| Language and languages - 1901 - 484 pages
...lectisternium of the same year, also ordered by the Books, were six pulvinaria, with the following divinities: Jupiter and Juno, Neptune and Minerva, Mars and Venus,...Apollo and Diana, Vulcan and Vesta, Mercury and Ceres " — a system of twelve corresponding to the Greek system. What with the identification of old Roman... | |
| Grant Showerman - Cults - 1901 - 138 pages
...lectisternium of the same year, also ordered by the Books, were six pulvinaria, with the following divinities: Jupiter and Juno, Neptune and Minerva, Mars and Venus,...Apollo and Diana, Vulcan and Vesta, Mercury and Ceres " — a system of twelve corresponding to the Greek system. What with the identification of old Roman... | |
| Theology - 1903 - 834 pages
...lines. An important passage in Livy (XXII, 10, 9) tells of a lectistcrnium held in 217 BC in honor of Jupiter and Juno, Neptune and Minerva, Mars and Venus,...Apollo and Diana, Vulcan and Vesta, Mercury and Ceres. Here we have the recognition of a new order of twelve great gods, di consentes, ranged side by side... | |
| George Foot Moore - 1913 - 668 pages
...and Diana, Mercury and Neptune. In 217 BC was held a great lectisternium of the twelve gods, Juppiter and Juno, Neptune and Minerva, Mars and Venus, Apollo and Diana, Vulcan and Vesta, Mercury and Ceres. Here Greek and Latin gods mingle indiscriminately, but the circle of twelve gods and the grouping in... | |
| Clifford Herschel Moore - Greece - 1916 - 410 pages
...people; these twelve gods were Greek divinities, although all but Apollo were called by Roman names: Jupiter and Juno, Neptune and Minerva, Mars and Venus, Apollo and Diana, Volcanus and Vesta, Mercury and Ceres.1 While the practical character of Roman religion still remained,... | |
| Charlotte R. Long - History - 1987 - 512 pages
...Hannibal. Repeated as late as reign of Marcus Aurelius. Couches set up in public for pairs of deities: Jupiter and Juno, Neptune and Minerva, Mars and Venus,...Apollo and Diana, Vulcan and Vesta, Mercury and Ceres. Not stated whether or how gods were represented. In lectisternium of 179 BC deities may have been symbolized... | |
| Claas Jouco Bleeker, Geo Widengren - Religion - 1988 - 704 pages
...was only in 217 BC that a new lectisternium presented twelve Greek divinities grouped in real couples (Jupiter and Juno, Neptune and Minerva, Mars and Venus,...Apollo and Diana, Vulcan and Vesta, Mercury and Ceres). It is significant that this ceremony was to take place for the last time in Rome, and even more significant... | |
| Baldassare Conticello, Luisa Franchi Dell'Orto - Art - 1990 - 326 pages
...amalgamated. In thè end there was a consensus of principal divinities (di consente!) formed of six couples: Jupiter and Juno, Neptune and Minerva, Mars and Venus,...Apollo and Diana, Vulcan and Vesta, Mercury and Ceres. Temples were erected, altars dedicated, and places of worship set aside for ali of these divinities,... | |
| Yves Bonnefoy - Literary Criticism - 1992 - 341 pages
...and six goddesses, grouped into couples according to the Hellenic pattern, in the following order:45 Jupiter and Juno; Neptune and Minerva; Mars and Venus;...Apollo and Diana; Vulcan and Vesta; Mercury and Ceres. Though this ceremony was celebrated in Rome46 only once, it was the source of the idea of constituting... | |
| Prudence Jones, Nigel Pennick - History - 1995 - 302 pages
...another lectisternia, which was organised according to the Greek pantheon in a Roman disguise. Images of Jupiter and Juno, Neptune and Minerva, Mars and Venus, Apollo and Diana, Volcanus and Vesta, and Ceres and Mercury presided at the feast. The deities, with their Roman names,... | |
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