INTRODUCTION
The evolution of society is a fascinating interdisciplinary quest.
Many scholars investigate societal types and how ancient societies
evolved into modern industrial megacomplexes. However, one of
the more fascinating aspects of these societal changes can be
found in the historical study of ancient Rome and other ancient
cities that emerged with similar patterns of culture not because
of their societal types, but because of their belief systems.
These belief systems provide sociological insight into the family
structure, religion, and culture of that time. In the work by
Fustel de Coulanges (1980), one finds insights into the primordial
character of the family and how family religions were tied to
rights of property and early jurisprudence. These insights emerged
from the study of the Roman patriarch (pater familias). For it
is from the study of the family that one comes to better understand
the structure of the family. These include the stem families based
on primogeniture, the extended family (gens), and the nuclear
family. From these primordial relationships, emerge the aggregations
of families into phrateries and tribes. This historical research
demonstrates how the ancient city of Rome remained an aggregation
of families long before it developed it municipal character.
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The Earlier families of Rome were situated in Cermalus, Cispius, Fagutal, Oppius
The later developments were those of Aventinus (Aventine), Caelius (Caelian), Capitolium (Capitoline),
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When people come together to form a unit, what rules their
behavior? What is it that makes them function together and how
are they structured in order to achieve these goals? Many of the
answers to these questions come from the study of the primitive
religion that constituted the Greek and Roman family. In these
primitive social structures one finds all of the elements that
led to the founding of the ancient cities and their religious
bonds. These people, for example, did not see death as the dissolution
of being. Nor did they believe in metempsychosis. Hence, they
differed from those early belief systems in which the immortal
spirit escaped from the body upon death and animated other corporeal
forms. If they believed in a soul, it was not the soul that resided
into a celestial home after the demise of the body. They looked
upon death as a change of life. The soul remained with the body
and they were buried together in the grave. Death did not separate
the soul from the body. This ancient belief explains numerous
aspects of the customs of the time. For example, burial was a
necessity because it confined the soul to its subterranean abode.
If the departed one was not buried, the he had no dwelling place.
A soul without a dwelling place became a wandering spirit that
could become malevolent and torment the living. It could present
them with diseases, ravage their harvests, or torment them with
apparitions. The soul that was not buried was miserable. Another
ancient custom that can be explained by this Roman belief was
the rites of sepulture. There were numerous religious rituals
to insure that the soul was at rest and did not continue to appear
to the living. To supplicate these spirits, a meal was carried
to every tomb. The ancients believed that the dead still had human
frailties and were offered wreaths of grasses and flowers. They
were given cakes, fruits, and libations. Roman tombs even had
kitchens (culina) to prevent the deceased from being condemned
to a perpetual hunger. A happy spirit, they believed, would return
t consul the living and protect them
The ancients believed that the dead not only roamed beneath the earth, but they were also subterranean gods (manes). These divine beings were worshipped as well as feared. There were among these spiritual entities (manes) both benevolent (lares) and malevolent (larvae) forces.
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There were many different types of guardians. There were the guardians ot the family (lares familiares), the guardians of the household (lares domestici), the guardians of the house (lares patrii or lares privati), the guardians of the sea (lares permarini), the guardians of the land (lares rulrales), the guardians of the crossroads (lares compitales), the guardians of travelers (lares viales), and the guardians of the state (lares praestitis). These guardians were depicted as dancing youths with a horn cup in one hand and a bowl in the other. In the symbology of domestic religions one found depictions of a phallic serpent that accompanied the progenitor of the family. |
In order to appease the gods, Roman homes had an altar that housed the sacred flame. This fire was kept alive both day and night. They considered this flame to be a living entity (vesta) and they knew that if it were to be extinguished, the entire family would perish. An extinguished hearth meant that the whole family and their ancestors would perish. This explains why enemies in war sought to extinguish the flames of the family altar. If the flames were extinguished, the subterranean gods ceased to exist. If they no longer existed, the family would be without protection and their prayers would no longer be answered .
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Foustel de Coulanges (1980: chapter III) relates these rituals of the eternal flame with those of the Hindu deity, Agni. He notes that the Rig-Veda contains numerous rituals relating to the Laws of Manu. He also notes how a similar pattern of ancestral worship occurred among the Greeks who also relied upon their ancestral spirits (demons, heroes). The reason for these similarities has to do with the fact that this ancestral religion was Indo-European. It was part of the common culture, a time when Greeks, Romans, and Hindus shared a common culture. However, the analogy ends here. The Law of Manu had to do with the metaphor of society as a (human) body with an imposed hierarchy of caste systems. (Múller, 1886). |
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| Somewhere between 900 and 800 BC, the Italian peninsula was settled by the Etruscans. This agrarian group is important because it brought civilization and urbanization to the area. This group settled in the city of Latium and used to local population to farm the area for them while they furthered their own interests in commerce and industry. The first king of Rome was Etruscan. Eventually, they were replaced by the Latinate monarchy. These Latin tribes were neolithic at the time when the agrarian Etruscans replaced them. |
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Romulus Numa Pompilius Tullus Hostilius Ancus Martius Tarquinius Priscus Servius Tullius Tarquinius Superbus |
THE FAMILY STRUCTURE
How did this belief in ancestor worship impact on the Roman family?
How did it manifest itself in the daily activities of these early
families of Rome? The answers to these questions are interesting
because they demonstrate how the daily activities of the family
were shrouded in ancestral ritual.
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In the Ancient City described by Fustel de Coulanges (1980), the father was the high priest and his wife was the high priestess. In the family lodging, there was a temple, a sacred altar, dedicated to the spirits of the ancestors. The father (pater familias) perforced the sacred rituals and the incantations. When was married, he carried his new bride across the door and into her new home. Her bare feet were placed on the sacred grounds of her new home. Her new duties were that of the keepr of the flame. This ancient Indoeuroprean tradition was also found in the tradition of the Vestal Virgins and the Vestal Temple in Rome. |
First, the father was the family priest. It was his duty to
perform the sacred rituals (parentare). He knew the sacred incantations
and protected this information. Since the family altar was sacred,
strangers were forbidden from entering the funeral banquet over
which he presided. He was the family patriarch (pater familias).
He owned his family. He could kill them or sell them for he was
the sacred priest of the family, the master of their domain. If
the paterfamilias died, the family would fall to the next oldest
ascendant in the male line (potestas) .
Second, the wife was the keeper of the flame. When she was brought into the family, she had to forego her own hearth religion and partake in the family religion of her husband. She could no longer pray to her subterranean gods. She had to worship those of his family.
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In Roman mythology, the Penates (the inner ones) were the patron gods of the storeroom. Later, they became known as the patron gods for the entire household. The Penates were worshipped at the hearth and were given daily meals. When Rome became a municipality, the tradition continued and the state had its own patron gods of the household (penates publici). |
Third, the son was chosen to perform the libations and to do the sacrifices at the ancestral tomb. He had an agnastic relationship with his father. This meant that he would assume the role of the family priest upon the death of his father. For this reason, he was next in line to inherit whatever property his father owned, and this included the servants. When the son was born, he underwent an initiation at the ancestral hearth on the ninth day after birth. He was presented to the domestic gods and carried several times around the sacred fire. In performing this act, he was purified. He was officially proclaimed to be in line of male kinship that would someday make him an honored ancestor. Third, the sister did not have the same relationship to the family as her brother. She was not destined to inherit any of the family fortune. She would be given away in marriage to another family religion. She would forsake her family ancestors and commit herself to those of another family. She would learn to perform the mysterious ceremonies of another family. As a young girl, she would be carried to the house of her husband. The procession is led by a nuptial torch, the bride is dressed in white, and have her face covered by a veil. When her new husband arrives to possess her, she must cry out for help and the women around her must pretend to defend her. She will not be allowed to enter her new home without ceremony. Her husband must carry her over the family threshold in order to prevent her from contaminating the family hearth. She is brought into the presence of her new domestic divinity and sprinkled with lustral water. She touches the sacred fire. Prayers are given and she shares cake or a loaf with her new husband. She is now in communion with their ancestral gods. She has left her paternal hearth and has come to worship his domestic spirits (penates) . The wife is now married. She now belongs to their family. She can no longer return to her parents. One cannot belong to two families. The institution of marriage is sacred because it is connected with the rituals of ancestral worship and she is of their family and must worship their ancestors. The new bride ensures that her new family will perpetuate itself forever. She is there to guarantee that the descendants should not die out. She is there to give her husband a son, the fruit of their religious marriage .
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The Patrician Class is Rome's elite aristocracy, the powerful Founding Families of Rome. For centuries Patricians governed Rome exclusively. For them, the Senate was a birthright. This was because their bloodline could be traced back to the Senate of Romulus himself. It was an honored position.steeped in honors, culture, and tradition. . . The Patrician Class was Rome's old guard. It was this group that originally helped to build Rome into the great empire. Patricians sewed a broad purple stripe (three inches wide or more) down the right side of their tunics to signify their high rank. Historically, Patricians also wore an iron ring, and shoes of red leather. |
What is important about this domestic religion is that it continued to structure group relationships. When a family expanded into a phratry, familial religious rites united the group. This larger group shared a temple of ancestral worship where the eternal flame was kept. When these phrateries grew into tribes, they also established communal temples, performed sacred rituals, and shared in ancestral offerings of food and libations. By the time that Rome was emerging into a city, it consisted of an aggregation of tribes based on family religions. Hence, it is not surprising that Rome would eventually become a municipality with its own city gods, vestal temples, and vestal virgins (two from each tribe). It was this tradition of the hearth religion that led to a stratified Rome ruled by the patricians, tribal members who shared a family religion. The plebeians did not share in these tribal gods and were considered to be outsiders.
ROMAN KINSHIP SYSTEM
The kinship relationship among Romans was not based on birth,
but on worship. The father was the family priest who knew the
rituals of ancestor worship. It was religion that was transmitted
from one male heir to the next (agnates). The mother was the keeper
of the flame, the family hearth. This was a system of primogeniture
in which the son of the family would inherit the role of the domestic
priest upon the death of his father. It would eventually become
his task to maintain the hearth religion. This belief system was
imparted to the son and formalized in the Roman kinship system,
the rule of agnation. This system differs from those of blood
relationships in which sisters and brothers are treated as blood
relatives. In this system, only the males who are agnates matter.
Consider the case of L. Cornelius Scipio who died about 250 BC.
He had two children, a son, (Publius Scipio) and a daughter, (Cornelia.
Scipio). The son married and also had a son, Luc. Scipio Asiaticus.
All of these males are agnates in that they share the same consanguineous
relationship with their ancestral father. What happens to the
daughters in this kinship system? How are their sons treated within
the family tree? Are their sons considered to be blood relatives?
No, because they have left the family religion to join another.
Upon marriage, a daughter renounces her hearth religion and accepts
the religion of her new husband as her own. When she has sons,
they are not related to L. Cornelius Scipio because they no longer
share the same family religion. These sons, born of Cornelia Scipio
are not agnates. They share a uterine relationship with their
mothers and are seen as cognates (cognatio). The crucial element
in this system of ancestral relationships is the son, the male
heir of the family religion. Hence, the system of primogeniture
can be traced back into the ancient religions of Rome. It is the
same system that one found in other Indo-European cultures. The
system was still in place at the time that the Law of the Twelve
Tables was written. It continued to be the basis for laws of family
inheritance throughout the Middle Ages.(cf. Roman
Nomenclature)
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Nomen (plural nomina) |
Cognomen (plural cognomina) |
| This was a personal, individualizing name and was given through naming ceremony | This was the name of the clan (gens) to which the man belonged; a hereditary name | This was the name of the branch of the clan to which the man belonged; also a hereditary name |
| This name was used primarily within the family or among intimates; usually abbreviated in inscriptions | This name was used to designate the man in most circumstances, especially if he had no cognomen | This name most commonly used to designate the man; in formal circumstances in which all three names were used |
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THE ROMAN RELIGIOUS CALENDAR
Knowledge of the Roman calendar comes mainly from Ovid, a Roman
born in 43 BC, and from Plutraarch, a Greek biographer who wrote
about 105-115 AD. These men had access to historical documents
that are no longer extant. Ovid was an expert in Roman mythology
and he traces the calendar back to a time before the founding
of Rome. At this time, the year had only ten months. It began
in March, in honor of the Mars (martius) who was the Roman god
of war. March began the New Year, the time of the vernal equiinox.
It was followed by the month of April (aprilis) who represented
Venus . Following the month of April was May (maius), named after
one of the daughters of the mythological Atlas. The month of June
(Juno) is also named for a goddess. Both May and June are known
as sky-gods. The remaining months of the year were merely numbered
V-X (quintilis, sextisilis, septembis, octobris, novembris et
decembris). Those who live by the modern calendar are wondering
what happened to February, March, and August. Under the second
emperor of Rome, Numa Pompilius, the months of January (januarius)
and February (februarius) were created. They marked the beginning
and the end of the year. February only had 24 days. It would end
when needed at the end of the year. The Romans had always worshipped
Janus, the sky-god. He was responsible for the beginning of each
day, month and year. They believed that he opened the gates of
heaven at dawn to let out the morning and it was he who also closed
them at night. Hence, this word has come to mean "the god
of all doors." Emperor Numa Pompilius found it fitting to
have January mark the beginning of each year. He also added the
month of February to complete the year. At this time February
was not the second month of the year, but the last. It was the
month of purification and expiate It was the time was calendar
and natural year lengths were reconciled. Numa Pompilius also
created an intercalary (intercalaris) month following February.
It consisted of 22 days and was called Merecedinus .
At the time when Julius Caesar became emperor, he changed the
Roman lunar calendar (lunar calendars) into a solar one (solar
calendars). The former was based on the monthly motions of the
moon, as was the Greek lunar calendar with its Metonic Cycles.
The lunar month was replaced by the sidereal month . Caesar based
his year on 354 day rather than on the earlier cycle of 354 days.
This is close to the orbital period of the Earth (365.242199 days).
He compensated for this by giving February (the last day of the
month) an extra day every four years. Later, the Roman Senate
was to honor Julius Caesar by naming a month after him, July (julius).
This month replaced the fifth moon (quintilius) . After Caesar's
death, his adopted son and nephew, Octavian became the new emperor.
He was called Augustus. The month of August (sextilis) is named
after him. Later reforms placed the month of February after January
and readjusted Easter (dies dominum) to fall on a Sunday (dies
solis).
The Roman priest (pontifex minor) was in charge of the calendar.
He watched the phases of the moon and when it was just about to
begin to form a crescent, he would call out the beginning of the
next month. The word calendar (kalendar) comes from this word
to call out (calare). The Romans named the first day of each month
as kalendae and designated it by the letter "K." Each
month was sectioned into three parts. The kalends, nones, and
ides. The nundinal letter (nundinae) represented the market day.
The letter "C" designated the ninth day. This is because
it was the day when committees of citizens could vote on civic
matters (dies comitatiales). Every ninth day (nones) was a market
day. The kalends was used before the name of the month. The days
of the week were numbered from A through H and designated the
regular market day for that year.
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C = dies comitatiales K = Kalend used before the name of the month APR = the month of April F = letter day. The days of the week were number from A through H. |
Other designated days on the calendar were F (dies fasti) and N (dies nefasti). The former (F) represented business days, the latter (N) designated non-business days. It is interesting to note that in current calendric systems, the days of the month begin with one and ascends to 28-31. In the Roman calendar, the days were assigned numbers that were assigned to three sections. These numbers began with a high value and decreased as the month progressed. There was a special day (Pridie) that marked a change in the numbering phase. This day marked the ending of one moon phase and the beginning of the other. Finally, there was the Ninth (nones). This was originally the day when the moon reached its first quarter phase. The last phase (ides) of 15-17 days represented the countdown until the next new moon. This system of reckoning time was truly based on a lunar calendar. The Calends was based on the new moon, the nones on the quarter moon and the ides on the full moon.
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| Calends | VIII | XVII |
| VI | VII | XVI |
| V | VI | XV |
| IV | V | XIV |
| III | IV | XII |
| Priedie | III | XII |
| Nones | Priedie | XI |
| Ides | X | |
| IX | ||
| VIII | ||
| VII | ||
| VI | ||
| V | ||
| IV | ||
| III | ||
| Pridie | ||
It should be noted in closing that special days in the Roman calendar
were marked in red. Hence, one can ascertain the meaning of the
term "It is a red letter day."
PERSONAL NOMENCLATURE
Naming practices are important because they shed light on how
individuals are perceived within a social system. Latin names
are structured into three parts. This is evidenced in the Latin
system for naming individuals. There is the first name (praenomen),
the family name (nomen), and the family branch (cognomen).
Adopted names could also be found during the Republic. A family
that did not have a male heir could adopt the adult son of a family
that already had a male heir. For example Publius Cornelius Scipio
Africanus could adopt Lucius Aemelus Paullus. The new name of
the adopted male would include all three names of the adoptive
father and was usually marked with the suffix -anus. Hence, the
adopted male would be renamed as Publius Cornelius Scipio Aemilianus.
He did not adopt the name Africanus as this was an honrary title.
Women's names included the feminine form of the clan into which
they were born. Hence, the daughter of Julius was named Julia
and the daughter of Cornelius was named Cornelia. In public, these
women were given cognomina. For example, the daughter of Julius
Caesar was called Julias Caesaris (Julia, the daughter of Caesar).
If a man had several daughters, they were be distinguished by
the words maior (the elder) and minor (the younger). They could
also be named as the first (Julia prima), second (Julia secunda),
or their third (Julia tertia) daughter. If Gaius Cornelius Calvus,
for example, had a daughter, she would simply be named Cornelia.
The second daughter would be named Cornelia secunda or Cornelia
minor.
Roman nicknames were cognomina that denoted certain traits or
deeds. For example, Flaccus meant "big ears." Cicero
meant "chick pea" because he was probably a garbonzo
bean farmer. The cognomina of Jucundus meant pleasant or delightful.
THE ROMAN LEGIONS
There are many reasons why Rome grew beyond an Italic city and
emerged as a vast empire stretching from Britain to Persia and
ruling over eighty millions subjects. One of these reasons, however,
can be found in the strength of the Roman Military. The Roman
legions were the best equipped, trained, and disciplined fighting
force that the ancient world had ever known. Because of these
fighting forces, Rome held together an empire that would last
for many centuries.
The core of the Roman legion consisted of heavily armored infantry (hoplites). These men were trained and disciplined by Centurions. These soldiers feared him more than they feared any enemy. He made them undergo force marches of great distances and insured that they remained in precise formation while carrying heavy loads. His concern with endurance also included swimming. He drilled them relentlessly and provided them with different types of weapons that they had to master. The standard training drill involved the use of a wooden or a real sword in a Gladiatorial drills (Armatura) where he had to strike assigned targets accurately and with great force.
| CE = Common Era, Formerly AD | BCE = Before the Common Era |
| CE stands for "Common Era." It is a relatively new term that is experiencing increased usage and is eventually expected to replace AD. The latter is an abbreviation for "Anno Domini" in Latin or "the year of the Lord" in English. The latter refers to the approximate birth year of Yeshua of Nazareth (a.k.a. Jesus Christ). CE and AD have the same and value. 2004 CE = 2004 AD. | BCE stands for "Before the common era." It is eventually expected to replace BC, which means "Before Christ." BC and BCE are also identical in value. Most theologians and religious historians believe that the approximate birth date of Yeshua of Nazareth (Jesus) was in the fall, sometime between 7 and 4 BCE, although we have seen estimates as late as 4 CE and as early as the second century BCE. |
The Roman soldiers fought in a formation that was deployed
for battle. During the 4th century BC. , this formation consisted
of a rectangular formation of 975 yards wide and 130 yards deep.
One can only image the impact of marching soldier in tight formation
advancing in a formation that is equivalent to nine football fields
wide and one football field deep. By the first century BC. this
formation doubled in size. There were several tactics used by
the military in a front attack. One of them consisted of a wedge
shaped formation that had the effect of dividing the offensive
line of their opponents and allowed them to enter the formation
of their enemy and attack from within and behind their ranks.
Another formation used by the Roman legionnaires was the turtle
(Testudo). This formation was used when the enemy showered missiles
at them. The legionnaires held shields over their heads and along
their sides and deflected the enemy fire quite effectively.
Early in the fourth century BC., the legions were re-organized (Landels, 1978). Above the common soldiers (miles) were the centurions. These centurions were officers who commanded one hundred men. These were further divided into ten squads of eight soldiers who shared a tent (contubernia), the smallest unit in the legion. Each squad had a leader, decurion. There were usually sixty of these centurion commanding officers in an army unit (legione). Under the new system, two centuries were combined into a larger unit called the manipulus. It consisted of 120-160 men who fought in an extended formation. They were accompanied by a mobile light infantry (velites) who filled in the gaps around the infantry (hoplites) in the new maniple formation. The result of this re-organization was a division (legione) of 3,000 to 6,000 men. The mobile light infantry (velites) was abandoned in the late Republic and replaced by auxiliary troops (auxilia), the Calvary (Alae). Among the heavy infantry, the younger soldiers (hastati) formed the first line, the veterans (principes) formed the second, and the most experienced soldiers (triarii) formed the rear ranks. Among the officers, each centurion was given an aide (optio) to assist him. The legion was divided into cohorts (the basic fighting unit) and the leader f the first cohort (cohors) was given a special status (primus pilus). He was the prefect of the camp (praefectus castrorum) because his cohort was double the size of the others and flanked both sides of the battle formation. Beneath him were centurions of the other centurions in the same cohort (primi ordines). There were also six tribunes per legion who rarely saw combat. They were equestrians from the Patrician social class and they were there to further their political careers. From these six tribunes, the senior tribune (tribunus laticlavius) went on to a position of power in the government bureaucracy because he served in war with honor (cursus hononrum). This senior tribune, however, was usually an ex-centurion who had served as the prefect of the camp. He had already served his country in war and was now allowed to follow a career path into the aristocratic senate (Luttwak, 1976: Chapter 1).
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Each cohort was made up of a six centuries of 80 men each. The
first cohort was doubled in number as it flanked the legionnaire
formation. This amounted to 5,280 foot soldiers (cohors peditata).
When the auxiliary troops and support staff was added, the legion
amounted to about 6,000 men. There were many Roman legions and
their names consisted of numbers (numerus) followed by its location
or place of origin. Legio IV Macedonica, for example, ws the legion
that fought in Macedonian territory. Legio XIII Gemina and Legio
XIV Gemina are legions that fought in Germany. As the Roman Army
expanded, it encountered numerous difficulties at its frontiers
(limes). Hence, it created frontier troops (limitanei) in addition
to its field troops (comitatenses). Many of the soldiers that
made up these frontier troops were barbarians from within the
conquered regions.
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THE ROMAN MITHRAIC TEMPLES (MITHRAE)
Fustel de Coulanges (1980) believes that the ancient family religion
of Rome goes back in time to the Indo-European era. He makes this
assumption on the basis of certain common features shared in the
mystery religions of Rome, Greece, and India. There are several
problems with this assumption. There are villas in Pompeii associated
with the Mithraic rituals and this cult of Mithra was immensely
popular among the Roman Legions from 1 BC to 4 AD. The remains
of Mithraic temples can be found through out the Roman Empire
from Palestine to North Africa and from Central Europe to England.
Mithraism was officially accepted in Rome as evidenced by several
emperors (Nero, Commodus, Septimius Severus, Caracalla, and the
Tetrachs) participated in this secret religion. The fact that
these Mithraic mysteries occurred within the Roman Empire is not
the reason for associating them with the ancient family religion
of Rome. What Fustel de Coulanges found in this rituals were certain
similarities, in particular, the sacred altar of the eternal flame.
Each As noted earlier, the Romans worshipped the dead as sacred
beings (Fustel de Coulanges, 1980: 13). They believed that the
dead continued to live underground after internment where they
became subterranean gods. They called these dead entities Manes
and they constructed temples that housed their tombs. Some of
these subterranean gods were benevolent (Lares, Genii) and some
were malevolent (Larvae). Before the tomb was a sacred altar from
which they performed rites for the dead. If they did not perform
these rites of providing food and libations for the dead, they
would suffer their wrath of the Larvae or not be rewarded by the
Lares. The father of the family (pater familias) was in charge
of the sacred rites for these divine beings. Every home had an
altar and on that altar was an eternal flame, a sacred fire. The
ancients believed that if the fire ceased to glow, the entire
both past and present family would perish. If the fire was extinguished,
these gods would cease to exist. If they ceased to exist, they
could no longer protect the living members of the family and they
could no longer act propitiously towards them. Hence, the ceremony
was sacred. What is important about this sacred fire is that it
was personified and identified with the Goddess Vesta. She was
a "living flame." In these domestic religions, the father
was the priest of the family and the wife was the keeper of the
sacred flame. As families grew into larger groups, phrateries,
and emerged as tribes, they kept their religious beliefs. These
phrateries eventually became tribes and at this stage of unification,
they established a communal temple in which an eternal flame was
housed. The keepers of these flames were the Vestal Virgins. They
were young girls who where chosen from each tribe at puberty and
served until the third decade of their lives. When Rome was founded,
three of these tribes existed and founded the sacred temple of
the city (mithreum). There were six Vestal Virgins at this time,
two from each tribe. As the city grew and more tribes were assimilated,
the number of Vestal Virgins increased.
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The name Mithras is the Greek masculine form of Mitra, the Persian god who was the mediator between Ahura Mazda and the earth. However, some of the attributes of Roman Mithras may have been taken from other Eastern cults: for example, the Mithraist emphasis on astrology strongly suggests syncretism with star-oriented Mesopotamian or Anatolian religions. At least some of this synthesis of beliefs may have already been underway by the time the cult was adopted in the West. When Mithraism was introduced by Roman legions at Dura-Europos after 168 CE, the savior god assumed his familiar Hellenistic iconic formula |
When one looks at the cult of Mithra in greater detail, one
finds that there are very few similarities with the Iranian god,
Mithra. For example, the typical temples of Mithra in the Roman
Empire were subterranean chambers of 75 feet by 30 feet. It had
a vaulted ceiling with an aisle that ran along the center of the
temple. One found stone benches alongside the altar where members
could recline during the ceremonies. At one end of the aisle was
a carved relief or statue or painting depicting a bull slaying
scene (tauroctony). The god of the cult, Mithra, is accompanied
by a dog, a snake, a rave, and a scorpion. The god is shown in
the act of killing the bull. If these subterranean chambers were
borrowed from Iran, one would expect to find them in the Near
East. As a matter of fact, the famous Belgian historian, Franz
Cumont (1956), wrote a two-volume tome based on this assumption,
that it is an Iranian myth. The problem is that no such occurs.
In no known Iranian text can one find Mithra having anything to
do with the killing of a bull. What one does find in their mythology,
however, is a bull-slayer known as Ahriman. He represents the
force of cosmic evil in Iranian religion. Cumont assumed that
the cult of Mithra was a variant of this myth. This assumption
goes unwarranted, as there is no evidence that connects these
two myths. There are no written texts, no archeological findings,
and no historical evidence that the tauroctony icon of the Roman
cult of Mithas is connected to the Iranian myth of Ahriman. This
lack of evidence has led scholars to believe that the Mithraic
temples of Rome was actually a new religion that had merely borrowed
the name of Mithra (Greek mithras) in order to provide it with
legitimacy.
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Every two thousand years a new constellation appears over the horizon in the evening. These constellations were named after different animals because that is how they were identified in the evening sky. Thesuccession of these signs are known as the zodiac belt. |
David Ulansey (1991) if the myth of Mithra did not represent an ancient Iranian myth and if it was a new religion, then what did it represent? According to his interpretation, the pictorial representation of the tauroctony is not an Iranian myth, but an astronomical star map. The first rationale for this insight comes from the fact that every figure in the tauroctony has a symbolic significance with the zodiac. The Bull has a parallel in the Constellation of Taurus; the dog can be representative of the Constellation Canis Minor; the snake is the constellation Hydra; the Raven is illustrative of the Constellation Corvus; and the Scorpion is reminiscent of the Constellation Scorpio. The second rationale for this insight that the tauroctony is a star map comes from the fact that the Bull Taurus is being killed just at the time in astronomical lore when the Age of Taurus is leaving and the Age of Aries is entering the Zodiac. What this suggests is that the Mithraic temples were designed to represent an image of the Cosmos. Within the context of a geocentric cosmology in which the Earth is the center of the cosmos, every day the sun rotated around the earth. The sun was not the only celestial object that rotated around the earth. The great sphere of the stars also rotated around the earth along with the sun. The circle traced by the sun in the course of a year was known as the Zodiac, the little zoo. It was assumed, at this time, that the Sun was the great mover of the stars along the celestial equator. As the earth wobbles on its axis, it influences the appearance of the Constellations along the celestial highway. Every 2,160 years a new constellation of the Zodiac is associated with the Spring Equinox. This slow procession along the celestial highway takes 25,920 years to complete the entire zodiac. What one finds in the tauroctony is the procession of the constellations of the zodiac. Currently, the Constellation of Pisces appears at the time of the Spring Equinox. In a few hundred years, the Age of Aquarius will appear and replace Pisces as the constellation to appear during the Spring Equinox. At the time of the cult of Mithra, the Constellation of Taurus appeared during the Spring Equinox and The Constellation of Leo (the lion) and Aquarius appeared during the two solstices . This period lasted from 4,000 to 2,000 BC. At this time Scorpio appeared during the Autumn Equinox. Aries eventually replaced Taurus along the celestial equator. The slaying of the Bull represents this change of constellations along the celestial equator during the Spring Equinox. What is important about all of these astrological changes is that the ancients believed that a new god, Mithra the Cosmic Bull-Slayer, was responsible for these changes. Such a god could only move the cosmos if he stood outside of the celestial equator where he would be in a position to move the constellations out of its customary procession. In the iconography of this religion, Mithras is shown in the role of the god Atlas, who holds stands outside of the celestial sphere, the Mithraic cave as seen from the outside. Hence, the cult of Mithra did represent a new god in the Roman cosmology. The old god of Ahriman of the Iranian Pantheon was the original bull-slayer, but Mithras, sun god and mover of the zodiac replaced him. The Romans made him their cosmic bull-slayer. With the advent of Christianity, the religion of Mithraism came under attack by the Apologists. What is interesting is that Catholicism has preserved some of the symbols and rituals associated with Mithraism.
| 1 | The celebration of Christmas parallels the celebration of the autumnal equinox. |
| 2 | Christian priests are called "father" even though this was Mithraic title was not allowed by Christianity (Matthew 23:9). |
| 3 | The Mithraic Holy father wore a red cap, red garments, and a ring. He also carried a shepherd's staff. Christianity adopted this title and apparel. |
| 4 | Only males could be priests in the Mithraic cult and only males can be priests in the Catholic Church. |
ROMAN GOVERNMENT
As the families grew into extended families (gens) and these developed
further into phrateries (curia) and into tribes (several groups
of phraterie or curies), Roman government changed to reflect those
developments. In order to understand the political organization
of Rome, one must begin with the family structure with its father
as the high priest of the family. This individual literally owned
his family. He was able to sell his wife and children and he was
not accountable by civic law, as there was none. Hence, the extended
family (gens) was the first form of society in Ancient Rome. What
law did exist was private law. Each family has its religion, its
gods, its priesthood, and its private laws. Furthermore, each
family had its own property in which one found an ancestral tomb,
a sacred altar, and land markers (termini) that were inhabited
by familial gods that protected the land. As these families grew,
they each had their own chiefs (curion) who performed religious
rights. When families united, they established new gods to represent
them. These new gods were housed in a sacred altar belonging to
the phratry. The laws of the phrateries (curae) were separate
from those of the private laws of the families (Fustel de Coulanges,
1980: 105). As time progressed, family farms (curae) combined
with other phrateries to create tribal units. There were three
such tribes existing in Rome at the time of its founding.
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The Patrician: Latin patricius, from patres senators, from plural of pater father |
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The Plebeans were common people. They could be rich merchants, farmers, craftsmen or even beggars. They could never become patricians. Although they were the majority, they had fewer votes. |
It is not surprising to find that members of the Patrician class governed Rome. There were two Patrician leaders who ran the Senate and represented the Noble Houses of Rome. They were the consuls. The Senate consisted of Patricians (Adkins & Adkins, 1994: 32-34) who had distinguished themselves politically and served as elected officials. They also felt themselves to be special because their bloodline could be traced to Romulus, the Founder of Rome (Kebric, 1993). Hence, they were steeped in honors, culture, and tradition and they were the Old Guard. They controlled the treasury, they voted on new legislation, and they established policy. Later, a new group was added to the Senate, the Equestrians. These were men of the Calvary (equites) who wore purple. Some Equestrians were elevated into Senatorial Treasurers (Quaestors). These men served as procurators and oversaw any purchases made collectively in the name of Rome. They also provided funds for the priests (aedile) who performed sacred rites at major events (battle, games, races, feasts, sacred hunts, etc.). From the Senate emerged the special Patrician (praetor) who ensured that all the laws of Rome (lex Romana) were obeyed. What is obvious from this discussion of the Patrician class is that they excluded the Plebeians from government. This exclusion took many years to overturn. With the passage of time, the Plebeians voiced their resentment to this exclusion. They were allowed, at first, to distinguish themselves in military action and some were rewarded by becoming Roman citizens. They were given a special place within the senate as voting members of the Tribune. Later, they were allowed to become Equestrians and shared this honor with the Patricians. What eventually emerged in Rome was a political hierarchy controlled by the Consuls of Rome.
| Only Senators who have served as Praetors may become Consults. Only consuls may introduce new laws. Only consuls may call for a vote or for an election. Only two consuls are elected. | The Consuls (2) |
| The Praetor was in charge of the judiciary of Rome. He was the chief law officer. He acted as the chief judge, apart from the consuls who possessed higher authority, should they choose to use it. He also acted as a deputy to the consuls, in particular regarding the administration of the provinces. And it is therefore that provincial governors were either drawn from former consuls (proconsul) or from former praetors (propraetor). | The Praetor (8 Judges) |
| The Aedile was the supervisor of public works. He oversaw the public works, temples and markets. Censors who had similar or related duties.) Also he oversaw the organization of festivals and games. In 367 BC BC the refusal of the plebeian aediles on one occasion to stage circus games for the length the senate desired, led to the senate simply creating two new patrician aediles, the so-called curule aediles (aediles curules) who then obliged in staging the games for the appropriate length of time. The curule aediles were hence of senior authority. But within twelve months the differences were settled and also plebeians were allowed into the | The Aedile (2 curules and 2 Pelbeian Priests) |
| The Quaestor was in charge of the military and civic treasury of Rome as well as keeping records. The quaestors also acted as aides to the consuls. | The Quaestor (20 Treasurers) |
| The Censor ) was the registrar of Rome. He also oversaw the finances, including taxation, inspected the quality of public works and - more controversially - oversaw public morality. He and his staff compiled lists of all Roman citizens, recording their name, age, ancestry, families, wealth as well as which one of the three tribes of Rome they belonged to. If the initial purpose of the census, the counting of the people, was to allow for the military strength of Rome to be assessed, then it was naturally the censor, during the time of conscription, were in charge of assigning men, according to their status, to the various types of infantry or cavalry. | Censors (2) |
| In times of crisis, a Dictator could be appointed. His time in office could not be longer than six months. But for his time in office he possessed the absolute power of a king. The office of dictator was a very ancient office, having originated from times when one military commander might be appointed over the armies of several Latin cities. This rank then had been referred to as 'master-of-infantry'. | The Dictator (1) |
| Religion was firmly in the hands of the Pontifex Maximus (High Priest) - a title still held by the present day Pope. The pontifex maximus was, as were pretty much all official positions, an elected office. But unlike other offices its holder enjoyed a residence at the Roman forum in the very heart of Rome. His chief duty was to preside at a state ceremonies, but apart from that he also oversaw the calendar and chose the vestal virgins, as well as some of the priesthoods. He also possessed powers to discipline members of the priesthood. | Pontifex Maximus |
| Triumvirates | Triumvirates were common in the Roman republic. |
| First Triumvirate | The First Triumvirate was the alliance of Julius Caesar, Pompey, and Marcus Licinius Crassus formed in 60 This was not strictly a triumvirate, since the alliance had no official sanction. The three men were able to control Rome, and the alliance aided Caesar's rise to power by giving him the opportunity to pursue the Gallic Wars. |
| Second Triumvirate | The Second Triumvirate was legally established as the tresviri rei publicae constituendae [triumvirate for reestablishing the public welfare].. The members were Octavian (Augustus), Marc Antony, and Marcus Aemilius Lepidus.. This group was granted enormous power by the senate. |
| PUBLIC LAW: Against the State | One could be found guilty of crimes such treason by act or word (maiestas), sedition (vis publica), offenses against religion (sacrilegium), bribery (ambitus), extortion or the corruption in public administration (crimen repetundarum), embezzlement of state funds and bribery of a judge or member of the jury (corruptio judicis). |
| PRIVATE LAW: Against the Individual | One could commit crimes of physical injury (injuria), deception (falsum), indecency (stuprum), and murder (caedes). There were also laws against pederasty (lex Scantinia) and laws of obligations concerned with duties related to contacts or torts (delict). Torts were non-contractual wrongs committed against a person or his property. Contracts were agreements that were enforceable by law. They were not always written. They were merely enforced verbally by uttering "I promise"(spondeo). |
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The Romans also made copies of the Carthaginian ship that they called "The Five" (quinquereme). It provided them with an instant navy. This ship had 112 oarsmen on the upper deck, 108 on the middle deck, and 50 on the lower deck. Among the crew were some 30 sailors and from 40-120 marines. The Romans never really mastered the sea. They were never good at maneuvering the Five and resorted to the use of a large boarding plank (corvus) of 4 x 36 feet that they dropped on the enemies ship before unloading their combatants. |
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Hadrian chose as his official title Imperator Caesar Traianus Hadrianus Augustus. He was simply known as Hadrianus Augustus). |
