In ancient Roman religion , the October Horse ( Latin Equus October ) was an animal sacrifice to Mars carried out on October 15, coinciding with the end of the agricultural and military campaigning season. The rite took place during one of three horse-racing festivals held in honor of Mars, the others being the two Equirria on February 27 and March 14.
98-514: The Robigalia was a festival in ancient Roman religion held April 25, named for the god Robigus . Its main ritual was a dog sacrifice to protect grain fields from disease . Games ( ludi ) in the form of "major and minor" races were held. The Robigalia was one of several agricultural festivals in April to celebrate and vitalize the growing season, but the darker sacrificial elements of these occasions are also fraught with anxiety about crop failure and
196-566: A communal meal and thus involved domestic animals whose flesh was a normal part of the Roman diet; the dog occurs as a victim most often in magic and private rites for Hecate and other chthonic deities , but was offered publicly at the Lupercalia and two other sacrifices pertaining to grain crops. Like many other aspects of Roman law and religion, the institution of the Robigalia was attributed to
294-524: A suffimentum as an effective cure for draft animals and for humans prone to emotional outbursts, as well as for driving off hailstorms, demons and ghosts (daemones and umbras) . Sacrificial victims were most often domestic animals normally part of the Roman diet, and the meat was eaten at a banquet shared by those celebrating the rite. Horse meat was distasteful to the Romans, and Tacitus classes horses among " profane " animals. Inedible victims such as
392-534: A Roman holiday." More benignly, the phrase was used as the title of a romantic movie set in Rome, Roman Holiday . October Horse Two-horse chariot races ( bigae ) were held in the Campus Martius , the area of Rome named for Mars, after which the right-hand horse of the winning team was transfixed by a spear , then sacrificed. The horse's head (caput) and tail ( cauda ) were cut off and used separately in
490-572: A day sacred to Mars doubles up with that of another god. The Equus preceded the Armilustrium ("Purification of Arms") on October 19. Although most of Mars' festivals cluster in his namesake month of March ( Martius ) , ceremonies pertaining to Mars in October are seen as concluding the season in which he was most active. André Dacier , an early editor of Festus, noted in regard to the October Horse
588-498: A funerary animal among the Greeks and Etruscans by the Archaic period. Hendrik Wagenvoort even speculated about an archaic form of Mars who "had been imagined as the god of death and the underworld in the shape of a horse." The two-horse chariot races ( bigae ) that preceded the October Horse sacrifice determined the selection of the optimal victim. In a dual yoke, the right-hand horse
686-410: A horse is suited for war, an ox for tilling. The Romans did not use horses as draft animals for farm work, nor chariots in warfare , but Polybius specifies that the victim is a war horse . The ritual was held outside the pomerium , Rome's sacred boundary, presumably because of its martial character. But agriculture was also an extra-urban activity, as Vitruvius indicates when he notes that
784-613: A horse's tail to a helmet may originate in a desire to appropriate the animal's power in battle; in the Iliad , Hector 's horse-crested helmet is a terrifying sight. In the iconography of the Mithraic mysteries , the tail of the sacrificial bull is often grasped, as is the horse's tail in depictions of the Thracian Rider god , as if to possess its power. A pinax from Corinth depicts a dwarf holding his phallus with both hands while standing on
882-409: A man falling in battle to horses collapsing when they are unharnessed after exertions. Cremation frees the psychē from both thūmós and ménos so that it may pass into the afterlife; the horse, which embodies ménos , races off and leaves the chariot behind, as in the philosophical allegory of the chariot from Plato . The anthropological term mana has sometimes been borrowed to conceptualize
980-493: A myth in which the ass misplaces a pharmakon entrusted to him by the king of the gods, thereby causing humanity to lose its eternal youth. The symbolism of bread for the October Horse is unstated in the ancient sources. Robert Turcan has seen the garland of loaves as a way to thank Mars for protecting the harvest. Mars was linked to Vesta, the Regia, and the production of grain through several religious observances. In his poem on
1078-499: A normal part of their diet. The unusual ritual of the October Horse has thus been analyzed at times in light of other Indo-European forms of horse sacrifice , such as the Vedic ashvamedha and the Irish ritual described by Giraldus Cambrensis , both of which have to do with kingship. Although the ritual battle for possession of the head may preserve an element from the early period when Rome
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#17328450569801176-462: A severed horse's tail may drip or ooze about three minutes – a timeframe within which a good runner could reach the Regia but with the potential for an unlucky or poorly performing runner to fail ominously. A phallic-like potency may be attributed to the October Horse's tail without requiring cauda to mean "penis," since the ubiquity of phallic symbols in Roman culture would make euphemism or substitution unnecessary. The practice of attaching
1274-473: A similar throwing away of food abundance as a background to the October Horse, which he saw as the embodiment of the " corn spirit ". According to tradition, the fields consecrated to Mars had been appropriated by the Etruscan king Tarquinius Superbus for his private use. Accumulated acts of arrogance among the royal family led to the expulsion of the king. The overthrow of the monarchy occurred at harvest time, and
1372-417: A spirited ('sharp') horse," which Vergil says was uncovered by Dido and her colonists when they began the dig to found Carthage : "by this sign it was shown that the race ( gens ) would be distinguished in war and abound with the means of life." The 4th-century agricultural writer Palladius advised farmers to place the skull of a horse or ass on their land; the animals were not to be "virgin," because
1470-544: A threat. On the Becket altarpiece of Hamburg, one of two known medieval depictions of the scene, the mutilator makes a phallic gesture with the horse's tail. A legend then arose that the descendants of the perpetrator grew tails and earned the insulting nickname caudati , the "tailed ones," which spread to attach itself to all Kentishmen ; Greek-speaking Sicilians hurled the insult at the English generally in an incident during Richard
1568-421: A very few other public rites. Birth deities, however, also received offerings of puppies or bitches, and infant cemeteries show a high concentration of puppies, sometimes ritually dismembered. Inedible victims were offered to a restricted group of deities mainly involved with the cycle of birth and death, but the reasoning is obscure. The importance of the horse to the war god is likewise not self-evident, since
1666-557: A war-horse before the city in the Campus Martius, because the capture of Troy was due to the wooden horse — a most childish statement. For at that rate we should have to say that all barbarian tribes were descendants of the Trojans , since nearly all of them, or at least the majority, when they are entering on a war or on the eve of a decisive battle sacrifice a horse, divining the issue from the manner in which it falls. Timaeus in dealing with
1764-459: Is a month-by-month list of Roman festivals and games that had a fixed place on the calendar. For some, the date on which they were first established is recorded. A deity's festival often marked the anniversary ( dies natalis , "birthday") of the founding of a temple, or a rededication after a major renovation. Festivals not named for deities are thought to be among the oldest on the calendar. Some religious observances were monthly. The first day of
1862-628: Is not recorded. Equines decorated with bread are found also on the Feast of Vesta on June 9, when the asses who normally worked in the milling and baking industry were dressed with garlands from which decorative loaves dangled. According to Ovid , the ass was honored at the Vestalia as a reward for its service to the Virgin Mother , who is portrayed in Augustan ideology as simultaneously native and Trojan. When
1960-403: Is paralleled by the spear used by the officiating priest at the October sacrifice. Timaeus, who interpreted the October Horse in light of Rome's claim to Trojan origins, is both the earliest source and the only one that specifies a spear as the sacrificial implement. The spear was an attribute of Mars in the way that Jupiter wielded the thunderbolt or Neptune the trident . The spear of Mars
2058-553: Is part of a complex of meanings surrounding equine mutilation in Europe. It appears notably in the medieval Welsh narrative of Branwen when Efnisien, one of a set of twins, mutilates the horses of the King of Ireland, including cutting "their tails to their backs." A similar act of horse disfigurement as an insult occurs in the Old Icelandic saga of Hrólf Kraki . In the medieval period,
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#17328450569802156-464: Is said to be thus disgraced. Timaeus (3rd century BC) attempted to explain the ritual of the October Horse in connection with the Trojan Horse —an attempt mostly regarded by ancient and modern scholars as "hardly convincing." As recorded by Polybius (2nd century BC), he tells us that the Romans still commemorate the disaster at Troy by shooting (κατακοντίζειν, "to spear down") on a certain day
2254-454: The Athenians was chopping off the manes and tails of their horses: "The public prisoners were collected together, the fairest and tallest trees along the river bank were hung with the captured suits of armour, and then the victors crowned themselves with wreaths, adorned their own horses splendidly while they sheared and cropped the horses of their conquered foes." The October Horse sacrifice
2352-481: The Capitoline citadel . At an emergency council of the gods, Mars objects to the removal of the sacred talismans of Trojan Vesta which guarantee the safety of the state , and is indignant that the Romans, destined to rule the world, are starving. Vesta causes flour to materialize, and the process of breadmaking occurs miraculously during the night, resulting in an abundance ( ops ) of the gifts of Ceres. Jupiter wakes
2450-609: The Equirria and before the sacrifice of the October Horse . The Fasti Praenestini also record that on the same day the festival celebrated a particular class of sex workers : "pimped-out boys," following the previous day's recognition of meretrices , female prostitutes regarded as professionals of some standing. Other April festivals related to farming were the Cerealia , or festival of Ceres , lasting for several days in mid-month;
2548-689: The Fordicidia on April 15, when a pregnant cow was sacrificed; the Parilia on April 21 to ensure healthy flocks; and the Vinalia , a wine festival on April 23. Varro considered these and the Robigalia, along with the Great Mother 's Megalensia late in the month, the "original" Roman holidays in April. The Robigalia has been connected to the Christian feast of Rogation , which was concerned with purifying and blessing
2646-526: The Iliad . Perhaps the most famous scene from the Iliad involving a chariot is Achilles dragging the body of Hector , the Trojan heir to the throne, three times around the tomb of Patroclus; in the version of the Aeneid , it is the city walls that are circled. Variations of the scene occur throughout Roman funerary art. Gregory Nagy sees horses and chariots, and particularly the chariot of Achilles, as embodying
2744-506: The Rhodians dedicated a four-horse chariot ( quadriga ) to the Sun and cast it into the sea. The quadriga traditionally represented the sun, as the biga did the moon. A Persian horse-sacrifice to " Hyperion clothed in rays of light" was noted by Ovid and Greek sources. In contrast to cultures that offered a horse to the war god in advance to ask for success, the Roman horse sacrifice marked
2842-455: The Saturnalia may have been a mercatus in this sense. Surviving fasti record Mercatus Apollinares , July 14–19; Mercatus Romani , September 20–23; and Mercatus Plebeii , November 18–20. Others may have existed. The English word "fair" derives from Latin feria . By the outset of the nineteenth century and particularly in response to the carnage of the latter years of
2940-415: The ithyphallic god Priapus , an imported deity who was never the recipient of public cult, was about to rape Vesta as she slept, the braying ass woke her. In revenge, Priapus thereafter demanded the ass as a customary sacrifice to him. The early Christian writer Lactantius says that the garland of bread pendants commemorates the preservation of Vesta's sexual integrity ( pudicitia ). Aelian recounts
3038-488: The penis of the October Horse, which might be expected to contain more blood to drip on the hearth at the Regia towards the preparation of the suffimen . However, the tail itself was a magico-religious symbol of fertility or power, and in 1974, at the request of Georges Dumézil , a vétérinaire-inspecteur from the Veterinary Services of Paris carried out a horse-slaughter experiment to demonstrate that blood from
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3136-441: The suffimen was the ash produced from the holocaust of an unborn calf at the Fordicidia on April 15, along with the stalks from which beans had been harvested. One source, from late antiquity and not always reliable, notes that beans were sacred to Mars. Suffimentum is a general word for a preparation used for healing, purification, or warding off ill influence. In his treatise on veterinary medicine, Vegetius recommends
3234-501: The 5th or 7th of that month. On the Nones, announcements were made regarding events to take place that month; with the exception of the Poplifugia , no major festivals were held before the Nones, though other ceremonies, such as anniversaries of temple dedications, might be carried out. The Ides (usually the 13th, or in a few months the 15th) were sacred to Jupiter . On each Ides, a white lamb
3332-523: The Alban populace to Rome, it was reported to have rained stones on the Mons Albanus . A Roman deputation was sent to investigate the report, and a further shower of stones was witnessed. The Romans took this to be a sign of the displeasure of the Alban gods, the worship of whom had been abandoned with the evacuation of Alba Longa. Livy goes on to say that the Romans instituted a public festival of nine days, at
3430-507: The Campus Martius, during a religious festival celebrated for Mars, it is often assumed that the Flamen Martialis presided. This priest of Mars may have wielded a spear ritually on other occasions, but no source names the officiant over the October Horse rite. The Equus October occurred on the Ides of October. All Ides were sacred to Jupiter . Here as at a few other points in the calendar,
3528-541: The Etruscan tradition of public games ( ludi ) and equestrian processions . Chariot racing was imported from Magna Graecia no earlier than the 6th century BC. Images of chariot races were considered good luck, but the races themselves were magnets for magic in attempts to influence the outcome. One law from the Theodosian Code , published in AD 438, prohibits charioteers from using magic to win, on pain of death. Some of
3626-492: The First's crusade (1198–92). Equine mutilation as a form of insult survived into the early modern era. At Somerset in 1611, a horse was paraded in a skimmington ride , a form of public mockery usually aimed at a sexual offense or adultery. On this occasion, horns were attached to the animal's head, indicating cuckolding, and its ears and the hair of its mane and tail were cut off. The horse, in an instance of transferred epithet ,
3724-449: The French revolution, the term "Roman holiday" had taken on sinister aspects, implying an event that occasions enjoyment or profit at the expense, or derived from the suffering, of others, as in this passage about a dying gladiator from Lord Byron's Childe Harold's Pilgrimage : There were his young barbarians all at play, There was their Dacian mother—he their sire, Butchered to make
3822-451: The October Horse and dogs were typically offered to chthonic deities in the form of a holocaust , resulting in no shared meal. In Greece, dog sacrifices were made to Mars' counterpart Ares and the related war god Enyalios . At Rome, dogs were sacrificed at the Robigalia , a festival for protecting the crops at which chariot races were held for Mars along with the namesake deity, and at
3920-455: The October Horse as a harvest festival in origin, because it took place on the king's farmland in the autumn. Since no source accounts for what happens to the horse apart from the head and tail, it is possible that it was reduced to ash and disposed of in the same manner as Tarquin's grain. George Devereux and others have argued that cauda , or οὐρά (oura) in Greek sources, is a euphemism for
4018-518: The October Horse cannot be taken as a sacrificial reenactment against the Trojan Horse, there may be some shared ritualistic origin. The Trojan Horse succeeded as a stratagem because the Trojans accepted its validity as a votive offering or dedication to a deity, and they wanted to transfer that power within their own walls. The spear that the Trojan priest Laocoön drives into the side of the wooden horse
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4116-399: The October Horse took place on the Ides of October, but no name is recorded for a festival on that date. The grammarian Festus describes it as follows: The October Horse is named from the annual sacrifice to Mars in the Campus Martius during the month of October. It is the right-hand horse of the winning team in the two-horse chariot races. The customary competition for its head between
4214-481: The October Horse's potency, also expressed in modern scholarship as numen . The physical exertions of the hard-breathing horse in its contest are thought to intensify or concentrate this mana or numen . In honoring the god who presided over the Roman census , which among other functions registered the eligibility of young men for military service, the festivals of Mars have a strongly lustral character. A lustration
4312-494: The Roman military was based on infantry. Mars' youthful armed priests the Salii , attired as "typical representatives of the archaic infantry," performed their rituals emphatically on foot, with dance steps. The equestrian order was of lesser social standing than the senatorial patres , "fathers", who were originally the patricians only. The Magister equitum , "Master of the Horse,"
4410-558: The Roman people and received public funding. Games ( ludi ) , such as the Ludi Apollinares , were not technically feriae , but the days on which they were celebrated were dies festi , holidays in the modern sense of days off work. Although feriae were paid for by the state, ludi were often funded by wealthy individuals. Feriae privatae were holidays celebrated in honor of private individuals or by families. This article deals only with public holidays, including rites celebrated by
4508-519: The Romans' claim to Trojan descent, with the latest in the Calendar of Philocalus (354 AD), where it is noted as still occurring, even as Christianity was becoming the dominant religion of the Empire . Most scholars see an Etruscan influence on the early formation of the ceremonies. The October Horse is the only instance of horse sacrifice in Roman religion; the Romans typically sacrificed animals that were
4606-567: The Sabine Numa Pompilius , in the eleventh year of his reign as the second king of Rome . The combined presence of Numa and the flamen Quirinalis , the high priest of Quirinus , the Sabine god of war who become identified with Mars, may suggest a Sabine origin. The late Republican scholar Varro says that the Robigalia was named for the god Robigus , who as the numen or personification of agricultural disease could also prevent it. He
4704-456: The actual docking of the tail of a knight's horse carried a message of emasculation, defamation, and domination. Dozens of such mutilations are recorded in medieval England after the practice was brought in by the Normans . Tail mutilation was carried out frequently enough that it was criminalized and penalties were set in early medieval Germanic, Scandinavian, and Welsh law. As an indication that
4802-517: The blood from the tail was dripped or smeared on the sacred hearth of Rome in October, blood or ashes from the rest of the animal could have been processed and preserved for the suffimen as well. Although no other horse sacrifice in Rome is recorded, Georges Dumézil and others have attempted to exclude the Equus October as the source of equine blood for the Parilia. Another important ingredient for
4900-527: The calendar , Ovid thematically connects bread and war throughout the month of June ( Iunius , a name for which Ovid offers multiple derivations including Juno and "youths", iuniores ). Immediately following the story of Vesta, Priapus, and the ass, Ovid associates Vesta, Mars, and bread in recounting the Gallic siege of Rome . The Gauls were camped in the Field of Mars, and the Romans had taken to their last retreat,
4998-457: The close of the military campaigning season. Among the Romans, horse- and chariot-races were characteristic of "old and obscure" religious observances such as the Consualia that at times propitiated chthonic deities. The horse races at the shadowy Taurian Games in honor of the underworld gods ( di inferi ) were held in the Campus Martius as were Mars' Equirria. The horse had been established as
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#17328450569805096-471: The concept of ménos , which he defines as "conscious life, power, consciousness, awareness," associated in the Homeric epics with thūmós , "spiritedness," and psychē , "soul," all of which depart the body in death. The gods endow both heroes and horses with ménos through breathing into them, so that "warriors eager for battle are literally 'snorting with ménos .'" A metaphor at Iliad 5.296 compares
5194-451: The correct sacred place for Ceres was outside the city (extra urbem loco) . In Rome's early history, the roles of soldier and farmer were complementary: In early Rome agriculture and military activity were closely bound up, in the sense that the Roman farmer was also a soldier. … In the case of the October Horse, for example, we should not be trying to decide whether it is a military, or an agricultural festival; but see it rather as one of
5292-530: The dependence on divine favor to avert it. The Robigalia was held at the boundary of the Ager Romanus . Verrius Flaccus sites it in a grove ( lucus ) at the fifth milestone from Rome along the Via Claudia . The celebration included games ( ludi ) and a sacrificial offering of the blood and entrails of an unweaned puppy ( catulus ). Most animal sacrifice in the public religion of ancient Rome resulted in
5390-552: The detail that the horse's head is adorned with bread. The Calendar of Philocalus notes that on October 15 "the Horse takes place at the Nixae," either an altar to birth deities ( di nixi ) or less likely an obscure landmark called the Ciconiae Nixae . According to Roman tradition, the Campus Martius had been consecrated to Mars by their ancestors as horse pasturage and an equestrian training ground for youths. The "sacred rite" that
5488-508: The divine embodiment of the vital principle found in each individual conceived of as residing in the head, in some ways comparable to the Homeric thumos or the Latin numen . Pendants of bread were attached to the head of the Equus October: a portion of the inedible sacrifice was retained for humans and garnished with an everyday food associated with Ceres and Vesta . The shape of the "breads"
5586-411: The fall. The phrase has been connected to the divine personification Bonus Eventus , "Good Outcome," who had a temple of unknown date in the Campus Martius and whom Varro lists as one of the twelve agricultural deities . But like other ceremonies in October, the sacrifice occurred during the time of the army's return and reintegration into society, for which Verrius also accounted by explaining that
5684-563: The few months to be named for a god, Mars , whose festivals dominate the month. A major feriae conceptivae in April was the Latin Festival . The feriae conceptivae of this month was the Ambarvalia . Scullard places the Taurian Games on June 25–26, but other scholars doubt these ludi had a fixed date or recurred on a regular basis. Until renamed for Julius Caesar , this month
5782-407: The foolish practice seems to me to exhibit not only ignorance but pedantry in supposing that in sacrificing a horse they do so because Troy was said to have been taken by means of a horse. Plutarch (d. 120 AD) also offers a Trojan origin as a possibility, noting that the Romans claimed to have descended from the Trojans and would want to punish the horse that betrayed the city. Festus said that this
5880-452: The grain from the Campus Martius had already been gathered for threshing . Even though the tyrant's other property had been seized and redistributed among the people, the consuls declared that the harvest was under religious prohibition. In recognition of the new political liberty, a vote was taken on the matter, after which the grain and chaff were willingly thrown into the Tiber river. Frazer saw
5978-528: The historical Mycenaeans . By the time the Homeric epics were composed, however, fighting from chariot was no longer a part of Greek warfare, and the Iliad has warriors taking chariots as transportation to the battlefield, then fighting on foot. Chariot racing was a part of funeral games quite early, as the first reference to a chariot race in Western literature is as an event in the funeral games held for Patroclus in
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#17328450569806076-400: The horse tail represented or was associated with the penis, a 13th-century English law condemned a rapist not only to lose his life and limbs but also to have both the genitals and the tail of his horse cut off. In one of the most striking incidents, on Christmas Eve 1170, four days before Thomas Becket was martyred, an enemy cut off the tail of one of his horses and taunted him with it as
6174-448: The horse under an explicit ban. Horses were forbidden in the grove of Diana Nemorensis , and the patrician Flamen Dialis was religiously prohibited from riding a horse. Mars, however, was associated with horses at his Equirria festivals and the equestrian "Troy Game" , which was one of the events Augustus staged for the dedication of the Temple of Mars Ultor in 2 BC. Horse sacrifice
6272-400: The horse's blood became part of is usually taken to be the Parilia , a festival of rural character on April 21, which became the date on which the founding of Rome was celebrated. Verrius Flaccus notes that the horse ritual was carried out ob frugum eventum , usually taken to mean "in thanks for the completed harvest" or "for the sake of the next harvest", since winter wheat was sown in
6370-452: The idea that Robigus is an "indigitation" of Mars, that is, a name to be used in a prayer formulary to fix the local action of the invoked god. In support of this idea, the priest who presided was the flamen Quirinalis, and the ludi were held for both Mars and Robigo. The flamen recited a prayer that Ovid quotes at length in the Fasti , his six-book calendar poem on Roman holidays which provides
6468-522: The instigation either of a 'heavenly voice' heard on the Mons Albanus, or of the haruspices . Livy also says that it became the longstanding practice in Rome that whenever a shower of stones was reported, a festival of nine days would be ordered in response. Another irregular festival of note is the Secular Games . Over the course of several days there were sacrifices, entertainers, and games hosted by
6566-460: The men or horses. The design of the turning posts (metae) on a Roman race course was derived from Etruscan funerary monuments. Pliny attributes the invention of the two-horse chariot to the " Phrygians ", an ethnic designation that the Romans came to regard as synonymous with "Trojan." In the Greek narrative tradition, chariots played a role in Homeric warfare, reflecting their importance among
6664-638: The month was the Kalends (or Calends, from which the English word "calendar" derives). Each Kalends was sacred to Juno , and the Regina sacrorum ("Queen of the Rites," a public priestess) marked the day by presiding over a sacrifice to the goddess. Originally a pontiff and the Rex sacrorum reported the sighting of the new moon , and the pontiff announced whether the Nones occurred on
6762-462: The most extended, though problematic, description of the day. Chariot races (ludi cursoribus) were held in honor of Mars and Robigo on this day. The races had two classes, "major and minor," which may represent junior and senior divisions. In chariot racing, younger drivers seem to have gained experience with a two-horse chariot ( biga ) before graduating to a four-horse team ( quadriga ) . Other horse and chariot races in honor of Mars occurred at
6860-480: The ornaments placed on horses were good-luck charms or devices to ward off malevolence, including bells, wolves' teeth, crescents, and brands . This counter-magic was directed at actual practices; binding spells ( defixiones ) have been found at race tracks. The defixio sometimes employed the spirits of the prematurely dead to work harm. On Greek racetracks , the turning posts were heroes' tombs or altars for propitiating malevolent spirits who might cause harm to
6958-677: The parish and fields and which took the place of the Robigalia on April 25 of the Christian calendar. The Church Father Tertullian mocks the goddess Robigo as "made up," a fiction. Roman festivals Festivals in ancient Rome were a very important part in Roman religious life during both the Republican and Imperial eras , and one of the primary feat of "holy days"; singular also feriae or dies ferialis ) were either public (publicae) or private ( privatae ) . State holidays were celebrated by
7056-481: The preliminary parade ( pompa circensis ) of the first Roman Games . The tail of the wolf, an animal regularly associated with Mars , was said by Pliny to contain amatorium virus, aphrodisiac power. Dumézil rejected any phallic significance for the tail. Plutarch relates that at the conclusion of the Sicilian Expedition (413 BC), among the many humiliations inflicted by the victorious Syracusans on
7154-424: The purpose was to promote fertility. The practice may be related to the effigies known as oscilla , figures or faces that Vergil says were hung from pine trees by mask-wearing Ausonian farmers of Trojan descent when they were sowing seed. The location of sexual vitality or fertility in the horse's head suggests its talismanic potency. The substance hippomanes , which was thought to induce sexual passion,
7252-599: The residents of the Suburra and those of the Sacra Via was no trivial affair; the latter would get to attach it to the wall of the Regia, or the former to the Mamilian Tower . Its tail was transported to the Regia with sufficient speed that the blood from it could be dripped onto the hearth for the sake of becoming part of the sacred rite ( res divina ) . In a separate passage, the Augustan antiquarian Verrius Flaccus adds
7350-452: The ritual preparation suffimen or suffimentum , which the Vestals compounded for use in the lustration of shepherds and their sheep at the Parilia. Propertius may imply that this horse was not an original part of the preparation: "the purification rites ( lustra ) are now renewed by means of the dismembered horse". Ovid specifies that the horse's blood was used for the suffimen . While
7448-579: The sacrifice of a puppy. Within the city of Rome, the flamens and the priest known as the Rex sacrorum were not allowed even to see work done. On a practical level, those who "inadvertently" worked could pay a fine or offer up a piaculum , usually a pig. Work considered vital either to the gods or preserving human life was excusable, according to some experts on religious law. Although Romans were required not to work, they were not required to take any religious action unless they were priests or had family rites ( sacra gentilicia ) to maintain. Following
7546-567: The sake of the gods." Religious rites were performed on the feriae , and public business was suspended. Even slaves were supposed to be given some form of rest. Cicero says specifically that people who were free should not engage in lawsuits and quarrels, and slaves should get a break from their labours. Agricultural writers recognized that some jobs on a farm might still need to be performed, and specified what these were. Some agricultural tasks not otherwise permitted could be carried out if an expiation were made in advance ( piaculum ) , usually
7644-434: The semi-legendary second king of Rome , established mercatus in conjunction with religious festivals to facilitate trade, since people had already gathered in great numbers. In early times, these mercatus may have played a role in wholesale trade, but as commerce in Rome became more sophisticated, by the late Republic they seem to have become retail fairs specialized for the holiday market. The Sigillaria attached to
7742-452: The sleeping generals and delivers an oracular message: they are to throw that which they least want to surrender from the citadel onto the enemy. Puzzled at first, as is conventional in receiving an oracle, the Romans then throw down the loaves of bread as weapons against the shields and helmets of the Gauls, causing the enemy to despair of starving Rome into submission. J.G. Frazer pointed to
7840-425: The state priests of Rome at temples, as well as celebrations by neighborhoods, families, and friends held simultaneously throughout Rome. Feriae publicae were of three kinds: One of the most important sources for Roman holidays is Ovid 's Fasti , an incomplete poem that describes and provides origins for festivals from January to June at the time of Augustus . Varro defined feriae as "days instituted for
7938-623: The state, attempting to be the greatest display anyone living had ever seen. These games were intended to be held every 100 years with the purpose of it occurring only once in any individuals lifetime. At one point two cycles of the Secular Games were being held simultaneously, leading there to be people who would in fact witness it twice in their life. The noun mercatus (plural mercatūs ) means "commerce" or "the market" generally, but it also refers to fairs or markets held immediately after certain ludi . Cicero said that Numa Pompilius ,
8036-597: The tail of a stallion carrying a rider; although the dwarf has sometimes been interpreted as the horse-threatening Taraxippus , the phallus is more typically an apotropaic talisman ( fascinum ) to ward off malevolence. Satyrs and sileni , though later characterized as goat-like, in the Archaic period were regularly depicted with equine features, including a prominent horsetail; they were known for uncontrolled sexuality, and are often ithyphallic in art. Satyrs are first recorded in Roman culture as part of ludi , appearing in
8134-454: The two subsequent parts of the ceremonies: two neighborhoods staged a fight for the right to display the head, and the freshly bloodied cauda was carried to the Regia for sprinkling the sacred hearth of Rome . Ancient references to the Equus October are scattered over more than six centuries: the earliest is that of Timaeus (3rd century BC), who linked the sacrifice to the Trojan Horse and
8232-500: The ways in which the convergence of farming and warfare (or more accurately of farmers and fighters) might be expressed. This polyvalence was characteristic of the god for whom the sacrifice was conducted, since among the Romans Mars brought war and bloodshed, agriculture and virility, and thus both death and fertility within his sphere of influence. The Augustan poets Propertius and Ovid both mention horse as an ingredient in
8330-463: Was a common belief, but rejects it on the same grounds as Polybius. Mars and a horse's head appear on opposite sides of the earliest Roman didrachm , introduced during the Pyrrhic War , which was the subject of Timaeus's book. Michael Crawford attributes Timaeus's interest in the October Horse to the appearance of this coinage in conjunction with the war. Walter Burkert has suggested that while
8428-513: Was called Quinctilis or Quintilis , originally the fifth month (quint-) when the year began in March. From this point in the calendar forward, the months had numerical designations. Until renamed for Augustus Caesar , this month was called Sextilis, originally the sixth month (sext-) when the year began in March. The following "moveable feasts" are listed roughly in chronological order. The Rosalia or "Festival of Roses" also had no fixed date, but
8526-421: Was kept in the Regia, the destination of the October Horse's tail. Sacrificial victims were normally felled with a mallet and securis (sacrificial axe), and other implements would have been necessary for dismembering the horse. A spear was used against the bull in a taurobolium , perhaps as a remnant of the ritual's origin as a hunt, but otherwise it is a sacrificial oddity. Because the sacrifice took place in
8624-563: Was led along the Via Sacra to the Capitolium for sacrifice to Jupiter. The list also includes other notable public religious events such as sacrifices and processions that were observed annually but are neither feriae nor dies natales. Unless otherwise noted, the calendar is that of H.H. Scullard , Festivals and Ceremonies of the Roman Republic . In the archaic Roman calendar, February
8722-462: Was performed in the Campus Martius following the census. Although lustral ceremonies are not recorded as occurring before the chariot races of the Equirria or the October Horse, it is plausible that they were, and that they were seen as a test or assurance of the lustration's efficacy. The significance of the October Horse's head as a powerful trophy may be illuminated by the caput acris equi , "head of
8820-557: Was regularly offered by peoples the Romans classified as " barbarians ," such as Scythians , but also at times by Greeks. In Macedonia , "horses in armor" were sacrificed as a lustration for the army. Immediately after describing the October Horse, Festus gives three other examples: the Spartans sacrifice a horse "to the winds " on Mount Taygetus ; among the Sallentini, horses were burnt alive for an obscure Jove Menzana; and every year
8918-456: Was ruled by kings , the October Horse's collocation of agriculture and war is characteristic of the Republic . The sacred topography of the rite and the role of Mars in other equestrian festivals also suggest aspects of youth initiation and rebirth ritual. The complex or even contradictory aspects of the October Horse probably result from overlays of traditions accumulated over time. The rite of
9016-608: Was subordinate to the Dictator , who was forbidden the use of the horse except through special legislation. By the late Republic, the Roman cavalry was formed primarily from allies ( auxilia ) , and Arrian emphasizes the foreign origin of cavalry training techniques, particularly among the Celts of Gaul and Spain . Roman technical terms pertaining to horsemanship and horse-drawn vehicles are mostly not Latin in origin, and often from Gaulish . Under some circumstances, Roman religion placed
9114-555: Was supposedly exuded from the forehead of a foal; Aelian ( ca. 175–235 AD) says either the forehead or "loins." Called amor by Vergil, it is an ingredient in Dido's ritual preparations before her suicide in the Aeneid . On Roman funerary reliefs, the deceased is often depicted riding on a horse for his journey to the afterlife, sometimes pointing to his head. This gesture signifies the Genius ,
9212-404: Was technically not one of the feriae conceptivae with a date announced by public priests based on archaic practice. Festivals were also held in ancient Rome in response to particular events, or for a particular purpose such as to propitiate or show gratitude toward the gods. For example, Livy reports that following the Roman destruction of Alba Longa in the 7th century BC, and the removal of
9310-399: Was the last month of the year. The name derives from februa , "the means of purification, expiatory offerings." It marked a turn of season, with February 5 the official first day of spring bringing the renewal of agricultural activities after winter. In the old Roman calendar (until perhaps as late as 153 BC), the mensis Martius ("Mars' Month") was the first month of the year. It is one of
9408-497: Was the lead or strongest animal, and thus the one from the winning chariot was chosen as the most potent offering for Mars. Chariots have a rich symbolism in Roman culture, but the Romans never used chariots in war, though they faced enemies who did. The chariot was part of Roman military culture primarily as the vehicle of the triumphing general , who rode in an ornamented four-horse car markedly impractical for actual war. Most Roman racing practices were of Etruscan origin, part of
9506-423: Was thought to be connected to the color red ( ruber ) as a form of homeopathic or sympathetic magic . The color is thematic: the disease was red, the requisite puppies (or sometimes bitches) had a red coat, the red of blood recalls the distinctively Roman incarnation of Mars as both a god of agriculture and bloodshed. William Warde Fowler , whose work on Roman festivals remains a standard reference, entertained
9604-427: Was thus a potentially malignant deity to be propitiated, as Aulus Gellius notes. But the gender of this deity is elusive. The agricultural writer Columella gives the name in the feminine as Robigo , like the word used for a form of the disease of wheat rust , which has a reddish or reddish-brown color. Both Robigus and robigo are also found as Rubig- which, following the etymology -by-association of antiquity,
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