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Suovetaurilia
(272 words)
[German version] also
Suovitaurilia. The combination, traditional in Roman religion, of three sacrificial animals - pig (
sus), sheep (
ovis) and bull (
taurus) - that were led, as part of ritual purification (Lustratio), round a place (e.g. a piece of land: Cato Agr. 141; [1. 103-125]) or group of people to be lustrated, and subsequently sacrificed. A distinction was made between
suovetaurilia lactentia or
minora (piglet, lamb and calf: Cato Agr. 141) and adult
suovetaurilia maiora (e.g. boar, ram, bull: Varro Rust. 2,1,10; cf. Plin. HN 8,206). The
suovetaurilia seem originally to …
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Sacellum
(117 words)
[German version] (“small sanctuary”). Diminutive form of the Latin
sacrum. Distinct from it was the
sacrarium, the storage room for the sacred gear (
sacra supellex), which did not necessarily have to be consecrated (Consecratio).
Sacellum could describe public Roman cult sites consisting of an open altar with an enclosure (Trebatius in Gell. NA 7,12,5; cf. Fest. 422 L.), as well as private sanctuaries. It had the form of a chapel, with the divine image standing in a niche (
aedicula ) in front of which the offering was made (cf. Paul. Fest. 319 L.). In everyday speech,
sacellum also referred…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Lectisternium
(460 words)
[German version] (Etym.: Lat.
lectum sternere, ‘to prepare a couch’). To serve the gods, food for the gods: a very old form of sacrifice in which a meal was laid out on a table for the god who was lying on a feasting couch in the temple (cf.
Iovis epulum ). This practice was based on the idea that the gods received their share at every meal, suggesting their actual presence. The term
lectisternium is only used in a sacred context. First and foremost, the
lectisternium was a part of the
Graecus ritus, thus a widely common form of sacrifice in Greek worship. In Rome, on the other hand, i…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Transvectio equitum
(365 words)
[German version] Parade of the
iuventus of Roman
equites on 15 July. Its route led from the Temple of Mars to the Porta Capena, the Temple of Castor and Pollux, and up to the Temple of Iuppiter Optimus Maximus on the Capitolium (sources: Liv. 9,46,15; Vir. ill. 32,2). There are mythical/cultic and constitutional versions of the origins of this institution, whose beginnings can be traced to the 4th cent. BC. The first is connected with the help given by the Dioscuri in the battle between the Romans and …
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Litatio
(188 words)
[German version] (‘fortunate sacrifice’). From the Latin
litare (based on Greek λιτή/
litḗ, ‘entreaty’) = ‘to sacrifice under favourable auspices’ (intransitive) in contrast to
sacrificare (‘to sacrifice’). The distinction between the two verbs
litare and
sacrificare disappeared in the Augustan period, as they were used synonymously.
Litatio was a technical term of Roman pontifical law (cf. Serv. Aen. 2,119) for the favourable course and completion of an act of sacrifice, by which the desired influence upon the deity (
pax deorum, ‘grace of the gods’) was ensured. The party…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Sistrum
(137 words)
[German version] (Greek σίστρον/
sístron). Egyptian musical instrument, a bronze rattle, used particularly in the cult of Isis. Two forms are known: 1) stirrup
s.: grip or handle with a U-shaped frame; between the arms three moving cross-pieces, on which in an earlier period metal rings were threaded. 2) naos
s.: in the form of a temple gate, i.e. between rectangular and slightly trapezoidal. Statue representing Isis with a
s. cf. [1. 128, cat. no. 51]. With the spread of the Isis cult in the Greek and Roman worlds the
s. also spread, including as a votive gift in Greek sanctuaries [2]. Siebert…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Hasta
(1,030 words)
[German version] [1] Hasta, hastati In the Roman army of the middle Republic, the
hasta served primarily as a thrust lance for close combat although it could also be thrown; it had a wooden shaft and an iron point. The
hasta was adapted to the fighting style of the phalanx, but it remained in use when, in the 4th cent. BC, the Romans adopted a more flexible set-up in maniples (
manipulus ). According to Livy (Liv. 8,8,5-13), whose account, however, is not without its problems, in 340 BC the Roman army consisted of three battle rows, the
hastati, the
principes and the
triarii. The
triarii were a…
Source:
Brill’s New Pauly
Hasta
(959 words)
[English version] [1] Hasta, hastati Die
hasta diente im röm. Heer während der mittleren Republik vor allem als Stoßlanze für den Nahkampf, obwohl sie auch geworfen werden konnte; sie hatte einen hölzernen Schaft und eine Eisenspitze. Die
h. war der Kampfweise der Phalanx angepaßt, blieb aber im Gebrauch, als die Römer im 4. Jh. v.Chr. zur flexibleren Aufstellung in Manipeln (
manipulus ) übergingen. Nach Livius (Liv. 8,8,5-13), dessen Darstellung allerdings nicht unproblematisch ist, bestand das röm. Heer 340 v.Chr. aus drei Schlachtreihen, den
hastati, den
principes und den
triar…
Source:
Der Neue Pauly