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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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638 THE NATURE OF ROMAN MYTHOLOGY<br />

cated to the Camenae, water-nymphs of great antiquity but unknown origin.<br />

Later they were identified with the Greek Muses. The Vestals drew water from<br />

the fountain of the Camenae for the purification of the temple of Vesta. Closely<br />

associated with the spring of the Camenae was the nymph Egeria, said to have<br />

been the counselor and consort of Numa, to whom so much of Roman religious<br />

custom was ascribed. Egeria is also found in the precinct of Diana at Aricia, and<br />

her spring was one of those that fed Lake Nemi. She was the helper of pregnant<br />

women and may indeed have once been a birth-goddess. Another nymph associated<br />

with the Camenae is Carmentis (or Carmenta), who also has the double<br />

association with water and with birth. As a water-nymph she shared the festival<br />

of Juturna, and she is sometimes named as the mother of Evander, the king<br />

of Pallanteum, an earlier city on the site of Rome. Like the Parcae (the Roman<br />

birth-goddesses identified with the three Fates) she had prophetic powers, as is<br />

indicated by her name, for carmen means a song or prophetic utterance.<br />

DIANA<br />

The Italian goddess Diana was worshiped at Aricia with a cult that was established<br />

by members of the Latin League. Aricia is near Lake Nemi, which was known as<br />

"Diana's mirror," perhaps indicating her association with the moon, reflected in<br />

the waters of the lake. This cult was the starting point for Sir James Frazer's The<br />

Golden Bough. The priest of Diana at Aricia was a fugitive slave, who had the title<br />

of "King of the Grove" (rex nemorensis). He became priest by killing his predecessor<br />

in single combat, having challenged him by plucking a bough from a sacred<br />

tree. As priest he always went armed, watching for the successor who would kill<br />

him. It is likely that the sacred grove was originally an asylum for runaway slaves<br />

and the sacred bough was the branch carried by suppliants at an altar.<br />

Diana was concerned with the life of women (especially in childbirth). She<br />

was often identified with the Italian goddess Lucina, who brought babies into<br />

the light (Latin, lux, lucis), although Lucina was more commonly a title of Juno.<br />

Diana was also worshiped at Mt. Tifata near Capua. It is possible that this<br />

is where she began to be identified with Artemis. Through Artemis she acquired<br />

her powers as goddess of the hunt and (as Hecate) her association with the Underworld.<br />

At Rome she was worshiped upon the Aventine Hill, and her cult<br />

was established by Servius Tullius. Like her cult at Aricia, it was originally shared<br />

by members of the Latin League, being situated outside the early city's walls.<br />

Under Augustus her status as sister of Apollo was emphasized and was dramatically<br />

expressed in Horace's Carmen Saeculare, sung at the celebration of the<br />

Secular Games in 17 B.c. by antiphonal choirs of boys and girls, standing respectively<br />

upon the Palatine and Aventine hills.<br />

Horace embodies the triple functions of Diana (as Artemis, mistress of animals;<br />

Lucina, goddess of childbirth; and Hecate, goddess of the Underworld) in<br />

the following hymn, in which he dedicates a pine tree to her (Odes 3. 22):

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