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Mars (mythology)

In ancient Roman religion and mythology, Mars (Latin: Mārs, pronounced [maːrs])[4] is the god of war and also an agricultural guardian, a combination characteristic of early Rome.[5] He is the son of Jupiter and Juno, and was pre-eminent among the Roman army's military gods. Most of his festivals were held in March, the month named for him (Latin Martius), and in October, the months which traditionally began and ended the season for both military campaigning and farming.[6]

Mars
God of war, protector of agriculture, and patron of the Roman state
Member of the Dii Consentes
Statue of Mars from the Forum of Nerva, 2nd century AD. Based on an Augustan-era original that utilized a Hellenistic Greek model from the 4th century BC. Located at the Capitoline Museums in Rome, Italy.[1]
Other namesMavors, Mavorte (archaic and poetic forms)
PlanetMars[2]
Symbolsspear, shield [3]
DayTuesday ('dies Martis')
FestivalsFebruary 27, March 14: Equirria horse races
March 1: Dies natalis and feriae of the Salian priests
March 17: Agonia
May 14: Dies natalis of the Temple of Mars Invictus
October 15: October Horse sacrifice
October 19: Armilustrium
Personal information
ParentsJupiter and Juno
SiblingsVulcan, Minerva, Hercules, Bellona, Apollo, Diana, Bacchus, among others
ConsortNerio and others, including Venus, Bellona; also involved with Rhea Silvia and others
ChildrenCupid, Romulus, and Remus
Equivalents
Greek equivalentAres
Norse equivalentTyr
Etruscan equivalentMaris, Laran

Under the influence of Greek culture, Mars was identified with the Greek god Ares,[7] whose myths were reinterpreted in Roman literature and art under the name of Mars. The character and dignity of Mars differs in fundamental ways from that of his Greek counterpart, who is often treated with contempt and revulsion in Greek literature.[8] Mars's altar in the Campus Martius, the area of Rome that took its name from him, was supposed to have been dedicated by Numa, the peace-loving semi-legendary second king of Rome; in Republican times it was a focus of electoral activities. Augustus shifted the focus of Mars' cult to within the pomerium (Rome's ritual boundary), and built a temple to Mars Ultor as a key religious feature of his new forum.[9]

Unlike Ares, who was viewed primarily as a destructive and destabilizing force, Mars represented military power as a way to secure peace, and was a father (pater) of the Roman people.[10] In Rome's mythic genealogy and founding, Mars fathered Romulus and Remus through his rape of Rhea Silvia. His love affair with Venus symbolically reconciled two different traditions of Rome's founding; Venus was the divine mother of the hero Aeneas, celebrated as the Trojan refugee who "founded" Rome several generations before Romulus laid out the city walls.

Name edit

The word Mārs (genitive Mārtis),[11] which in Old Latin and poetic usage also appears as Māvors (Māvortis),[12] is cognate with Oscan Māmers (Māmertos).[13] The oldest recorded Latin form, Mamart-, is likely of foreign origin.[14] It has been explained as deriving from Maris, the name of an Etruscan child-god, though this is not universally agreed upon.[15] Scholars have varying views on whether the two gods are related, and if so how.[16] Latin adjectives from the name of Mars are martius and martialis, from which derive English "martial" (as in "martial arts" or "martial law") and personal names such as "Marcus", "Mark" and "Martin".[17][18]

Mars may ultimately be a thematic reflex of the Proto-Indo-European god Perkwunos, having originally a thunderer character.[19]

Birth edit

Like Ares who was the son of Zeus and Hera,[20] Mars is usually considered to be the son of Jupiter and Juno. In Ovid's version of Mars' origin, he was the son of Juno alone. Jupiter had usurped the accepted function of women as mothers when he gave birth to Minerva directly from his forehead (or mind). Juno sought the advice of the goddess Flora on how to do the same. Flora obtained a magic flower (Latin flos, plural flores, a masculine word) and tested it on a heifer who became fecund at once. Flora ritually plucked a flower, using her thumb, touched Juno's belly, and impregnated her. Juno withdrew to Thrace and the shore of Marmara for the birth.[21]

Ovid tells this story in the Fasti, his long-form poetic work on the Roman calendar.[21] It may explain why the Matronalia, a festival celebrated by married women in honor of Juno as a goddess of childbirth, occurred on the first day of Mars's month, which is also marked on a calendar from late antiquity as the birthday of Mars. In the earliest Roman calendar, March was the first month, and the god would have been born with the new year.[22] Ovid is the only source for the story. He may be presenting a literary myth of his own invention, or an otherwise unknown archaic Italic tradition; either way, in choosing to include the story, he emphasizes that Mars was connected to plant life and was not alienated from female nurture.[23]

Consort edit

The consort of Mars was Nerio or Neriene, "Valor." She represents the vital force (vis), power (potentia) and majesty (maiestas) of Mars.[24] Her name was regarded as Sabine in origin and is equivalent to Latin virtus, "manly virtue" (from vir, "man").[25] In the early 3rd century BCE, the comic playwright Plautus has a reference to Mars greeting Nerio, his wife.[26] A source from late antiquity says that Mars and Neriene were celebrated together at a festival held on March 23.[27] In the later Roman Empire, Neriene came to be identified with Minerva.[28]

Nerio probably originates as a divine personification of Mars's power, as such abstractions in Latin are generally feminine. Her name appears with that of Mars in an archaic prayer invoking a series of abstract qualities, each paired with the name of a deity. The influence of Greek mythology and its anthropomorphic gods may have caused Roman writers to treat these pairs as "marriages."[29]

Venus and Mars edit

 
Mars caresses Venus enthroned. Wall-painting in Pompeii, c. 20 BC – 50s AD

The union of Venus and Mars held greater appeal for poets and philosophers, and the couple were a frequent subject of art. In Greek myth, the adultery of Ares and Aphrodite had been exposed to ridicule when her husband Hephaestus (whose Roman equivalent was Vulcan) caught them in the act by means of a magical snare. Although not originally part of the Roman tradition, in 217 BCE Venus and Mars were presented as a complementary pair in the lectisternium, a public banquet at which images of twelve major gods of the Roman state were presented on couches as if present and participating.[30]

Scenes of Venus and Mars in Roman art often ignore the adulterous implications of their union, and take pleasure in the good-looking couple attended by Cupid or multiple Loves (amores). Some scenes may imply marriage,[31] and the relationship was romanticized in funerary or domestic art in which husbands and wives had themselves portrayed as the passionate divine couple.[32]

The uniting of deities representing Love and War lent itself to allegory, especially since the lovers were the parents of Concordia.[citation needed] The Renaissance philosopher Marsilio Ficino notes that "only Venus dominates Mars, and he never dominates her".[33] In ancient Roman and Renaissance art, Mars is often shown disarmed and relaxed, or even sleeping, but the extramarital nature of their affair can also suggest that this peace is impermanent.[34]

Essential nature edit

 
A relief depicting Mars and Venus on a black-slip bowl from Campania, Italy, 250–150 BCE, British Museum

Virility as a kind of life force (vis) or virtue (virtus) is an essential characteristic of Mars.[35] As an agricultural guardian, he directs his energies toward creating conditions that allow crops to grow, which may include warding off hostile forces of nature.[36]

The priesthood of the Arval Brothers called on Mars to drive off "rust" (lues), with its double meaning of wheat fungus and the red oxides that affect metal, a threat to both iron farm implements and weaponry. In the surviving text of their hymn, the Arval Brothers invoked Mars as ferus, "savage" or "feral" like a wild animal.[37]

Mars's potential for savagery is expressed in his obscure connections to the wild woodlands, and he may even have originated as a god of the wild, beyond the boundaries set by humans, and thus a force to be propitiated.[38] In his book on farming, Cato invokes Mars Silvanus for a ritual to be carried out in silva, in the woods, an uncultivated place that if not held within bounds can threaten to overtake the fields needed for crops.[39] Mars's character as an agricultural god may derive solely from his role as a defender and protector,[40] or may be inseparable from his warrior nature,[41] as the leaping of his armed priests the Salii was meant to quicken the growth of crops.[42]

It appears that Mars was originally a thunderer or storm deity, which explains some of his mixed traits in regards to fertility.[19] This role was later taken in the Roman pantheon by several other gods, such as Summanus or Jupiter.

Sacred animals edit

 
She-wolf and twins Romulus and Remus from an altar to Venus and Mars

The wild animals most sacred to Mars were the woodpecker and the wolf, which in the natural lore of the Romans were said always to inhabit the same foothills and woodlands.[43]

Plutarch notes that the woodpecker (picus) is sacred to Mars because "it is a courageous and spirited bird and has a beak so strong that it can overturn oaks by pecking them until it has reached the inmost part of the tree."[44] As the beak of the picus Martius contained the god's power to ward off harm, it was carried as a magic charm to prevent bee stings and leech bites.[45] The bird of Mars also guarded a woodland herb (paeonia) used for treatment of the digestive or female reproductive systems; those who sought to harvest it were advised to do so by night, lest the woodpecker jab out their eyes.[46] The picus Martius seems to have been a particular species, but authorities differ on which one: perhaps Picus viridis[47] or Dryocopus martius.[48]

The woodpecker was revered by the Latin peoples, who abstained from eating its flesh.[49] It was one of the most important birds in Roman and Italic augury, the practice of reading the will of the gods through watching the sky for signs.[50] The mythological figure named Picus had powers of augury that he retained when he was transformed into a woodpecker; in one tradition, Picus was the son of Mars.[51] The Umbrian cognate peiqu also means "woodpecker", and the Italic Picenes were supposed to have derived their name from the picus who served as their guide animal during a ritual migration (ver sacrum) undertaken as a rite of Mars.[52] In the territory of the Aequi, another Italic people, Mars had an oracle of great antiquity where the prophecies were supposed to be spoken by a woodpecker perched on a wooden column.[53]

Mars's association with the wolf is familiar from what may be the most famous of Roman myths, the story of how a she-wolf (lupa) suckled his infant sons when they were exposed by order of King Amulius, who feared them because he had usurped the throne from their grandfather, Numitor.[54] The woodpecker also brought nourishment to the twins.[55]

The wolf appears elsewhere in Roman art and literature in masculine form as the animal of Mars. A statue group that stood along the Appian Way showed Mars in the company of wolves.[56] At the Battle of Sentinum in 295 BCE, the appearance of the wolf of Mars (Martius lupus) was a sign that Roman victory was to come.[57]

In Roman Gaul, the goose was associated with the Celtic forms of Mars, and archaeologists have found geese buried alongside warriors in graves. The goose was considered a bellicose animal because it is easily provoked to aggression.[58]

Sacrificial animals edit

 
The procession of the suovetaurilia, a sacrifice of a pig, ram, and bull, led by a priest with his head ritually covered

Ancient Greek and Roman religion distinguished between animals that were sacred to a deity and those that were prescribed as the correct sacrificial offerings for the god. Wild animals might be viewed as already belonging to the god to whom they were sacred, or at least not owned by human beings and therefore not theirs to give. Since sacrificial meat was eaten at a banquet after the gods received their portion – mainly the entrails (exta) – it follows that the animals sacrificed were most often, though not always, domestic animals normally part of the Roman diet.[59] Gods often received castrated male animals as sacrifices, and the goddesses female victims; Mars, however, regularly received intact males.[60] Mars did receive oxen under a few of his cult titles, such as Mars Grabovius, but the usual offering was the bull, singly, in multiples, or in combination with other animals.[citation needed]

The two most distinctive animal sacrifices made to Mars were the suovetaurilia, a triple offering of a pig (sus), ram (ovis) and bull (taurus),[61] and the October Horse, the only horse sacrifice known to have been carried out in ancient Rome and a rare instance of a victim the Romans considered inedible.[62]

Temples and topography in Rome edit

The earliest center in Rome for cultivating Mars as a deity was the Altar of Mars (Ara Martis) in the Campus Martius ("Field of Mars") outside the sacred boundary of Rome (pomerium). The Romans thought that this altar had been established by the semi-legendary Numa Pompilius, the peace-loving successor of Romulus.[63] According to Roman tradition, the Campus Martius had been consecrated to Mars by their ancestors to serve as horse pasturage and an equestrian training ground for youths.[64] During the Roman Republic (509–27 BCE), the Campus was a largely open expanse. No temple was built at the altar, but from 193 BCE a covered walkway connected it to the Porta Fontinalis, near the office and archives of the Roman censors. Newly elected censors placed their curule chairs by the altar, and when they had finished conducting the census, the citizens were collectively purified with a suovetaurilia there.[65] A frieze from the so-called "Altar" of Domitius Ahenobarbus is thought to depict the census, and may show Mars himself standing by the altar as the procession of victims advances.[66]

 
Remains of the Temple of Mars Ultor in the Forum of Augustus, Rome

The main Temple of Mars (Aedes Martis) in the Republican period also lay outside the sacred boundary[where?] and was devoted to the god's warrior aspect.[67] It was built to fulfill a vow (votum) made by a Titus Quinctius in 388 BCE during the Gallic siege of Rome.[68] The founding day (dies natalis) was commemorated on June 1,[69] and the temple is attested by several inscriptions and literary sources.[70] The sculpture group of Mars and the wolves was displayed there.[71] Soldiers sometimes assembled at the temple before heading off to war, and it was the point of departure for a major parade of Roman cavalry held annually on July 15.[72]

A temple to Mars in the Circus Flaminius was built around 133 BCE, funded by Decimus Junius Brutus Callaicus from war booty. It housed a colossal statue of Mars and a nude Venus.[73]

The Campus Martius continued to provide venues for equestrian events such as chariot racing during the Imperial period, but under the first emperor Augustus it underwent a major program of urban renewal, marked by monumental architecture. The Altar of Augustan Peace (Ara Pacis Augustae) was located there, as was the Obelisk of Montecitorio, imported from Egypt to form the pointer (gnomon) of the Solarium Augusti, a giant sundial. With its public gardens, the Campus became one of the most attractive places in the city to visit.[74]

Augustus made the centrepiece of his new forum a large Temple to Mars Ultor, a manifestation of Mars he cultivated as the avenger (ultor) of the murder of Julius Caesar and of the military disaster suffered at the Battle of Carrhae. When the legionary standards lost to the Parthians were recovered, they were housed in the new temple. The date of the temple's dedication on May 12 was aligned with the heliacal setting of the constellation Scorpio, the sign of war.[75] The date continued to be marked with circus games as late as the mid-4th century AD.[76]

A large statue of Mars was part of the short-lived Arch of Nero, which was built in 62 CE but dismantled after Nero's suicide and disgrace (damnatio memoriae).[77]

Iconography and symbol edit

 
Medieval representation of Mars. Sitting on a rainbow with a sword and a sceptre, he "excites men to war".
 
A nude statue of Mars[78] in a garden setting, depicted on a wall painting from Pompeii.

In Roman art, Mars is depicted as either bearded and mature, or young and clean-shaven. Even nude or seminude, he often wears a helmet or carries a spear as emblems of his warrior nature. Mars was among the deities to appear on the earliest Roman coinage in the late 4th and early 3rd century BCE.[79]

On the Altar of Peace (Ara Pacis), built in the last years of the 1st century BCE, Mars is a mature man with a "handsome, classicizing" face, and a short curly beard and moustache. His helmet is a plumed neo-Attic-type. He wears a military cloak (paludamentum) and a cuirass ornamented with a gorgoneion. Although the relief is somewhat damaged at this spot, he appears to hold a spear garlanded in laurel, symbolizing a peace that is won by military victory. The 1st-century statue of Mars found in the Forum of Nerva (pictured at top) is similar. In this guise, Mars is presented as the dignified ancestor of the Roman people. The panel of the Ara Pacis on which he appears would have faced the Campus Martius, reminding viewers that Mars was the god whose altar Numa established there, that is, the god of Rome's oldest civic and military institutions.[80]

Particularly in works of art influenced by the Greek tradition, Mars may be portrayed in a manner that resembles Ares, youthful, beardless, and often nude.[81] In the Renaissance, Mars's nudity was thought to represent his lack of fear in facing danger.[82]

The spear of Mars edit

The spear is the instrument of Mars in the same way that Jupiter wields the lightning bolt, Neptune the trident, and Saturn the scythe or sickle.[83] A relic or fetish called the spear of Mars[84] was kept in a sacrarium at the Regia, the former residence of the Kings of Rome.[85] The spear was said to move, tremble or vibrate at impending war or other danger to the state, as was reported to occur before the assassination of Julius Caesar.[86] When Mars is pictured as a peace-bringer, his spear is wreathed with laurel or other vegetation, as on the Ara Pacis or a coin of Aemilianus.[87]

Priesthoods edit

The high priest of Mars in Roman public religion was the Flamen Martialis, who was one of the three major priests in the fifteen-member college of flamens. Mars was also served by the Salii, a twelve-member priesthood of patrician youths who dressed as archaic warriors and danced in procession around the city in March. Both priesthoods extend to the earliest periods of Roman history, and patrician birth was required.[88]

Festivals and rituals edit

The festivals of Mars cluster in his namesake month of March (Latin: Martius), with a few observances in October, the beginning and end of the season for military campaigning and agriculture. Festivals with horse racing took place in the Campus Martius. Some festivals in March retained characteristics of new year festivals, since Martius was originally the first month of the Roman calendar.[89]

 
Denarius, issued 88 BCE, depicting the helmeted head of Mars, with Victory driving a two-horse chariot (biga) on the reverse

Mars was also honored by chariot races at the Robigalia and Consualia, though these festivals are not primarily dedicated to him. From 217 BCE onward, Mars was among the gods honored at the lectisternium, a banquet given for deities who were present as images.[citation needed]

Roman hymns (carmina) are rarely preserved, but Mars is invoked in two. The Arval Brothers, or "Brothers of the Fields", chanted a hymn to Mars while performing their three-step dance.[91] The Carmen Saliare was sung by Mars's priests the Salii while they moved twelve sacred shields (ancilia) throughout the city in a procession.[92] In the 1st century AD, Quintilian remarks that the language of the Salian hymn was so archaic that it was no longer fully understood.[93]

Name and cult epithets edit

 
The so-called Mars of Todi, an Etruscan bronze of the early 4th century BCE, probably depicting a warrior[94]

In Classical Roman religion, Mars was invoked under several titles, and the first Roman emperor Augustus thoroughly integrated Mars into Imperial cult. The 4th-century Latin historian Ammianus Marcellinus treats Mars as one of several classical Roman deities who remained "cultic realities" up to his own time.[95] Mars, and specifically Mars Ultor, was among the gods who received sacrifices from Julian, the only emperor to reject Christianity after the conversion of Constantine I. In 363 AD, in preparation for the Siege of Ctesiphon, Julian sacrificed ten "very fine" bulls to Mars Ultor. The tenth bull violated ritual protocol by attempting to break free, and when killed and examined, produced ill omens, among the many that were read at the end of Julian's reign. As represented by Ammianus, Julian swore never to make sacrifice to Mars again—a vow kept with his death a month later.[96]

Mars Gradivus edit

Gradivus was one of the gods by whom a general or soldiers might swear an oath to be valorous in battle.[97] His temple outside the Porta Capena was where armies gathered. The archaic priesthood of Mars Gradivus was the Salii, the "leaping priests" who danced ritually in armor as a prelude to war.[98] His cult title is most often taken to mean "the Strider" or "the Marching God", from gradus, "step, march."[99]

The poet Statius addresses him as "the most implacable of the gods,"[100] but Valerius Maximus concludes his history by invoking Mars Gradivus as "author and support of the name 'Roman'":[101] Gradivus is asked – along with Capitoline Jupiter and Vesta, as the keeper of Rome's perpetual flame – to "guard, preserve, and protect" the state of Rome, the peace, and the princeps (the emperor Tiberius at the time).[102]

A source from Late Antiquity says that the wife of Gradivus was Nereia, the daughter of Nereus, and that he loved her passionately.[103]

Mars Quirinus edit

 
Mars celebrated as peace-bringer on a Roman coin issued by Aemilianus

Mars Quirinus was the protector of the Quirites ("citizens" or "civilians") as divided into curiae (citizen assemblies), whose oaths were required to make a treaty.[104] As a guarantor of treaties, Mars Quirinus is thus a god of peace: "When he rampages, Mars is called Gradivus, but when he's at peace Quirinus."[105]

The deified Romulus was identified with Mars Quirinus. In the Capitoline Triad of Jupiter, Mars, and Quirinus, however, Mars and Quirinus were two separate deities, though not perhaps in origin. Each of the three had his own flamen (specialized priest), but the functions of the Flamen Martialis and Flamen Quirinalis are hard to distinguish.[106]

Mars Grabovius edit

Mars is invoked as Grabovius in the Iguvine Tablets, bronze tablets written in Umbrian that record ritual protocols for carrying out public ceremonies on behalf of the city and community of Iguvium. The same title is given to Jupiter and to the Umbrian deity Vofionus. This triad has been compared to the Archaic Triad, with Vofionus equivalent to Quirinus.[107] Tables I and VI describe a complex ritual that took place at the three gates of the city. After the auspices were taken, two groups of three victims were sacrificed at each gate. Mars Grabovius received three oxen.[108]

Mars Pater edit

"Father Mars" or "Mars the Father" is the form in which the god is invoked in the agricultural prayer of Cato,[109] and he appears with this title in several other literary texts and inscriptions.[110] Mars Pater is among the several gods invoked in the ritual of devotio, by means of which a general sacrificed himself and the lives of the enemy to secure a Roman victory.[111]

Father Mars is the regular recipient of the suovetaurilia, the sacrifice of a pig (sus), ram (ovis) and bull (taurus), or often a bull alone.[112] To Mars Pater other epithets were sometimes appended, such as Mars Pater Victor ("Father Mars the Victorious"),[113] to whom the Roman army sacrificed a bull on March 1.[114]

Although pater and mater were fairly common as honorifics for a deity,[115] any special claim for Mars as father of the Roman people lies in the mythic genealogy that makes him the divine father of Romulus and Remus.[116]

Mars Silvanus edit

In the section of his farming book that offers recipes and medical preparations, Cato describes a votum to promote the health of cattle:

Make an offering to Mars Silvanus in the forest (in silva) during the daytime for each head of cattle: 3 pounds of meal, 4½ pounds of bacon, 4½ pounds of meat, and 3 pints of wine. You may place the viands in one vessel, and the wine likewise in one vessel. Either a slave or a free man may make this offering. After the ceremony is over, consume the offering on the spot at once. A woman may not take part in this offering or see how it is performed. You may vow the vow every year if you wish.[117]

That Mars Silvanus is a single entity has been doubted. Invocations of deities are often list-like, without connecting words, and the phrase should perhaps be understood as "Mars and Silvanus".[118] Women were explicitly excluded from some cult practices of Silvanus, but not necessarily of Mars.[119] William Warde Fowler, however, thought that the wild god of the wood Silvanus may have been "an emanation or offshoot" of Mars.[120]

Mars Ultor edit

 
A statue to Mars Ultor from Balmuildy on the Antonine Wall has been scanned and a video produced.[121]

Augustus created the cult of "Mars the Avenger" to mark two occasions: his defeat of the assassins of Caesar at Philippi in 42 BCE, and the negotiated return of the Roman battle standards that had been lost to the Parthians at the Battle of Carrhae in 53 BCE.[122] The god is depicted wearing a cuirass and helmet and standing in a "martial pose," leaning on a lance he holds in his right hand. He holds a shield in his left hand.[123] The goddess Ultio, a divine personification of vengeance, had an altar and golden statue in his temple.[124]

The Temple of Mars Ultor, dedicated in 2 BCE in the center of the Forum of Augustus, gave the god a new place of honor.[122][125] Some rituals previously conducted within the cult of Capitoline Jupiter were transferred to the new temple,[126] which became the point of departure for magistrates as they left for military campaigns abroad.[127] Augustus required the Senate to meet at the temple when deliberating questions of war and peace.[128] The temple also became the site at which sacrifice was made to conclude the rite of passage of young men assuming the toga virilis ("man's toga") around age 14.[129]

On various Imperial holidays, Mars Ultor was the first god to receive a sacrifice, followed by the Genius of the emperor.[130] An inscription from the 2nd century records a vow to offer Mars Ultor a bull with gilded horns.[131]

Mars Augustus edit

 
Fragmentary dedication stele to Mars Augustus from Roman Gaul

Augustus or Augusta was appended far and wide, "on monuments great and small,"[132] to the name of gods or goddesses, including Mars. The honorific marks the affiliation of a deity with Imperial cult.[133] In Hispania, many of the statues and dedications to Mars Augustus were presented by members of the priesthood or sodality called the Sodales Augustales.[134] These vows (vota) were usually fulfilled within a sanctuary of Imperial cult, or in a temple or precinct (templum) consecrated specifically to Mars.[135] As with other deities invoked as Augustus, altars to Mars Augustus might be set up to further the well-being (salus) of the emperor,[136] but some inscriptions suggest personal devotion. An inscription in the Alps records the gratitude of a slave who dedicated a statue to Mars Augustus as conservator corporis sui, the preserver of his own body, said to have been vowed ex iussu numinis ipsius, "by the order of the numen himself".[137]

Mars Augustus appears in inscriptions at sites throughout the Empire, such as Hispania Baetica, Saguntum,[138] and Emerita (Lusitania) in Roman Spain;[139] Leptis Magna (with a date of 6–7 AD) in present-day Libya;[140] and Sarmizegetusa in the province of Dacia.[141]

Provincial epithets edit

In addition to his cult titles at Rome, Mars appears in a large number of inscriptions in the provinces of the Roman Empire, and more rarely in literary texts, identified with a local deity by means of an epithet. Mars appears with great frequency in Gaul among the Continental Celts, as well as in Roman Spain and Britain. In Celtic settings, he is often invoked as a healer.[142] The inscriptions indicate that Mars's ability to dispel the enemy on the battlefield was transferred to the sick person's struggle against illness; healing is expressed in terms of warding off and rescue.[143]

Celtic Mars edit

Mars is identified with a number of Celtic deities, some of whom are not attested independently.

 
Votive plaque inscribed to Mars Alator from the Barkway hoard, Roman Britain
  • Mars Alator is attested in Roman Britain by an inscription found on an altar at South Shields,[144] and a silver-gilt votive plaque that was part of the Barkway hoard from Hertfordshire.[145] Alator has been interpreted variously as "Huntsman" or "Cherisher".[146][147]
  • Mars Albiorix appears in an inscription from modern-day Sablet, in the province of Gallia Narbonensis.[148] Albiorix probably means "King of the Land" or "King of the World", with the first element related to the geographical name Albion and Middle Welsh elfydd, "world, land".[149] The Saturnian moon Albiorix is named after this epithet.[150]
  • Mars Barrex is attested by a single dedicatory inscription found at Carlisle, England.[151] Barrex or Barrecis probably means "Supreme One"[147] (Gaulish barro-, "head").[152]
  • Mars Belatucadrus is named in five inscriptions[153] in the area of Hadrian's Wall.[154] The Celtic god Belatucadros, with various spellings, is attested independently in twenty additional inscriptions in northern England.[155]
  • Mars Braciaca appears in a single votive inscription at Bakewell, Derbyshire.[147][156] The Celtic epithet may refer to malt or beer, though intoxication in Greco-Roman religion is associated with Dionysus.[157] A reference in Pliny[158] suggests a connection to Mars's agricultural function, with the Gaulish word bracis referring to a type of wheat; a medieval Latin gloss says it was used to make beer.[159]
 
A bronze Mars from Gaul
  • Mars Camulus is found in five inscriptions scattered over a fairly wide geographical area.[160] The Celtic god Camulus appears independently in one votive inscription from Rome.[161]
  • Mars Cocidius is found in five inscriptions from northern England.[162] About twenty dedications in all are known for the Celtic god Cocidius, mainly made by Roman military personnel, and confined to northwest Cumbria and along Hadrian's Wall. He is once identified with Silvanus.[163] He is depicted on two votive plaques as a warrior bearing shield and spear,[164] and on an altar as a huntsman accompanied by a dog and stag.[165]
  • Mars Condatis occurs in several inscriptions from Roman Britain.[a] The cult title is probably related to the place name Condate, often used in Gaul for settlements at the confluence of rivers.[166] The Celtic god Condatis is thought to have functions pertaining to water and healing.[147][167]
  • Mars Corotiacus is an equestrian Mars attested only on a votive from Martlesham in Suffolk.[168] A bronze statuette depicts him as a cavalryman, armed and riding a horse which tramples a prostrate enemy beneath its hooves.[169]
  • Mars Lenus, or more often Lenus Mars, had a major healing cult at the capital of the Treveri (present-day Trier). Among the votives are images of children offering doves.[170] His consort Ancamna is also found with the Celtic god Smertrios.
  • Mars Loucetius. The Celtic god Loucetios, Latinized as -ius, appears in nine inscriptions in present-day Germany and France and one in Britain, and in three as Leucetius. The Gaulish and Brythonic theonyms likely derive from Proto-Celtic *louk(k)et-, "bright, shining, flashing," hence also "lightning,"[171] alluding to either a Celtic commonplace metaphor between battles and thunderstorms (Old Irish torannchless, the "thunder feat"), or the aura of a divinized hero (the lúan of Cú Chulainn). The name is given as an epithet of Mars. The consort of Mars Loucetius is Nemetona, whose name may be understood as pertaining either to "sacred privilege" or to the sacred grove (nemeton),[172] and who is also identified with the goddess Victoria. At the Romano-British site in Bath, a dedication to Mars Loucetius as part of this divine couple was made by a pilgrim who had come from the continental Treveri of Gallia Belgica to seek healing.[173]
  • Mars Medocius Campesium appears on a bronze plaque at a Romano-Celtic temple at Camulodunum (modern Colchester; see Mars Camulus above). The dedication[174] was made between 222 and 235 CE by a self-identified Caledonian,[175] jointly honoring Mars and the Victoria (Victory)[176] of Severus Alexander. A Celto-Latin name Medocius or Medocus is known,[177] and a link between Mars's epithet and the Irish legendary surgeon Miodhach has been conjectured.[178] Campesium may be an error for Campestrium, "of the Campestres", the divinities who oversaw the parade ground,[179] or "of the Compeses" may refer to a local place name or ethnonym.[180]
  • Mars Mullo is invoked in two Armorican inscriptions pertaining to Imperial cult.[181] The name of the Celtic god Mullo, which appears in a few additional inscriptions, has been analyzed variously as "mule" and "hill, heap".[182]
  • Mars Neton or Neto was a Celtiberian god at Acci (modern Guadix). According to Macrobius, he wore a radiant crown like a sun god, because the passion to act with valor was a kind of heat. He may be connected to Irish Neit.[183]
  • Mars Nodens has a possible connection to the Irish mythological figure Nuada Airgetlám. The Celtic god Nodens was also interpreted as equivalent to several other Roman gods, including Mercury and Neptune. The name may have meant "catcher", hence a fisher or hunter.[184]
  • Mars Ocelus had an altar dedicated by a junior army officer at Caerwent, and possibly a temple. He may be a local counterpart to Lenus.[185]
  • Mars Olloudius was depicted in a relief from Roman Britain without armor, in the guise of a Genius carrying a double cornucopia and holding a libation bowl (patera). Olloudius is found also at Ollioules in southern Gaul.[186]
  • Mars Rigisamus is found in two inscriptions, the earliest most likely the one at Avaricum (present-day Bourges, France) in the territory of the Bituriges.[187] At the site of a villa at West Coker, Somerset, he received a bronze plaque votum.[188] The Gaulish element rig- (very common at the end of names as -rix), found in later Celtic languages as , is cognate with Latin rex, "king" or more precisely "ruler". Rigisamus or Rigisamos is "supreme ruler" or "king of kings".[189]
 
Bronze statuette of Mars Balearicus
  • Mars Rigonemetis ("King of the Sacred Grove"). A dedication to Rigonemetis and the numen (spirit) of the Emperor inscribed on a stone was discovered at Nettleham (Lincolnshire) in 1961. Rigonemetis is only known from this site, and it seems he may have been a god belonging to the tribe of the Corieltauvi.[169]
  • Mars Segomo. "Mars the Victorious" appears among the Celtic Sequani.[190]
  • Mars Smertrius. At a site within the territory of the Treveri, Ancamna was the consort of Mars Smertrius.[191]
  • Mars Teutates. A fusion of Mars with the Celtic god Teutates (Toutatis).
  • Mars Thincsus. A form of Mars invoked at Housesteads Roman Fort at Hadrian's Wall, where his name is linked with two goddesses called the Alaisiagae. Anne Ross associated Thincsus with a sculpture, also from the fort, which shows a god flanked by goddesses and accompanied by a goose – a frequent companion of war gods.[169]
  • Mars Visucius. A fusion of Mars with the Celtic god Visucius.
  • Mars Vorocius. A Celtic healer-god invoked at the curative spring shrine at Vichy (Allier) as a curer of eye afflictions. On images, the god is depicted as a Celtic warrior.[169]

"Mars Balearicus" edit

"Mars Balearicus" is a name used in modern scholarship for small bronze warrior figures from Majorca (one of the Balearic Islands) that are interpreted as representing the local Mars cult.[192] These statuettes have been found within talayotic sanctuaries with extensive evidence of burnt offerings. "Mars" is fashioned as a lean, athletic nude lifting a lance and wearing a helmet, often conical; the genitals are perhaps semi-erect in some examples.

Other bronzes at the sites represent the heads or horns of bulls, but the bones in the ash layers indicate that sheep, goats, and pigs were the sacrificial victims. Bronze horse-hooves were found in one sanctuary. Another site held an imported statue of Imhotep, the legendary Egyptian physician. These sacred precincts were still in active use when the Roman occupation began in 123 BCE. They seem to have been astronomically oriented toward the rising or setting of the constellation Centaurus.[193]

On the calendar edit

Mars gave his name to the third month in the Roman calendar, Martius, from which English March derives. In the most ancient Roman calendar, Martius was the first month. The planet Mars was named for him, and in some allegorical and philosophical writings, the planet and the god are endowed with shared characteristics.[194] In many languages, Tuesday is named for the planet Mars or the god of war: In Latin, martis dies (literally, 'Mars's Day'), survived in Romance languages as marte (Portuguese), martes (Spanish), mardi (French), martedì (Italian), marți (Romanian), and dimarts (Catalan). In Irish (Gaelic), the day is An Mháirt, while in Albanian it is e Marta. The English word Tuesday derives from Old English Tiwesdæg and means 'Tiw's Day', Tiw being the Old English form of the Proto-Germanic war god *Tîwaz, or Týr in Norse.[195]

See also edit

References edit

Notes edit

Citations edit

  1. ^ Capitoline Museums. "Colossal statue of Mars Ultor also known as Pyrrhus – Inv. Scu 58." Capitolini.information. Accessed October 8, 2016.
  2. ^ Evans, James (1998). The History and Practice of Ancient Astronomy. Oxford University Press. pp. 296–7. ISBN 978-0-19-509539-5. Retrieved February 4, 2008.
  3. ^ The spear and shield are also symbols in astronomy and astrology for the planet Mars, and symbolically represent the male gender (♂).
  4. ^ Chapter 3, Charles E. Bennett (1907) The Latin Language – a historical outline of its sounds, inflections, and syntax. Allyn & Bacon, Boston.
  5. ^ Mary Beard, J.A. North, and S.R.F. Price, Religions of Rome: A History (Cambridge University Press, 1998), pp. 47–48.
  6. ^ John Scheid, An Introduction to Roman Religion, translated by Janet Lloyd (Indiana University Press, 2003), pp. 51–52; Robert Turcan, The Gods of Ancient Rome (Routledge, 2001; originally published in French 1998), p. 79.
  7. ^ Larousse Desk Reference Encyclopedia, The Book People, Haydock, 1995, p. 215.
  8. ^ Kurt A. Raaflaub, War and Peace in the Ancient World (Blackwell, 2007), p. 15.
  9. ^ Paul Rehak and John G. Younger, Imperium and Cosmos: Augustus and the Northern Campus Martius (University of Wisconsin Press, 2006), pp. 11–12.
  10. ^ Isidore of Seville calls Mars Romanae gentis auctorem, the originator or founder of the Roman people as a gens (Etymologiae 5.33.5).
  11. ^ The classical Latin declension of the name is as follows: nominative and vocative case, Mars; genitive, Martis; accusative, Martem; dative, Marti; ablative Marte.[1] September 10, 2017, at the Wayback Machine
  12. ^ Virgil, Aeneid VIII, 630
  13. ^ Mallory, J. P.; D. Q. Adams (1997). Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture. New York: Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers. pp. 630–631. ISBN 1-884964-98-2.; some of the older literature assumes an Indo-European form closer to *Marts, and see a connection with the Indic wind gods, the Maruts . Archived from the original on July 24, 2011. Retrieved July 8, 2010. However, this makes the appearance of Mavors and the agricultural cults of Mars difficult to explain.
  14. ^ Michiel de Vaan, Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages, Brill, 2008, p. 366.
  15. ^ Larissa Bonfante, Etruscan Life and Afterlife: A Handbook of Etruscan Studies (Wayne State University Press, 1986), p. 226.
  16. ^ Massimo Pallottino, "Religion in Pre-Roman Italy", in Roman and European Mythologies (University of Chicago Press, 1992, from the French edition of 1981), pp. 29, 30; Hendrik Wagenvoort, "The Origin of the Ludi Saeculares", in Studies in Roman Literature, Culture and Religion (Brill, 1956), p. 219 et passim; John F. Hall III, "The Saeculum Novum of Augustus and its Etruscan Antecedents", Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt II.16.3 (1986), p. 2574; Larissa Bonfante, Etruscan Life and Afterlife: A Handbook of Etruscan Studies (Wayne State University Press, 1986), p. 226.
  17. ^ "martial". The American Heritage Dictionary. Retrieved November 4, 2019.
  18. ^ Albert Dauzat, Dictionnaire étymologique des noms de famille et prénoms de France, Larousse, Paris 1980. p. 420. New completed edition by Marie-Thérèse Morlet.
  19. ^ a b York, Michael. Romulus and Remus, Mars and Quirinus. Journal of Indo-European Studies 16:1 & 2 (Spring/Summer, 1988), 153–172.
  20. ^ Hesiod, Theogony p. 79 in the translation of Norman O. Brown (Bobbs-Merrill, 1953); 921 in the Loeb Classical Library numbering; Iliad, 5.890–896.
  21. ^ a b Ovid, Fasti 5.229–260
  22. ^ William Warde Fowler, The Roman Festivals of the Period of the Republic (London, 1908), p. 35f., discusses this interpretation in order to question it.
  23. ^ Carole E. Newlands, Playing with Time: Ovid and the Fasti (Cornell University Press, 1995), pp. 105–106.
  24. ^ Aulus Gellius, Attic Nights 13.23. Gellius says the word Nerio or Nerienes is Sabine and is supposed to be the origin of the name Nero as used by the Claudian family, who were Sabine in origin. The Sabines themselves, Gellius says, thought the word was Greek in origin, from νεῦρα (neura), Latin nervi, meaning the sinews and ligaments of the limbs.
  25. ^ Robert E.A. Palmer, The Archaic Community of the Romans (Cambridge University Press, 1970, 2009), p. 167.
  26. ^ Plautus, Truculentus 515.
  27. ^ Johannes Lydus, De mensibus 4.60 (42).
  28. ^ Porphyrion, Commentum in Horatium Flaccum, on Epistula II.2.209.
  29. ^ William Warde Fowler, The Religious Experience of the Roman People (London, 1922), p. 150–154; Roger D. Woodard, Indo-European Sacred Space: Vedic and Roman Cult (University of Illinois Press, 2006), pp. 113–114; Gary Forsythe, A Critical History of Early Rome: From Prehistory to the First Punic War (University of California Press, 2005), p. 145. The prayer is recorded in the passage on Nerio in Aulus Gellius.
  30. ^ Robert Schilling, "Venus", in Roman and European Mythologies (University of Chicago Press, 1992, from the French edition of 1981), p. 147.
  31. ^ John R. Clarke, The Houses of Roman Italy, 100 B.C.–A.D. 250: Ritual, Space, and Decoration (University of California Press, 1991), pp. 156–157
  32. ^ Laura Salah Nasrallah, Christian Responses to Roman Art and Architecture: The Second-Century Church amid the Spaces of Empire (Cambridge University Press, 2010), pp. 284–287.
  33. ^ Ficino, On Love, speech 5, chapter 8, as summarized in the entry on "Mars", The Classical Tradition (Harvard University Press, 2010), p. 564.
  34. ^ Entry on "Mars" in The Classical Tradition, p. 564.
  35. ^ Onians, The Origins of European Thought about the Body, the Mind, the Soul, the World, Time and Fate (Cambridge University Press, 1951), pp. 470–471. Onians connects the name of Mars to the Latin mas, maris, "male" (p. 178), as had Isidore of Seville, saying that the month of March (Martius) was named after Mars "because at that time all living things are stirred toward virility (mas, gen. maris) and to the pleasures of sexual intercourse" (eo tempore cuncta animantia agantur ad marem et ad concumbendi voluptatem): Etymologies 5.33.5, translation by Stephen A. Barney, The Etymologies of Isidore of Seville (Cambridge University Press, 2006), p. 128. In antiquity, vis was thought to be related etymologically to vita, "life." Varro (De lingua latina 5.64, quoting Lucilius) notes that vis is vita: "vis drives us to do everything."
  36. ^ On the relation of Mars's warrior aspect to his agricultural functions with respect to Dumézil's Trifunctional hypothesis, see Wouter W. Belier, Decayed Gods: Origin and Development of Georges Dumézil's 'idéologie tripartie' (Brill, 1991), pp. 88–91 online.
  37. ^ Schilling, "Mars", in Roman and European Mythologies, p. 135; Palmer, Archaic Community, pp. 113–114.
  38. ^ Gary Forsythe, A Critical History of Early Rome (University of California Press, 2005), p. 127; Fowler, Religious Experience, p. 134.
  39. ^ Cato, On Agriculture 141. In pre-modern agricultural societies, encroaching woodland or wild growth was a real threat to the food supply, since clearing land for cultivation required intense manual labor with minimal tools and little or no large-scale machinery. Fowler says of Mars, "As he was not localised either on the farm or in the city, I prefer to think that he was originally conceived as a Power outside the boundary in each case, but for that very reason all the more to be propitiated by the settlers within it" (Religious Experience, p. 142).
  40. ^ Schilling, "Mars", p. 135.
  41. ^ Beard et al., Religions of Rome: A History, pp. 47–48.
  42. ^ Forsythe, A Critical History of Early Rome, p. 127
  43. ^ Plutarch, Roman Questions 21, citing Nigidius Figulus.
  44. ^ Plutarch, Roman Questions 21; also named as sacred to Mars in his Life of Romulus. Ovid (Fasti 3.37) calls the woodpecker the bird of Mars.
  45. ^ Pliny, Natural History 29.29.
  46. ^ Pliny, Natural History 27.60. Pliny names the herb as glycysīdē in Greek, Latin paeonia (see Peony: Name), also called pentorobos.
  47. ^ A.H. Krappe, "Picus Who Is Also Zeus", Mnemosyne 9.4 (1941), p. 241.
  48. ^ William Geoffrey Arnott, Birds in the ancient world from A to Z (Routledge, 2007), p. 63 online.
  49. ^ Plutarch, Roman Questions 21. Athenaeus lists the woodpecker among delicacies on Greek tables (Deipnosophistae 9.369).
  50. ^ Plautus, Asinaria 259–261; Pliny, Natural History 10.18. Named also in the Iguvine Tables (6a, 1–7), as Umbrian peiqu; Schilling, "Roman Divination", in Roman and European Mythologies (University of Chicago Press, 1992), pp. 96–97 and 105, note 7.
  51. ^ Dionysius of Halicarnassus 1.31; Peter F. Dorcey, The Cult of Silvanus: A Study in Roman Folk Religion (Brill, 1992), p. 33.
  52. ^ John Greppin, entry on "woodpecker", Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture (Fitzroy Dearborn, 1997), p. 648.
  53. ^ Dionysius Halicarnassus, Roman Antiquities I.14.5, as noted by Mary Emma Armstrong, The Significance of Certain Colors in Roman Ritual (George Banta Publishing, 1917), p. 6.
  54. ^ The myth of the she-wolf, and the birth of the twins with Mars as their father, is a long and complex tradition that weaves together multiple stories about the founding of Rome. See T.P. Wiseman, Remus: A Roman Myth (Cambridge University Press, 1995), p. xiii, 73ff. et passim.
  55. ^ Plutarch, Life of Romulus 4.
  56. ^ Livy 22.1.12, as cited by Wiseman, Remus, p. 189, note 6, and Armstrong, The Significance of Certain Colors, p. 6.
  57. ^ Livy, Ab Urbe Condita 10.27.
  58. ^ Miranda Green, Animals in Celtic Life and Myth (Routledge, 1992), p. 126.
  59. ^ Nicole Belayche, "Religious Actors in Daily Life: Practices and Related Beliefs", in A Companion to Roman Religion (Blackwell, 2007), p. 283; C. Bennett Pascal, "October Horse", Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 85 (1981), pp. 268, 277.
  60. ^ As did Neptune, Janus and the Genius; John Scheid, "Sacrifices for Gods and Ancestors", in A Companion to Roman Religion (Blackwell, 2007), p. 264.
  61. ^ Mary Beard, J.A. North, and S.R.F. Price, Religions of Rome: A Sourcebook (Cambridge University Press, 1998), p. 153.
  62. ^ C. Bennett Pascal, "October Horse", Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 85 (1981), pp. 263, 268, 277.
  63. ^ Lawrence Richardson, A New Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992), p. 245.
  64. ^ Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Roman Antiquities 5.13.2
  65. ^ Livy 40.45.8, 1.44.1–2.
  66. ^ Katja Moede, "Reliefs, Public and Private", in A Companion to Roman Religion (Blackwell, 2007), p. 170.
  67. ^ Vitruvius 1.7.1; Servius, note to Aeneid 1.292; Richardson, New Topographical Dictionary, p. 244.
  68. ^ Livy 6.5.7; Richardson, New Topographical Dictionary, p. 244.
  69. ^ Ovid, Fasti 6.191–192 and the Fasti Antiates (Degrassi 463), as cited by Richardson, New Topographical Dictionary, p. 244.
  70. ^ CIL 6.473, 474 = 30774, 485; ILS 3139, 3144, as cited by Richardson, New Topographical Dictionary, p. 244.
  71. ^ H.H. Scullard, Festivals and Ceremonies of the Roman Republic (Cornell University Press, 1981), p. 127.
  72. ^ Scullard, Festivals and Ceremonies, pp. 127, 164.
  73. ^ Pliny, Natural History 36.26; Richardson, New Topographical Dictionary, p. 245.
  74. ^ Paul Rehak, Imperium and Cosmos: Augustus and the Northern Campus Martius (University of Wisconsin Press, 2006), pp. 7–8.
  75. ^ Rehak, Imperium and Cosmos, p. 145.
  76. ^ Michele Renee Salzman, On Roman Time: The Codex Calendar of 354 and the Rhythms of Urban Life in Late Antiquity (University of California Press, 1990), p. 122.
  77. ^ Richardson, New Topographical Dictionary, p. 27.
  78. ^ Robert Schilling, "Mars", in Roman and European Mythologies (University of Chicago Press, 1992, from the French edition of 1981), p. 135 online. The figure is sometimes identified only as a warrior.
  79. ^ Jonathan Williams, "Religion and Roman Coins", in A Companion to Roman Religion, p. 143.
  80. ^ Paul Rehak and John G. Younger, Imperium and Cosmos: Augustus and the Northern Campus Martius (University of Wisconsin Press, 2006), p. 114.
  81. ^ Rehak and Younger, Imperium and Cosmos, p. 114.
  82. ^ Entry on "Mars", in The Classical Tradition, p. 564, citing Sebastiano Erizzo, On Ancient Medallions (1559), p. 120.
  83. ^ Martianus Capella 5.425, with Mars specified as Gradivus and Neptune named as Portunus.
  84. ^ Varro, Antiquitates frg. 254* (Cardauns); Plutarch, Romulus 29.1 (a rather muddled account); Arnobius, Adversus nationes 6.11.
  85. ^ Michael Lipka, Roman Gods: A Conceptual Approach (Brill, 2009), p. 88.
  86. ^ Aulus Gellius, Attic Nights 4.6.1; Cassius Dio 44.17.2 (because Caesar was pontifex maximus); Veit Rosenberger, "Republican Nobiles: Controlling the Res Publica", in A Companion to Roman Religion, p. 295.
  87. ^ Imperium and Cosmos p. 114.
  88. ^ Christopher Smith, "The Religion of Archaic Rome", in A Companion to Roman Religion, p. 39.
  89. ^ Scullard, Festivals and Ceremonies of the Roman Republic, p. 84.
  90. ^ Marked as such only on the Chronography of 354.
  91. ^ The hymn is preserved in an inscription (CIL 6.2104); Frances Hickson Hahn, "Performing the Sacred", in A Companion to Roman Religion, p. 237.
  92. ^ Hahn, "Performing the Sacred", p. 237, citing Dionysius of Halicarnassus 2.70.1–5.
  93. ^ Quintilian, Institutiones 1.6.40, as cited by Frances Hickson Hahn, in "Performing the Sacred", in A Companion to Roman Religion, p. 236.
  94. ^ Guiliano Bonfante and Larissa Bonfante, The Etruscan Language: An Introduction (Manchester University Press, 1983, 2002 rev.ed.), p. 26; Donald Strong and J.M.C. Toynbee, Roman Art (Yale University Press, 1976, 1988), p. 33; Fred S. Kleiner, introduction to A History of Roman Art (Wadsworth, 2007, 2010 "enhanced edition"), p. xl.
  95. ^ R.L. Rike, Apex Omnium: Religion in the Res Gestae of Ammianus (University of California Press, 1987), p. 26.
  96. ^ Ammianus Marcellinus 24.6.17; Rike, Apex Omnium, p. 32.
  97. ^ Livy 2.45.
  98. ^ Livy, 1.20, Livy; Warrior, Valerie M (1884). The History of Rome, Books 1–5. Hackett Publishing. ISBN 1-60384-381-7., with note by Valerie M. Warrior, The History of Rome Books 1–5 (Hackett, 2006), p. 31.
  99. ^ Compare Gradiva. The second-century grammarian Sextus Pompeius Festus offers two other explanations in addition. The name, he says, might also mean the vibration of a spear, for which the Greeks use the word kradainein; others locate the origin of Gradivus in the grass (gramine), because the Grass Crown is the highest military honor; see Carole Newlands, Playing with Time: Ovid and the Fasti (Cornell University Press, 1995), p. 106. Maurus Servius Honoratus says that grass was sacred to Mars (note to Aeneid 12.119).
  100. ^ Statius, Thebaid 9.4. See also 7.695.
  101. ^ Valerius Maximus 2.131.1, auctor ac stator Romani nominis.
  102. ^ Hans-Friedrich Mueller, Roman Religion in Valerius Maximus (Routledge, 2002), p. 88.
  103. ^ Martianus Capella, The Marriage of Philology and Mercury 1.4.
  104. ^ Palmer, R. E. A. (1970). The Archaic Community of the Romans. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-07702-6., p. 167.
  105. ^ Mars enim cum saevit Gradivus dicitur, cum tranquillus est Quirinus: Maurus Servius Honoratus, note to Aeneid 1.292, at Perseus. At Aeneid 6.860, Servius further notes: "Quirinus is the Mars who presides over peace and whose cult is maintained within the civilian realm, for the Mars of war has his temple outside that realm." See also Belier, Decayed Gods, p. 92: "The identification of the two gods is a reflection of a social process. The men who till the soil as Quirites in times of peace are identical with the men who defend their country as Milites in times of war."
  106. ^ Palmer, The Archaic Community of the Romans, pp. 165–171. On how Romulus became identified with Mars Quirinus, see the Dumézilian summary of Belier, Decayed Gods, p. 93–94.
  107. ^ Etymologically, Quirinus is *co-uiri-no, "(the god) of the community of men (viri)," and Vofionus is *leudhyo-no, "(the god) of the people": Oliver de Cazanove, "Pre-Roman Italy, Before and Under the Romans", in A Companion to Roman Religion (Blackwell, 2007), p. 49. It has also been argued that Vofionus corresponds to Janus, because an entry in Sextus Pompeius Festus (204, edition of Lindsay) indicates there was a Roman triad of Jupiter, Mars, and Janus, each having quirinus as a title; C. Scott Littleton, The New Comparative Mythology (University of California Press, 1966, 1973), p. 178, citing Vsevolod Basanoff, Les dieux Romains (1942).
  108. ^ O. de Cazanove, "Pre-Roman Italy," pp. 49–50.
  109. ^ The Indo-European character of this prayer is discussed by Calvert Watkins, "Some Indo-European Prayers: Cato's Lustration of the Fields", in How to Kill a Dragon: Aspects of Indo-European Poetics (Oxford University Press, 1995), pp. 197–213.
  110. ^ Celia E. Schultz, "Juno Sospita and Roman Insecurity in the Social War", in Religion in Republican Italy (Cambridge University Press, 2006), p. 217, especially note 38.
  111. ^ For the text of this vow, see The invocation of Decius Mus.
  112. ^ Mary Beard, J.A. North, and S.R.F. Price, Religions of Rome: A Sourcebook (Cambridge University Press, 1998), pp. 71ff. for examples of a bull offering, p. 153 on the suovetaurilia.
  113. ^ Beard et al., "Religions of Rome, p. 370.
  114. ^ Martin Henig, Religion in Roman Britain (London, 1984, 1995), p. 27, citing the military calendar from Dura-Europos.
  115. ^ Gary Forsythe, A Critical History of Early Rome: From Prehistory to the First Punic War (University of California Press, 2005), p. 168.
  116. ^ Newlands, Playing with Time, p. 104.
  117. ^ Votum pro bubus, uti valeant, sic facito. Marti Silvano in silva interdius in capita singula boum votum facito. Farris L. III et lardi P.39 IIII S et pulpae P. IIII S, vini S.40 III, id in unum vas liceto coicere, et vinum item in unum vas liceto coicere. Eam rem divinam vel servus vel liber licebit faciat. Ubi res divina facta erit, statim ibidem consumito. Mulier ad eam rem divinam ne adsit neve videat quo modo fiat. Hoc votum in annos singulos, si voles, licebit vovere. Cato the Elder, On Farming 83, English translation from the Loeb Classical Library, Bill Thayer's edition at LacusCurtius.
  118. ^ Robert Schilling, "Silvanus", in Roman and European Mythologies (University of Chicago Press, 1992, from the French edition of 1981), p. 146; Peter F. Dorcey, The Cult of Silvanus: A Study in Roman Folk Religion (Brill, 1992), pp. 8–9, 49.
  119. ^ Dorcey, The Cult of Silvanus, pp. 9 and 105ff.
  120. ^ William Warde Fowler, The Roman Festivals of the Period of the Republic (London, 1908), p. 55.
  121. ^ "Statue of Mars Ultor, Balmuildy". May 11, 2018. Retrieved May 19, 2018.
  122. ^ a b Diana E. E. Kleiner. Augustus Assembles His Marble City (Multimedia presentation). Yale University.
  123. ^ Michael Lipka, Roman Gods: A Conceptual Approach (Brill, 2009), p. 91.
  124. ^ Clark, Divine Qualities, pp. 23–24.
  125. ^ Robert Schilling, "Mars," Roman and European Mythologies (University of Chicago Press, 1992, from the French edition of 1981), p. 135; Mary Beard, J.A. North, and S.R.F. Price, Religions of Rome: A Sourcebook (Cambridge University Press, 1998), p. 80.
  126. ^ For instance, during the Republic, the dictator was charged with the ritual clavi figendi causa, driving a nail into the wall of the Capitoline temple. According to Cassius Dio (55.10.4, as cited by Lipka, Roman Gods, p. 108), this duty was transferred to a censor under Augustus, and the ritual moved to the Temple of Mars Ultor.
  127. ^ Lipka, Roman Gods, p. 109.
  128. ^ Harry Sidebottom, "International Relations," in The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Warfare: Rome from the Late Republic to the Late Empire (Cambridge University Press, 2007), vol. 2, p. 15.
  129. ^ Cassius Dio 55.10.2; Nicole Belyache, "Religious Actors in Daily Life," in A Companion to Roman Religion p. 279.
  130. ^ Lipka, Roman Gods, pp. 111–112.
  131. ^ CIL VI.1, no. 2086 (edition of Bormann and Henzen, 1876), as translated and cited by Charlotte R. Long, The Twelve Gods of Greece and Rome (Brill, 1987), pp. 130–131.
  132. ^ Keith Hopkins, Conquerors and Slaves (Cambridge University Press, 1978), p. 230.
  133. ^ A.E. Cooley, "Beyond Rome and Latium: Roman Religion in the Age of Augustus," in Religion in Republican Italy (Cambridge University Press, 2006), p. 247; Duncan Fishwick, The imperial cult in the Latin West (Brill, 2005), passim.
  134. ^ Jonathan Edmondson, "The Cult of Mars Augustus and Roman Imperial Power at Augusta Emerita (Lusitania) in the Third Century A.D.: A New Votive Dedication," in Culto imperial: politica y poder («L'Erma» di Bretschneider, 2007), p. 562. These include an inscription that was later built into the castle walls at Sines, Portugal; dedications at Ipagrum (Aguilar de la Frontera, in the modern province of Córdoba) and at Conobaria (Las Cabezas de San Juan in the province of Seville) in Baetica; and a statue at Isturgi (CIL II. 2121 = ILS II2/7, 56). A magister of the "Lares of Augustus" made a dedication to Mars Augustus (CIL II. 2013 = ILS II2/5, 773) at Singili(a) Barba (Cerro del Castillón, Antequera).
  135. ^ Edmondson, "The Cult of Mars Augustus," p. 563.
  136. ^ Edmondson, "The Cult of Mars Augustus," p. 562.
  137. ^ ILS 3160; Rudolf Haensch, "Inscriptions as Sources of Knowledge for Religions and Cults in the Roman World of Imperial Times," in A Companion to Roman Religion (Blackwell, 2007), p. 182.
  138. ^ William Van Andringa, "Religions and the Integration of Cities in the Empire in the Second Century AD: The Creation of a Common Religious Language," A Companion to Roman Religion, p. 86.
  139. ^ Edmondson, "The Cult of Mars Augustus," pp. 541–575.
  140. ^ Ittai Gradel, Emperor Worship and Roman Religion (Oxford University Press, 2002), p. 238, note 11, citing Victor Ehrenberg and Arnold H.M. Jones, Documents Illustrating the Reigns of Augustus and Tiberius (Oxford University Press, 1955), no. 43.
  141. ^ The chief priest of the three Dacian provinces dedicated an altar pro salute, for the wellbeing of Gordian III, at an imperial cult center sometime between 238 and 244 AD; Edmondson, "The Cult of Mars Augustus," p. 562.
  142. ^ Miranda Green, Animals in Celtic Life and Myth (Routledge, 1992), p. 198.
  143. ^ Ton Derks, Gods, Temples, and Ritual Practices: The Transformation of Religious Ideas and Values in Roman Gaul (Amsterdam University Press, 1998), p. 79.
  144. ^ RIB 1055, as cited by Bernhard Maier, Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture (Boydell & Brewer, 1997, originally published in German 1994), p. 11.
  145. ^ RIB 218, as cited by Maier, Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture, p. 11.
  146. ^ Phillips, E.J. (1977). Corpus Signorum Imperii Romani, Great Britain, Volume I, Fascicule 1. Hadrian's Wall East of the North Tyne (p. 66). Oxford: Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-725954-5.
  147. ^ a b c d Ross, Anne (1967). Pagan Celtic Britain. Routledge & Kegan Paul. ISBN 0-902357-03-4.
  148. ^ CIL 12.1300.
  149. ^ Maier, Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture, p. 11.
  150. ^ "Planet and Satellite Names and Discoverers". Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature. USGS Astrogeology. from the original on May 27, 2010. Retrieved May 1, 2010.
  151. ^ Maier, Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture, p. 32.
  152. ^ Xavier Delamarre, Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise (Éditions Errance, 2003), p. 68.
  153. ^ RIB 918, 948, 970, 1784, 2044, as cited by Maier, Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture, p. 33.
  154. ^ Miranda Alhouse-Green, "Gallo-British Deities and Their Shrines," in A Companion to Roman Britain (Blackwell, 2004), p. 215.
  155. ^ Maier, Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture, p. 33.
  156. ^ RIB 278, as cited by Maier, Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture, pp. 42–43.
  157. ^ Eric Birley, "The Deities of Roman Britain," Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt II.18.1 (1986), pp. 43, 68; Delamarre, entry on bracis, Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise, p. 85. In discussing the Celtiberian Mars Neto, Macrobius associates Mars and Liber, a Roman deity identified with Dionysus (Saturnalia 1.19).
  158. ^ Pliny the Elder, Natural History 18.62.
  159. ^ In Galatian, the form of Celtic spoken by the Celts who settled in Anatolia, the word embrekton was a kind of beverage; Delamarre, Dictionnaire, p. 85.
  160. ^ ILTG 351; CIL 13.3980; CIL 13.8701; CIL 13.11818; RIV 2166; Maier, Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture, p. 57.
  161. ^ CIL 6.32574; Maier, Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture, pp. 56–57.
  162. ^ RIB 602, 933, 1017, 2015, 2024; Maier, Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture, p. 75.
  163. ^ RIB 1578.
  164. ^ RIB 2007.
  165. ^ RIB 986 and 987; Maier, Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture, p. 75.
  166. ^ Maier, Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture, p. 80.
  167. ^ Jones, Barri & Mattingly, David (1990). An Atlas of Roman Britain (p. 275). Oxford: Basil Blackwell. ISBN 1-84217-067-8.
  168. ^ RIB 213; Maier, Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture, p. 82.
  169. ^ a b c d Miranda J. Green. "Dictionary of Celtic Myth and Legend" (p. 142.) Thames and Hudson Ltd. 1997
  170. ^ Green, Animals in Celtic Life and Myth, p. 216.
  171. ^ Xavier Delamarre, Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise (Éditions Errance, 2003), 2nd edition, p. 200.
  172. ^ Gaulish nemeton was originally a sacred grove or space defined for religious purposes, and later a building: Bernhard Maier, Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture (Boydell Press, 1997, 2000, originally published 1994 in German), p. 207.
  173. ^ Helmut Birkham, entry on "Loucetius," in Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia, edited by John Koch (ABC-Clio, 2006), p. 1192.
  174. ^ RIB 191: DEO MARTI MEDOCIO CAMPESIVM ET VICTORIE ALEXANDRI PII FELICIS AVGVSTI NOSI DONVM LOSSIO VEDA DE SVO POSVIT NEPOS VEPOGENI CALEDO ("To the god of the battlefields Mars Medocius, and to the victory of [Imperator Caesar Marcus Aurelius Severus] Alexander Pius Felix Augustus, Lossius Veda the grandson of Vepogenus Caledos, placed [this] offering out of his own [funds]").
  175. ^ Martin Henig, Religion in Roman Britain (Taylor & Francis, 1984, 2005), p. 61.
  176. ^ Duncan Fishwick, "Imperial Cult in Britain," Phoenix 15.4 (1961), p. 219.
  177. ^ A Saint Medocus is recorded in the early 16th century as the eponym for St. Madoes in Gowrie; Molly Miller, "Matriliny by Treaty: The Pictish Foundation-Legend," in Ireland in Early Mediaeval Europe (Cambridge University Press, 1982), p. 159.
  178. ^ Fishwick, "Imperial Cult in Britain," p. 219.
  179. ^ John Ferguson, The Religions of the Roman Empire (Cornell University Press, 1970, 1985), p. 212.
  180. ^ Perhaps related to Campesie Fells in Stirlingshire; Fishwick, "Imperial Cult in Britain," p. 219.
  181. ^ CIL 13.3148 and 3149 at Rennes; Paganism and Christianity, 100–425 C.E.: A Sourcebook, edited by Ramsay MacMullen and Eugene N. Lane (Augsburg Fortress, 1992), pp. 76–77.
  182. ^ CIL 13.3096 (Craon), CIL 13.3101 and 3102, at Nantes, ILTG 343–345 (Allones); Maier, Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture, p. 200.
  183. ^ Macrobius, Saturnalia 1.19; David Rankin, Celts and the Classical World (Routledge, 1987), p. 260.
  184. ^ Maier, Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture, p. 209.
  185. ^ John Wacher, The Towns of Roman Britain (University of California Press, 1974), p. 384.
  186. ^ Green, Symbol and Image in Celtic Religious Art, p. 115.
  187. ^ CIL 1190 = ILS 4581; E. Birley, "Deities of Roman Britain," p. 48.
  188. ^ Anthony Birley, The People of Roman Britain (University of California Press, 1979), p. 141.
  189. ^ Delamarre, entry on rix, Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise, pp. 260–261; Green, Symbol and Image in Celtic Religious Art, p. 113.
  190. ^ Lesley Adkins and Roy A. Adkins, Handbook to Life in Ancient Rome (Facts on File, 1994, 2004), p. 297.
  191. ^ Miranda Green, Celtic Myths (University of Texas Press, 1993, 1998), p. 42.
  192. ^ G. Llompart, "Mars Balearicus," Boletín del Seminario de Estudios de Arte y Arqueología 26 (1960) 101–128; "Estatuillas de bronce de Mallorca: Mars Balearicus," in Bronces y religión romana: actas del XI Congreso Internacional de Bronces Antiguos, Madrid, mayo-junio, 1990 (Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Científicas, 1993), p. 57ff.
  193. ^ Jaume García Rosselló, Joan Fornés Bisquerra, and Michael Hoskin, "Orientations of the Talayotic Sanctuaries of Mallorca," Journal of History of Astronomy, Archaeoastronomy Supplement 31 (2000), pp. 58–64 (especially note 10) pdf.
  194. ^ "Mars," The Classical Tradition, p. 565.
  195. ^ Online Etymology Dictionary.

External links edit

mars, mythology, ancient, roman, religion, mythology, mars, latin, mārs, pronounced, maːrs, also, agricultural, guardian, combination, characteristic, early, rome, jupiter, juno, eminent, among, roman, army, military, gods, most, festivals, were, held, march, . In ancient Roman religion and mythology Mars Latin Mars pronounced maːrs 4 is the god of war and also an agricultural guardian a combination characteristic of early Rome 5 He is the son of Jupiter and Juno and was pre eminent among the Roman army s military gods Most of his festivals were held in March the month named for him Latin Martius and in October the months which traditionally began and ended the season for both military campaigning and farming 6 MarsGod of war protector of agriculture and patron of the Roman stateMember of the Dii ConsentesStatue of Mars from the Forum of Nerva 2nd century AD Based on an Augustan era original that utilized a Hellenistic Greek model from the 4th century BC Located at the Capitoline Museums in Rome Italy 1 Other namesMavors Mavorte archaic and poetic forms PlanetMars 2 Symbolsspear shield 3 DayTuesday dies Martis FestivalsFebruary 27 March 14 Equirria horse racesMarch 1 Dies natalis and feriae of the Salian priestsMarch 17 AgoniaMay 14 Dies natalis of the Temple of Mars InvictusOctober 15 October Horse sacrificeOctober 19 ArmilustriumPersonal informationParentsJupiter and JunoSiblingsVulcan Minerva Hercules Bellona Apollo Diana Bacchus among othersConsortNerio and others including Venus Bellona also involved with Rhea Silvia and othersChildrenCupid Romulus and RemusEquivalentsGreek equivalentAresNorse equivalentTyrEtruscan equivalentMaris Laran Under the influence of Greek culture Mars was identified with the Greek god Ares 7 whose myths were reinterpreted in Roman literature and art under the name of Mars The character and dignity of Mars differs in fundamental ways from that of his Greek counterpart who is often treated with contempt and revulsion in Greek literature 8 Mars s altar in the Campus Martius the area of Rome that took its name from him was supposed to have been dedicated by Numa the peace loving semi legendary second king of Rome in Republican times it was a focus of electoral activities Augustus shifted the focus of Mars cult to within the pomerium Rome s ritual boundary and built a temple to Mars Ultor as a key religious feature of his new forum 9 Unlike Ares who was viewed primarily as a destructive and destabilizing force Mars represented military power as a way to secure peace and was a father pater of the Roman people 10 In Rome s mythic genealogy and founding Mars fathered Romulus and Remus through his rape of Rhea Silvia His love affair with Venus symbolically reconciled two different traditions of Rome s founding Venus was the divine mother of the hero Aeneas celebrated as the Trojan refugee who founded Rome several generations before Romulus laid out the city walls Contents 1 Name 2 Birth 3 Consort 3 1 Venus and Mars 4 Essential nature 5 Sacred animals 5 1 Sacrificial animals 6 Temples and topography in Rome 7 Iconography and symbol 7 1 The spear of Mars 8 Priesthoods 9 Festivals and rituals 10 Name and cult epithets 10 1 Mars Gradivus 10 2 Mars Quirinus 10 3 Mars Grabovius 10 4 Mars Pater 10 5 Mars Silvanus 10 6 Mars Ultor 10 7 Mars Augustus 10 8 Provincial epithets 10 8 1 Celtic Mars 10 8 2 Mars Balearicus 11 On the calendar 12 See also 13 References 13 1 Notes 13 2 Citations 14 External linksName editThe word Mars genitive Martis 11 which in Old Latin and poetic usage also appears as Mavors Mavortis 12 is cognate with Oscan Mamers Mamertos 13 The oldest recorded Latin form Mamart is likely of foreign origin 14 It has been explained as deriving from Maris the name of an Etruscan child god though this is not universally agreed upon 15 Scholars have varying views on whether the two gods are related and if so how 16 Latin adjectives from the name of Mars are martius and martialis from which derive English martial as in martial arts or martial law and personal names such as Marcus Mark and Martin 17 18 Mars may ultimately be a thematic reflex of the Proto Indo European god Perkwunos having originally a thunderer character 19 Birth editLike Ares who was the son of Zeus and Hera 20 Mars is usually considered to be the son of Jupiter and Juno In Ovid s version of Mars origin he was the son of Juno alone Jupiter had usurped the accepted function of women as mothers when he gave birth to Minerva directly from his forehead or mind Juno sought the advice of the goddess Flora on how to do the same Flora obtained a magic flower Latin flos plural flores a masculine word and tested it on a heifer who became fecund at once Flora ritually plucked a flower using her thumb touched Juno s belly and impregnated her Juno withdrew to Thrace and the shore of Marmara for the birth 21 Ovid tells this story in the Fasti his long form poetic work on the Roman calendar 21 It may explain why the Matronalia a festival celebrated by married women in honor of Juno as a goddess of childbirth occurred on the first day of Mars s month which is also marked on a calendar from late antiquity as the birthday of Mars In the earliest Roman calendar March was the first month and the god would have been born with the new year 22 Ovid is the only source for the story He may be presenting a literary myth of his own invention or an otherwise unknown archaic Italic tradition either way in choosing to include the story he emphasizes that Mars was connected to plant life and was not alienated from female nurture 23 Consort editThe consort of Mars was Nerio or Neriene Valor She represents the vital force vis power potentia and majesty maiestas of Mars 24 Her name was regarded as Sabine in origin and is equivalent to Latin virtus manly virtue from vir man 25 In the early 3rd century BCE the comic playwright Plautus has a reference to Mars greeting Nerio his wife 26 A source from late antiquity says that Mars and Neriene were celebrated together at a festival held on March 23 27 In the later Roman Empire Neriene came to be identified with Minerva 28 Nerio probably originates as a divine personification of Mars s power as such abstractions in Latin are generally feminine Her name appears with that of Mars in an archaic prayer invoking a series of abstract qualities each paired with the name of a deity The influence of Greek mythology and its anthropomorphic gods may have caused Roman writers to treat these pairs as marriages 29 Venus and Mars edit nbsp Mars caresses Venus enthroned Wall painting in Pompeii c 20 BC 50s AD The union of Venus and Mars held greater appeal for poets and philosophers and the couple were a frequent subject of art In Greek myth the adultery of Ares and Aphrodite had been exposed to ridicule when her husband Hephaestus whose Roman equivalent was Vulcan caught them in the act by means of a magical snare Although not originally part of the Roman tradition in 217 BCE Venus and Mars were presented as a complementary pair in the lectisternium a public banquet at which images of twelve major gods of the Roman state were presented on couches as if present and participating 30 Scenes of Venus and Mars in Roman art often ignore the adulterous implications of their union and take pleasure in the good looking couple attended by Cupid or multiple Loves amores Some scenes may imply marriage 31 and the relationship was romanticized in funerary or domestic art in which husbands and wives had themselves portrayed as the passionate divine couple 32 The uniting of deities representing Love and War lent itself to allegory especially since the lovers were the parents of Concordia citation needed The Renaissance philosopher Marsilio Ficino notes that only Venus dominates Mars and he never dominates her 33 In ancient Roman and Renaissance art Mars is often shown disarmed and relaxed or even sleeping but the extramarital nature of their affair can also suggest that this peace is impermanent 34 Essential nature edit nbsp A relief depicting Mars and Venus on a black slip bowl from Campania Italy 250 150 BCE British Museum Virility as a kind of life force vis or virtue virtus is an essential characteristic of Mars 35 As an agricultural guardian he directs his energies toward creating conditions that allow crops to grow which may include warding off hostile forces of nature 36 The priesthood of the Arval Brothers called on Mars to drive off rust lues with its double meaning of wheat fungus and the red oxides that affect metal a threat to both iron farm implements and weaponry In the surviving text of their hymn the Arval Brothers invoked Mars as ferus savage or feral like a wild animal 37 Mars s potential for savagery is expressed in his obscure connections to the wild woodlands and he may even have originated as a god of the wild beyond the boundaries set by humans and thus a force to be propitiated 38 In his book on farming Cato invokes Mars Silvanus for a ritual to be carried out in silva in the woods an uncultivated place that if not held within bounds can threaten to overtake the fields needed for crops 39 Mars s character as an agricultural god may derive solely from his role as a defender and protector 40 or may be inseparable from his warrior nature 41 as the leaping of his armed priests the Salii was meant to quicken the growth of crops 42 It appears that Mars was originally a thunderer or storm deity which explains some of his mixed traits in regards to fertility 19 This role was later taken in the Roman pantheon by several other gods such as Summanus or Jupiter Sacred animals edit nbsp She wolf and twins Romulus and Remus from an altar to Venus and Mars The wild animals most sacred to Mars were the woodpecker and the wolf which in the natural lore of the Romans were said always to inhabit the same foothills and woodlands 43 Plutarch notes that the woodpecker picus is sacred to Mars because it is a courageous and spirited bird and has a beak so strong that it can overturn oaks by pecking them until it has reached the inmost part of the tree 44 As the beak of the picus Martius contained the god s power to ward off harm it was carried as a magic charm to prevent bee stings and leech bites 45 The bird of Mars also guarded a woodland herb paeonia used for treatment of the digestive or female reproductive systems those who sought to harvest it were advised to do so by night lest the woodpecker jab out their eyes 46 The picus Martius seems to have been a particular species but authorities differ on which one perhaps Picus viridis 47 or Dryocopus martius 48 The woodpecker was revered by the Latin peoples who abstained from eating its flesh 49 It was one of the most important birds in Roman and Italic augury the practice of reading the will of the gods through watching the sky for signs 50 The mythological figure named Picus had powers of augury that he retained when he was transformed into a woodpecker in one tradition Picus was the son of Mars 51 The Umbrian cognate peiqu also means woodpecker and the Italic Picenes were supposed to have derived their name from the picus who served as their guide animal during a ritual migration ver sacrum undertaken as a rite of Mars 52 In the territory of the Aequi another Italic people Mars had an oracle of great antiquity where the prophecies were supposed to be spoken by a woodpecker perched on a wooden column 53 Mars s association with the wolf is familiar from what may be the most famous of Roman myths the story of how a she wolf lupa suckled his infant sons when they were exposed by order of King Amulius who feared them because he had usurped the throne from their grandfather Numitor 54 The woodpecker also brought nourishment to the twins 55 The wolf appears elsewhere in Roman art and literature in masculine form as the animal of Mars A statue group that stood along the Appian Way showed Mars in the company of wolves 56 At the Battle of Sentinum in 295 BCE the appearance of the wolf of Mars Martius lupus was a sign that Roman victory was to come 57 In Roman Gaul the goose was associated with the Celtic forms of Mars and archaeologists have found geese buried alongside warriors in graves The goose was considered a bellicose animal because it is easily provoked to aggression 58 Sacrificial animals edit nbsp The procession of the suovetaurilia a sacrifice of a pig ram and bull led by a priest with his head ritually covered Ancient Greek and Roman religion distinguished between animals that were sacred to a deity and those that were prescribed as the correct sacrificial offerings for the god Wild animals might be viewed as already belonging to the god to whom they were sacred or at least not owned by human beings and therefore not theirs to give Since sacrificial meat was eaten at a banquet after the gods received their portion mainly the entrails exta it follows that the animals sacrificed were most often though not always domestic animals normally part of the Roman diet 59 Gods often received castrated male animals as sacrifices and the goddesses female victims Mars however regularly received intact males 60 Mars did receive oxen under a few of his cult titles such as Mars Grabovius but the usual offering was the bull singly in multiples or in combination with other animals citation needed The two most distinctive animal sacrifices made to Mars were the suovetaurilia a triple offering of a pig sus ram ovis and bull taurus 61 and the October Horse the only horse sacrifice known to have been carried out in ancient Rome and a rare instance of a victim the Romans considered inedible 62 Temples and topography in Rome editThe earliest center in Rome for cultivating Mars as a deity was the Altar of Mars Ara Martis in the Campus Martius Field of Mars outside the sacred boundary of Rome pomerium The Romans thought that this altar had been established by the semi legendary Numa Pompilius the peace loving successor of Romulus 63 According to Roman tradition the Campus Martius had been consecrated to Mars by their ancestors to serve as horse pasturage and an equestrian training ground for youths 64 During the Roman Republic 509 27 BCE the Campus was a largely open expanse No temple was built at the altar but from 193 BCE a covered walkway connected it to the Porta Fontinalis near the office and archives of the Roman censors Newly elected censors placed their curule chairs by the altar and when they had finished conducting the census the citizens were collectively purified with a suovetaurilia there 65 A frieze from the so called Altar of Domitius Ahenobarbus is thought to depict the census and may show Mars himself standing by the altar as the procession of victims advances 66 nbsp Remains of the Temple of Mars Ultor in the Forum of Augustus Rome The main Temple of Mars Aedes Martis in the Republican period also lay outside the sacred boundary where and was devoted to the god s warrior aspect 67 It was built to fulfill a vow votum made by a Titus Quinctius in 388 BCE during the Gallic siege of Rome 68 The founding day dies natalis was commemorated on June 1 69 and the temple is attested by several inscriptions and literary sources 70 The sculpture group of Mars and the wolves was displayed there 71 Soldiers sometimes assembled at the temple before heading off to war and it was the point of departure for a major parade of Roman cavalry held annually on July 15 72 A temple to Mars in the Circus Flaminius was built around 133 BCE funded by Decimus Junius Brutus Callaicus from war booty It housed a colossal statue of Mars and a nude Venus 73 The Campus Martius continued to provide venues for equestrian events such as chariot racing during the Imperial period but under the first emperor Augustus it underwent a major program of urban renewal marked by monumental architecture The Altar of Augustan Peace Ara Pacis Augustae was located there as was the Obelisk of Montecitorio imported from Egypt to form the pointer gnomon of the Solarium Augusti a giant sundial With its public gardens the Campus became one of the most attractive places in the city to visit 74 Augustus made the centrepiece of his new forum a large Temple to Mars Ultor a manifestation of Mars he cultivated as the avenger ultor of the murder of Julius Caesar and of the military disaster suffered at the Battle of Carrhae When the legionary standards lost to the Parthians were recovered they were housed in the new temple The date of the temple s dedication on May 12 was aligned with the heliacal setting of the constellation Scorpio the sign of war 75 The date continued to be marked with circus games as late as the mid 4th century AD 76 A large statue of Mars was part of the short lived Arch of Nero which was built in 62 CE but dismantled after Nero s suicide and disgrace damnatio memoriae 77 Iconography and symbol edit nbsp Medieval representation of Mars Sitting on a rainbow with a sword and a sceptre he excites men to war nbsp A nude statue of Mars 78 in a garden setting depicted on a wall painting from Pompeii nbsp A stylised spear and shield of Mars is also the symbol for the planet Mars and male gender In Roman art Mars is depicted as either bearded and mature or young and clean shaven Even nude or seminude he often wears a helmet or carries a spear as emblems of his warrior nature Mars was among the deities to appear on the earliest Roman coinage in the late 4th and early 3rd century BCE 79 On the Altar of Peace Ara Pacis built in the last years of the 1st century BCE Mars is a mature man with a handsome classicizing face and a short curly beard and moustache His helmet is a plumed neo Attic type He wears a military cloak paludamentum and a cuirass ornamented with a gorgoneion Although the relief is somewhat damaged at this spot he appears to hold a spear garlanded in laurel symbolizing a peace that is won by military victory The 1st century statue of Mars found in the Forum of Nerva pictured at top is similar In this guise Mars is presented as the dignified ancestor of the Roman people The panel of the Ara Pacis on which he appears would have faced the Campus Martius reminding viewers that Mars was the god whose altar Numa established there that is the god of Rome s oldest civic and military institutions 80 Particularly in works of art influenced by the Greek tradition Mars may be portrayed in a manner that resembles Ares youthful beardless and often nude 81 In the Renaissance Mars s nudity was thought to represent his lack of fear in facing danger 82 The spear of Mars edit The spear is the instrument of Mars in the same way that Jupiter wields the lightning bolt Neptune the trident and Saturn the scythe or sickle 83 A relic or fetish called the spear of Mars 84 was kept in a sacrarium at the Regia the former residence of the Kings of Rome 85 The spear was said to move tremble or vibrate at impending war or other danger to the state as was reported to occur before the assassination of Julius Caesar 86 When Mars is pictured as a peace bringer his spear is wreathed with laurel or other vegetation as on the Ara Pacis or a coin of Aemilianus 87 Priesthoods editThe high priest of Mars in Roman public religion was the Flamen Martialis who was one of the three major priests in the fifteen member college of flamens Mars was also served by the Salii a twelve member priesthood of patrician youths who dressed as archaic warriors and danced in procession around the city in March Both priesthoods extend to the earliest periods of Roman history and patrician birth was required 88 Festivals and rituals editThe festivals of Mars cluster in his namesake month of March Latin Martius with a few observances in October the beginning and end of the season for military campaigning and agriculture Festivals with horse racing took place in the Campus Martius Some festivals in March retained characteristics of new year festivals since Martius was originally the first month of the Roman calendar 89 nbsp Denarius issued 88 BCE depicting the helmeted head of Mars with Victory driving a two horse chariot biga on the reverse February 27 Equirria involving chariot or horse races March 1 Mars s dies natalis birthday a feria also sacred to his mother Juno 90 March 14 a second Equirria again with chariot races March 14 or 15 Mamuralia a new year festival when a figure called Mamurius Veturius perhaps the old Mars of the old year is driven out March 17 an Agonalia or Agonium Martiale an obscure type of observance held at other times for various deities March 23 Tubilustrium a purification of the deploying army March 23 October 15 the ritual of the October Horse with a chariot race and Rome s only known horse sacrifice October 19 Armilustrium purification of arms Mars was also honored by chariot races at the Robigalia and Consualia though these festivals are not primarily dedicated to him From 217 BCE onward Mars was among the gods honored at the lectisternium a banquet given for deities who were present as images citation needed Roman hymns carmina are rarely preserved but Mars is invoked in two The Arval Brothers or Brothers of the Fields chanted a hymn to Mars while performing their three step dance 91 The Carmen Saliare was sung by Mars s priests the Salii while they moved twelve sacred shields ancilia throughout the city in a procession 92 In the 1st century AD Quintilian remarks that the language of the Salian hymn was so archaic that it was no longer fully understood 93 Name and cult epithets edit nbsp The so called Mars of Todi an Etruscan bronze of the early 4th century BCE probably depicting a warrior 94 In Classical Roman religion Mars was invoked under several titles and the first Roman emperor Augustus thoroughly integrated Mars into Imperial cult The 4th century Latin historian Ammianus Marcellinus treats Mars as one of several classical Roman deities who remained cultic realities up to his own time 95 Mars and specifically Mars Ultor was among the gods who received sacrifices from Julian the only emperor to reject Christianity after the conversion of Constantine I In 363 AD in preparation for the Siege of Ctesiphon Julian sacrificed ten very fine bulls to Mars Ultor The tenth bull violated ritual protocol by attempting to break free and when killed and examined produced ill omens among the many that were read at the end of Julian s reign As represented by Ammianus Julian swore never to make sacrifice to Mars again a vow kept with his death a month later 96 Mars Gradivus edit Gradivus was one of the gods by whom a general or soldiers might swear an oath to be valorous in battle 97 His temple outside the Porta Capena was where armies gathered The archaic priesthood of Mars Gradivus was the Salii the leaping priests who danced ritually in armor as a prelude to war 98 His cult title is most often taken to mean the Strider or the Marching God from gradus step march 99 The poet Statius addresses him as the most implacable of the gods 100 but Valerius Maximus concludes his history by invoking Mars Gradivus as author and support of the name Roman 101 Gradivus is asked along with Capitoline Jupiter and Vesta as the keeper of Rome s perpetual flame to guard preserve and protect the state of Rome the peace and the princeps the emperor Tiberius at the time 102 A source from Late Antiquity says that the wife of Gradivus was Nereia the daughter of Nereus and that he loved her passionately 103 Mars Quirinus edit nbsp Mars celebrated as peace bringer on a Roman coin issued by Aemilianus Mars Quirinus was the protector of the Quirites citizens or civilians as divided into curiae citizen assemblies whose oaths were required to make a treaty 104 As a guarantor of treaties Mars Quirinus is thus a god of peace When he rampages Mars is called Gradivus but when he s at peace Quirinus 105 The deified Romulus was identified with Mars Quirinus In the Capitoline Triad of Jupiter Mars and Quirinus however Mars and Quirinus were two separate deities though not perhaps in origin Each of the three had his own flamen specialized priest but the functions of the Flamen Martialis and Flamen Quirinalis are hard to distinguish 106 Mars Grabovius edit Mars is invoked as Grabovius in the Iguvine Tablets bronze tablets written in Umbrian that record ritual protocols for carrying out public ceremonies on behalf of the city and community of Iguvium The same title is given to Jupiter and to the Umbrian deity Vofionus This triad has been compared to the Archaic Triad with Vofionus equivalent to Quirinus 107 Tables I and VI describe a complex ritual that took place at the three gates of the city After the auspices were taken two groups of three victims were sacrificed at each gate Mars Grabovius received three oxen 108 Mars Pater edit Father Mars or Mars the Father is the form in which the god is invoked in the agricultural prayer of Cato 109 and he appears with this title in several other literary texts and inscriptions 110 Mars Pater is among the several gods invoked in the ritual of devotio by means of which a general sacrificed himself and the lives of the enemy to secure a Roman victory 111 Father Mars is the regular recipient of the suovetaurilia the sacrifice of a pig sus ram ovis and bull taurus or often a bull alone 112 To Mars Pater other epithets were sometimes appended such as Mars Pater Victor Father Mars the Victorious 113 to whom the Roman army sacrificed a bull on March 1 114 Although pater and mater were fairly common as honorifics for a deity 115 any special claim for Mars as father of the Roman people lies in the mythic genealogy that makes him the divine father of Romulus and Remus 116 Mars Silvanus edit In the section of his farming book that offers recipes and medical preparations Cato describes a votum to promote the health of cattle Make an offering to Mars Silvanus in the forest in silva during the daytime for each head of cattle 3 pounds of meal 4 pounds of bacon 4 pounds of meat and 3 pints of wine You may place the viands in one vessel and the wine likewise in one vessel Either a slave or a free man may make this offering After the ceremony is over consume the offering on the spot at once A woman may not take part in this offering or see how it is performed You may vow the vow every year if you wish 117 That Mars Silvanus is a single entity has been doubted Invocations of deities are often list like without connecting words and the phrase should perhaps be understood as Mars and Silvanus 118 Women were explicitly excluded from some cult practices of Silvanus but not necessarily of Mars 119 William Warde Fowler however thought that the wild god of the wood Silvanus may have been an emanation or offshoot of Mars 120 Mars Ultor edit nbsp A statue to Mars Ultor from Balmuildy on the Antonine Wall has been scanned and a video produced 121 Augustus created the cult of Mars the Avenger to mark two occasions his defeat of the assassins of Caesar at Philippi in 42 BCE and the negotiated return of the Roman battle standards that had been lost to the Parthians at the Battle of Carrhae in 53 BCE 122 The god is depicted wearing a cuirass and helmet and standing in a martial pose leaning on a lance he holds in his right hand He holds a shield in his left hand 123 The goddess Ultio a divine personification of vengeance had an altar and golden statue in his temple 124 The Temple of Mars Ultor dedicated in 2 BCE in the center of the Forum of Augustus gave the god a new place of honor 122 125 Some rituals previously conducted within the cult of Capitoline Jupiter were transferred to the new temple 126 which became the point of departure for magistrates as they left for military campaigns abroad 127 Augustus required the Senate to meet at the temple when deliberating questions of war and peace 128 The temple also became the site at which sacrifice was made to conclude the rite of passage of young men assuming the toga virilis man s toga around age 14 129 On various Imperial holidays Mars Ultor was the first god to receive a sacrifice followed by the Genius of the emperor 130 An inscription from the 2nd century records a vow to offer Mars Ultor a bull with gilded horns 131 Mars Augustus edit See also Augustus honorific nbsp Fragmentary dedication stele to Mars Augustus from Roman Gaul Augustus or Augusta was appended far and wide on monuments great and small 132 to the name of gods or goddesses including Mars The honorific marks the affiliation of a deity with Imperial cult 133 In Hispania many of the statues and dedications to Mars Augustus were presented by members of the priesthood or sodality called the Sodales Augustales 134 These vows vota were usually fulfilled within a sanctuary of Imperial cult or in a temple or precinct templum consecrated specifically to Mars 135 As with other deities invoked as Augustus altars to Mars Augustus might be set up to further the well being salus of the emperor 136 but some inscriptions suggest personal devotion An inscription in the Alps records the gratitude of a slave who dedicated a statue to Mars Augustus as conservator corporis sui the preserver of his own body said to have been vowed ex iussu numinis ipsius by the order of the numen himself 137 Mars Augustus appears in inscriptions at sites throughout the Empire such as Hispania Baetica Saguntum 138 and Emerita Lusitania in Roman Spain 139 Leptis Magna with a date of 6 7 AD in present day Libya 140 and Sarmizegetusa in the province of Dacia 141 Provincial epithets edit In addition to his cult titles at Rome Mars appears in a large number of inscriptions in the provinces of the Roman Empire and more rarely in literary texts identified with a local deity by means of an epithet Mars appears with great frequency in Gaul among the Continental Celts as well as in Roman Spain and Britain In Celtic settings he is often invoked as a healer 142 The inscriptions indicate that Mars s ability to dispel the enemy on the battlefield was transferred to the sick person s struggle against illness healing is expressed in terms of warding off and rescue 143 Celtic Mars edit Mars is identified with a number of Celtic deities some of whom are not attested independently nbsp Votive plaque inscribed to Mars Alator from the Barkway hoard Roman Britain Mars Alator is attested in Roman Britain by an inscription found on an altar at South Shields 144 and a silver gilt votive plaque that was part of the Barkway hoard from Hertfordshire 145 Alator has been interpreted variously as Huntsman or Cherisher 146 147 Mars Albiorix appears in an inscription from modern day Sablet in the province of Gallia Narbonensis 148 Albiorix probably means King of the Land or King of the World with the first element related to the geographical name Albion and Middle Welsh elfydd world land 149 The Saturnian moon Albiorix is named after this epithet 150 Mars Barrex is attested by a single dedicatory inscription found at Carlisle England 151 Barrex or Barrecis probably means Supreme One 147 Gaulish barro head 152 Mars Belatucadrus is named in five inscriptions 153 in the area of Hadrian s Wall 154 The Celtic god Belatucadros with various spellings is attested independently in twenty additional inscriptions in northern England 155 Mars Braciaca appears in a single votive inscription at Bakewell Derbyshire 147 156 The Celtic epithet may refer to malt or beer though intoxication in Greco Roman religion is associated with Dionysus 157 A reference in Pliny 158 suggests a connection to Mars s agricultural function with the Gaulish word bracis referring to a type of wheat a medieval Latin gloss says it was used to make beer 159 nbsp A bronze Mars from Gaul Mars Camulus is found in five inscriptions scattered over a fairly wide geographical area 160 The Celtic god Camulus appears independently in one votive inscription from Rome 161 Mars Cocidius is found in five inscriptions from northern England 162 About twenty dedications in all are known for the Celtic god Cocidius mainly made by Roman military personnel and confined to northwest Cumbria and along Hadrian s Wall He is once identified with Silvanus 163 He is depicted on two votive plaques as a warrior bearing shield and spear 164 and on an altar as a huntsman accompanied by a dog and stag 165 Mars Condatis occurs in several inscriptions from Roman Britain a The cult title is probably related to the place name Condate often used in Gaul for settlements at the confluence of rivers 166 The Celtic god Condatis is thought to have functions pertaining to water and healing 147 167 Mars Corotiacus is an equestrian Mars attested only on a votive from Martlesham in Suffolk 168 A bronze statuette depicts him as a cavalryman armed and riding a horse which tramples a prostrate enemy beneath its hooves 169 Mars Lenus or more often Lenus Mars had a major healing cult at the capital of the Treveri present day Trier Among the votives are images of children offering doves 170 His consort Ancamna is also found with the Celtic god Smertrios Mars Loucetius The Celtic god Loucetios Latinized as ius appears in nine inscriptions in present day Germany and France and one in Britain and in three as Leucetius The Gaulish and Brythonic theonyms likely derive from Proto Celtic louk k et bright shining flashing hence also lightning 171 alluding to either a Celtic commonplace metaphor between battles and thunderstorms Old Irish torannchless the thunder feat or the aura of a divinized hero the luan of Cu Chulainn The name is given as an epithet of Mars The consort of Mars Loucetius is Nemetona whose name may be understood as pertaining either to sacred privilege or to the sacred grove nemeton 172 and who is also identified with the goddess Victoria At the Romano British site in Bath a dedication to Mars Loucetius as part of this divine couple was made by a pilgrim who had come from the continental Treveri of Gallia Belgica to seek healing 173 Mars Medocius Campesium appears on a bronze plaque at a Romano Celtic temple at Camulodunum modern Colchester see Mars Camulus above The dedication 174 was made between 222 and 235 CE by a self identified Caledonian 175 jointly honoring Mars and the Victoria Victory 176 of Severus Alexander A Celto Latin name Medocius or Medocus is known 177 and a link between Mars s epithet and the Irish legendary surgeon Miodhach has been conjectured 178 Campesium may be an error for Campestrium of the Campestres the divinities who oversaw the parade ground 179 or of the Compeses may refer to a local place name or ethnonym 180 Mars Mullo is invoked in two Armorican inscriptions pertaining to Imperial cult 181 The name of the Celtic god Mullo which appears in a few additional inscriptions has been analyzed variously as mule and hill heap 182 Mars Neton or Neto was a Celtiberian god at Acci modern Guadix According to Macrobius he wore a radiant crown like a sun god because the passion to act with valor was a kind of heat He may be connected to Irish Neit 183 Mars Nodens has a possible connection to the Irish mythological figure Nuada Airgetlam The Celtic god Nodens was also interpreted as equivalent to several other Roman gods including Mercury and Neptune The name may have meant catcher hence a fisher or hunter 184 Mars Ocelus had an altar dedicated by a junior army officer at Caerwent and possibly a temple He may be a local counterpart to Lenus 185 Mars Olloudius was depicted in a relief from Roman Britain without armor in the guise of a Genius carrying a double cornucopia and holding a libation bowl patera Olloudius is found also at Ollioules in southern Gaul 186 Mars Rigisamus is found in two inscriptions the earliest most likely the one at Avaricum present day Bourges France in the territory of the Bituriges 187 At the site of a villa at West Coker Somerset he received a bronze plaque votum 188 The Gaulish element rig very common at the end of names as rix found in later Celtic languages as ri is cognate with Latin rex king or more precisely ruler Rigisamus or Rigisamos is supreme ruler or king of kings 189 nbsp Bronze statuette of Mars Balearicus Mars Rigonemetis King of the Sacred Grove A dedication to Rigonemetis and the numen spirit of the Emperor inscribed on a stone was discovered at Nettleham Lincolnshire in 1961 Rigonemetis is only known from this site and it seems he may have been a god belonging to the tribe of the Corieltauvi 169 Mars Segomo Mars the Victorious appears among the Celtic Sequani 190 Mars Smertrius At a site within the territory of the Treveri Ancamna was the consort of Mars Smertrius 191 Mars Teutates A fusion of Mars with the Celtic god Teutates Toutatis Mars Thincsus A form of Mars invoked at Housesteads Roman Fort at Hadrian s Wall where his name is linked with two goddesses called the Alaisiagae Anne Ross associated Thincsus with a sculpture also from the fort which shows a god flanked by goddesses and accompanied by a goose a frequent companion of war gods 169 Mars Visucius A fusion of Mars with the Celtic god Visucius Mars Vorocius A Celtic healer god invoked at the curative spring shrine at Vichy Allier as a curer of eye afflictions On images the god is depicted as a Celtic warrior 169 Mars Balearicus edit Mars Balearicus is a name used in modern scholarship for small bronze warrior figures from Majorca one of the Balearic Islands that are interpreted as representing the local Mars cult 192 These statuettes have been found within talayotic sanctuaries with extensive evidence of burnt offerings Mars is fashioned as a lean athletic nude lifting a lance and wearing a helmet often conical the genitals are perhaps semi erect in some examples Other bronzes at the sites represent the heads or horns of bulls but the bones in the ash layers indicate that sheep goats and pigs were the sacrificial victims Bronze horse hooves were found in one sanctuary Another site held an imported statue of Imhotep the legendary Egyptian physician These sacred precincts were still in active use when the Roman occupation began in 123 BCE They seem to have been astronomically oriented toward the rising or setting of the constellation Centaurus 193 On the calendar editMars gave his name to the third month in the Roman calendar Martius from which English March derives In the most ancient Roman calendar Martius was the first month The planet Mars was named for him and in some allegorical and philosophical writings the planet and the god are endowed with shared characteristics 194 In many languages Tuesday is named for the planet Mars or the god of war In Latin martis dies literally Mars s Day survived in Romance languages as marte Portuguese martes Spanish mardi French martedi Italian marți Romanian and dimarts Catalan In Irish Gaelic the day is An Mhairt while in Albanian it is e Marta The English word Tuesday derives from Old English Tiwesdaeg and means Tiw s Day Tiw being the Old English form of the Proto Germanic war god Tiwaz or Tyr in Norse 195 See also editCariocecus an Iberian war god syncretised with Mars Mars the planet Nergal the Babylonian god associated with the planet Mars in astral theology Planets in astrology Mars Tyr the Norse god of warReferences editNotes edit See Condatis gt Archaeological evidence Citations edit Capitoline Museums Colossal statue of Mars Ultor also known as Pyrrhus Inv Scu 58 Capitolini information Accessed October 8 2016 Evans James 1998 The History and Practice of Ancient Astronomy Oxford University Press pp 296 7 ISBN 978 0 19 509539 5 Retrieved February 4 2008 The spear and shield are also symbols in astronomy and astrology for the planet Mars and symbolically represent the male gender Chapter 3 Charles E Bennett 1907 The Latin Language a historical outline of its sounds inflections and syntax Allyn amp Bacon Boston Mary Beard J A North and S R F Price Religions of Rome A History Cambridge University Press 1998 pp 47 48 John Scheid An Introduction to Roman Religion translated by Janet Lloyd Indiana University Press 2003 pp 51 52 Robert Turcan The Gods of Ancient Rome Routledge 2001 originally published in French 1998 p 79 Larousse Desk Reference Encyclopedia The Book People Haydock 1995 p 215 Kurt A Raaflaub War and Peace in the Ancient World Blackwell 2007 p 15 Paul Rehak and John G Younger Imperium and Cosmos Augustus and the Northern Campus Martius University of Wisconsin Press 2006 pp 11 12 Isidore of Seville calls Mars Romanae gentis auctorem the originator or founder of the Roman people as a gens Etymologiae 5 33 5 The classical Latin declension of the name is as follows nominative and vocative case Mars genitive Martis accusative Martem dative Marti ablative Marte 1 Archived September 10 2017 at the Wayback Machine Virgil Aeneid VIII 630 Mallory J P D Q Adams 1997 Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture New York Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers pp 630 631 ISBN 1 884964 98 2 some of the older literature assumes an Indo European form closer to Marts and see a connection with the Indic wind gods the Maruts Maruta Archived from the original on July 24 2011 Retrieved July 8 2010 However this makes the appearance of Mavors and the agricultural cults of Mars difficult to explain Michiel de Vaan Etymological Dictionary of Latin and the other Italic Languages Brill 2008 p 366 Larissa Bonfante Etruscan Life and Afterlife A Handbook of Etruscan Studies Wayne State University Press 1986 p 226 Massimo Pallottino Religion in Pre Roman Italy in Roman and European Mythologies University of Chicago Press 1992 from the French edition of 1981 pp 29 30 Hendrik Wagenvoort The Origin of the Ludi Saeculares in Studies in Roman Literature Culture and Religion Brill 1956 p 219 et passim John F Hall III The Saeculum Novum of Augustus and its Etruscan Antecedents Aufstieg und Niedergang der romischen Welt II 16 3 1986 p 2574 Larissa Bonfante Etruscan Life and Afterlife A Handbook of Etruscan Studies Wayne State University Press 1986 p 226 martial The American Heritage Dictionary Retrieved November 4 2019 Albert Dauzat Dictionnaire etymologique des noms de famille et prenoms de France Larousse Paris 1980 p 420 New completed edition by Marie Therese Morlet a b York Michael Romulus and Remus Mars and Quirinus Journal of Indo European Studies 16 1 amp 2 Spring Summer 1988 153 172 Hesiod Theogony p 79 in the translation of Norman O Brown Bobbs Merrill 1953 921 in the Loeb Classical Library numbering Iliad 5 890 896 a b Ovid Fasti 5 229 260 William Warde Fowler The Roman Festivals of the Period of the Republic London 1908 p 35f discusses this interpretation in order to question it Carole E Newlands Playing with Time Ovid and the Fasti Cornell University Press 1995 pp 105 106 Aulus Gellius Attic Nights 13 23 Gellius says the word Nerio or Nerienes is Sabine and is supposed to be the origin of the name Nero as used by the Claudian family who were Sabine in origin The Sabines themselves Gellius says thought the word was Greek in origin from neῦra neura Latin nervi meaning the sinews and ligaments of the limbs Robert E A Palmer The Archaic Community of the Romans Cambridge University Press 1970 2009 p 167 Plautus Truculentus 515 Johannes Lydus De mensibus 4 60 42 Porphyrion Commentum in Horatium Flaccum on Epistula II 2 209 William Warde Fowler The Religious Experience of the Roman People London 1922 p 150 154 Roger D Woodard Indo European Sacred Space Vedic and Roman Cult University of Illinois Press 2006 pp 113 114 Gary Forsythe A Critical History of Early Rome From Prehistory to the First Punic War University of California Press 2005 p 145 The prayer is recorded in the passage on Nerio in Aulus Gellius Robert Schilling Venus in Roman and European Mythologies University of Chicago Press 1992 from the French edition of 1981 p 147 John R Clarke The Houses of Roman Italy 100 B C A D 250 Ritual Space and Decoration University of California Press 1991 pp 156 157 Laura Salah Nasrallah Christian Responses to Roman Art and Architecture The Second Century Church amid the Spaces of Empire Cambridge University Press 2010 pp 284 287 Ficino On Love speech 5 chapter 8 as summarized in the entry on Mars The Classical Tradition Harvard University Press 2010 p 564 Entry on Mars in The Classical Tradition p 564 Onians The Origins of European Thought about the Body the Mind the Soul the World Time and Fate Cambridge University Press 1951 pp 470 471 Onians connects the name of Mars to the Latin mas maris male p 178 as had Isidore of Seville saying that the month of March Martius was named after Mars because at that time all living things are stirred toward virility mas gen maris and to the pleasures of sexual intercourse eo tempore cuncta animantia agantur ad marem et ad concumbendi voluptatem Etymologies 5 33 5 translation by Stephen A Barney The Etymologies of Isidore of Seville Cambridge University Press 2006 p 128 In antiquity vis was thought to be related etymologically to vita life Varro De lingua latina 5 64 quoting Lucilius notes that vis is vita vis drives us to do everything On the relation of Mars s warrior aspect to his agricultural functions with respect to Dumezil s Trifunctional hypothesis see Wouter W Belier Decayed Gods Origin and Development of Georges Dumezil s ideologie tripartie Brill 1991 pp 88 91 online Schilling Mars in Roman and European Mythologies p 135 Palmer Archaic Community pp 113 114 Gary Forsythe A Critical History of Early Rome University of California Press 2005 p 127 Fowler Religious Experience p 134 Cato On Agriculture 141 In pre modern agricultural societies encroaching woodland or wild growth was a real threat to the food supply since clearing land for cultivation required intense manual labor with minimal tools and little or no large scale machinery Fowler says of Mars As he was not localised either on the farm or in the city I prefer to think that he was originally conceived as a Power outside the boundary in each case but for that very reason all the more to be propitiated by the settlers within it Religious Experience p 142 Schilling Mars p 135 Beard et al Religions of Rome A History pp 47 48 Forsythe A Critical History of Early Rome p 127 Plutarch Roman Questions 21 citing Nigidius Figulus Plutarch Roman Questions 21 also named as sacred to Mars in his Life of Romulus Ovid Fasti 3 37 calls the woodpecker the bird of Mars Pliny Natural History 29 29 Pliny Natural History 27 60 Pliny names the herb as glycyside in Greek Latin paeonia see Peony Name also called pentorobos A H Krappe Picus Who Is Also Zeus Mnemosyne 9 4 1941 p 241 William Geoffrey Arnott Birds in the ancient world from A to Z Routledge 2007 p 63 online Plutarch Roman Questions 21 Athenaeus lists the woodpecker among delicacies on Greek tables Deipnosophistae 9 369 Plautus Asinaria 259 261 Pliny Natural History 10 18 Named also in the Iguvine Tables 6a 1 7 as Umbrian peiqu Schilling Roman Divination in Roman and European Mythologies University of Chicago Press 1992 pp 96 97 and 105 note 7 Dionysius of Halicarnassus 1 31 Peter F Dorcey The Cult of Silvanus A Study in Roman Folk Religion Brill 1992 p 33 John Greppin entry on woodpecker Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture Fitzroy Dearborn 1997 p 648 Dionysius Halicarnassus Roman Antiquities I 14 5 as noted by Mary Emma Armstrong The Significance of Certain Colors in Roman Ritual George Banta Publishing 1917 p 6 The myth of the she wolf and the birth of the twins with Mars as their father is a long and complex tradition that weaves together multiple stories about the founding of Rome See T P Wiseman Remus A Roman Myth Cambridge University Press 1995 p xiii 73ff et passim Plutarch Life of Romulus 4 Livy 22 1 12 as cited by Wiseman Remus p 189 note 6 and Armstrong The Significance of Certain Colors p 6 Livy Ab Urbe Condita 10 27 Miranda Green Animals in Celtic Life and Myth Routledge 1992 p 126 Nicole Belayche Religious Actors in Daily Life Practices and Related Beliefs in A Companion to Roman Religion Blackwell 2007 p 283 C Bennett Pascal October Horse Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 85 1981 pp 268 277 As did Neptune Janus and the Genius John Scheid Sacrifices for Gods and Ancestors in A Companion to Roman Religion Blackwell 2007 p 264 Mary Beard J A North and S R F Price Religions of Rome A Sourcebook Cambridge University Press 1998 p 153 C Bennett Pascal October Horse Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 85 1981 pp 263 268 277 Lawrence Richardson A New Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome Johns Hopkins University Press 1992 p 245 Dionysius of Halicarnassus Roman Antiquities 5 13 2 Livy 40 45 8 1 44 1 2 Katja Moede Reliefs Public and Private in A Companion to Roman Religion Blackwell 2007 p 170 Vitruvius 1 7 1 Servius note to Aeneid 1 292 Richardson New Topographical Dictionary p 244 Livy 6 5 7 Richardson New Topographical Dictionary p 244 Ovid Fasti 6 191 192 and the Fasti Antiates Degrassi 463 as cited by Richardson New Topographical Dictionary p 244 CIL 6 473 474 30774 485 ILS 3139 3144 as cited by Richardson New Topographical Dictionary p 244 H H Scullard Festivals and Ceremonies of the Roman Republic Cornell University Press 1981 p 127 Scullard Festivals and Ceremonies pp 127 164 Pliny Natural History 36 26 Richardson New Topographical Dictionary p 245 Paul Rehak Imperium and Cosmos Augustus and the Northern Campus Martius University of Wisconsin Press 2006 pp 7 8 Rehak Imperium and Cosmos p 145 Michele Renee Salzman On Roman Time The Codex Calendar of 354 and the Rhythms of Urban Life in Late Antiquity University of California Press 1990 p 122 Richardson New Topographical Dictionary p 27 Robert Schilling Mars in Roman and European Mythologies University of Chicago Press 1992 from the French edition of 1981 p 135 online The figure is sometimes identified only as a warrior Jonathan Williams Religion and Roman Coins in A Companion to Roman Religion p 143 Paul Rehak and John G Younger Imperium and Cosmos Augustus and the Northern Campus Martius University of Wisconsin Press 2006 p 114 Rehak and Younger Imperium and Cosmos p 114 Entry on Mars in The Classical Tradition p 564 citing Sebastiano Erizzo On Ancient Medallions 1559 p 120 Martianus Capella 5 425 with Mars specified as Gradivus and Neptune named as Portunus Varro Antiquitates frg 254 Cardauns Plutarch Romulus 29 1 a rather muddled account Arnobius Adversus nationes 6 11 Michael Lipka Roman Gods A Conceptual Approach Brill 2009 p 88 Aulus Gellius Attic Nights 4 6 1 Cassius Dio 44 17 2 because Caesar was pontifex maximus Veit Rosenberger Republican Nobiles Controlling the Res Publica in A Companion to Roman Religion p 295 Imperium and Cosmos p 114 Christopher Smith The Religion of Archaic Rome in A Companion to Roman Religion p 39 Scullard Festivals and Ceremonies of the Roman Republic p 84 Marked as such only on the Chronography of 354 The hymn is preserved in an inscription CIL 6 2104 Frances Hickson Hahn Performing the Sacred in A Companion to Roman Religion p 237 Hahn Performing the Sacred p 237 citing Dionysius of Halicarnassus 2 70 1 5 Quintilian Institutiones 1 6 40 as cited by Frances Hickson Hahn in Performing the Sacred in A Companion to Roman Religion p 236 Guiliano Bonfante and Larissa Bonfante The Etruscan Language An Introduction Manchester University Press 1983 2002 rev ed p 26 Donald Strong and J M C Toynbee Roman Art Yale University Press 1976 1988 p 33 Fred S Kleiner introduction to A History of Roman Art Wadsworth 2007 2010 enhanced edition p xl R L Rike Apex Omnium Religion in theRes Gestaeof Ammianus University of California Press 1987 p 26 Ammianus Marcellinus 24 6 17 Rike Apex Omnium p 32 Livy 2 45 Livy 1 20 Livy Warrior Valerie M 1884 The History of Rome Books 1 5 Hackett Publishing ISBN 1 60384 381 7 with note by Valerie M Warrior The History of Rome Books 1 5 Hackett 2006 p 31 Compare Gradiva The second century grammarian Sextus Pompeius Festus offers two other explanations in addition The name he says might also mean the vibration of a spear for which the Greeks use the word kradainein others locate the origin of Gradivus in the grass gramine because the Grass Crown is the highest military honor see Carole Newlands Playing with Time Ovid and the Fasti Cornell University Press 1995 p 106 Maurus Servius Honoratus says that grass was sacred to Mars note to Aeneid 12 119 Statius Thebaid 9 4 See also 7 695 Valerius Maximus 2 131 1 auctor ac stator Romani nominis Hans Friedrich Mueller Roman Religion in Valerius Maximus Routledge 2002 p 88 Martianus Capella The Marriage of Philology and Mercury 1 4 Palmer R E A 1970 The Archaic Community of the Romans Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 07702 6 p 167 Mars enim cum saevit Gradivus dicitur cum tranquillus est Quirinus Maurus Servius Honoratus note to Aeneid 1 292 at Perseus At Aeneid 6 860 Servius further notes Quirinus is the Mars who presides over peace and whose cult is maintained within the civilian realm for the Mars of war has his temple outside that realm See also Belier Decayed Gods p 92 The identification of the two gods is a reflection of a social process The men who till the soil as Quirites in times of peace are identical with the men who defend their country as Milites in times of war Palmer The Archaic Community of the Romans pp 165 171 On how Romulus became identified with Mars Quirinus see the Dumezilian summary of Belier Decayed Gods p 93 94 Etymologically Quirinus is co uiri no the god of the community of men viri and Vofionus is leudhyo no the god of the people Oliver de Cazanove Pre Roman Italy Before and Under the Romans in A Companion to Roman Religion Blackwell 2007 p 49 It has also been argued that Vofionus corresponds to Janus because an entry in Sextus Pompeius Festus 204 edition of Lindsay indicates there was a Roman triad of Jupiter Mars and Janus each having quirinus as a title C Scott Littleton The New Comparative Mythology University of California Press 1966 1973 p 178 citing Vsevolod Basanoff Les dieux Romains 1942 O de Cazanove Pre Roman Italy pp 49 50 The Indo European character of this prayer is discussed by Calvert Watkins Some Indo European Prayers Cato s Lustration of the Fields in How to Kill a Dragon Aspects of Indo European Poetics Oxford University Press 1995 pp 197 213 Celia E Schultz Juno Sospita and Roman Insecurity in the Social War in Religion in Republican Italy Cambridge University Press 2006 p 217 especially note 38 For the text of this vow see The invocation of Decius Mus Mary Beard J A North and S R F Price Religions of Rome A Sourcebook Cambridge University Press 1998 pp 71ff for examples of a bull offering p 153 on the suovetaurilia Beard et al Religions of Rome p 370 Martin Henig Religion in Roman Britain London 1984 1995 p 27 citing the military calendar from Dura Europos Gary Forsythe A Critical History of Early Rome From Prehistory to the First Punic War University of California Press 2005 p 168 Newlands Playing with Time p 104 Votum pro bubus uti valeant sic facito Marti Silvano in silva interdius in capita singula boum votum facito Farris L III et lardi P 39 IIII S et pulpae P IIII S vini S 40 III id in unum vas liceto coicere et vinum item in unum vas liceto coicere Eam rem divinam vel servus vel liber licebit faciat Ubi res divina facta erit statim ibidem consumito Mulier ad eam rem divinam ne adsit neve videat quo modo fiat Hoc votum in annos singulos si voles licebit vovere Cato the Elder On Farming 83 English translation from the Loeb Classical Library Bill Thayer s edition at LacusCurtius Robert Schilling Silvanus in Roman and European Mythologies University of Chicago Press 1992 from the French edition of 1981 p 146 Peter F Dorcey The Cult of Silvanus A Study in Roman Folk Religion Brill 1992 pp 8 9 49 Dorcey The Cult of Silvanus pp 9 and 105ff William Warde Fowler The Roman Festivals of the Period of the Republic London 1908 p 55 Statue of Mars Ultor Balmuildy May 11 2018 Retrieved May 19 2018 a b Diana E E Kleiner Augustus Assembles His Marble City Multimedia presentation Yale University Michael Lipka Roman Gods A Conceptual Approach Brill 2009 p 91 Clark Divine Qualities pp 23 24 Robert Schilling Mars Roman and European Mythologies University of Chicago Press 1992 from the French edition of 1981 p 135 Mary Beard J A North and S R F Price Religions of Rome A Sourcebook Cambridge University Press 1998 p 80 For instance during the Republic the dictator was charged with the ritual clavi figendi causa driving a nail into the wall of the Capitoline temple According to Cassius Dio 55 10 4 as cited by Lipka Roman Gods p 108 this duty was transferred to a censor under Augustus and the ritual moved to the Temple of Mars Ultor Lipka Roman Gods p 109 Harry Sidebottom International Relations in The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Warfare Rome from the Late Republic to the Late Empire Cambridge University Press 2007 vol 2 p 15 Cassius Dio 55 10 2 Nicole Belyache Religious Actors in Daily Life in A Companion to Roman Religion p 279 Lipka Roman Gods pp 111 112 CIL VI 1 no 2086 edition of Bormann and Henzen 1876 as translated and cited by Charlotte R Long The Twelve Gods of Greece and Rome Brill 1987 pp 130 131 Keith Hopkins Conquerors and Slaves Cambridge University Press 1978 p 230 A E Cooley Beyond Rome and Latium Roman Religion in the Age of Augustus in Religion in Republican Italy Cambridge University Press 2006 p 247 Duncan Fishwick The imperial cult in the Latin West Brill 2005 passim Jonathan Edmondson The Cult of Mars Augustus and Roman Imperial Power at Augusta Emerita Lusitania in the Third Century A D A New Votive Dedication in Culto imperial politica y poder L Erma di Bretschneider 2007 p 562 These include an inscription that was later built into the castle walls at Sines Portugal dedications at Ipagrum Aguilar de la Frontera in the modern province of Cordoba and at Conobaria Las Cabezas de San Juan in the province of Seville in Baetica and a statue at Isturgi CIL II 2121 ILS II2 7 56 A magister of the Lares of Augustus made a dedication to Mars Augustus CIL II 2013 ILS II2 5 773 at Singili a Barba Cerro del Castillon Antequera Edmondson The Cult of Mars Augustus p 563 Edmondson The Cult of Mars Augustus p 562 ILS 3160 Rudolf Haensch Inscriptions as Sources of Knowledge for Religions and Cults in the Roman World of Imperial Times in A Companion to Roman Religion Blackwell 2007 p 182 William Van Andringa Religions and the Integration of Cities in the Empire in the Second Century AD The Creation of a Common Religious Language A Companion to Roman Religion p 86 Edmondson The Cult of Mars Augustus pp 541 575 Ittai Gradel Emperor Worship and Roman Religion Oxford University Press 2002 p 238 note 11 citing Victor Ehrenberg and Arnold H M Jones Documents Illustrating the Reigns of Augustus and Tiberius Oxford University Press 1955 no 43 The chief priest of the three Dacian provinces dedicated an altar pro salute for the wellbeing of Gordian III at an imperial cult center sometime between 238 and 244 AD Edmondson The Cult of Mars Augustus p 562 Miranda Green Animals in Celtic Life and Myth Routledge 1992 p 198 Ton Derks Gods Temples and Ritual Practices The Transformation of Religious Ideas and Values in Roman Gaul Amsterdam University Press 1998 p 79 RIB 1055 as cited by Bernhard Maier Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture Boydell amp Brewer 1997 originally published in German 1994 p 11 RIB 218 as cited by Maier Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture p 11 Phillips E J 1977 Corpus Signorum Imperii Romani Great Britain Volume I Fascicule 1 Hadrian s Wall East of the North Tyne p 66 Oxford Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 725954 5 a b c d Ross Anne 1967 Pagan Celtic Britain Routledge amp Kegan Paul ISBN 0 902357 03 4 CIL 12 1300 Maier Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture p 11 Planet and Satellite Names and Discoverers Gazetteer of Planetary Nomenclature USGS Astrogeology Archived from the original on May 27 2010 Retrieved May 1 2010 Maier Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture p 32 Xavier Delamarre Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise Editions Errance 2003 p 68 RIB 918 948 970 1784 2044 as cited by Maier Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture p 33 Miranda Alhouse Green Gallo British Deities and Their Shrines in A Companion to Roman Britain Blackwell 2004 p 215 Maier Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture p 33 RIB 278 as cited by Maier Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture pp 42 43 Eric Birley The Deities of Roman Britain Aufstieg und Niedergang der romischen Welt II 18 1 1986 pp 43 68 Delamarre entry on bracis Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise p 85 In discussing the Celtiberian Mars Neto Macrobius associates Mars and Liber a Roman deity identified with Dionysus Saturnalia 1 19 Pliny the Elder Natural History 18 62 In Galatian the form of Celtic spoken by the Celts who settled in Anatolia the word embrekton was a kind of beverage Delamarre Dictionnaire p 85 ILTG 351 CIL 13 3980 CIL 13 8701 CIL 13 11818 RIV 2166 Maier Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture p 57 CIL 6 32574 Maier Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture pp 56 57 RIB 602 933 1017 2015 2024 Maier Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture p 75 RIB 1578 RIB 2007 RIB 986 and 987 Maier Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture p 75 Maier Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture p 80 Jones Barri amp Mattingly David 1990 An Atlas of Roman Britain p 275 Oxford Basil Blackwell ISBN 1 84217 067 8 RIB 213 Maier Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture p 82 a b c d Miranda J Green Dictionary of Celtic Myth and Legend p 142 Thames and Hudson Ltd 1997 Green Animals in Celtic Life and Myth p 216 Xavier Delamarre Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise Editions Errance 2003 2nd edition p 200 Gaulish nemeton was originally a sacred grove or space defined for religious purposes and later a building Bernhard Maier Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture Boydell Press 1997 2000 originally published 1994 in German p 207 Helmut Birkham entry on Loucetius in Celtic Culture A Historical Encyclopedia edited by John Koch ABC Clio 2006 p 1192 RIB 191 DEO MARTI MEDOCIO CAMPESIVM ET VICTORIE ALEXANDRI PII FELICIS AVGVSTI NOSI DONVM LOSSIO VEDA DE SVO POSVIT NEPOS VEPOGENI CALEDO To the god of the battlefields Mars Medocius and to the victory of Imperator Caesar Marcus Aurelius Severus Alexander Pius Felix Augustus Lossius Veda the grandson of Vepogenus Caledos placed this offering out of his own funds Martin Henig Religion in Roman Britain Taylor amp Francis 1984 2005 p 61 Duncan Fishwick Imperial Cult in Britain Phoenix 15 4 1961 p 219 A Saint Medocus is recorded in the early 16th century as the eponym for St Madoes in Gowrie Molly Miller Matriliny by Treaty The Pictish Foundation Legend in Ireland in Early Mediaeval Europe Cambridge University Press 1982 p 159 Fishwick Imperial Cult in Britain p 219 John Ferguson The Religions of the Roman Empire Cornell University Press 1970 1985 p 212 Perhaps related to Campesie Fells in Stirlingshire Fishwick Imperial Cult in Britain p 219 CIL 13 3148 and 3149 at Rennes Paganism and Christianity 100 425 C E A Sourcebook edited by Ramsay MacMullen and Eugene N Lane Augsburg Fortress 1992 pp 76 77 CIL 13 3096 Craon CIL 13 3101 and 3102 at Nantes ILTG 343 345 Allones Maier Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture p 200 Macrobius Saturnalia 1 19 David Rankin Celts and the Classical World Routledge 1987 p 260 Maier Dictionary of Celtic Religion and Culture p 209 John Wacher The Towns of Roman Britain University of California Press 1974 p 384 Green Symbol and Image in Celtic Religious Art p 115 CIL 1190 ILS 4581 E Birley Deities of Roman Britain p 48 Anthony Birley The People of Roman Britain University of California Press 1979 p 141 Delamarre entry on rix Dictionnaire de la langue gauloise pp 260 261 Green Symbol and Image in Celtic Religious Art p 113 Lesley Adkins and Roy A Adkins Handbook to Life in Ancient Rome Facts on File 1994 2004 p 297 Miranda Green Celtic Myths University of Texas Press 1993 1998 p 42 G Llompart Mars Balearicus Boletin del Seminario de Estudios de Arte y Arqueologia 26 1960 101 128 Estatuillas de bronce de Mallorca Mars Balearicus in Bronces y religion romana actas del XI Congreso Internacional de Bronces Antiguos Madrid mayo junio 1990 Consejo Superior de Investigaciones Cientificas 1993 p 57ff Jaume Garcia Rossello Joan Fornes Bisquerra and Michael Hoskin Orientations of the Talayotic Sanctuaries of Mallorca Journal of History of Astronomy Archaeoastronomy Supplement 31 2000 pp 58 64 especially note 10 pdf Mars The Classical Tradition p 565 Online Etymology Dictionary External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Mars god Fowler William Warde 1911 Mars deity In Chisholm Hugh ed Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 17 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 760 761 The Warburg Institute Iconographic Database images of Mars Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Mars mythology amp oldid 1220450433, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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