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Secular Games

The Secular or Saecular Games[1] (Ludi Saeculares) was an ancient Roman religious celebration involving sacrifices, theatrical performances, and public games (ludi). It was held irregularly in Rome for three days and nights to mark the ends of various eras (saecula) and to celebrate the beginning of the next.[2] In particular, the Romans reckoned a saeculum as the longest possible length of human life, either 100 or 110 years in length;[3][4] as such, it was used to mark various centennials, particularly anniversaries from the computed founding of Rome.

According to Roman mythology, the Secular Games began as the Tarentine Games (Ludi Tarentini) when a Sabine man called Valesius prayed for a cure for his children's illness and was supernaturally instructed to sacrifice on the Campus Martius to Dis Pater and Proserpina, deities of the underworld. Some ancient authors traced official celebrations of the Games as far back as 509 BC, but the only clearly attested celebrations under the Roman Republic took place in 249 and in the 140s BC. They involved sacrifices to the underworld gods over three consecutive nights. The Games were revived in 17 BC by Rome's first emperor Augustus, with the nocturnal sacrifices on the Campus Martius now transferred to the Moerae (fates), the Ilythiae (goddesses of childbirth), and Terra Mater ("Mother Earth"). The Games of 17 BC also introduced day-time sacrifices to Roman deities on the Capitoline and Palatine hills. Certain sacrifices were unusually specified to be performed by married women.[5] Each sacrifice was followed by theatrical performances.[6] Later emperors held celebrations in AD 88 and 204, after intervals of roughly 110 years. However, they were also held by Claudius in AD 47 to celebrate the 800th anniversary of Rome's foundation,[7] which led to a second cycle of Games in 148 and 248. The Games were abandoned under later Christian emperors.

Republic edit

According to Roman mythology told by Zosimus, the Secular Games originated with a Sabine man called Valesius, ancestor of the Valerii.[8][9] When his children became seriously ill, he prayed to his household gods for their cure, offering to give up his own life in exchange. A voice told him to take them to Tarentum and to give them water from the Tiber to drink, heated on an altar of Dis Pater and Proserpina.[10] Assuming that he had to travel to the Greek colony of Tarentum in southern Italy, he set out with his children on the journey. Sailing along the Tiber, he was instructed by the voice to stop on the Campus Martius, at a place which happened also to be called Tarentum. When he warmed water from the river and gave it to the children, they were miraculously cured and fell asleep. When they woke up, they informed Valesius that a figure had appeared to them in a dream and told the family to sacrifice to Dis Pater and Proserpina. Upon digging, Valesius found that an altar to those deities was buried on the site, and performed the ritual as instructed.[11][12]

Celebrations of the Games under the Roman Republic are poorly documented. Although some Roman antiquarians traced them as far back as 509 BC,[13] some modern scholars consider that the first celebration well attested as having taken place was that of 249 BC, during the First Punic War.[14][15] According to Varro, an antiquarian of the 1st century BC, the Games were introduced after a series of portents led to a consultation of the Sibylline Books by the quindecimviri.[16] In accordance with the instructions contained in these books, sacrifices were offered at the Tarentum on the Campus Martius over three nights, to the underworld deities of Dis Pater and Proserpina. Varro also states that a vow was made that the Games would be repeated every hundred years, and another celebration did indeed take place in either 149 or 146 BC, at the time of the Third Punic War.[15][17] However, Beard, North and Price suggest that the Games of 249 and the 140s BC were both held because of the immediate pressures of war, and that it was only with the revival in the 140s that they came to be considered as a regular centennial celebration.[18] This sequence would have led to a celebration in 49 BC, but the civil wars apparently prevented this.

Augustus edit

The Games were revived in 17 BC by Rome's first emperor Augustus. The date was justified by a Sibylline oracle that called for the Games to be celebrated every 110 years, and a new reconstruction of the Games' Republican history which placed a first celebration in 456 BC.[19]

Before the Games themselves, heralds went around the city and invited the people to "a spectacle, such as they had never witnessed and never would again".[12] The quindecimviri sat on the Capitol and in the temple of Apollo on the Palatine, and handed out to the free citizens torches, sulphur and asphalt, to be burnt as a means of purification. (This may have been modelled on the purificatory rituals of the Parilia, the anniversary of Rome's foundation.)[20] Offerings of wheat, barley, and beans were also made.[12]

The Senate decreed that an inscribed record of the Games should be set up in the Tarentum, a site in the Campus Martius.[21] This inscription has partially survived,[22] and offers information about the ceremonies.[23] The night-time sacrifices were made not to the underworld deities Dis Pater and Proserpina, but to the Moerae (fates), the Ilythiae (goddesses of childbirth), and Terra Mater (the "Earth mother"). These were "more beneficent honorands, who nonetheless shared with Dis Pater and Proserpina the twin characteristics of being Greek in nomenclature and without cult in the Roman state".[24] The nocturnal sacrifices to Greek deities on the Campus Martius alternated with day-time sacrifices to Roman deities on the Capitoline and Palatine hills.

Date Time Location Deities Sacrifices
May 31 Night Campus Martius Moerae 9 female lambs, 9 she-goats
June 1 Day Capitoline Hill Jupiter Optimus Maximus 2 bulls
June 1 Night Campus Martius Ilythiae (Εἰλείθυια) 27 sacrificial cakes (9 of each of three types)
June 2 Day Capitoline Hill Juno Regina 2 cows
June 2 Night Campus Martius Terra Mater Pregnant sow
June 3 Day Palatine Hill Apollo and Diana 27 sacrificial cakes (9 of each of three types)

The key roles were played by Augustus and his son-in-law Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa, in their capacity as members of the quindecimviri; Augustus participated alone in the night-time sacrifices but was joined by Agrippa for those during the day. After the sacrifices of June 3, choirs of boys and girls sang the Carmen Saeculare, composed for the occasion by the poet Horace.[25] This hymn was sung both on the Palatine and then on the Capitoline, but its words focus on the Palatine deities Apollo and Diana, which were more closely associated with Augustus. The hymn adds a further level of complexity to the alternation of sacrifices between Greek and Roman deities by addressing the Greek deities under Latin names.[24]

Each sacrifice was followed by theatrical performances. Once the major sacrifices were over, the days between June 5 and June 11 were devoted to Greek and Latin plays, and June 12 saw chariot racing and displays of hunting.[23]

Later games edit

The Games continued to be celebrated under later emperors, but two different systems of calculation were used to determine their dates. Claudius held them in AD 47 to celebrate the 800th year from the foundation of Rome.[17][26] According to Suetonius, a herald's proclamation of a spectacle "which no one had ever seen or would ever see again" amused his listeners, some of whom had attended the Games under Augustus.[27]

Under subsequent emperors, Games were celebrated on both the Augustan and the Claudian systems. Domitian held his in AD 88,[17][28] possibly 110 years from a planned Augustan celebration in 22 BC,[29] and he was followed by Septimius Severus in AD 204, 220 years from the actual Augustan celebration.[12][17] On both occasions, the procedure used in 17 BC was followed closely.[30] Antoninus Pius on 21 August 148[31] and Philip I in 248 followed Claudius in celebrating the 900- and 1000-year anniversaries of Rome's foundation, respectively. These involved rituals at the Temple of Venus and Roma instead of the Tarentum, and the date was probably changed to the Parilia on April 21.[30] In the case of Antoninus Pius, the games aligned with his decennalia, the celebration of the first ten years of his own rule.[31]

By 314, 110 years from the Games of Septimius Severus, the Christian Constantine I was emperor, and no Secular Games were held. The pagan historian Zosimus (fl. c. 498–518), who wrote the most detailed extant account of the Games, blamed this neglect of the traditional ritual for the decline of the Roman Empire.[12]

References edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Rüpke, Jörg (2018). Pantheon: A new history of Roman religion. Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press. pp. 193–203. ISBN 978-1-4008-8885-6.
  2. ^ Dunning, Susan Bilynskyj (2022-06-06). "The transformation of the saeculum and its rhetoric in the construction and rejection of Roman imperial power". In Faure, Richard; Valli, Simon-Pierre; Zucker, Arnaud (eds.). Conceptions of time in Greek and Roman antiquity. Berlin: De Gruyter. doi:10.1515/9783110736076-008. ISBN 978-3-11-073607-6.
  3. ^ Haase, Mareile; Rüpke, Jörg (2002). "Saeculum". In Hubert Cancik; Helmuth Schneider; Christine F. Salazar; David E. Orton (eds.). Brill's New Pauly: Encyclopaedia of the ancient world. Leiden: Brill. doi:10.1163/1574-9347_bnp_e1027080. ISBN 978-90-04-12259-8.
  4. ^ Bilynskyj Dunning, Susan (November 2017). "Saeculum". Oxford Classical Dictionary. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.8233. ISBN 978-0-19-938113-5.
  5. ^ Darja, Šterbenc Erker (2018-05-02). "Augustus' "New" Festival: The Centrality of Married Women's Rituals at the Ludi Saeculares of 17 BCE". Numen. 65 (4): 377–404. doi:10.1163/15685276-12341504. ISSN 1568-5276.
  6. ^ Boyce, Aline Abaecherli (1941). "Processions in the Acta Ludorum Saecularium". Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association. 72: 36–48. doi:10.2307/283039. JSTOR 283039.
  7. ^ Tacitus, Cornelius. Furneaux, Henry (ed.). Annals XI (in Latin) (1907 ed.). Oxford: Clarendon Press. p. 17. ludi saeculares octingentesimo post Romam conditam
  8. ^ Bilynskyj Dunning, Susan (2020). "The Republican Ludi Saeculares as a cult of the Valerian gens". Historia. 69 (2): 208. doi:10.25162/historia-2020-0010. ISSN 0018-2311. S2CID 216460005.
  9. ^ Bilynskyj Dunning, Susan (March 2016). "Secular Games". Oxford Classical Dictionary. doi:10.1093/acrefore/9780199381135.013.5781. ISBN 978-0-19-938113-5.
  10. ^ Watkins, Calvert (1991). "Latin tarentum Accas, the ludi Saeculares, and Indo-European Eschatology". In Winfred P. Lehmann; Helen-Jo Jakusz Hewitt (eds.). Language typology 1988: Typological models in reconstruction. Amsterdam studies in the theory and history of linguistic science. Vol. 81. Amsterdam: Benjamins. p. 135. doi:10.1075/cilt.81.10wat. ISBN 978-90-272-3578-7.
  11. ^ Valerius Maximus 2.4.5.
  12. ^ a b c d e Zosimus 2.
  13. ^ Censorinus 17.10.
  14. ^ Beard et al., vol. 1, pp. 71–72.
  15. ^ a b Livy, Periochae 49.6 2018-12-04 at the Wayback Machine.
  16. ^ Varro in Censorinus 17.8.
  17. ^ a b c d Censorinus 17.11.
  18. ^ Beard et al., vol. 1, pp. 71–72, 111.
  19. ^ Beard et al., vol. 1, p. 205. The oracle is preserved in Zosimus 2, and is also translated by Braund, no. 770. This cycle would logically have led to Games in 16 rather than 17 BC; the reason for the discrepancy is unclear (Beard et al., vol. 1, p. 205 and n. 126).
  20. ^ Beard et al., vol. 1, p. 203.
  21. ^ Braund, no. 768.
  22. ^ Inscription CIL VI, 32323 = AE 2002, 192, with English translation.
  23. ^ a b Beard et al., vol. 2, no. 5.7b = Braund, no. 769.
  24. ^ a b Feeney, Dennis (2003). "The Ludi Saeculares and the Carmen Saeculare". In Ando, Clifford (ed.). Roman religion. Edinburgh readings on the ancient world. Edinburgh: Edinburgh University Press. pp. 106–116. doi:10.3366/edinburgh/9780748615650.003.0027. ISBN 978-0-7486-1565-0. JSTOR 10.3366/j.ctt1r2b8s.15.
  25. ^ Bollók, János (2001). "A Carmen saeculare és a Ludi Saeculares" (PDF). Antik Tanulmányok. 45 (1): 63–73. doi:10.1556/AntTan.45.2001.1-2.7. ISSN 0003-567X.
  26. ^ Tacitus, Annals 11.11.
  27. ^ Suetonius, Claudius 21.2.
  28. ^ Sobocinski, Melanie Grunow (2006). "Visualizing Ceremony: The Design and Audience of the Ludi Saeculares Coinage of Domitian". American Journal of Archaeology. 110 (4): 581–602. doi:10.3764/aja.110.4.581. JSTOR 40025059. S2CID 192958570.
  29. ^ Suetonius, Domitian 4.3, with Jones and Milns, p. 130.
  30. ^ a b Beard et al., vol. 1, p. 206.
  31. ^ a b Rachet, Marguerite (1980), "Decennalia et Vincennalia sous la Dynastie des Antonins" [Decennalia and Vicennalia under the Antonine Dynasty], Revue des Études Anciennes [Review of Ancient Studies] (in French), vol. 82, Bordeaux: University Press of Bordeaux, pp. 200–242.

Bibliography edit

  • Beard, Mary; North, John A.; Price, Simon (1998). Religions of Rome. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-30401-6. (vol. 1). (vol. 2).
  • Braund, David C. (1985). Augustus to Nero: A Sourcebook on Roman History 31 BC–AD 68. Totowa: Barnes and Noble. ISBN 978-0-389-20536-4.
  • Jones, Brian; Robert Milns (2002). Suetonius: The Flavian Emperors: A Historical Commentary. London: Bristol Classical Press. ISBN 978-1-85399-613-9.
  • Pighi, Giovanni Battista (1965). De ludis saecularibus populi Romani Quiritium (2nd ed.). Amsterdam: Schippers.
  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Secular Games". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 24 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 573.

External links edit

  • Coins commemorating secular celebrations and games under Antoninus Pius, Septimius Severus and Philip I

secular, games, secular, saecular, games, ludi, saeculares, ancient, roman, religious, celebration, involving, sacrifices, theatrical, performances, public, games, ludi, held, irregularly, rome, three, days, nights, mark, ends, various, eras, saecula, celebrat. The Secular or Saecular Games 1 Ludi Saeculares was an ancient Roman religious celebration involving sacrifices theatrical performances and public games ludi It was held irregularly in Rome for three days and nights to mark the ends of various eras saecula and to celebrate the beginning of the next 2 In particular the Romans reckoned a saeculum as the longest possible length of human life either 100 or 110 years in length 3 4 as such it was used to mark various centennials particularly anniversaries from the computed founding of Rome According to Roman mythology the Secular Games began as the Tarentine Games Ludi Tarentini when a Sabine man called Valesius prayed for a cure for his children s illness and was supernaturally instructed to sacrifice on the Campus Martius to Dis Pater and Proserpina deities of the underworld Some ancient authors traced official celebrations of the Games as far back as 509 BC but the only clearly attested celebrations under the Roman Republic took place in 249 and in the 140s BC They involved sacrifices to the underworld gods over three consecutive nights The Games were revived in 17 BC by Rome s first emperor Augustus with the nocturnal sacrifices on the Campus Martius now transferred to the Moerae fates the Ilythiae goddesses of childbirth and Terra Mater Mother Earth The Games of 17 BC also introduced day time sacrifices to Roman deities on the Capitoline and Palatine hills Certain sacrifices were unusually specified to be performed by married women 5 Each sacrifice was followed by theatrical performances 6 Later emperors held celebrations in AD 88 and 204 after intervals of roughly 110 years However they were also held by Claudius in AD 47 to celebrate the 800th anniversary of Rome s foundation 7 which led to a second cycle of Games in 148 and 248 The Games were abandoned under later Christian emperors Contents 1 Republic 2 Augustus 3 Later games 4 References 4 1 Citations 4 2 Bibliography 5 External linksRepublic editAccording to Roman mythology told by Zosimus the Secular Games originated with a Sabine man called Valesius ancestor of the Valerii 8 9 When his children became seriously ill he prayed to his household gods for their cure offering to give up his own life in exchange A voice told him to take them to Tarentum and to give them water from the Tiber to drink heated on an altar of Dis Pater and Proserpina 10 Assuming that he had to travel to the Greek colony of Tarentum in southern Italy he set out with his children on the journey Sailing along the Tiber he was instructed by the voice to stop on the Campus Martius at a place which happened also to be called Tarentum When he warmed water from the river and gave it to the children they were miraculously cured and fell asleep When they woke up they informed Valesius that a figure had appeared to them in a dream and told the family to sacrifice to Dis Pater and Proserpina Upon digging Valesius found that an altar to those deities was buried on the site and performed the ritual as instructed 11 12 Celebrations of the Games under the Roman Republic are poorly documented Although some Roman antiquarians traced them as far back as 509 BC 13 some modern scholars consider that the first celebration well attested as having taken place was that of 249 BC during the First Punic War 14 15 According to Varro an antiquarian of the 1st century BC the Games were introduced after a series of portents led to a consultation of the Sibylline Books by the quindecimviri 16 In accordance with the instructions contained in these books sacrifices were offered at the Tarentum on the Campus Martius over three nights to the underworld deities of Dis Pater and Proserpina Varro also states that a vow was made that the Games would be repeated every hundred years and another celebration did indeed take place in either 149 or 146 BC at the time of the Third Punic War 15 17 However Beard North and Price suggest that the Games of 249 and the 140s BC were both held because of the immediate pressures of war and that it was only with the revival in the 140s that they came to be considered as a regular centennial celebration 18 This sequence would have led to a celebration in 49 BC but the civil wars apparently prevented this Augustus editThe Games were revived in 17 BC by Rome s first emperor Augustus The date was justified by a Sibylline oracle that called for the Games to be celebrated every 110 years and a new reconstruction of the Games Republican history which placed a first celebration in 456 BC 19 Before the Games themselves heralds went around the city and invited the people to a spectacle such as they had never witnessed and never would again 12 The quindecimviri sat on the Capitol and in the temple of Apollo on the Palatine and handed out to the free citizens torches sulphur and asphalt to be burnt as a means of purification This may have been modelled on the purificatory rituals of the Parilia the anniversary of Rome s foundation 20 Offerings of wheat barley and beans were also made 12 The Senate decreed that an inscribed record of the Games should be set up in the Tarentum a site in the Campus Martius 21 This inscription has partially survived 22 and offers information about the ceremonies 23 The night time sacrifices were made not to the underworld deities Dis Pater and Proserpina but to the Moerae fates the Ilythiae goddesses of childbirth and Terra Mater the Earth mother These were more beneficent honorands who nonetheless shared with Dis Pater and Proserpina the twin characteristics of being Greek in nomenclature and without cult in the Roman state 24 The nocturnal sacrifices to Greek deities on the Campus Martius alternated with day time sacrifices to Roman deities on the Capitoline and Palatine hills Date Time Location Deities Sacrifices May 31 Night Campus Martius Moerae 9 female lambs 9 she goats June 1 Day Capitoline Hill Jupiter Optimus Maximus 2 bulls June 1 Night Campus Martius Ilythiae Eἰlei8yia 27 sacrificial cakes 9 of each of three types June 2 Day Capitoline Hill Juno Regina 2 cows June 2 Night Campus Martius Terra Mater Pregnant sow June 3 Day Palatine Hill Apollo and Diana 27 sacrificial cakes 9 of each of three types The key roles were played by Augustus and his son in law Marcus Vipsanius Agrippa in their capacity as members of the quindecimviri Augustus participated alone in the night time sacrifices but was joined by Agrippa for those during the day After the sacrifices of June 3 choirs of boys and girls sang the Carmen Saeculare composed for the occasion by the poet Horace 25 This hymn was sung both on the Palatine and then on the Capitoline but its words focus on the Palatine deities Apollo and Diana which were more closely associated with Augustus The hymn adds a further level of complexity to the alternation of sacrifices between Greek and Roman deities by addressing the Greek deities under Latin names 24 Each sacrifice was followed by theatrical performances Once the major sacrifices were over the days between June 5 and June 11 were devoted to Greek and Latin plays and June 12 saw chariot racing and displays of hunting 23 Later games editThe Games continued to be celebrated under later emperors but two different systems of calculation were used to determine their dates Claudius held them in AD 47 to celebrate the 800th year from the foundation of Rome 17 26 According to Suetonius a herald s proclamation of a spectacle which no one had ever seen or would ever see again amused his listeners some of whom had attended the Games under Augustus 27 Under subsequent emperors Games were celebrated on both the Augustan and the Claudian systems Domitian held his in AD 88 17 28 possibly 110 years from a planned Augustan celebration in 22 BC 29 and he was followed by Septimius Severus in AD 204 220 years from the actual Augustan celebration 12 17 On both occasions the procedure used in 17 BC was followed closely 30 Antoninus Pius on 21 August 148 31 and Philip I in 248 followed Claudius in celebrating the 900 and 1000 year anniversaries of Rome s foundation respectively These involved rituals at the Temple of Venus and Roma instead of the Tarentum and the date was probably changed to the Parilia on April 21 30 In the case of Antoninus Pius the games aligned with his decennalia the celebration of the first ten years of his own rule 31 By 314 110 years from the Games of Septimius Severus the Christian Constantine I was emperor and no Secular Games were held The pagan historian Zosimus fl c 498 518 who wrote the most detailed extant account of the Games blamed this neglect of the traditional ritual for the decline of the Roman Empire 12 References editCitations edit Rupke Jorg 2018 Pantheon A new history of Roman religion Princeton NJ Princeton University Press pp 193 203 ISBN 978 1 4008 8885 6 Dunning Susan Bilynskyj 2022 06 06 The transformation of the saeculum and its rhetoric in the construction and rejection of Roman imperial power In Faure Richard Valli Simon Pierre Zucker Arnaud eds Conceptions of time in Greek and Roman antiquity Berlin De Gruyter doi 10 1515 9783110736076 008 ISBN 978 3 11 073607 6 Haase Mareile Rupke Jorg 2002 Saeculum In Hubert Cancik Helmuth Schneider Christine F Salazar David E Orton eds Brill s New Pauly Encyclopaedia of the ancient world Leiden Brill doi 10 1163 1574 9347 bnp e1027080 ISBN 978 90 04 12259 8 Bilynskyj Dunning Susan November 2017 Saeculum Oxford Classical Dictionary doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199381135 013 8233 ISBN 978 0 19 938113 5 Darja Sterbenc Erker 2018 05 02 Augustus New Festival The Centrality of Married Women s Rituals at the Ludi Saeculares of 17 BCE Numen 65 4 377 404 doi 10 1163 15685276 12341504 ISSN 1568 5276 Boyce Aline Abaecherli 1941 Processions in the Acta Ludorum Saecularium Transactions and Proceedings of the American Philological Association 72 36 48 doi 10 2307 283039 JSTOR 283039 Tacitus Cornelius Furneaux Henry ed Annals XI in Latin 1907 ed Oxford Clarendon Press p 17 ludi saeculares octingentesimo post Romam conditam Bilynskyj Dunning Susan 2020 The Republican Ludi Saeculares as a cult of the Valerian gens Historia 69 2 208 doi 10 25162 historia 2020 0010 ISSN 0018 2311 S2CID 216460005 Bilynskyj Dunning Susan March 2016 Secular Games Oxford Classical Dictionary doi 10 1093 acrefore 9780199381135 013 5781 ISBN 978 0 19 938113 5 Watkins Calvert 1991 Latin tarentum Accas the ludi Saeculares and Indo European Eschatology In Winfred P Lehmann Helen Jo Jakusz Hewitt eds Language typology 1988 Typological models in reconstruction Amsterdam studies in the theory and history of linguistic science Vol 81 Amsterdam Benjamins p 135 doi 10 1075 cilt 81 10wat ISBN 978 90 272 3578 7 Valerius Maximus 2 4 5 a b c d e Zosimus 2 Censorinus 17 10 Beard et al vol 1 pp 71 72 a b Livy Periochae 49 6 Archived 2018 12 04 at the Wayback Machine Varro in Censorinus 17 8 a b c d Censorinus 17 11 Beard et al vol 1 pp 71 72 111 Beard et al vol 1 p 205 The oracle is preserved in Zosimus 2 and is also translated by Braund no 770 This cycle would logically have led to Games in 16 rather than 17 BC the reason for the discrepancy is unclear Beard et al vol 1 p 205 and n 126 Beard et al vol 1 p 203 Braund no 768 Inscription CIL VI 32323 AE 2002 192 with English translation a b Beard et al vol 2 no 5 7b Braund no 769 a b Feeney Dennis 2003 The Ludi Saeculares and the Carmen Saeculare In Ando Clifford ed Roman religion Edinburgh readings on the ancient world Edinburgh Edinburgh University Press pp 106 116 doi 10 3366 edinburgh 9780748615650 003 0027 ISBN 978 0 7486 1565 0 JSTOR 10 3366 j ctt1r2b8s 15 Bollok Janos 2001 A Carmen saeculare es a Ludi Saeculares PDF Antik Tanulmanyok 45 1 63 73 doi 10 1556 AntTan 45 2001 1 2 7 ISSN 0003 567X Tacitus Annals 11 11 Suetonius Claudius 21 2 Sobocinski Melanie Grunow 2006 Visualizing Ceremony The Design and Audience of the Ludi Saeculares Coinage of Domitian American Journal of Archaeology 110 4 581 602 doi 10 3764 aja 110 4 581 JSTOR 40025059 S2CID 192958570 Suetonius Domitian 4 3 with Jones and Milns p 130 a b Beard et al vol 1 p 206 a b Rachet Marguerite 1980 Decennalia et Vincennalia sous la Dynastie des Antonins Decennalia and Vicennalia under the Antonine Dynasty Revue des Etudes Anciennes Review of Ancient Studies in French vol 82 Bordeaux University Press of Bordeaux pp 200 242 Bibliography edit Beard Mary North John A Price Simon 1998 Religions of Rome Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 30401 6 vol 1 vol 2 Braund David C 1985 Augustus to Nero A Sourcebook on Roman History 31 BC AD 68 Totowa Barnes and Noble ISBN 978 0 389 20536 4 Jones Brian Robert Milns 2002 Suetonius The Flavian Emperors A Historical Commentary London Bristol Classical Press ISBN 978 1 85399 613 9 Pighi Giovanni Battista 1965 De ludis saecularibus populi Romani Quiritium 2nd ed Amsterdam Schippers nbsp This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Secular Games Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 24 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 573 External links editCoins commemorating secular celebrations and games under Antoninus Pius Septimius Severus and Philip I Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Secular Games amp oldid 1211856286, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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