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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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ROMAN MYTHOLOGY AND SAGA 643<br />

same price. This time, acting on the advice of the augurs (an important group<br />

of priests), Tarquin bought the books. The Sibyl handed them over and promptly<br />

disappeared. The books were stored in the Capitoline temple of Jupiter, to be<br />

consulted only on the orders of the senate—for guidance in times of calamity<br />

and perplexity or during a pestilence or after the appearance of disturbing prodigies.<br />

The priests who had charge of them were prominent citizens. The books<br />

were considered so important that after they were destroyed in the Capitoline<br />

fire of 83 B.c., a new collection was made, which Augustus later deposited in the<br />

base of the statue of Apollo in his new temple on the Palatine Hill. The Sibylline<br />

books are an example of early Greek influence at Rome. They also were influential<br />

in bringing new cults to Rome. For example, they advised the introduction<br />

of the cults of Ceres, Liber, and Libera in 496 B.c. and of Apollo in 433.<br />

APOLLO AND AESCULAPIUS<br />

Apollo—the only one of the great Greek gods not to change his name at Rome—<br />

arrived as the result of a pestilence, and his temple was dedicated in 431 B.C.,<br />

two years after the Sibylline books had been consulted. Until the time of Augustus,<br />

this remained his only temple at Rome. Except for his cult under Augustus<br />

and, to a lesser extent, under Nero, he was never as prominent at Rome<br />

as he was in the Greek world. He was worshiped originally as Apollo Medicus<br />

(corresponding to his Greek title of Paean, the Healer). Later his other attributes<br />

and interests were introduced, and in 212 the Ludi Apollinares (Games of Apollo,<br />

an annual festival), were instituted. Augustus had a special regard for Apollo,<br />

and in 28 B.c. he dedicated a magnificent new temple to him on the Palatine Hill.<br />

In 293 B.C., during an epidemic, the Sibylline books counseled bringing Asclepius,<br />

the Greek god of healing, to Rome from Epidaurus. He came in the form<br />

of a sacred serpent; when the ship bringing him came up the Tiber to Rome, the<br />

serpent slipped onto the island that is in the middle of the present-day city and<br />

there made its home. A temple to Aesculapius (his Latin name) was built on the<br />

island and his cult was established.<br />

CYBELE<br />

In 205 B.c., during another period of public distress, the Sibylline books advised<br />

the Romans to bring in the Phrygian mother-goddess Cybele, known also at Rome<br />

as the Magna Mater (Great Mother). After a visit to Delphi, a solemn embassy<br />

went to the city of Pessinus in Phrygia, where it received a black stone that was<br />

said to be the goddess. It was brought to Rome with much ceremony; a temple<br />

was built on the Palatine Hill, and the festival of the Megalensia was instituted<br />

in honor of Cybele. The ecstatic nature of her worship was exceptional at Rome.<br />

Her priests (known as Galli) practiced self-castration, and until the reign of<br />

Claudius, Roman citizens were forbidden to become Galli. The Megalensia,

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