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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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624 THE NATURE OF ROMAN MYTHOLOGY<br />

and Propertius (to name the three most important poets in this respect) and in<br />

the prose writers Cicero, Varro (a polymath and antiquarian who died at the age<br />

of eighty-nine in 27 B.c.), and Livy. The outline of other legends can be recovered<br />

from what is known of the cults and rituals of Roman divinities. Especially<br />

important in this respect is Ovid's Fasti, in which he describes the festivals of<br />

the first six months of the Roman calendar. He tells many legends of the gods,<br />

while describing their cults and explaining the origins of their rituals.<br />

Legends attached to the early history of Rome are the Roman equivalent of<br />

saga. A few of these are associated with specific local heroes, of whom the most<br />

important are Aeneas and Romulus. A large group of legends associated with<br />

the early history of Rome idealized the past, and their central figures exemplify<br />

Roman virtues. Such idealizing was especially practiced in the time of Augustus<br />

(who reigned from 27 B.C. to A.D. 14), a period of reconstruction and revival<br />

of the supposed principles of the early Romans. All the authors named here as<br />

sources for Roman mythology were contemporaries of Augustus, and of them,<br />

only Varro (fifty-three years older than Augustus) and Cicero (forty-three years<br />

older) died before the Augustan reconstruction had begun. Thus the definition<br />

of myth as a "traditional tale" has a special coloring in Roman mythology. Livy<br />

justifies the process of idealization in the "Preface" to his history (sects. 6-10):<br />

I do not intend to accept or deny the truth of traditional legends about events<br />

before and during the founding of the city. These are more suitable for poetic<br />

fables than for reliable historical records. But one can excuse ancient legends because<br />

they make the origins of the city more august by uniting human and divine<br />

actions. If any nation has the right to consider its origins sacred and to ascribe<br />

them to the gods, it is the Roman people, for they claim that Mars is their<br />

ancestor and the father of the founder [Romulus].<br />

THE ITALIAN GODS<br />

JANUS, MARS, AND BELLONA<br />

Among the gods of the Roman state, Janus takes first place; in formal prayers<br />

to the gods he was named first. He is a very ancient deity, and he has an equivalent<br />

in the Etruscan god, Culsans. He is the god who presides over beginnings,<br />

and in this connection we preserve his name in the month that begins our year.<br />

It is likely, however, that in his earliest form he was connected with water, especially<br />

with crossing places and bridges. Thus in the city of Rome there were<br />

five shrines to Janus, all placed near crossings over the river or watercourses,<br />

and he was intimately connected with the boundaries of the earliest settlements<br />

at Rome, the approaches to which required crossing the Tiber or one of its tributary<br />

brooks. As the city expanded, these early crossing-places lost their importance,<br />

and Janus' original functions were obscured. Yet they can be detected<br />

in later times; the gates of his shrine near the Argiletum entrance to the Forum<br />

were open in time of war and closed in time of peace. They were closed by Au-

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