birth rate, and gave specific financial and legal privileges to those with at least three children.<\/p>\n<p>Augustus, in other words, made this \u2018private\u2019 aspect of domestic life part of \u2018public\u2019 business. And that is what we see reflected here \u2013 as well as the husband\u2019s implication, in refusing the divorce, that his love for Turia surpassed any such state pressure.<\/p>\n<h2>Being Roman<\/h2>\n<p>Turia is just one of the characters we spotlight in a series of six BBC Radio 4 programmes and podcasts that explore what it was to be Roman. In them, we look far beyond the standard image of upper-class men in togas or battledress spouting Latin.<\/p>\n<p>To be fair, we do include one of those \u2013 the emperor <a href=\"https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/roman\/marcus-aurelius-leader-rome-emperor-warrior\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">Marcus Aurelius<\/a> (reigned AD 161\u2013180). But we give more time to the little-known surviving letters between him and his tutor, Marcus Cornelius Fronto, than to his better-known <em>Meditations<\/em> \u2013 still bestsellers among well-being handbooks after almost 2,000 years.<\/p>\n<p>However, we range much more widely across the population of the Roman empire. In one programme we meet Galen, a celebrity doctor of the second century AD. He\u2019s not really a household name today, yet we can still read more than 3 million words he wrote on medicine, philosophy and himself.<\/p>\n<p>Another introduces a young boy by the name of Quintus Sulpicius Maximus, who died when he was only 11 years old \u2013 though not before he had won a \u2018highly commended\u2019 prize in an international poetry competition. His parents had his poem inscribed alongside his portrait on his tombstone.<\/p>\n<p>Then there is Regina (\u2018Queenie\u2019), a girl who was originally from somewhere near St Albans. Enslaved and later freed, she then married her former master, who was a Syrian from Palymra. The pair lived and died near <a href=\"https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/roman\/hadrians-wall-romans-facts-archaeology-tourism-game-of-thrones-jon-snow-watcher-english-heritage\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">Hadrian\u2019s Wall<\/a> in a textbook example of diversity, Roman-style \u2013 one of many that reveal how people from all across the Roman world mingled and interacted.<\/p>\n<div class=\"image-handler__container image-handler__container--aspect\" style=\"padding-bottom: calc(100% \/ 1.501210653753);\"> <picture> <source media=\"(max-width: 320px)\" data-srcset=\"https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2023\/10\/Mary-and-ReginaPSweb-981dd93.jpg?webp=true&amp;quality=90&amp;resize=299%2C199, https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2023\/10\/Mary-and-ReginaPSweb-981dd93.jpg?webp=true&amp;quality=45&amp;resize=599%2C399 2x\" type=\"image\/webp\"> <source media=\"(max-width: 320px)\" data-srcset=\"https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2023\/10\/Mary-and-ReginaPSweb-981dd93.jpg?quality=90&amp;resize=299%2C199, https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2023\/10\/Mary-and-ReginaPSweb-981dd93.jpg?quality=45&amp;resize=599%2C399 2x\" type=\"image\/jpeg\"> <source media=\"(max-width: 375px)\" data-srcset=\"https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2023\/10\/Mary-and-ReginaPSweb-981dd93.jpg?webp=true&amp;quality=90&amp;resize=354%2C236\" type=\"image\/webp\"> <source media=\"(max-width: 375px)\" data-srcset=\"https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2023\/10\/Mary-and-ReginaPSweb-981dd93.jpg?quality=90&amp;resize=354%2C236\" type=\"image\/jpeg\"> <source media=\"(max-width: 425px)\" data-srcset=\"https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2023\/10\/Mary-and-ReginaPSweb-981dd93.jpg?webp=true&amp;quality=90&amp;resize=404%2C269\" type=\"image\/webp\"> <source media=\"(max-width: 425px)\" data-srcset=\"https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2023\/10\/Mary-and-ReginaPSweb-981dd93.jpg?quality=90&amp;resize=404%2C269\" type=\"image\/jpeg\"> <source media=\"(max-width: 589px)\" data-srcset=\"https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2023\/10\/Mary-and-ReginaPSweb-981dd93.jpg?webp=true&amp;quality=90&amp;resize=554%2C369\" type=\"image\/webp\"> <source media=\"(max-width: 589px)\" data-srcset=\"https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2023\/10\/Mary-and-ReginaPSweb-981dd93.jpg?quality=90&amp;resize=554%2C369\" type=\"image\/jpeg\"> <source media=\"(min-width: 992px)\" data-srcset=\"https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2023\/10\/Mary-and-ReginaPSweb-981dd93.jpg?webp=true&amp;quality=90&amp;resize=620%2C413\" type=\"image\/webp\"> <source media=\"(min-width: 992px)\" data-srcset=\"https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2023\/10\/Mary-and-ReginaPSweb-981dd93.jpg?quality=90&amp;resize=620%2C413\" type=\"image\/jpeg\"> <source media=\"(min-width: 768px)\" data-srcset=\"https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2023\/10\/Mary-and-ReginaPSweb-981dd93.jpg?webp=true&amp;quality=90&amp;resize=407%2C271\" type=\"image\/webp\"> <source media=\"(min-width: 768px)\" data-srcset=\"https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2023\/10\/Mary-and-ReginaPSweb-981dd93.jpg?quality=90&amp;resize=407%2C271\" type=\"image\/jpeg\"> <source media=\"(min-width: 590px)\" data-srcset=\"https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2023\/10\/Mary-and-ReginaPSweb-981dd93.jpg?webp=true&amp;quality=90&amp;resize=555%2C370\" type=\"image\/webp\"> <source media=\"(min-width: 590px)\" data-srcset=\"https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2023\/10\/Mary-and-ReginaPSweb-981dd93.jpg?quality=90&amp;resize=555%2C370\" type=\"image\/jpeg\"> <img class=\"wp-image-247260 align size-landscape_thumbnail image-handler__image image-handler__image--aspect no-wrap js-lazyload\" srcset=\"data:image\/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAAAAACH5BAEKAAEALAAAAAABAAEAAAICTAEAOw==\" data-src=\"https:\/\/images.immediate.co.uk\/production\/volatile\/sites\/7\/2023\/10\/Mary-and-ReginaPSweb-981dd93.jpg?quality=90&amp;resize=620%2C413\" width=\"620\" height=\"413\" alt=\"Mary Beard looking at a stone tomb\" title=\"Mary Beard examines the tomb of Regina, a formerly enslaved British girl who married her erstwhile Syrian master. (Photo by BBC)\"\/>\n<\/source><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/source><\/picture>\n<\/div><div class=\"caption-hold\"><figcaption class=\"wp-caption-text\"><span class=\"caption-copy\"><i class=\"icon-arrow icon-camera-circle\"\/> Mary Beard examines the tomb of Regina, a formerly enslaved British girl who married her erstwhile Syrian master. (Photo by BBC)<\/span><\/figcaption><span class=\"im-image-caption\"\/><\/div>\n<p>But perhaps my favourite of the six is a long-suffering and slightly bad-tempered middle manager from Roman Egypt. He usually refers to himself only by his job title: <em>strategos<\/em> (assistant governor). But a series of his letters, preserved on papyrus, allows us to trace the problems he encountered while attempting to organise a visit to Egypt by the emperor Diocletian in the late third century AD. Local mayors proved decidedly uncooperative: \u201cI have told you two or three times,\u201d he writes to one of them, \u201cto get the bakery repaired so we can feed his majesty\u2019s soldiers.\u201d<\/p>\n<p>He also had to cover his back with his own superiors, reporting that: \u201cI have told them that they have to get the bakery repaired.\u201d His letters provide a wonderful glimpse into a Roman office and a Roman filing cabinet over a couple of weeks in AD 298 \u2013 and into the burden placed on the locals ahead of \u201cthe auspiciously impending visit of our ruler\u201d, as the <em>strategos<\/em> puts it in his formal bureaucratese. It all makes a visit from <a href=\"https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/20th-century\/prince-charles-wales-life-marriage-royal-family\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">King Charles<\/a> and <a href=\"https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/20th-century\/camilla-parker-bowles-duchess-cornwall-prince-charles-wife-who-life-biography-married-title-queen-andrew\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">Queen Camilla<\/a> look quite low maintenance.<\/p>\n<h2>Scattered evidence<\/h2>\n<p>One of our aims in the series is to show just how varied the \u2018Romans\u2019 were. But we also look to lift the lid on some of the surprising stories of rediscovery that have allowed us to get to know these ancient characters.<\/p>\n<p>The tombstone of little Quintus Sulpicius Maximus, for instance, was discovered only after Garibaldi\u2019s forces destroyed Rome\u2019s ancient wall after capturing the city in 1870: it had been recycled as a building block in the defences just a couple of hundred years after the boy\u2019s death.<\/p>\n<p>Some of Galen\u2019s works, meanwhile, are known only in Arabic versions: his medical writings were influential in the Arab world, and some translations have been preserved in Arabic long after the original Greek texts were lost.<\/p>\n<p>The letters between Fronto and Marcus Aurelius were rediscovered in even stranger circumstances. The parchment on which a copy of them had once been transcribed was later washed down and, for the sake of economy, reused by some monks in the seventh century to record the minutes of an early Christian council.<\/p>\n<p>The more ancient correspondence would have disappeared forever, had an ingenious 19th-century scholar not realised that an earlier text lay underneath the Christian minutes, and used a chemical compound to reveal the traces.<\/p>\n<p>The fate of the stone on which the <em>Praise of Turia<\/em> was inscribed \u2013 smashed up and scattered across Rome, only to be rediscovered in sewerage works and abbey walls, then pieced together again \u2013 is therefore not as unusual as it might at first seem.<\/p>\n<p>It is a perfect reminder not only of how fragile the evidence from the Roman past can be, but also of how chance and serendipity can sometimes still bring that past back to us, with all those stories of real Romans and their real lives. Long may that serendipity continue.<\/p>\n<ul>\n<li><strong>On the podcast | <a href=\"https:\/\/www.historyextra.com\/period\/roman\/roman-emperor-life-podcast-mary-beard\/\" target=\"_blank\" rel=\"noopener noreferrer\">How brutal were Roman emperors?<\/a><\/strong><\/li>\n<\/ul>\n<p><strong>Mary Beard is honorary fellow at Newnham College, University of Cambridge, and an author and broadcaster. Her new book, <em>Emperor of Rome<\/em>, is out now from Profile Books.<\/strong><\/p> <\/body><\/html>\n<hr class=\"no-tts wp-block-separator\"\/>","protected":false},"excerpt":{"rendered":"<p> The remarkable story of one Roman woman, pieced together from fragments over many centuries, reveals insights into family life more than 2,000 years ago. 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Mary Beard gives voice to the long-silent Turia","_links":{"self":[{"href":"https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/bbchistory\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/rss_feed\/31774"}],"collection":[{"href":"https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/bbchistory\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/rss_feed"}],"about":[{"href":"https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/bbchistory\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/types\/rss_feed"}],"author":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/bbchistory\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/users\/24"}],"wp:featuredmedia":[{"embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/bbchistory\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media\/31775"}],"wp:attachment":[{"href":"https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/bbchistory\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/media?parent=31774"}],"wp:term":[{"taxonomy":"category","embeddable":true,"href":"https:\/\/c01.purpledshub.com\/bbchistory\/wp-json\/wp\/v2\/categories?post=31774"}],"curies":[{"name":"wp","href":"https:\/\/api.w.org\/{rel}","templated":true}]}}