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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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ROMAN MYTHOLOGY AND SAGA 627<br />

Mars is particularly associated with two animals, the wolf and the woodpecker.<br />

A she-wolf suckled his sons, the infants Romulus and Remus. The woodpecker,<br />

picus, was said in one legend to have been a Latin king Picus, whose<br />

wife was the nymph Canens (Singer). Circe, the magician, tried to seduce him,<br />

and when he rejected her, she turned him into a woodpecker. After searching<br />

in vain for him for six days and six nights, Canens wasted away into nothing<br />

more than a voice.<br />

JUPITER<br />

The great Italian sky-god was Jupiter, the forms of whose name are etymologically<br />

connected with those of other Indo-European sky-gods, including Zeus. At<br />

the end of the regal period (509 B.c.) the temple of Jupiter Optimus Maximus<br />

was built on the Capitoline Hill and the great sky-god became localized in a<br />

temple with a statue like a Greek city god. He shared the temple with Juno, the<br />

chief Italian goddess of women, and Minerva, an Italian fertility and war goddess<br />

who at Rome was worshiped principally as the patroness of handicrafts<br />

and wisdom. These three deities formed the "Capitoline triad."<br />

Jupiter was called by many titles. In his temple on the Capitol he was worshiped<br />

as Jupiter Optimus Maximus (Best and Greatest). The great ceremonial procession<br />

of the Triumph wound its way through the Forum up to this temple. The<br />

triumphing general was robed as if he were a god, proceeding in his chariot amid<br />

the cheering crowds, with his soldiers around him and his prisoners before him.<br />

On the Capitoline Hill he sacrificed to Jupiter, acknowledging by this ritual that<br />

Jupiter was the source of Roman greatness and military might.<br />

As sky-god, Jupiter directly influenced Roman public life, in which the<br />

weather omens of thunder and lightning, his special weapons, played an important<br />

role. After lightning had struck, a ritual purification or expiatory rite<br />

was required, and Jupiter himself was said to have given King Numa the original<br />

instructions for the sacrifice. Advised by the nymph Egeria, Numa captured<br />

the two forest divinities, Picus and Faunus, on the Aventine Hill and compelled<br />

them to tell him how to summon Jupiter. When Jupiter himself came, Numa<br />

asked what objects were necessary for the expiatory rite. "A head," the god<br />

replied, and Numa interrupted with "of an onion." "Of a man," Jupiter went<br />

on, and Numa added "a hair"; finally Jupiter demanded "a life." "Of a fish,"<br />

said Numa, and Jupiter good-naturedly agreed to accept these objects (the head<br />

of an onion, a human hair, and a fish) as part of the expiatory ritual. Ovid's narrative<br />

(Fasti 3. 285-346), which is summarized here, explains why these objects<br />

were offered instead of a human sacrifice, almost certainly the original form of<br />

expiation.<br />

Jupiter also promised to give Numa a sign to support Rome's claim to exercise<br />

power over other communities. In full view of the people of Rome, he<br />

caused a shield (ancile) to fall miraculously from heaven. This ancile was of the

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