fbpx
Wikipedia

Flamen Dialis

In ancient Roman religion, the flamen Dialis was the high priest of Jupiter.[1] The term Dialis is related to Diespiter, an Old Latin form of the name Jupiter.[2] There were 15 flamines, of whom three were flamines maiores, serving the three gods of the Archaic Triad. According to tradition the flamines were forbidden to touch metal, ride a horse, or see a corpse. The Flamen Dialis was officially ranked second in the ranking of the highest Roman priests (ordo sacerdotum), behind only the rex sacrorum and before other flamines maiores (Flamen Martialis, Flamen Quirinalis) and pontifex maximus.[3]

The office of Flamen Dialis, and the offices of the other flamines maiores, were traditionally said to have been created by Numa Pompilius, second king of Rome, although Numa himself performed many of the rites of the Flamen Dialis.[4](1:20)

Appointment and privileges edit

The Flamen Dialis enjoyed many peculiar honours. When a vacancy occurred, three persons of patrician descent, whose parents had been married according to the ceremonies of confarreatio (the strictest form of Roman marriage),[5] were nominated by the Comitia, one of whom was selected (captus), and consecrated (inaugurabatur) by the Pontifex Maximus.[6][7](iv, 16)[4](xxvii, 8) The candidates also had to be married, confarreatio and to a virgin (see Flamen#Marriage).[8][9]

From that time forward he was emancipated from the control of his father, and became sui juris.[10](i, 130)[7](iv.16)[11] He alone of all priests wore the apex,[13][14] he had a right to a lictor,[15][16](p 119) to the toga praetexta,[17] to the Sella Curulis,[18] and to a seat in the Roman senate ex officio.[19] This last privilege, after having fallen into disuse for a long period, was asserted by Gaius Valerius Flaccus (209 BC), the claim allowed however, says Livy, more in deference to his high personal character than from a conviction of the justice of the demand.[4](xxvii, 8; cf. i, 20) The Rex Sacrificulus or Rex Sacrorum alone was entitled to recline above him at a banquet; if one in bonds took refuge in his house, the chains were immediately struck off and conveyed through the impluvium to the roof, and thence cast down into the street:[12](x, 15) if a criminal on his way to punishment met him, and fell suppliant at his feet, he was respited for that day,[12](x, 15)[15](p 166) similar to the right of sanctuary attached to the persons and dwellings of the papal cardinals.

Restrictions edit

The Flamen Dialis was subjected to many restrictions and privations,[20] many of considerable Indo-European vintage,[21] a long catalogue of which was compiled by Aulus Gellius[12](x, 15) from the works of Fabius Pictor and Masurius Sabinus.

  • It was unlawful for him to be out of the city for a single night;[4](v, 52) a regulation which seems to have been modified by Augustus, insofar that an absence of two nights was permitted.[7](iii, 58, 71)
  • He was forbidden to sleep out of his own bed for three nights consecutively. Thus, it was impossible for him to undertake the government of a province.
  • He might not
    • mount or even touch a horse,
    • touch iron, or
    • look at an army marshalled outside the pomerium.
  • He might not be elected to the consulship. Indeed, it would seem that originally he was altogether precluded from seeking or accepting any civil magistracy;[15](p 169) but this last prohibition was certainly not enforced in later times.
  • The Flamen Dialis was required to wear certain unusual garments, such as the apex, a point-tipped hat, and a laena, a heavy wool cloak.
  • He was not allowed to swear an oath,[4](xxxi, 50)
  • nor to wear a ring nisi pervio et casso ("unless plain and without stones");[22]
  • nor to strip himself naked in the open air
  • nor to go out without his proper head-dress
  • nor to have a knot in any part of his attire
  • nor to walk along a path over-canopied by vines.
  • He might not touch flour, nor leaven, nor leavened bread.
  • He might not touch a dead body, nor enter a burial place, but he was allowed to attend a funeral.
  • He was forbidden either to touch or to name a dog, a she-goat, ivy, beans, or raw flesh.
  • None but a free man might cut his hair; the clippings of which, together with the parings of his nails, were buried beneath an arbor felix ("auspicious tree").
  • No one might sleep in his bed, the legs of which were smeared with fine clay
  • It was unlawful to place a box containing sacrificial cakes in contact with the bedstead
  • He was not allowed to be present of a table without food, so that he never appeared wanting.

The object of these rules was clearly to make him literally Jovi adsiduum sacerdotem (the constant priest of Jove / Jupiter),[23][24] to compel constant attention to the duties of the priesthood, and to leave him effectively without any temptation to neglect them.[25]

In the view of Dumézil,[26] these prohibitions mark the Flamen Dialis as serving a celestial god, with his attributes of absolute purity and freedom, but also wielder of lightning and kingship. Within his scope of action there are the domains of political power and right, but not battle, which belongs to Mars and the Flamen Martialis. His solidarity with the king is reflected in that of his earthly counterpart, the rex sacrorum. Similar partnerships, with similar ritual restrictions, are seen reflected in other Indo-European cultures, such as that of the Vedic rajan and his purohita, and the ancient Irish rig and the chief druid.[26]

Flaminica Dialis edit

The Flaminica Dialis was the wife of the Flamen Dialis.[23] She was required to be a virgin at the time of their wedding, which had to be conducted according to the ceremonies of confarreatio, the traditional form of marriage for patricians. (This regulation also applied to the marriages of the two other flamines maiores.)[27](iv, 104, 374)[10](i, 112) The couple were not permitted to divorce, and if the flaminica died the Dialis was obliged to resign.[28] The assistance of the flaminica was essential in the performance of certain rituals. On each of the nundinae, she sacrificed a ram to Juno Regina in the Curia Calabra.[29](i, 16)[30] The flaminica was assigned a special ritual attire. Her hair was plaited up with a purple band in a conical form (tutulus), but when she went to participate in the ritual of the Argei, she neither combed nor arranged her hair.[29](i, 16) The flaminica and the regina sacrorum were the only ones who might wear the hairdressing named (in)arculata.[clarification needed][31][27](IV, 137) The flaminica wore a dyed robe (venenato operitur) and a small square cloth with a border (rica), to which was attached a slip cut from a felix arbor, a tree under the protection of the heavenly gods.[32][33] The rica may have been a short cloak, or less likely a sort of scarf or veil thrown over the head. The restrictions imposed upon the flaminica were similar to those placed on her husband.[34] She was prohibited from mounting a staircase consisting of more than three steps,[12](x, 15) perhaps to prevent her ankles from being seen.[35]

Holders of the office edit

  • Publius Cornelius Sulla, probably appointed flamen by the Pontifex Maximus Publius Cornelius Calussa c. 279–270 BC. He may have been the son of Publius Cornelius Rufinus, and the first member of his family named Sulla.[36](p 644)
  • Lucius Quinctius, appointed in the middle of the 3rd century BC. He was probably a son of Caeso Quinctius Claudus, and the ancestor of the Quinctii Flaminini.[36](p 864, notes 5 & 6)[37][i]
  • Publius Cornelius Scipio, grandson of Scipio Africanus, became Flamen Dialis in 174 BC. He died soon after between 170 and 168 BC.[36](p 642)[38]
  • Lucius Cornelius Merula was likely chosen flamen at the end of the 2nd century BC.[36](p 639) He is mostly known for his death in 87 BC, during the civil war between the two consuls of 87 BC, Octavius and Cinna. Appointed suffect consul in replacement of Cinna, who had been expelled by Octavius, Merula resigned when Cinna returned to Rome with an army. Targeted by Cinna's and Marius' purge, he instead committed suicide in Dec. 87 in the Temple of Jupiter, calling down curses on his enemies with his dying breath.[39][40]
  • Gaius Julius Caesar, the future dictator, was chosen at the instigation of Cinna, his father-in-law, at the end of 87 BC, or before 13 January 86 BC, while Marius was still alive.[41] Many scholars have however debated the possibility that Caesar was never formally appointed, because of his age. The theory that religious technicalities interfered as if his mother Aurelia was not plebeian are false. Aurelia was a patrician. Caesar nonetheless lost his priesthood during the dictatorship of Sulla, in about 81, but was elected a regular pontifex in the College of Pontiffs in 77, according to Vell. 2.43.1. He was elected pontifex maximus in 63 BC. No Flamen Dialis was appointed thereafter, and the office then remained vacant for about 72 years.[36](pp734–735) until 16/15 BC (Dec. 87 BC - 72 years = 16 or 15 BC -- per Tac. Ann. 3.58.4, which has wrongly been emended by some editors to "75 years."[42] Due to inclusive counting, it is hard to be certain if this means 71 or 72 years).
  • Servius Cornelius Lentulus Maluginensis, probably a son of Gnaeus Cornelius Lentulus Augur. Born c. 30 BC, he seems to have become flamen c. 15 BC, after the long hiatus that followed the removal of Caesar. But since the first mention of him in office appears in Tac. Ann. 3.58.1 for AD 22, it is very likely he was not the first man to hold the post after the long vacancy. Accordingly, the exact date that Maluginensis became Flamen Dialis is uncertain. Cassius Dio 54.36.1 says the post was filled about 11 BC, a date unwisely accepted by many modern scholars who forget that Tacitus is more reliable and closer to the events than Dio. Tacitus[7] 3.58.4 clearly indicates that the date was 72 years after the suicide of Cornelius Merula in Dec. 87 BC. Some modern translators have preferred Dio over Tacitus, including Penguin's Rex Warner. [43] [36]
  • Cornelius Lentulus Maluginensis, succeeded his father as flamen in AD 23, probably at a very young age.[36](p 638)
  • Terentius Gentianus is mentioned as flamen in an inscription commissioned for his sister.[44][45] The last known Flamen Dialis. Since he was also consul in AD 211 it seems the restrictions on holding political offices had been removed.

See also edit

Footnotes edit

  1. ^ Münzer[37] thought that Caeso Quinctius Claudus was the brother of the Claudus who was consul 271 BC.

References edit

  1. ^ Dillon, Matthew; Garland, Lynda (28 October 2013). Ancient Rome: A Sourcebook. Taylor & Francis. p. 127. ISBN 978-1-136-76143-0.
  2. ^ Lewis, Charlton T.; Short, Charles (1879). "Dĭālis". A Latin Dictionary. Oxford, UK: Clarendon Press.
  3. ^ Forsythe, Gary (1 January 2006). A Critical History of Early Rome: From Prehistory to the First Punic War. University of California Press. p. 136. ISBN 978-0-520-24991-2. Retrieved 2 September 2016.
  4. ^ a b c d e Livy. Ab urbe condita.
  5. ^ Tatum, W. Jeffrey (2008-04-30). Always I Am Caesar. John Wiley & Sons. p. 30. ISBN 978-0-470-69588-3.
  6. ^ Turcan, Robert (2013-10-28). The Gods of Ancient Rome: Religion in Everyday Life from Archaic to Imperial Times. Routledge. p. 52. ISBN 978-1-136-05850-9.
  7. ^ a b c d Tacitus. Annales.
  8. ^ Smith, C. J.; Smith, Lecturer in Department of Biochemistry C. J. (2006-03-09). The Roman Clan: The Gens from Ancient Ideology to Modern Anthropology. Cambridge University Press. p. 351. ISBN 978-0-521-85692-8.
  9. ^ Dillon, Matthew; Garland, Lynda (2013-10-28). Ancient Rome: A Sourcebook. Routledge. p. 127. ISBN 978-1-136-76136-2.
  10. ^ a b Gaius. Institutes.
  11. ^ Ulpian, Frag. x.5[full citation needed]
  12. ^ a b c d e Aulus Gellius. Noctes Atticae [Attic Nights].
  13. ^ Varro,[full citation needed] ap.[clarification needed] Gellius[12](x, 15)
  14. ^ Graham, Emma-Jayne (2020-11-09). Reassembling Religion in Roman Italy. Routledge. p. 106. ISBN 978-1-351-98245-0.
  15. ^ a b c Plutarch. Reiske (ed.). Αἰτίαι Ῥωμαϊκαί [Roman Questions].[full citation needed]
  16. ^ Cohick, Lynn (2009). Women in the World of the Earliest Christians: Illuminating Ancient Ways of Life. Baker Academic. p. 163. ISBN 978-0-8010-3172-4.
  17. ^ Brøns, Cecilie; Nosch, Marie-Louise (2017-07-31). Textiles and Cult in the Ancient Mediterranean. Oxbow Books. p. 138. ISBN 978-1-78570-675-2.
  18. ^ Shannon-Henderson, Kelly E. (2018-12-12). Religion and Memory in Tacitus' Annals. Oxford University Press. p. 125. ISBN 978-0-19-256910-3.
  19. ^ Feldman, Louis H.; Cohen, Shaye J. D.; Schwartz, Joshua J. (2007). Studies in Josephus And the Varieties of Ancient Judaism: Louis H. Feldman Jubilee Volume. BRILL. p. 61. ISBN 978-90-04-15389-9.
  20. ^ Land, Darin H. (2008-07-17). The Diffusion of Ecclesiastical Authority: Sociological Dimensions of Leadership in the Book of Acts. Wipf and Stock Publishers. p. 87. ISBN 978-1-55635-575-2.
  21. ^ Woodard, Roger D. (2013-01-28). Myth, Ritual, and the Warrior in Roman and Indo-European Antiquity. Cambridge University Press. p. 93. ISBN 978-1-107-02240-9.
  22. ^ Kirchmann. De Annulis. p. 14.[full citation needed]
  23. ^ a b Hancock-Jones, Robert; Menashe, Dan; Renshaw, James (2017-07-13). OCR Classical Civilisation GCSE Route 2: Women in the Ancient World. Bloomsbury Publishing. p. 84. ISBN 978-1-350-01505-0.
  24. ^ Purity and the Forming of Religious Traditions in the Ancient Mediterranean World and Ancient Judaism. BRILL. 2012-11-01. p. 297. ISBN 978-90-04-23229-7.
  25. ^ Beard, Mary; North, John; Price, S.R.F. (28 June 1998). Religions of Rome. Vol. 2 – a sourcebook. Cambridge University Press. p. 196. ISBN 978-0-521-45646-3 – via Google Books.
  26. ^ a b Dumézil, G. (1977). ——, It. tr. Milan pp. 146-148 and 31-32.[full citation needed]
  27. ^ a b Maurus Servius Honoratus. Ad Aeneidem [On the Aeneid].
  28. ^ Sebesta, Judith Lynn; Bonfante, Larissa (2001). The World of Roman Costume. Univ of Wisconsin Press. p. 56. ISBN 978-0-299-13854-7 – via Google Books.
  29. ^ a b Macrobius Ambrosius Theodosius. Saturnalia.
  30. ^ Henderson (2011). Saturnalia, Volume I.19. ISBN 978-0-674-99649-6.
  31. ^ Paulus, ——, p 237 L 2nd.[full citation needed]
  32. ^ Varro. De lingua latina. vii, 44.
  33. ^ Sextus Pompeius Festus, ——, s.v. tutulum and rica[full citation needed]
  34. ^ James, Sharon L.; Dillon, Sheila (15 June 2015). A Companion to Women in the Ancient World. John Wiley & Sons. p. 207. ISBN 978-1-119-02554-2 – via Google Books.
  35. ^ Holstein, Justus Frederick (1916). Rites and Ritual Acts as Prescribed by the Roman Religion According to the Commentary of Servius on Vergil's Aeneid. New York University. p. 25 – via Google Books.
  36. ^ a b c d e f g Rüpke, Jörg; Glock, Anne (2008). Fasti Sacerdotum: A prosopography of pagan, Jewish, and Christian religious officials in the City of Rome, 300 BC to AD 499. Translated by Richardson, David. Oxford, UK: Oxford University Press.
  37. ^ a b Münzer, F. (1999) [1920]. Roman Aristocratic Parties and Families. Translated by Ridley, Thérèse. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press. pp. 110, 117.
  38. ^ Etcheto, Henri (2012). Les Scipions: Famille et pouvoir à Rome à l'époque républicaine [The Scipios: Family and power in Rome during the republican era] (in French). Bordeaux, FR: Ausonius Éditions. pp. 181–182 – via archives-ouvertes.fr.
  39. ^ Valerius Maximus. Facta et dicta memorabilia. ix 12.5.
  40. ^ Velleius. Paterculus. ii, 20; ii, 22.
  41. ^ Broughton, —. (–). ——, vol II, p 52.[full citation needed]
  42. ^ Gaius Stern, “M. Aemilius Lepidus and the Four Flamines on the Ara Pacis Augustae,” in eds. Donohue, Mattusch, Brauer, Common Ground: Archaeology, Art, Science and the Humanities, Acta of the XVI International Congress of Classical Archaeology (2003 Oxbow Monograph), 293-97.
  43. ^ Anthony Woodman wisely kept Tacitus's testimony of 72 years. Gaius Stern, “M. Aemilius Lepidus and the Four Flamines on the Ara Pacis Augustae,” in eds. Donohue, Mattusch, Brauer, Common Ground: Archaeology, Art, Science and the Humanities, Acta of the XVI International Congress of Classical Archaeology (2003 Oxbow Monograph), 293-97, asserts that Tacitus is probably correct, meaning that Maluginensis or his predecessor became Flamen Dialis, while Lepidus (the triumvir, cos. 46, 42) was Pontifex Maximus (16–15 BC), so that Lepidus had to supervise his inauguration at Augustus' direction, possibly unwillingly
  44. ^ Craven, Maxwell (2019-12-08). The Imperial Families of Ancient Rome. Fonthill Media.
  45. ^ Segni, Leah Di; Arubas, Benjamin (2018). "A Flamen Dialis Recorded on a Decorated Marble Slab from Ptolemais-Acco". Jerusalem and Eretz Israel.

Bibliography edit

  • Henri Etcheto, Les Scipions. Famille et pouvoir à Rome à l’époque républicaine, Bordeaux, Ausonius Éditions, 2012.
  • Friedrich Münzer, Roman Aristocratic Parties and Families, translated by Thérèse Ridley, Johns Hopkins University Press, 1999 (originally published in 1920).
  • Jörg Rüpke, Anne Glock, David Richardson (translator), Fasti Sacerdotum: A Prosopography of Pagan, Jewish, and Christian Religious Officials in the City of Rome, 300 BC to AD 499, Oxford University Press, 2008.

This article is based on a portion of the article "Flamen" from Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, in the public domain.

flamen, dialis, ancient, roman, religion, flamen, dialis, high, priest, jupiter, term, dialis, related, diespiter, latin, form, name, jupiter, there, were, flamines, whom, three, were, flamines, maiores, serving, three, gods, archaic, triad, according, traditi. In ancient Roman religion the flamen Dialis was the high priest of Jupiter 1 The term Dialis is related to Diespiter an Old Latin form of the name Jupiter 2 There were 15 flamines of whom three were flamines maiores serving the three gods of the Archaic Triad According to tradition the flamines were forbidden to touch metal ride a horse or see a corpse The Flamen Dialis was officially ranked second in the ranking of the highest Roman priests ordo sacerdotum behind only the rex sacrorum and before other flamines maiores Flamen Martialis Flamen Quirinalis and pontifex maximus 3 The office of Flamen Dialis and the offices of the other flamines maiores were traditionally said to have been created by Numa Pompilius second king of Rome although Numa himself performed many of the rites of the Flamen Dialis 4 1 20 Contents 1 Appointment and privileges 2 Restrictions 3 Flaminica Dialis 4 Holders of the office 5 See also 6 Footnotes 7 References 8 BibliographyAppointment and privileges editThe Flamen Dialis enjoyed many peculiar honours When a vacancy occurred three persons of patrician descent whose parents had been married according to the ceremonies of confarreatio the strictest form of Roman marriage 5 were nominated by the Comitia one of whom was selected captus and consecrated inaugurabatur by the Pontifex Maximus 6 7 iv 16 4 xxvii 8 The candidates also had to be married confarreatio and to a virgin see Flamen Marriage 8 9 From that time forward he was emancipated from the control of his father and became sui juris 10 i 130 7 iv 16 11 He alone of all priests wore the apex 13 14 he had a right to a lictor 15 16 p 119 to the toga praetexta 17 to the Sella Curulis 18 and to a seat in the Roman senate ex officio 19 This last privilege after having fallen into disuse for a long period was asserted by Gaius Valerius Flaccus 209 BC the claim allowed however says Livy more in deference to his high personal character than from a conviction of the justice of the demand 4 xxvii 8 cf i 20 The Rex Sacrificulus or Rex Sacrorum alone was entitled to recline above him at a banquet if one in bonds took refuge in his house the chains were immediately struck off and conveyed through the impluvium to the roof and thence cast down into the street 12 x 15 if a criminal on his way to punishment met him and fell suppliant at his feet he was respited for that day 12 x 15 15 p 166 similar to the right of sanctuary attached to the persons and dwellings of the papal cardinals Restrictions editThe Flamen Dialis was subjected to many restrictions and privations 20 many of considerable Indo European vintage 21 a long catalogue of which was compiled by Aulus Gellius 12 x 15 from the works of Fabius Pictor and Masurius Sabinus It was unlawful for him to be out of the city for a single night 4 v 52 a regulation which seems to have been modified by Augustus insofar that an absence of two nights was permitted 7 iii 58 71 He was forbidden to sleep out of his own bed for three nights consecutively Thus it was impossible for him to undertake the government of a province He might not mount or even touch a horse touch iron or look at an army marshalled outside the pomerium He might not be elected to the consulship Indeed it would seem that originally he was altogether precluded from seeking or accepting any civil magistracy 15 p 169 but this last prohibition was certainly not enforced in later times The Flamen Dialis was required to wear certain unusual garments such as the apex a point tipped hat and a laena a heavy wool cloak He was not allowed to swear an oath 4 xxxi 50 nor to wear a ring nisi pervio et casso unless plain and without stones 22 nor to strip himself naked in the open air nor to go out without his proper head dress nor to have a knot in any part of his attire nor to walk along a path over canopied by vines He might not touch flour nor leaven nor leavened bread He might not touch a dead body nor enter a burial place but he was allowed to attend a funeral He was forbidden either to touch or to name a dog a she goat ivy beans or raw flesh None but a free man might cut his hair the clippings of which together with the parings of his nails were buried beneath an arbor felix auspicious tree No one might sleep in his bed the legs of which were smeared with fine clay It was unlawful to place a box containing sacrificial cakes in contact with the bedstead He was not allowed to be present of a table without food so that he never appeared wanting The object of these rules was clearly to make him literally Jovi adsiduum sacerdotem the constant priest of Jove Jupiter 23 24 to compel constant attention to the duties of the priesthood and to leave him effectively without any temptation to neglect them 25 In the view of Dumezil 26 these prohibitions mark the Flamen Dialis as serving a celestial god with his attributes of absolute purity and freedom but also wielder of lightning and kingship Within his scope of action there are the domains of political power and right but not battle which belongs to Mars and the Flamen Martialis His solidarity with the king is reflected in that of his earthly counterpart the rex sacrorum Similar partnerships with similar ritual restrictions are seen reflected in other Indo European cultures such as that of the Vedic rajan and his purohita and the ancient Irish rig and the chief druid 26 Flaminica Dialis editThe Flaminica Dialis was the wife of the Flamen Dialis 23 She was required to be a virgin at the time of their wedding which had to be conducted according to the ceremonies of confarreatio the traditional form of marriage for patricians This regulation also applied to the marriages of the two other flamines maiores 27 iv 104 374 10 i 112 The couple were not permitted to divorce and if the flaminica died the Dialis was obliged to resign 28 The assistance of the flaminica was essential in the performance of certain rituals On each of the nundinae she sacrificed a ram to Juno Regina in the Curia Calabra 29 i 16 30 The flaminica was assigned a special ritual attire Her hair was plaited up with a purple band in a conical form tutulus but when she went to participate in the ritual of the Argei she neither combed nor arranged her hair 29 i 16 The flaminica and the regina sacrorum were the only ones who might wear the hairdressing named in arculata clarification needed 31 27 IV 137 The flaminica wore a dyed robe venenato operitur and a small square cloth with a border rica to which was attached a slip cut from a felix arbor a tree under the protection of the heavenly gods 32 33 The rica may have been a short cloak or less likely a sort of scarf or veil thrown over the head The restrictions imposed upon the flaminica were similar to those placed on her husband 34 She was prohibited from mounting a staircase consisting of more than three steps 12 x 15 perhaps to prevent her ankles from being seen 35 Holders of the office editPublius Cornelius Sulla probably appointed flamen by the Pontifex Maximus Publius Cornelius Calussa c 279 270 BC He may have been the son of Publius Cornelius Rufinus and the first member of his family named Sulla 36 p 644 Lucius Quinctius appointed in the middle of the 3rd century BC He was probably a son of Caeso Quinctius Claudus and the ancestor of the Quinctii Flaminini 36 p 864 notes 5 amp 6 37 i Publius Cornelius Scipio grandson of Scipio Africanus became Flamen Dialis in 174 BC He died soon after between 170 and 168 BC 36 p 642 38 Lucius Cornelius Merula was likely chosen flamen at the end of the 2nd century BC 36 p 639 He is mostly known for his death in 87 BC during the civil war between the two consuls of 87 BC Octavius and Cinna Appointed suffect consul in replacement of Cinna who had been expelled by Octavius Merula resigned when Cinna returned to Rome with an army Targeted by Cinna s and Marius purge he instead committed suicide in Dec 87 in the Temple of Jupiter calling down curses on his enemies with his dying breath 39 40 Gaius Julius Caesar the future dictator was chosen at the instigation of Cinna his father in law at the end of 87 BC or before 13 January 86 BC while Marius was still alive 41 Many scholars have however debated the possibility that Caesar was never formally appointed because of his age The theory that religious technicalities interfered as if his mother Aurelia was not plebeian are false Aurelia was a patrician Caesar nonetheless lost his priesthood during the dictatorship of Sulla in about 81 but was elected a regular pontifex in the College of Pontiffs in 77 according to Vell 2 43 1 He was elected pontifex maximus in 63 BC No Flamen Dialis was appointed thereafter and the office then remained vacant for about 72 years 36 pp734 735 until 16 15 BC Dec 87 BC 72 years 16 or 15 BC per Tac Ann 3 58 4 which has wrongly been emended by some editors to 75 years 42 Due to inclusive counting it is hard to be certain if this means 71 or 72 years Servius Cornelius Lentulus Maluginensis probably a son of Gnaeus Cornelius Lentulus Augur Born c 30 BC he seems to have become flamen c 15 BC after the long hiatus that followed the removal of Caesar But since the first mention of him in office appears in Tac Ann 3 58 1 for AD 22 it is very likely he was not the first man to hold the post after the long vacancy Accordingly the exact date that Maluginensis became Flamen Dialis is uncertain Cassius Dio 54 36 1 says the post was filled about 11 BC a date unwisely accepted by many modern scholars who forget that Tacitus is more reliable and closer to the events than Dio Tacitus 7 3 58 4 clearly indicates that the date was 72 years after the suicide of Cornelius Merula in Dec 87 BC Some modern translators have preferred Dio over Tacitus including Penguin s Rex Warner 43 36 Cornelius Lentulus Maluginensis succeeded his father as flamen in AD 23 probably at a very young age 36 p 638 Terentius Gentianus is mentioned as flamen in an inscription commissioned for his sister 44 45 The last known Flamen Dialis Since he was also consul in AD 211 it seems the restrictions on holding political offices had been removed See also editDialiaFootnotes edit Munzer 37 thought that Caeso Quinctius Claudus was the brother of the Claudus who was consul 271 BC References edit Dillon Matthew Garland Lynda 28 October 2013 Ancient Rome A Sourcebook Taylor amp Francis p 127 ISBN 978 1 136 76143 0 Lewis Charlton T Short Charles 1879 Dĭalis A Latin Dictionary Oxford UK Clarendon Press Forsythe Gary 1 January 2006 A Critical History of Early Rome From Prehistory to the First Punic War University of California Press p 136 ISBN 978 0 520 24991 2 Retrieved 2 September 2016 a b c d e Livy Ab urbe condita Tatum W Jeffrey 2008 04 30 Always I Am Caesar John Wiley amp Sons p 30 ISBN 978 0 470 69588 3 Turcan Robert 2013 10 28 The Gods of Ancient Rome Religion in Everyday Life from Archaic to Imperial Times Routledge p 52 ISBN 978 1 136 05850 9 a b c d Tacitus Annales Smith C J Smith Lecturer in Department of Biochemistry C J 2006 03 09 The Roman Clan The Gens from Ancient Ideology to Modern Anthropology Cambridge University Press p 351 ISBN 978 0 521 85692 8 Dillon Matthew Garland Lynda 2013 10 28 Ancient Rome A Sourcebook Routledge p 127 ISBN 978 1 136 76136 2 a b Gaius Institutes Ulpian Frag x 5 full citation needed a b c d e Aulus Gellius Noctes Atticae Attic Nights Varro full citation needed ap clarification needed Gellius 12 x 15 Graham Emma Jayne 2020 11 09 Reassembling Religion in Roman Italy Routledge p 106 ISBN 978 1 351 98245 0 a b c Plutarch Reiske ed Aἰtiai Ῥwmaikai Roman Questions full citation needed Cohick Lynn 2009 Women in the World of the Earliest Christians Illuminating Ancient Ways of Life Baker Academic p 163 ISBN 978 0 8010 3172 4 Brons Cecilie Nosch Marie Louise 2017 07 31 Textiles and Cult in the Ancient Mediterranean Oxbow Books p 138 ISBN 978 1 78570 675 2 Shannon Henderson Kelly E 2018 12 12 Religion and Memory in Tacitus Annals Oxford University Press p 125 ISBN 978 0 19 256910 3 Feldman Louis H Cohen Shaye J D Schwartz Joshua J 2007 Studies in Josephus And the Varieties of Ancient Judaism Louis H Feldman Jubilee Volume BRILL p 61 ISBN 978 90 04 15389 9 Land Darin H 2008 07 17 The Diffusion of Ecclesiastical Authority Sociological Dimensions of Leadership in the Book of Acts Wipf and Stock Publishers p 87 ISBN 978 1 55635 575 2 Woodard Roger D 2013 01 28 Myth Ritual and the Warrior in Roman and Indo European Antiquity Cambridge University Press p 93 ISBN 978 1 107 02240 9 Kirchmann De Annulis p 14 full citation needed a b Hancock Jones Robert Menashe Dan Renshaw James 2017 07 13 OCR Classical Civilisation GCSE Route 2 Women in the Ancient World Bloomsbury Publishing p 84 ISBN 978 1 350 01505 0 Purity and the Forming of Religious Traditions in the Ancient Mediterranean World and Ancient Judaism BRILL 2012 11 01 p 297 ISBN 978 90 04 23229 7 Beard Mary North John Price S R F 28 June 1998 Religions of Rome Vol 2 a sourcebook Cambridge University Press p 196 ISBN 978 0 521 45646 3 via Google Books a b Dumezil G 1977 It tr Milan pp 146 148 and 31 32 full citation needed a b Maurus Servius Honoratus Ad Aeneidem On the Aeneid Sebesta Judith Lynn Bonfante Larissa 2001 The World of Roman Costume Univ of Wisconsin Press p 56 ISBN 978 0 299 13854 7 via Google Books a b Macrobius Ambrosius Theodosius Saturnalia Henderson 2011 Saturnalia Volume I 19 ISBN 978 0 674 99649 6 Paulus p 237 L 2nd full citation needed Varro De lingua latina vii 44 Sextus Pompeius Festus s v tutulum and rica full citation needed James Sharon L Dillon Sheila 15 June 2015 A Companion to Women in the Ancient World John Wiley amp Sons p 207 ISBN 978 1 119 02554 2 via Google Books Holstein Justus Frederick 1916 Rites and Ritual Acts as Prescribed by the Roman Religion According to the Commentary of Servius on Vergil s Aeneid New York University p 25 via Google Books a b c d e f g Rupke Jorg Glock Anne 2008 Fasti Sacerdotum A prosopography of pagan Jewish and Christian religious officials in the City of Rome 300 BC to AD 499 Translated by Richardson David Oxford UK Oxford University Press a b Munzer F 1999 1920 Roman Aristocratic Parties and Families Translated by Ridley Therese Baltimore MD Johns Hopkins University Press pp 110 117 Etcheto Henri 2012 Les Scipions Famille et pouvoir a Rome a l epoque republicaine The Scipios Family and power in Rome during the republican era in French Bordeaux FR Ausonius Editions pp 181 182 via archives ouvertes fr Valerius Maximus Facta et dicta memorabilia ix 12 5 Velleius Paterculus ii 20 ii 22 Broughton vol II p 52 full citation needed Gaius Stern M Aemilius Lepidus and the Four Flamines on the Ara Pacis Augustae in eds Donohue Mattusch Brauer Common Ground Archaeology Art Science and the Humanities Acta of the XVI International Congress of Classical Archaeology 2003 Oxbow Monograph 293 97 Anthony Woodman wisely kept Tacitus s testimony of 72 years Gaius Stern M Aemilius Lepidus and the Four Flamines on the Ara Pacis Augustae in eds Donohue Mattusch Brauer Common Ground Archaeology Art Science and the Humanities Acta of the XVI International Congress of Classical Archaeology 2003 Oxbow Monograph 293 97 asserts that Tacitus is probably correct meaning that Maluginensis or his predecessor became Flamen Dialis while Lepidus the triumvir cos 46 42 was Pontifex Maximus 16 15 BC so that Lepidus had to supervise his inauguration at Augustus direction possibly unwillingly Craven Maxwell 2019 12 08 The Imperial Families of Ancient Rome Fonthill Media Segni Leah Di Arubas Benjamin 2018 A Flamen Dialis Recorded on a Decorated Marble Slab from Ptolemais Acco Jerusalem and Eretz Israel Bibliography editHenri Etcheto Les Scipions Famille et pouvoir a Rome a l epoque republicaine Bordeaux Ausonius Editions 2012 Friedrich Munzer Roman Aristocratic Parties and Families translated by Therese Ridley Johns Hopkins University Press 1999 originally published in 1920 Jorg Rupke Anne Glock David Richardson translator Fasti Sacerdotum A Prosopography of Pagan Jewish and Christian Religious Officials in the City of Rome 300 BC to AD 499 Oxford University Press 2008 This article is based on a portion of the article Flamen from Smith s Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities in the public domain Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Flamen Dialis amp oldid 1213233013, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

article

, read, download, free, free download, mp3, video, mp4, 3gp, jpg, jpeg, gif, png, picture, music, song, movie, book, game, games.