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Lupercalia

Lupercalia was a pastoral festival of Ancient Rome observed annually on February 15 to purify the city, promoting health and fertility.[2] Lupercalia was also known as dies Februatus, after the purification instruments called februa, the basis for the month named Februarius.

Lupercalia
Lupercalia most likely derives from lupus, "wolf", though both the etymology and its significance are obscure[1] (bronze wolf's head, 1st century AD)
Observed byRoman Kingdom,
Roman Republic,
Roman Empire
TypeClassical Roman religion
Celebrationsfeasting
Observancessacrifices of goats and a dog by the Luperci; offering of cakes by the Vestals; fertility rite in which the goatskin-clad Luperci strike women who wish to conceive
DateFebruary 15

Name

The festival was originally known as Februa ("Purifications" or "Purgings") after the februum which was used on the day.[3] It was also known as Februatus and gave its name variously, as epithet to Juno Februalis, Februlis, or Februata in her role as patron deity of that month; to a supposed purification deity called Februus;[4] and to February (mensis Februarius), the month during which the festival occurred.[3] Ovid connects februare to an Etruscan word for "purging".[5]

The name Lupercalia was believed in antiquity to evince some connection with the Ancient Greek festival of the Arcadian Lykaia, a wolf festival (Greek: λύκος, lýkos; Latin: lupus), and the worship of Lycaean Pan, assumed to be a Greek equivalent to Faunus, as instituted by Evander.[6] Justin describes a cult image of "the Lycaean god, whom the Greeks call Pan and the Romans Lupercus", as nude, save for a goatskin girdle.[7]

The statue stood in the Lupercal, the cave where tradition held that Romulus and Remus were suckled by the she-wolf (Lupa). The cave lay at the foot of the Palatine Hill, on which Romulus was thought to have founded Rome.[8] The name of the festival most likely derives from lupus, "wolf", though both the etymology and its significance are obscure. Despite Justin's assertion, no deity named "Lupercus" has been identified.[1]

Rites

Locations

The rites were confined to the Lupercal cave, the Palatine Hill, and the Forum, all of which were central locations in Rome's foundation myth.[9] Near the cave stood a sanctuary of Rumina, goddess of breastfeeding; and the wild fig-tree (Ficus Ruminalis) to which Romulus and Remus were brought by the divine intervention of the river-god Tiberinus; some Roman sources name the wild fig tree caprificus, literally "goat fig". Like the cultivated fig, its fruit is pendulous, and the tree exudes a milky sap if cut, which makes it a good candidate for a cult of breastfeeding.[10]

Priesthoods

The Lupercalia had its own priesthood, the Luperci ("brothers of the wolf"), whose institution and rites were attributed either to the Arcadian culture-hero Evander, or to Romulus and Remus, erstwhile shepherds who had each established a group of followers. The Luperci were young men (iuvenes), usually between the ages of 20 and 40. They formed two religious collegia (associations) based on ancestry; the Quinctiliani (named after the gens Quinctia) and the Fabiani (named after the gens Fabia). Each college was headed by a magister.[11]

In 44 BC, a third college, the Juliani, was instituted in honor of Julius Caesar; its first magister was Mark Antony.[12] The college of Juliani disbanded or lapsed following the Assassination of Julius Caesar, and was not re-established in the reforms of his successor, Augustus. In the Imperial era, membership of the two traditional collegia was opened to iuvenes of equestrian status.

Sacrifice

At the Lupercal altar, a male goat (or goats) and a dog were sacrificed by one or another of the Luperci, under the supervision of the Flamen dialis, Jupiter's chief priest.[13] An offering was also made of salted mealcakes, prepared by the Vestal Virgins.[14] After the blood sacrifice, two Luperci approached the altar. Their foreheads were anointed with blood from the sacrificial knife, then wiped clean with wool soaked in milk, after which they were expected to laugh.

The sacrificial feast followed, after which the Luperci cut thongs (known as februa) from the flayed skin of the animal,[2] and ran with these, naked or near-naked, along the old Palatine boundary, in an anticlockwise direction around the hill.[10] In Plutarch's description of the Lupercalia, written during the early Empire,

...many of the noble youths and of the magistrates run up and down through the city naked, for sport and laughter striking those they meet with shaggy thongs. And many women of rank also purposely get in their way, and like children at school present their hands to be struck, believing that the pregnant will thus be helped in delivery, and the barren to pregnancy.[15]

The Luperci completed their circuit of the Palatine, then returned to the Lupercal cave.

 
The Lupercalian Festival in Rome (ca. 1578–1610), drawing by the circle of Adam Elsheimer, showing the Luperci dressed as dogs and goats, with Cupid and personifications of fertility

History

The Februa was of ancient and possibly Sabine origin. After February was added to the Roman calendar, Februa occurred on its fifteenth day (a.d. XV Kal. Mart.). Of its various rituals, the most important came to be those of the Lupercalia.[16] The Romans themselves attributed the instigation of the Lupercalia to Evander, a culture hero from Arcadia who was credited with bringing the Olympic pantheon, Greek laws and alphabet to Italy, where he founded the city of Pallantium on the future site of Rome, 60 years before the Trojan War.

Lupercalia was celebrated in parts of Italy and Gaul; Luperci are attested by inscriptions at Velitrae, Praeneste, Nemausus (modern Nîmes) and elsewhere. The ancient cult of the Hirpi Sorani ("wolves of Soranus", from Sabine hirpus "wolf"), who practiced at Mt. Soracte, 45 km (28 mi) north of Rome, had elements in common with the Roman Lupercalia.[17]

Descriptions of the Lupercalia festival of 44 BC attest to its continuity; Julius Caesar used it as the backdrop for his public refusal of a golden crown offered to him by Mark Antony.[18][19] The Lupercal cave was restored or rebuilt by Augustus, and has been speculated to be identical with a grotto discovered in 2007, 50 feet (15 m) below the remains of Augustus' residence; according to scholarly consensus, the grotto is a nymphaeum, not the Lupercal.[10] The Lupercalia festival is marked on a calendar of 354 alongside traditional and Christian festivals.[20]

Despite the banning in 391 of all non-Christian cults and festivals, the Lupercalia was celebrated by the nominally Christian populace on a regular basis into the reign of the emperor Anastasius. Pope Gelasius I (494–96) claimed that only the "vile rabble" were involved in the festival[21] and sought its forceful abolition; the Roman Senate protested that the Lupercalia was essential to Rome's safety and well-being. This prompted Gelasius' scornful suggestion that "If you assert that this rite has salutary force, celebrate it yourselves in the ancestral fashion; run nude yourselves that you may properly carry out the mockery".[22]

There is no contemporary evidence to support the popular notions that Gelasius abolished the Lupercalia, or that he, or any other prelate, replaced it with the Feast of the Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary.[23] A literary association between the Lupercalia and the romantic elements of Saint Valentine's Day dates back to Chaucer and poetic traditions of courtly love.[24][25][26]

Legacy

 
Caesar Refuses the Diadem (1894), when it was offered by Mark Antony during the Lupercalia

Horace's Ode III, 18 alludes to the Lupercalia. The festival or its associated rituals gave its name to the Roman month of February (mensis Februarius) and thence to the modern month. The Roman god Februus personified both the month and purification, but seems to postdate both.

William Shakespeare's play Julius Caesar begins during the Lupercalia. Mark Antony is instructed by Caesar to strike his wife Calpurnia, in the hope that she will be able to conceive.

Research published in 2019 suggests that the word Leprechaun derives from Lupercus.[27][28][29]

Today, the Satanic Temple celebrates Lupercalia among its official holidays.

References

Citations

  1. ^ a b H.H. Scullard, Festivals and Ceremonies of the Roman Republic (Cornell University Press, 1981), p. 77–78.
  2. ^ a b   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Lupercalia". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 17 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 126.
  3. ^ a b Lewis, Charlton T.; et al. (1879), "februum", A Latin Dictionary Founded on Andrews' edition of Freund's Latin Dictionary, Oxford: Clarendon Press.
  4. ^ The deity "Februus" is almost certainly a later invention; see Macrobius, Saturnalia, 1, 13, 3.
  5. ^ Richard Jackson King (2006). Desiring Rome: Male Subjectivity and Reading Ovid's Fasti. Ohio State University Press. pp. 195 ff. ISBN 978-0-8142-1020-8.
  6. ^ Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Roman Antiquities 1.32.3–5, 1.80; Justin, Epitome of the Philippic History of Pompeius Trogus 43.6ff; Livy, Ab urbe condita 1.5; Ovid, Fasti 2.423–42; Plutarch, Life of Romulus 21.3, Life of Julius Caesar, Roman Questions 68; Virgil, Aeneid 8.342–344; Lydus, De mensibus 4.25. See Smith, Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, s.v. "Lupercus"
  7. ^ Justin, Epitome of the Philippic History of Pompeius Trogus 43.1.7.
  8. ^ Ovid, Fasti: Lupercalia
  9. ^ Livy, Ab urbe condita 1.5
  10. ^ a b c Vuković, Krešimir (October 2018). "The topography of the Lupercalia". Papers of the British School at Rome. 86: 37–60. doi:10.1017/S0068246217000381. JSTOR 26579503. ProQuest 2117060930.
  11. ^ Vuković, Krešimir. "Roman Myth and Ritual: the Groups of Luperci and Epigraphic Evidence". Epigraphica. 78: 43–52.
  12. ^ Vuković, Krešimir. "Roman Myth and Ritual: the Groups of Luperci and Epigraphic Evidence". Epigraphica. 78: 43–52.
  13. ^ One of Plutarch's Roman Questions was "68. Why do the Luperci sacrifice a dog?"... [Because] "nearly all the Greeks used a dog as the sacrificial victim for ceremonies of purification; and some, at least, make use of it even to this day. They bring forth for Hecate puppies along with the other materials for purification." (On-line text in English).
  14. ^ T. P. Wiseman (1995). "The God of the Lupercal". The Journal of Roman Studies. 85: 1. doi:10.1017/S0075435800074724.
  15. ^ Plutarch • Life of Caesar
  16. ^ Alberta Mildred Franklin (1921). The Lupercalia. Columbia University. pp. 79–.
  17. ^ Mika Rissanen (17 April 2013). "The Hirpi Sorani and the Wolf Cults of Central Italy". Arctos. Acta Philologica Fennica. Klassillis-filologinen yhdistys. Retrieved 2016-08-18.
  18. ^ Roller, Duane W. (2010). Cleopatra: a biography. Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195365535, p. 72.
  19. ^ Christian Meier (trans. David McLintock), Caesar, Basic Books, New York, 1995, p.477.
  20. ^ Calendar of Philocalus, tertullian.org (accessed 15 February 2017)
  21. ^ ad viles trivialesque personas, abiectos et infimos. (Gelasius)
  22. ^ Gelasius, Epistle to Andromachus, quoted in Green (1931), p. 65.
  23. ^ Green, William M. (1931). "The Lupercalia in the Fifth Century". Classical Philology. 26 (1): 60–69. doi:10.1086/361308. JSTOR 264682. S2CID 161431650.
  24. ^ Henry Ansgar Kelly (1986), in "Chaucer and the Cult of Saint Valentine" (Leiden: Brill), pp. 58-63
  25. ^ Michael Matthew Kaylor (2006), Secreted Desires: The Major Uranians: Hopkins, Pater and Wilde (electronic ed.), Masaryk University (re-published in electronic format), p. footnote 2 in page 235, ISBN 978-80-210-4126-4
  26. ^ Jack B. Oruch, "St. Valentine, Chaucer, and Spring in February" Speculum 56.3 (July 1981:534–565)
  27. ^ Leprechaun 'is not a native Irish word' new dictionary reveals, BBC, 5 September 2019.
  28. ^ Lost Irish words rediscovered, including the word for ‘oozes pus', Queen's University Belfast research for the Dictionary of the Irish Language reported by Cambridge University.
  29. ^ lupracán, luchorpán on the Electronic Dictionary of the Irish Language (accessed 6 September 2019)

Bibliography

  • A. M. Franklin, The Lupercalia (doctoral dissertation, 1921, 102pp.)
  • Green, William M. (January 1931). "The Lupercalia in the Fifth Century". Classical Philology. 26 (1): 60–69. doi:10.1086/361308. S2CID 161431650. Retrieved 2008-01-26.
  • Liebler, Naomi Conn (1988). The Ritual Ground of Julius Caesar.

Further reading

  • Beard, Mary; North, John; Price, Simon. Religions of Rome: A History. Cambridge University Press, 1998, vol. 1, limited preview online; search "Lupercalia".
  • Lincoln, Bruce. Authority: Construction and Corrosion. University of Chicago Press, 1994, pp. 43–44 online on Julius Caesar and the politicizing of the Lupercalia; valuable list of sources pp. 182–183.
  • North, John. Roman Religion. The Classical Association, 2000, pp. 47 online and 50 on the problems of interpreting evidence for the Lupercalia.
  • Markus, R.A. The End of Ancient Christianity. Cambridge University Press, 1990, pp. 131–134 online, on the continued celebration of the Lupercalia among "uninhibited Christians" into the 5th century, and the reasons for the "brutal intervention" by Pope Gelasius.
  • Rissanen, Mika (2012). "The 'Hirpi Sorani' and the Wolf Cults of Central Italy". Arctos (46): 115–135.
  • Vuković, Krešimir (2016). "Roman Myth and Ritual: Groups of Luperci and Epigraphic Evidence". Epigraphica. 78: 43–52.
  • Vuković, Krešimir (October 2018). "The topography of the Lupercalia". Papers of the British School at Rome. 86: 37–60. doi:10.1017/S0068246217000381. JSTOR 26579503. ProQuest 2117060930.
  • Wiseman, T.P. "The Lupercalia". In Remus: A Roman Myth. Cambridge, Cambridge University Press, 1995, pp. 77–88, limited preview online, discussion of the Lupercalia in the context of myth and ritual.
  • Wiseman, T.P. "The God of the Lupercal", in Idem, Unwritten Rome. Exeter, University of Exeter Press, 2008.

External links

  • William Smith, Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, 1875: Lupercalia

lupercalia, confused, with, lupercal, saint, name, lupercus, marcellus, tangier, patrick, wolf, album, album, pastoral, festival, ancient, rome, observed, annually, february, purify, city, promoting, health, fertility, also, known, dies, februatus, after, puri. Not to be confused with Lupercal For the saint by the name Lupercus see Marcellus of Tangier For the Patrick Wolf album see Lupercalia album Lupercalia was a pastoral festival of Ancient Rome observed annually on February 15 to purify the city promoting health and fertility 2 Lupercalia was also known as dies Februatus after the purification instruments called februa the basis for the month named Februarius LupercaliaLupercalia most likely derives from lupus wolf though both the etymology and its significance are obscure 1 bronze wolf s head 1st century AD Observed byRoman Kingdom Roman Republic Roman EmpireTypeClassical Roman religionCelebrationsfeastingObservancessacrifices of goats and a dog by the Luperci offering of cakes by the Vestals fertility rite in which the goatskin clad Luperci strike women who wish to conceiveDateFebruary 15 Contents 1 Name 2 Rites 2 1 Locations 2 2 Priesthoods 2 3 Sacrifice 3 History 4 Legacy 5 References 5 1 Citations 5 2 Bibliography 6 Further reading 7 External linksName EditThe festival was originally known as Februa Purifications or Purgings after the februum which was used on the day 3 It was also known as Februatus and gave its name variously as epithet to Juno Februalis Februlis or Februata in her role as patron deity of that month to a supposed purification deity called Februus 4 and to February mensis Februarius the month during which the festival occurred 3 Ovid connects februare to an Etruscan word for purging 5 The name Lupercalia was believed in antiquity to evince some connection with the Ancient Greek festival of the Arcadian Lykaia a wolf festival Greek lykos lykos Latin lupus and the worship of Lycaean Pan assumed to be a Greek equivalent to Faunus as instituted by Evander 6 Justin describes a cult image of the Lycaean god whom the Greeks call Pan and the Romans Lupercus as nude save for a goatskin girdle 7 The statue stood in the Lupercal the cave where tradition held that Romulus and Remus were suckled by the she wolf Lupa The cave lay at the foot of the Palatine Hill on which Romulus was thought to have founded Rome 8 The name of the festival most likely derives from lupus wolf though both the etymology and its significance are obscure Despite Justin s assertion no deity named Lupercus has been identified 1 Rites EditSee also Religion in ancient Rome Locations Edit The rites were confined to the Lupercal cave the Palatine Hill and the Forum all of which were central locations in Rome s foundation myth 9 Near the cave stood a sanctuary of Rumina goddess of breastfeeding and the wild fig tree Ficus Ruminalis to which Romulus and Remus were brought by the divine intervention of the river god Tiberinus some Roman sources name the wild fig tree caprificus literally goat fig Like the cultivated fig its fruit is pendulous and the tree exudes a milky sap if cut which makes it a good candidate for a cult of breastfeeding 10 Priesthoods Edit The Lupercalia had its own priesthood the Luperci brothers of the wolf whose institution and rites were attributed either to the Arcadian culture hero Evander or to Romulus and Remus erstwhile shepherds who had each established a group of followers The Luperci were young men iuvenes usually between the ages of 20 and 40 They formed two religious collegia associations based on ancestry the Quinctiliani named after the gens Quinctia and the Fabiani named after the gens Fabia Each college was headed by a magister 11 In 44 BC a third college the Juliani was instituted in honor of Julius Caesar its first magister was Mark Antony 12 The college of Juliani disbanded or lapsed following the Assassination of Julius Caesar and was not re established in the reforms of his successor Augustus In the Imperial era membership of the two traditional collegia was opened to iuvenes of equestrian status Sacrifice Edit At the Lupercal altar a male goat or goats and a dog were sacrificed by one or another of the Luperci under the supervision of the Flamen dialis Jupiter s chief priest 13 An offering was also made of salted mealcakes prepared by the Vestal Virgins 14 After the blood sacrifice two Luperci approached the altar Their foreheads were anointed with blood from the sacrificial knife then wiped clean with wool soaked in milk after which they were expected to laugh The sacrificial feast followed after which the Luperci cut thongs known as februa from the flayed skin of the animal 2 and ran with these naked or near naked along the old Palatine boundary in an anticlockwise direction around the hill 10 In Plutarch s description of the Lupercalia written during the early Empire many of the noble youths and of the magistrates run up and down through the city naked for sport and laughter striking those they meet with shaggy thongs And many women of rank also purposely get in their way and like children at school present their hands to be struck believing that the pregnant will thus be helped in delivery and the barren to pregnancy 15 The Luperci completed their circuit of the Palatine then returned to the Lupercal cave The Lupercalian Festival in Rome ca 1578 1610 drawing by the circle of Adam Elsheimer showing the Luperci dressed as dogs and goats with Cupid and personifications of fertilityHistory EditThe Februa was of ancient and possibly Sabine origin After February was added to the Roman calendar Februa occurred on its fifteenth day a d XV Kal Mart Of its various rituals the most important came to be those of the Lupercalia 16 The Romans themselves attributed the instigation of the Lupercalia to Evander a culture hero from Arcadia who was credited with bringing the Olympic pantheon Greek laws and alphabet to Italy where he founded the city of Pallantium on the future site of Rome 60 years before the Trojan War Lupercalia was celebrated in parts of Italy and Gaul Luperci are attested by inscriptions at Velitrae Praeneste Nemausus modern Nimes and elsewhere The ancient cult of the Hirpi Sorani wolves of Soranus from Sabine hirpus wolf who practiced at Mt Soracte 45 km 28 mi north of Rome had elements in common with the Roman Lupercalia 17 Descriptions of the Lupercalia festival of 44 BC attest to its continuity Julius Caesar used it as the backdrop for his public refusal of a golden crown offered to him by Mark Antony 18 19 The Lupercal cave was restored or rebuilt by Augustus and has been speculated to be identical with a grotto discovered in 2007 50 feet 15 m below the remains of Augustus residence according to scholarly consensus the grotto is a nymphaeum not the Lupercal 10 The Lupercalia festival is marked on a calendar of 354 alongside traditional and Christian festivals 20 Despite the banning in 391 of all non Christian cults and festivals the Lupercalia was celebrated by the nominally Christian populace on a regular basis into the reign of the emperor Anastasius Pope Gelasius I 494 96 claimed that only the vile rabble were involved in the festival 21 and sought its forceful abolition the Roman Senate protested that the Lupercalia was essential to Rome s safety and well being This prompted Gelasius scornful suggestion that If you assert that this rite has salutary force celebrate it yourselves in the ancestral fashion run nude yourselves that you may properly carry out the mockery 22 There is no contemporary evidence to support the popular notions that Gelasius abolished the Lupercalia or that he or any other prelate replaced it with the Feast of the Purification of the Blessed Virgin Mary 23 A literary association between the Lupercalia and the romantic elements of Saint Valentine s Day dates back to Chaucer and poetic traditions of courtly love 24 25 26 Legacy Edit Caesar Refuses the Diadem 1894 when it was offered by Mark Antony during the Lupercalia Horace s Ode III 18 alludes to the Lupercalia The festival or its associated rituals gave its name to the Roman month of February mensis Februarius and thence to the modern month The Roman god Februus personified both the month and purification but seems to postdate both William Shakespeare s play Julius Caesar begins during the Lupercalia Mark Antony is instructed by Caesar to strike his wife Calpurnia in the hope that she will be able to conceive Research published in 2019 suggests that the word Leprechaun derives from Lupercus 27 28 29 Today the Satanic Temple celebrates Lupercalia among its official holidays References EditCitations Edit a b H H Scullard Festivals and Ceremonies of the Roman Republic Cornell University Press 1981 p 77 78 a b One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Lupercalia Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 126 a b Lewis Charlton T et al 1879 februum A Latin Dictionary Founded on Andrews edition of Freund s Latin Dictionary Oxford Clarendon Press The deity Februus is almost certainly a later invention see Macrobius Saturnalia 1 13 3 Richard Jackson King 2006 Desiring Rome Male Subjectivity and Reading Ovid s Fasti Ohio State University Press pp 195 ff ISBN 978 0 8142 1020 8 Dionysius of Halicarnassus Roman Antiquities 1 32 3 5 1 80 Justin Epitome of the Philippic History of Pompeius Trogus 43 6ff Livy Ab urbe condita 1 5 Ovid Fasti 2 423 42 Plutarch Life of Romulus 21 3 Life of Julius Caesar Roman Questions 68 Virgil Aeneid 8 342 344 Lydus De mensibus 4 25 See Smith Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities s v Lupercus Justin Epitome of the Philippic History of Pompeius Trogus 43 1 7 Ovid Fasti Lupercalia Livy Ab urbe condita 1 5 a b c Vukovic Kresimir October 2018 The topography of the Lupercalia Papers of the British School at Rome 86 37 60 doi 10 1017 S0068246217000381 JSTOR 26579503 ProQuest 2117060930 Vukovic Kresimir Roman Myth and Ritual the Groups of Luperci and Epigraphic Evidence Epigraphica 78 43 52 Vukovic Kresimir Roman Myth and Ritual the Groups of Luperci and Epigraphic Evidence Epigraphica 78 43 52 One of Plutarch s Roman Questions was 68 Why do the Luperci sacrifice a dog Because nearly all the Greeks used a dog as the sacrificial victim for ceremonies of purification and some at least make use of it even to this day They bring forth for Hecate puppies along with the other materials for purification On line text in English T P Wiseman 1995 The God of the Lupercal The Journal of Roman Studies 85 1 doi 10 1017 S0075435800074724 Plutarch Life of Caesar Alberta Mildred Franklin 1921 The Lupercalia Columbia University pp 79 Mika Rissanen 17 April 2013 The Hirpi Sorani and the Wolf Cults of Central Italy Arctos Acta Philologica Fennica Klassillis filologinen yhdistys Retrieved 2016 08 18 Roller Duane W 2010 Cleopatra a biography Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 9780195365535 p 72 Christian Meier trans David McLintock Caesar Basic Books New York 1995 p 477 Calendar of Philocalus tertullian org accessed 15 February 2017 ad viles trivialesque personas abiectos et infimos Gelasius Gelasius Epistle to Andromachus quoted in Green 1931 p 65 Green William M 1931 The Lupercalia in the Fifth Century Classical Philology 26 1 60 69 doi 10 1086 361308 JSTOR 264682 S2CID 161431650 Henry Ansgar Kelly 1986 in Chaucer and the Cult of Saint Valentine Leiden Brill pp 58 63 Michael Matthew Kaylor 2006 Secreted Desires The Major Uranians Hopkins Pater and Wilde electronic ed Masaryk University re published in electronic format p footnote 2 in page 235 ISBN 978 80 210 4126 4 Jack B Oruch St Valentine Chaucer and Spring in February Speculum 56 3 July 1981 534 565 Leprechaun is not a native Irish word new dictionary reveals BBC 5 September 2019 Lost Irish words rediscovered including the word for oozes pus Queen s University Belfast research for the Dictionary of the Irish Language reported by Cambridge University lupracan luchorpan on the Electronic Dictionary of the Irish Language accessed 6 September 2019 Bibliography Edit A M Franklin The Lupercalia doctoral dissertation 1921 102pp Green William M January 1931 The Lupercalia in the Fifth Century Classical Philology 26 1 60 69 doi 10 1086 361308 S2CID 161431650 Retrieved 2008 01 26 Liebler Naomi Conn 1988 The Ritual Ground of Julius Caesar Further reading EditBeard Mary North John Price Simon Religions of Rome A History Cambridge University Press 1998 vol 1 limited preview online search Lupercalia Lincoln Bruce Authority Construction and Corrosion University of Chicago Press 1994 pp 43 44 online on Julius Caesar and the politicizing of the Lupercalia valuable list of sources pp 182 183 North John Roman Religion The Classical Association 2000 pp 47 online and 50 on the problems of interpreting evidence for the Lupercalia Markus R A The End of Ancient Christianity Cambridge University Press 1990 pp 131 134 online on the continued celebration of the Lupercalia among uninhibited Christians into the 5th century and the reasons for the brutal intervention by Pope Gelasius Rissanen Mika 2012 The Hirpi Sorani and the Wolf Cults of Central Italy Arctos 46 115 135 Vukovic Kresimir 2016 Roman Myth and Ritual Groups of Luperci and Epigraphic Evidence Epigraphica 78 43 52 Vukovic Kresimir October 2018 The topography of the Lupercalia Papers of the British School at Rome 86 37 60 doi 10 1017 S0068246217000381 JSTOR 26579503 ProQuest 2117060930 Wiseman T P The Lupercalia In Remus A Roman Myth Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1995 pp 77 88 limited preview online discussion of the Lupercalia in the context of myth and ritual Wiseman T P The God of the Lupercal in Idem Unwritten Rome Exeter University of Exeter Press 2008 External links EditWilliam Smith Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities 1875 Lupercalia Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lupercalia amp oldid 1108770708, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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