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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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ROMAN MYTHOLOGY AND SAGA 641<br />

with spirits of the dead, particularly of ancestors, the Lares were probably household<br />

spirits in origin who could bring prosperity and happiness to the farmer<br />

and his farm.<br />

This agricultural origin survived in the Compitalia (crossroads festival), a<br />

winter feast celebrated when work on the farm had been completed. A crossroads<br />

in primitive communities was regularly the meeting point of the boundaries<br />

of four farms, and the Lares honored at the Compitalia were the protecting<br />

spirits of the farms. At each crossroads was a shrine, with one opening for<br />

each of the four properties. The farmer would hang a doll in the shrine for each<br />

free member of his household and a ball of wool for each slave. This seems to<br />

have been a purification ritual at the end of the farmer's labor, when substitutes<br />

for the human beings were hung up to be purified by the air.<br />

The Lares are basically kindly spirits, protecting the household. Transferred<br />

from farm to city, they kept this function, and each house had its Lar familiaris<br />

to whom offerings of incense, wine, and garlands were made. In Plautus' play<br />

Aulularia, the Lar familiaris speaks the prologue and describes how he can bring<br />

happiness and prosperity if he is duly worshiped; if he is neglected, the household<br />

will not prosper. Just as each household had its Lar, so the city had its Lares<br />

(called the Lares praestites or "guar<strong>dia</strong>n Lares"), who were worshiped on May 1.<br />

Augustus revived the celebration of the Compitalia in the city by instituting<br />

shrines of the Lares Compitales in each of the 265 vici or subdivisions of the city.<br />

In this function, according to Ovid, the Lares "protect the crossroads and are<br />

constantly on guard in our city" (Fasti 2. 616). At the city Compitalia, the Lares<br />

were worshiped together with the Genius of Augustus himself.<br />

The Lares were also protectors of travelers by land (Lares viales) and by sea<br />

(Lares permarini). In 179 B.c. a temple was dedicated to the Lares Permarini to<br />

commemorate a naval victory over King Antiochus eleven years earlier.<br />

The Genius represented the creative power of a man, seen most especially<br />

in the lectus genialis, or marriage bed, symbol of the continuing life of the family.<br />

It was associated more generally with the continued well-being of the family.<br />

Slaves swore oaths by the Genius of the head of the family, and offerings<br />

were made to it on his birthday. For women, the equivalent of the male Genius<br />

was her Juno.<br />

NON-ITALIAN GODS<br />

HERCULES<br />

Several foreign deities had an important place in Roman religion. In most cases,<br />

they came from Greece or the East, and their arrival can often be dated.<br />

The earliest newcomer was the Greek Heracles, called Hercules at Rome.<br />

Livy says that when Romulus founded the city the cult of Hercules was the only<br />

foreign one that he accepted. We have seen how Hercules visited Rome with the

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