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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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640 THE NATURE OF ROMAN MYTHOLOGY<br />

ent philosophical, religious, and literary sources, most of them Greek. The native<br />

Italian ideas of the Underworld and its spirits originated in the simple religion<br />

of the early agricultural communities. The spirits of dead ancestors were<br />

propitiated at the festival of the Parentalia that took place from February 13 to<br />

21 (which in the old Roman calendar was the last month of the year). During<br />

this period, no one got married, the temples were closed, and offerings were<br />

made to the spirits by the head of the family as a guarantee of their friendliness<br />

to the family in the ensuing year. The Parentalia was a family celebration. Its<br />

gods were simply "gods of the ancestors" (divi parentum), without names and<br />

without mythology.<br />

The festival of the Lemuria was celebrated in May. The head of the family<br />

would propitiate the Lémures, spirits who could do great harm to the household.<br />

The ceremony was conducted by night with a magic ritual—the paterfamilias<br />

was barefoot, his fingers and thumb forming an "O," his hands ritually<br />

washed before he threw behind him black beans for the Lémures to pick up,<br />

while uttering nine times a formula intended to drive the spirits from the house.<br />

Ovid identifies the Lémures with the Manes, who were synonymous with<br />

the dead. Each person has his or her Manes, and epitaphs conventionally began<br />

with Dis Manibus Sacrum, "sacred to the divine Manes of . . .," followed by the<br />

person's name.<br />

The Manes, the Parentalia, and the Lemuria, which involve no mythology<br />

or legend, are far removed from Vergil's elaborate Underworld, which was derived<br />

mostly from Greek sources. From the Etruscans the Romans learned to<br />

propitiate the dead by offering human blood spilled on the earth. This is the origin<br />

of the gla<strong>dia</strong>torial games, which were first celebrated at Rome in 264 B.c. at<br />

the funeral games for Decimus Junius Brutus. The Etruscans shared with the<br />

Greeks many Underworld divinities, such as Charon and Persephone, and added<br />

some of their own, such as the demon Tuculcha. The Underworld itself in Roman<br />

literature is commonly called Orcus (sometimes personalized as a god) and<br />

its ruler was Dis Pater, whose name (Dis = dives, "wealth") is the equivalent of<br />

the Greek Pluto. The worship of Dis Pater was established at Rome in 249, although<br />

he was certainly known there long before. He and Proserpine shared a<br />

cult at an underground altar in the Campus Martius, whose precinct was called<br />

Tarentum (the etymology of the name is still unexplained), and its cult was associated<br />

with the festival of the Secular Games.<br />

The burial goddess, Libitina, was Italian; but her name, origin, and associations<br />

have never been satisfactorily explained. Her name was used by the later<br />

poets as synonymous with Death, and undertakers were known as libitinarii.<br />

LARES AND GENIUS<br />

The Lares were divinities often linked with the Penates. The origin and etymology<br />

of their name are unknown. Although they have been identified

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