Expanding the discussion of religious participation of women in ancient Rome Celia E. Schultz demonstrates that in addition to observances of marriage fertility and childbirth there were more &#x2014; and more important &#x2014; religious opportunities available to Roman women than are commonly considered.<br/><br/>Based on research in ancient literature inscriptions and archaeological remains from the fifth to the first century B.C.E. Schultz&#x2019;s study shows that women honored gods unaffiliated with domestic matters including Hercules and Jupiter; they took part in commercial military and political rites; they often worshipped alongside men; and they were not confined to the private sphere the traditional domain of women. The Vestal Virgins did not stand alone but were instead the most prominent members of a group of women who held high-profile religious positions: priestesses of Ceres Liber and Venus; the <i>flaminica Dialis</i> and the <i>regina sacrorum</i>; other cult officials; and aristocratic matrons who often took leading roles in religious observances even though they were not priestesses. Schultz argues that women were vital participants &#x2014; both professional and nonprofessional &#x2014; in the religion of the Roman Republic and that social and marital status in addition to gender were important factors in determining their opportunities for religious participation in the public sphere.