October Horse
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In
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 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.[3]
Ancient references to the Equus October are scattered over more than six centuries: the earliest is that of
The October Horse is the only instance of horse sacrifice in Roman religion;
Description
The rite of the October Horse took place on the
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 the residents 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).[8]
In a separate passage,
The "sacred rite" that 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.
War and agriculture

Verrius Flaccus notes
The ritual was held outside the
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 the ways in which the convergence of farming and warfare (or more accurately of farmers and fighters) might be expressed.[23]
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.[24]
The Parilia and suffimen
The
Another important ingredient for 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.[30] One source, from late antiquity and not always reliable, notes that beans were sacred to Mars.[31]
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 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).[32]
The victim

The importance of the horse to the war god is likewise not self-evident, since the Roman military was based on infantry. Mars' youthful armed priests the
Under some circumstances, Roman religion placed 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.[44] 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.[45]
Horse sacrifice was regularly offered by peoples the Romans classified as "
In contrast to cultures that offered a horse to the war god in advance to ask for success, the Roman horse sacrifice marked the close of the military campaigning season.[55] 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.[56] The horse had been established as a funerary animal among the Greeks and Etruscans by the Archaic period.[57] 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."[58]
The chariot
The two-horse
Chariots have a rich symbolism in Roman culture, but the Romans never used chariots in war, though they faced enemies who did.[60] 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.[61] Most Roman racing practices were of Etruscan origin,[62] part of the Etruscan tradition of public games (ludi) and equestrian processions.[63] Chariot racing was imported from Magna Graecia no earlier than the 6th century BC.[64]
Images of chariot races were considered good luck, but the races themselves were magnets for

In honoring the god who presided over the
The head

The significance of the October Horse's head as a powerful trophy may be illuminated by the caput acris equi, "head of a spirited ('sharp') horse," which
The location of sexual vitality or fertility in the horse's head suggests its talismanic potency.[90] The substance hippomanes, which was thought to induce sexual passion, was supposedly exuded from the forehead of a foal; Aelian (ca. 175–235 AD) says either the forehead or "loins."[91] Called amor by Vergil,[92] 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,[93] sometimes pointing to his head. This gesture signifies the Genius, 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.[94]
Bread pendants
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

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.
The tail

A
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.[117] Satyrs are first recorded in Roman culture as part of ludi, appearing in the preliminary parade (pompa circensis) of the first Roman Games.[118] The tail of the wolf, an animal regularly associated with Mars, was said by Pliny to contain amatorium virus, aphrodisiac power.[119] Dumézil rejected any phallic significance for the tail.[120][121]
Tail docking as insult
Plutarch relates that at the conclusion of the Sicilian Expedition (413 BC), among the many humiliations inflicted by the victorious Syracusans on 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."[122]
The October Horse sacrifice is part of a complex of meanings surrounding equine mutilation in Europe.[123] 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.[124]
In the medieval period, the actual docking of the tail of a knight's horse carried a message of emasculation, defamation, and domination.
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 a threat.[129] 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.[130] 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 the First's crusade (1198–92).[131]
Equine mutilation as a form of insult survived into the early modern era. At
The Trojan Horse

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."[133] 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 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 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.[134]
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.[135] Festus said that this was a common belief, but rejects it on the same grounds as Polybius.[136]
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.[137]
Walter Burkert has suggested that while 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 is paralleled by the spear used by the officiating priest at the October sacrifice.[138]
Spear and officiant
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.[139] The spear was an attribute of Mars in the way that Jupiter wielded the thunderbolt or Neptune the trident. The spear of Mars 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.[140] 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.[141]
Because the sacrifice took place in 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.[142]
On the calendar
The Equus October occurred on the
André Dacier, an early editor of Festus, noted in regard to the October Horse the tradition that Troy had fallen in October.[144] The October Horse figured in the elaborate efforts of the 19th-century chronologist Edward Greswell to ascertain the date of that event. Greswell assumed that the Equus October commemorated the date Troy fell, and after accounting for adjustments to the original Roman calendar as a result of the Julian reform, arrived at October 19, 1181 BC.[145]
The festival diametrically opposed to the October Horse on the calendar was the
Plutarch places the horse sacrifice on the Ides of December,[147] presumably because it occurred in the tenth month, which in the original Roman calendar was December instead of October, as indicated by the month's name (from decem, "ten").[148]
Topography
Most religious events at Rome were set in a single place, or held simultaneously in multiple locations, such as neighborhoods or private households. But like the ritual of the Argei, the October Horse links several sites within Roman religious topography. The mapping of sites may be part of the ritual's meaning, accumulated in layers over time.[149]
The chariot races and sacrifice take place in the Campus Martius, formerly
Ad Nixas
The sacrifice itself took place within the Tarentum precinct "at the Nixae" (ad Nixas), probably an altar to the deities of birth (
The October Horse sacrifice for Mars at an altar for birth deities suggests his role as a patron to young warriors who undergo the symbolic rebirth of initiation ritual, a theme also of the equestrian
Some scholars think Roman conceptions of Mars were influenced by the Etruscan child-god Maris and the centaur Mares, ancestor of the Ausones.[163] Maris is depicted with a cauldron symbolizing rebirth, and the half-man, half-horse Mares three times underwent death and rebirth.[164] In association with Etruscan-influenced horse-racing festivals, John F. Hall saw Mars as a god having "power over death."[165]
Ad Nixas may, however, refer to a landmark called the Ciconiae Nixae ("Travailing Storks"), which did not exist during the Republican period. In that case, the original site for the sacrifice was likely to have been the Altar of Mars (Ara Martis) in the Campus Martius,[166] the oldest center in Rome for the cultivation of Mars as a deity.[167]
Ritual bifurcation
The dismemberment of the horse led to a ritual bifurcation into ceremonies involving the head and tail separately. The tail was speedily transported by foot
The head became the object of contention between two factions, residents of the
The claim of the
The Subura had equine associations in the Imperial era. Martial mentions mule teams on its steep slope, though normally traffic from draft animals was not permitted within Rome during daylight hours.[173] An inscription found there indicates that the muleteers sought the divine protection of Hercules, Silvanus, and Epona. Silvanus had an association with Mars dating back to the archaic agricultural prayer preserved by Cato's farming treatise, in which the two are invoked either as one or jointly to protect the health of livestock. Epona was the Celtic horse goddess,[174] the sole deity with a Gaulish name whose cult can be documented in Rome.
Exactly where the ceremonial struggle took place, or how, is unclear, but it implies a final procession to either site.[15]
Modern interpretations
Corn spirit
During the era of
Indo-European horse sacrifice
A trace of horse sacrifice might be detectable among the
Some fundamental differences between the Roman rite and the Vedic and Celtic forms pose obstacles to situating the Equus October within the trifunctional schema.[183] The equus is sacrificed to the Roman god of war, not kingship. Dumézil's follower Jaan Puhvel deals with the Roman rite only glancingly in his essay "Aspects of Equine Functionality," exploring mainly the Vedic and Celtic evidence for an "Indo-European equine myth" that "involves the mating of a kingship-class representative with the hippomorphous transfunctional goddess, and the creation of twin offspring belonging to the level of the third estate."[184]
Puhvel finds few linkages between the October Horse and the ásvamedha, primarily because the method of killing the horse differs so dramatically, and the crucial element of ritual mating is absent. He observes, however, that "the absence of the sexual element in Roman horse sacrifice is no surprise, for early Roman ritual is exceedingly nonerotic"—an avoidance he attributes to the Romans' desire to differentiate their sexual probity from the supposed license of the Etruscans.[185]
Homo Necans
In Homo Necans, Walter Burkert saw the October Horse as a "sacrifice of dissolution" (hence his willingness to entertain the ancient tradition that associated it with the Fall of Troy), and the struggle for the head as an agon, a competitive contest that vents violence and rage, as do funeral games.[186]
Julius Caesar and human sacrifice
In 46 BCE, discontent arose among the troops supporting
Two others were slain as a sort of ritual observance (hierourgia, ἱερουργία). The true cause I am unable to state, inasmuch as the Sibyl made no utterance and there was no other similar oracle, but at any rate they were sacrificed in the Campus Martius by the pontifices and the priest of Mars, and their heads were set up near the Regia.[187]
Both Wissowa[188] and Dumézil[189] read Dio's sardonic take on these events to mean that an actual sacrifice occurred with human victims replacing the October Horse. The two killings have no common elements other than the site and the display of the heads at the Regia, but the passage has been used as evidence that the flamen of Mars[190] presided over the October Horse as well, even though the officiant is never mentioned in sources that deal explicitly with the Equus. Human sacrifice had always been rare at Rome, and had been formally abolished as a part of public religion about fifty years earlier. Some executions took on a sacral aura, but Dio seems to regard the soldiers' deaths as a grotesque parody of a sacrifice, whatever Caesar's intent may have been.[142] Jörg Rüpke thought that Dio's account, while "muddled", might indicate that Caesar as pontifex maximus took up the Trojan interpretation of the October Horse, in light of the Julian family's claim to have descended directly from Iulus, the son of the Trojan refugee Aeneas.[191] In Colleen McCullough's novel The October Horse, it is Caesar himself who becomes the sacrificial victim, on the Ides of March rather than the Ides of October when the Equus was sacrificed.
Notes
References
- ^ John Scheid, An Introduction to Roman Religion, translated by Janet Lloyd (Indiana University Press, 2003), pp. 51–52 online.
- Ludi Saeculares," in Studies in Roman Literature, Culture and Religion (Brill, 1956), p. 224 online.
- Robert E.A. Palmer, Studies of the Northern Campus Martius in Ancient Rome (American Philosophical Society, 1990), pp. 16, 33, 35, 52.
- ^ C. Bennett Pascal, "October Horse," Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 85 (1981), p. 263. Two vague references in Ovid and Propertius are usually taken to refer to the October Horse, unless they preserve otherwise unknown rites.
- ^ M.L. West, Indo-European Poetry and Myth (Oxford University Press, 2007), p. 428 online.
- ^ Pascal, "October Horse," p. 287ff.
- ^ a b Pascal, "October Horse," p. 261.
- ^ Festus 190 (edition of Lindsay). Plutarch's description of the rite (Roman Questions 97) concurs with that of Festus. See Frederick E. Brenk, "An Imperial Heritage: The Religious Spirit of Plutarch of Chaironeia," Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt II.36.1 (1987), p. 340, on Plutarch's interpretational efforts.
- ^ Festus 246 (Lindsay).
- ^ CIL I2, p. 274.
- ^ Reported by the Greek historian Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Roman Antiquities 5.13.2: "This field their ancestors had by a public decree consecrated to Mars as a meadow for horses and the most suitable drill-field for the youth to perform their exercises in arms."
- ^ Preserved by Paulus in the epitome of Festus 246 L, as cited by Hendrik Wagenvoort, "On the Magical Significance of the Tail," in Pietas: Selected Studies in Roman Religion (Brill, 1980), p. 147.
- ^ Wagenvoort, "On the Magical Significance of the Tail," pp. 147–148.
- ^ Pascal, "October Horse," p. 267, as noted in Roman farmers' almanacs (menologia rustica).
- ^ a b Pascal, "October Horse," p. 285.
- ^ Lawrence Richardson, A New Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992), p. 60.
- ^ Varro, De re rustica 1.1.4–6. Later Eventus came to represent success in general.
- ^ "A horse was sacrificed rather than an ox, because it is suited for war as the ox is for tending crops" (et equus potius quam bos immolabatur, quod hic bello, bos frugibus pariendis est aptus), as quoted by Wagenvoort, "On the Magical Significance of the Tail," p. 148.
- ^ Robert Drews, The Coming of the Greeks: Indo-European Conquests in the Aegean and the Near East (Princeton University Press, 1988, 1989), p. 152, notes that "Roman farm horses, alas, are as imaginary as unicorns."
- ^ Polybius 12.4.
- pax deorum, Rome's "treaty" with the gods.
- ^ Vitruvius, De architectura 1.7.2; Pascal, "October Horse," p. 286.
- ^ Mary Beard, John North, and Simon Price, Religions of Rome (Cambridge University Press, 1998), pp. 47–48 online and 53.
- Dumézilian context by Wouter W. Belier, Decayed Gods: Origin and Development of Georges Dumézil's 'Idéologie Tripartite', (Brill, 1991), pp. 88–89 online. On Mars' virility, R.B. 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). In antiquity, vis ("force, power") 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."
- ^ Propertius 4.1.20: qualia nunc curto lustra novantur equo.
- ^ Pascal, "October Horse," pp. 262, 267, 275.
- ^ Ovid, Fasti 4.732f.: sanguis equi (line 733).
- ^ Pascal, "October Horse," pp. 276ff.
- ^ Pascal, "October Horse," pp. 266, 268. Robert Turcan, The Gods of Ancient Rome (Routledge, 2001; originally published in French 1998), pp. 69 and 79, also asserts that this was not the blood of the October Horse, as do some other scholars.
- ^ Ovid, Fasti 4.731–734; Daniel P. Harmon, "Religion in the Latin Elegists", Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt 2.16.3 (1986), p. 1958; William Warde Fowler, The Roman Festivals of the Period of the Republic (London, 1908), p. 71.
- Ioannes Lydus, De mensibus 4.42, as noted by Pascal, "October Horse," pp. 284–285.
- ^ Vegetius, Ars Mulomedicina 3.12.4 (see also 1.20.3); J.N. Adams, Pelagonius and Latin Veterinary Terminology in the Roman Empire (Brill, 1995), p. 186. Pelagonius also uses the word.
- ^ Nicole Belayche, "Religious Actors in Daily Life: Practices and Related Beliefs," in A Companion to Roman Religion (Blackwell, 2007), p. 283; Pascal, "October Horse," pp. 268, 277.
- ^ Tacitus, Histories 4.60 and Annals 2.24; Pascal, "October Horse," p. 268.
- ^ Pascal, "October Horse," p. 277; John Scheid, "Sacrifices for Gods and Ancestors," in A Companion to Roman Religion, pp. 267–268.
- ^ Robigus (masculine) or Robigo (feminine), who may be an "indigitation" of Mars, or originally an epithet or divine name to "fix" the desired action of warding off crop disease; William Warde Fowler, The Roman Festivals of the Period of the Republic (London, 1908), p. 89.
- T.P. Wiseman, Remus: A Roman Myth (Cambridge University Press, 1995), p. 80ff., particularly p. 85 on the interpretation of the lupercias "an initiatory rite in which adolescents had to live wild, like wolves, before returning and being accepted as fully adult members of the community"; the goat, however, had become the most important animal of the festival in historical times.
- sacra gentilicia), household, or self celebrated regularly by all Romans.
- ^ Hecate, for instance, was a regular recipient of dog sacrifice, as a chthonic and a birth goddess, or invoked for magic; Parker, On Greek Religion, pp. 158–159, citing also R. Gordon, Revista de historiographia 5.3 [2/2006], pp. 4–14.
- ^ Arnaldo Momigliano, "Procum Patricium," Journal of Roman Studies 56 (1966), p. 24.
- senators, and that the patricianscannot have originated as a mounted aristocracy: "Of course we are all used to visualizing our aristocrats as superior beings on horseback. This is the heritage from our Middle Ages. But the question is whether this mediaeval picture can be transferred to the Rome of the kings" (p. 16). The earliest Roman cavalry were supported by the state; their horses and the food for them were state-subsidized, and therefore horse-ownership and maintenance cannot be considered a sign of wealth in Rome to the extent that it was in Greece (p. 20). Momigliano argues that the cavalry were originally the bodyguard of the king: "When these landowners ('patres') got rid of the kings, they transformed themselves into the hereditary exclusive holders of the key positions of the State. As such they had to deal with the old equestrian bodyguard of the kings. By proper infusion of new blood, of new religious ideas and ceremonies, they subjected the cavalry to their control and made it a preserve of the rich. Their main preoccupation remained, however, the control of the infantry. … This of course does not exclude the employment of young members of the aristocracy in a cavalry paid by the state" (p. 23).
- ^ Pascal, "October Horse," citing Livy 23.14.2 and Plutarch, Fabius 4.
- ^ Pascal, "October Horse," p. 275; Joshua Whatmough, The Foundations of Roman Italy (London: Methuen, 1937), p. 156.
- ^ Pascal, "October Horse," pp. 272, 275, 284.
- ^ Kathleen M. Coleman, "Euergetism in Its Place: Where Was the Amphitheatre in Augustan Rome?" in Bread and Circuses: Euergetism and Municipal Patronage in Roman Italy (Routledge, 2003), p. 76.
- ^ Pascal, "October Horse," pp. 284.
- ^ Polybius 23.10.17.
- ^ Noted also by Pausanias 2.34.2.
- 7.691); see Pallottino, "Myths and Cults of the Ancient Veneti," in Roman and European Mythologies, p. 50, and L.R. Palmer, The Latin Language (Oklahoma University Press, 1988, originally published 1954), p. 40.
- ^ Perhaps related to mannus, "pony," a loanword from Illyrian; Francisco Marcos-Marin, "Etymology and Semantics: Theoretical Considerations apropos of an Analysis of the Etymological Problem of Spanish mañero, mañeria," in Historical Semantics—Historical Word-Formation (de Gruyter, 1985), p. 381. Festus records a sacrifice made every eight years by the Illyrians, who throw four horses into the sea; Parker, On Greek Religion, p. 138.
- ^ See the free-ranging examples of religious horsemanship collected by John Pairman Brown, Israel and Hellas, (de Gruyter, 2000), vol. 2, pp. 5–8.
- ), because it represented the full span of life, childhood (infantia), the prime of life (iuventus), and old age (senectas). The earliest Roman coins picturing a biga showed it driven by Luna, the moon goddess.
- ^ Ovid, Fasti 1.385.
- ^ Xenophon, Cyropaedia 8.3.24 and Anabasis 4.5.34–5; Philostratus, VA 1.21; Pausanias 3.20.4.
- ^ Arthur M. Eckstein, Mediterranean Anarchy, Interstate War, and the Rise of Rome (University of California Press, 2006), pp. 205–206.
- ^ Humphrey, Roman Circuses, pp. 544, 558; Auguste Bouché-Leclercq, Manuel des Institutions Romaines (Hachette, 1886), p. 549; "Purificazione," in Thesaurus Cultus et Rituum Antiquorum (LIMC, 2004), p. 83.
- ^ John H. Humphrey, Roman Circuses: Arenas for Chariot Racing (University of California Press, 1986), p. 62.
- ^ Wagenvoort, "The Origin of the Ludi Saeculares," p. 228.
- ^ Pascal, "October Horse," p. 279.
- Mithradates of Pontus; Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Warfare, p. 348.
- ^ Mary Beard, The Roman Triumph (Harvard University Press, 2007), p. 222.
- ^ Humphrey, Roman Circuses, p. 16.
- ^ Frank Bernstein, "Complex Rituals: Games and Processions in Republican Rome," in A Companion to Roman Religion, pp. 223–224.
- ^ Pascal, "October Horse," p. 275.
- ^ Eva D'Ambra, "Racing with Death: Circus Sarcophagi and the Commemoration of Children in Roman Italy" in Constructions of Childhood in Ancient Greece and Italy (American School of Classical Studies at Athens, 2007), pp. 349–351; Nicole Belayche, "Religious Actors in Daily Life: Practices and Related Beliefs," in A Companion to Roman Religion (Blackwell, 2007), p. 289.
- ^ Belayche, "Religious Actors," p. 289.
- ^ D'Ambra, "Racing with Death," p. 351.
- ^ D'Ambra, "Racing with Death," pp. 348–349; Belayche, "Religious Actors," p. 289.
- ^ D'Ambra, "Racing with Death," p. 349.
- ^ Gregory Nagy, Greek Mythology and Poetics (Cornell University Press, 1990), pp. 219–220.
- ^ Humphrey, Roman Circuses, p. 15. One of the few specifics recorded about the horse races of the Taurian Games, held like the races of the October Horse in the Campus Martius, is that they were run around metae in honor of the underworld gods (di inferi).
- ^ Pliny, Natural History 7.201.
- ^ Charles Brian Rose, "The Parthians in Augustan Rome," American Journal of Archaeology 109.1 (2005), p. 34; E. Hall, "When Did the Trojans Turn into Phrygians?" Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik 73 (1988) 15–18.
- ^ The Cambridge History of Greek and Roman Warfare: Greece, the Hellenistic World, and the Rise of Rome (Cambridge University Press, 2007), vol. 1, p. 117.
- ^ Humphrey, Roman Circuses, p. 5.
- ^ Nagy, Greek Mythology and Poetics, pp. 219–220.
- ^ Nagy, Greek Mythology and Poetics, pp 87–89. 219.
- ^ Ménea pneiontes (μένεα πνείοντες): Iliad 2.536, 3.8, 11.508, 24.364; Odyssey 22.203, as cited and discussed by Nagy, Greek Mythology and Poetics, pp. 114–115.
- ^ Nagy, Greek Mythology and Poetics, p. 88.
- ^ Nagy, Greek Mythology and Poetics, pp. 89, 116.
- ^ Nagy, Greek Mythology and Poetics, p. 88, citing also Jan Bremmer.
- ^ H.S. Versnel, Triumphus: An Inquiry into the Origin, Development and Meaning of the Roman Triumph (Brill, 1970), p. 157; Pascal, "October Horse," pp. 276–277 for additional examples.
- ^ Pascal, "October Horse," pp. 276–280.
- H.J. Rose, "A Suggested Explanation of Ritual Combats," Folklore (1925) 322–331, noted but considered "stretching a point" by Pascal, "October Horse," p. 280, though on p. 282 Pascal seems to think the hypothetical courier who takes the tail to the Regia enhances the tail's numinous power through his efforts.
- ^ Vincent J. Rosivach, "Mars, the Lustral God," Latomus 42.3 (1983), pp. 511 and 514, citing Wissowa on the likely lustral character of the races; Katja Moede, "Reliefs, Public and Private," in A Companion to Roman Religion (Blackwell, 2007), p. 170.
- ^ Aeneid 1.444–445: Sic nam fore bello / egregiam et facilem victu per saecula gentem; R.B. Onians, The Origins of European Thought about the Body, the Mind, the Soul, the World, Time and Fate (Cambridge University Press, 1951, 2000 reprint), p. 126.
- ^ Onians, p. 127.
- Bacchus.
- ^ The detail that they were planting seed is a note from the Vergil commentator traditionally identified as Probus; Onians, The Origins of European Thought, p. 127.
- ^ Onians, The Origin of European Thought, p. 245.
- ^ Onians, The Origin of European Thought, p. 245, pointing out also Pliny's bizarre passage on hippomanes (Natural History 28.44 (= 181) involving equine sex and magic.
- ^ Quaeritur et nascentis equi de fronte revulsus / et matri praereptus amor: Aeneid 4.515–516.
- ^ These depictions are perhaps to be distinguished from Roman cavalrymen shown mounted and in their armor as mere representations of their occupation, as was common in funerary art. Even with an explicitly military subject, however, the image can have allegorical elements. A horseman spearing down an opponent may suggest his soul's ability to rise above death, just as he achieved victories in life. See Graham Webster, The Roman Imperial Army of the First and Second Centuries A.D. (University of Oklahoma Press, 1985, 1998, 3rd edition), p. 280.
- Servius, note to Aeneid3.607: "the forehead is [consecrated to] the Genius, hence we touch our forehead as we venerate the god" (frontem genio, unde venerantes deum tangimus frontem).
- shrines in honor of the Lares often depict a cornucopia-bearing Vesta and her donkey; R. Joy Littlewood, A Commentary on Ovid's Fasti, Book 6 (Oxford University Press, 2006), pp. lviii–lx; 100, 104. Horses and asses were also garlanded, though not with bread, at the Consualia on August 21; H.H. Scullard, Festivals and Ceremonies of the Roman Republic (Cornell University Press, 1981), p. 177.
- ^ Geradine Herbert-Brown, "Fasti: the Poet, the Prince, and the Plebs," in A Companion to Ovid (Blackwell, 2009), p. 133; Carole E. Newlands, Playing with Time: Ovid and the Fasti (Cornell University Press, 1995), p. 130ff.
- ^ Elaine Fantham, "Sexual Comedy in Ovid's Fasti: Sources and Motivation," in Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 87 (1983), pp. 189, 201–207, and especially p. 202: "Priapus is an outsider to Roman public ritual with no place in any official fertility ceremonies." Priapus was a guardian of gardens, but the gardens he guards are not usually portrayed as lush. His perpetual erection results from sexual frustration, not potency; unlike satyrs, who are often but not always unsuccessful, Priapus never achieves sexual release, and thus lacks true generative power: Olender, "Priapus," in Roman and European Mythologies, pp. 140–142.
- ^ Customary at Lampsacus, where his cult originated; Steven J. Green, Ovid, Fasti 1: A Commentary (Brill, 2004), pp. 184–185. He also received offerings of "junk" fish (Palatine Anthology, 6.192), and imperfect or artificial fruit; Maurice Olender, "Priapus," in Roman and European Mythologies (University of Chicago Press, 1992), p. 140. A wall painting at Pompeii shows the nocturnal offering of a pig to Priapus: Anthony King, "Mammals," in The Natural History of Pompeii (Cambridge University Press, 2002), p. 444; John R. Clarke, The Houses of Roman Italy, 100 B.C.–A.D. 250: Ritual, Space and Decoration (University of California Press, 1991), p. 97.
- ^ Lactantius, Divine Institutes 1.24.
- ^ Aelian, De natura animalium 6.51 (in a Latin translation of the original Greek; Maurice Olender, "Priapus," p.141.
- ^ a b Turcan, The Gods of Ancient Rome, p. 79.
- ^ Pascal, "October Horse," p. 283 et passim, and Herbert-Brown, "Fasti: the Poet, the Prince, and the Plebs," pp. 134–138, on Mars' relation to Vesta generally.
- ^ Littlewood, A Commentary on Ovid's Fasti, Book 6, pp. lviii–lx.
- Penates brought to Italy by the Trojan refugee Aeneas; one tradition had the Vestals withdrawing from the city during the siege. In the dual founding myth of Rome, Mars fathered Romulus and Remus with a priestess of Vesta, and his animals the wolf and the woodpeckernourished the twins. See Ariadne Staples, From Good Goddess to Vestal Virgins: Sex and Category in Roman Religion (Routledge, 1998), pp. 63–64, 74.
- Quirinalia was the last day of the Fornacalia, the "Oven Festival." Littlewood, A Commentary on Ovid's Fasti, Book 6, pp. lviii–lx, lxxviii; 51, 113–116.
- aition for how the Tiber Islandwas created.
- J.G. Frazer, The Golden Bough(Cambridge University Press, 2012 digital reissue of the 1913 edition), pp. 43–44.
- ^ Pascal, "October Horse," pp. 277, 285.
- ^ George Devereux, "The Equus October Ritual Reconsidered," Mnemosyne 23 (1970) 297–201, and James H. Dee, "Propertius IV. 1. 20: Curtus equus and the Equus October," Mnemosyne 26 (1973) 289, as summarized but rejected by Daniel P. Harmon, "Religion in the Latin Elegists," Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt II.16.3 (1986) p. 1958. See also Walter Burkert, Homo Necans (Berlin and New York, 1972), p. 69. J.N. Adams, The Latin Sexual Vocabulary (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1982), pp. 36–37, cautions that the only secure usage of cauda as slang for the penis is by Horace, Sermones 1.2.45 and 2.7.49, and may be the poet's "ad hoc metaphor." Cauda can also be spelled coda.
- ^ Michel Rousseau, "Note sur la caudectomie rituelle de l’october equus," Bulletin de l'Académie Vétérinaire de France Année (1974), p. 79.
- ^ Rousseau 1976, p. 125, citing himself.
- ^ Dumézil 1975, p. 186-187.
- ^ Pascal, "October Horse," passim.
- ^ Wagenvoort, "On the Magical Significance of the Tail," p. 157.
- ^ Wagenvoort, "On the Magical Significance of the Tail," passim.
- ^ Wagenvoort, "On the Magical Significance of the Tail," p. 156, with image p. 152.
- ^ Wagenvoort, "On the Magical Significance of the Tail," p. 155.
- ^ T.P. Wiseman, "Satyrs in Rome? The Background to Horace's Ars Poetica," Journal of Roman Studies 78 (1988), p. 7.
- ^ Pliny, Natural History 8.22.83; Onians, The Origins of European Thought, p. 472.
- ^ Pascal, "October Horse," p. 283, noting Dumézil's position that cauda is the tail.
- ^ Dumézil 1975, p. 182.
- ^ Plutarch, Life of Nicias 27.6 (Loeb Classical Library); Andrew G. Miller, "'Tails' of Masculinity: Knights, Clerics, and the Mutilation of Horses in Medieval England," Speculum 88:4 (2013),p. 970, n. 58 on Plutarch.
- ^ Miller, "'Tails' of Masculinity," p. 970–971.
- ^ Malcolm Jones, "Saints and Other Horse Mutilators," Fauna and Flora in the Middle Ages: Studies of the Medieval Environment and Its Impact on the Human Mind [=Beihefte zur Mediaevistik 8], papers delivered at the International Medieval Congress, Leeds, 2000–2002 (Frankfurt, 2007), n.p.
- ^ Miller, "'Tails' of Masculinity," pp. 958–959 et passim.
- ^ Miller, "'Tails' of Masculinity," p. 959.
- ^ Miller, "'Tails' of Masculinity," p. 971.
- ^ Jones, "Saints and Other Horse Mutilators," n.p., citing the Laws and Customs of England as codified by Henry de Bracton.
- ^ Miller, "'Tails' of Masculinity," p. 958.
- ^ Miller, "'Tails' of Masculinity," pp. 994–995.
- ^ Miller, "'Tails' of Masculinity," p. 960.
- ^ a b Jones, "Saints and Other Horse Mutilators," n.p.
- ^ Brenk, "An Imperial Heritage," pp. 339–340. Pascal, "October Horse," p. 262, comments that "those ancient commentators who mention Timaeus's idea that the affair is an act of vicarious revenge for the ruse of the Trojan Horse have the good sense to scoff at it."
- ^ Polybius 12.4.b–c.
- ^ Plutarch, Roman Questions 97, without attributing Timaeus.
- ^ Festus, 190 (Lindsay).
- ^ Michael H. Crawford, Roman Republican Coinage (Cambridge University Press, 1974, 2001), vol. 1, p. 41.
- ^ Walter Burkert, Homo Necans (Berlin and New York, 1972), pp. 159–160.
- ^ Fowler, Roman Festivals, pp. 241–242.
- ^ Pascal, "October Horse," pp. 265–268.
- ^ Pascal, "October Horse," p. 266.
- ^ a b Pascal, "October Horse," pp. 262–263.
- ^ Michael Lipka, Roman Gods: A Conceptual Approach (Brill, 2009), p. 41.
- ^ André Dacier (as Andreas Dacerius), Sex. Pompei Festi et Mar. Verrii Flacci de Verborum Significatione (Amsterdam, 1700), p. 302.
- ^ Greswell, Origines Kalendariae Hellenicae: or, The History of the Primitive Calendar among the Greeks (Oxford University Press, 1862), vol. 6, pp. 540–547.
- ^ Leonardo Magini, Astronomy and Calendar in Ancient Rome: The Eclipse Festivals («L'Erma» di Bretschneider, 2001), p. 66.
- ^ Plutarch, Roman Questions 97.
- ^ Frederick E. Brenk, "An Imperial Heritage: The Religious Spirit of Plutarch of Chaironeia," Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt II.36.1 (1987), p. 339.
- ^ Pascal, "October Horse," pp. 285–286.
- ^ Livy, 2.5.2; M.L. West, Indo-European Poetry and Myth (Oxford University Press, 2007), p. 418.
- ^ Humphrey, Roman Circuses, pp. 560, 577; Magini, Astronomy and Calendar in Ancient Rome, p. 63.
- ^ H.D. Jocelyn, The Tragedies of Ennius (Cambridge University Press, 1967), p. 331, with reference to Kurt Latte, Römische Religionsgeschichte (C.H. Beck, 1967, 1992), p. 246ff.
- Matres or Matrones) specified as Campestres, "of the campus or equestrian field." This form of military devotion was characteristic of the Celtic and Germanic allies; R.W. Davies, "The Training Grounds of the Roman Cavalry," Archaeological Journal 125 (1968), p. 73 et passim.
- How to Kill a Dragon: Aspects of Indo-European Poetics(Oxford University Press, 1995), p. 350.
- H.J. Rose, The Roman Questions of Plutarch (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1924, 1974), pp. 142, 192; David and Noelle Soren, A Roman Villa and a Late Roman Infant Cemetery («L'Erma» di Bretschneider, 1999), p. 520; Simon Goldhill, Being Greek Under Rome: Cultural Identity, the Second Sophistic and the Development of Empire (Cambridge University Press, 2007), pp. 106–107; Emily A McDermott, "Greek and Roman Elements in Horace's Lyric Program," Aufsteig under Niedergang der römischen Welt (1981), p. 1665. Mana Genita was known for receiving dog sacrifices.
- ^ Julian, On the Mother of the Gods 176D, in connection with dog sacrifices to Hecate among the Greeks and Romans, taken as a reference to the October Horse by Frazer, The Golden Bough (London, 1890), vol. 2, p. 65.
- ^ Cassius Dio 55.10.2; Nicole Belyache, "Religious Actors in Daily Life," in A Companion to Roman Religion p. 279.
- ^ The bigarius is puerilis in CIL 6.100078 = ILS 9348; infans in ILS 5300.
- ^ Versnel, "Apollo and Mars," pp. 147–148; Jean-Paul Thuillier, "Le cirrus et la barbe. Questions d'iconographie athlétique romaine," Mélanges de l'École française de Rome, Antiquité 110.1 (1998), p. 377, noting that the "major and minor" races held for the Robigalia may be junior and senior divisions.
- ^ Anthony Corbeill, "Blood, Milk, and Tears: The Gestures of Mourning Women," in Nature Embodied: Gesture in Ancient Rome (Princeton University Press, 2004), pp. 67–105; M. Golden, "Did the Ancients Care When Their Children Died?" Greece & Rome 35 (1988) 152–163.
- ^ D'Ambra, "Racing with Death," p. 341.
- ^ Festus, excerpts of Paulus, p. 479 in the edition of Lindsay; John Briscoe, A Commentary on Livy, Books 38–40 (Oxford University Press, 2008), p. 294; Auguste Bouché-Leclercq, Histoire de la divination dans l'antiquité (Jérôme Millon, 2003 reprint, originally published 1883), p. 1024.
- ^ Massimo Pallottino, "Religion in Pre-Roman Italy," in Roman and European Mythologies (University of Chicago Press, 1992, from the French edition of 1981), p. 29; H.S. Versnel, "Apollo and Mars One Hundred Years after Roscher," in Visible Religion: Annual for Religious Iconography. Approaches to Iconology (Brill, 1985–86), pp. 147–148; Wagenvoort, "The Origin of the Ludi Saeculares," 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.
- ^ Versnel, "Apollo and Mars," pp. 147–148.
- ^ Hall, "The Saeculum Novum of Augustus," p. 2574.
- ^ Fowler, Roman Festivals, p. 242.
- ^ Lawrence Richardson, A New Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992), p. 245.
- ^ Scholars generally assume that the tail was conveyed by a runner, not a horseman or vehicle; the texts specify only that the tail was transported speedily.
- ^ Livy 35.10.12; John E. Stambaugh, The Ancient Roman City (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1988), p. 32; Daniel J. Gargola, Lands, Laws, and Gods: Magistrates and Ceremonies in the Regulation of Public Lands in Republican Rome (University of North Carolina Press, 1995), p. 135.
- ^ Magini, Astronomy and Calendar in Ancient Rome, p. 63.
- ^ Pascal, "October Horse," p. 284.
- ^ Pascal, "October Horse," pp. 279–280. Dumézil claimed that the mock battle represented the Mamilii as traditional enemies of Rome, but Pascal criticizes this interpretation as "an improper emphasis," since the potential for an enemy to possess the talisman of the head would result in a bad omen for the state: "As inconceivably bad as if Guy Fawkes were to escape the bonfire" (p. 280, note 89).
- Robert E.A. Palmer, "Silvanus, Sylvester, and the Chair of St. Peter," Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 122.4 (1978), p. 229.
- ^ Palmer, "Silvanus," p. 229.
- ^ J.G. Frazer, The Golden Bough (Cambridge University Press, 2012 edition of the original 1890 publication), pp. 65.
- ^ Frazer, The Golden Bough, p. 66.
- ^ Fowler, Roman Festivals, p. 245. See also critical discussion by Pascal, "October Horse," pp. 272–273.
- ^ Georges Dumézil, Archaic Roman Religion (1970), pp. 224–228; in connection to the Regia, The Destiny of a King (University of Chicago Press, 1973, 1988; originally published 1971 in French), p. 120.
- ^ Robert Drews, The Coming of the Greeks: Indo-European Conquests in the Aegean and the Near East (Princeton University Press, 1988), p. 151; West, Indo-European Poetry and Myth, p. 418.
- ^ a b Pascal, "October Horse," p. 268.
- ^ Jones, "Saints and Other Horse Mutilators," n.p., in the context of the October Horse and Indo-European horse sacrifice.
- ^ Drews, The Coming of the Greeks, p. 151; Georges-Jean Pinault, "Gaulois Epomeduos, le maître des chevaux," in Gaulois et Celtique Continental (Droz, 2007), p. 294ff.; Burkert, Homo Necans, pp. 159–160.
- ^ Udo Strutynski, introduction to Georges Dumézil, Camillus: A Study of Indo-European Religion as Roman History (University of California Press, 1980), p. 12.
- cult was at Lanuvium. See also Miriam Robbins Dexter, "Consort Goddess," Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture (Taylor & Francis, 1997), p. 124.
- ^ Puhvel, "Aspects of Equine Functionality," pp. 188 and 193.
- ^ Burkert, Homo Necans, pp. 53–54, 159–160.
- ^ Cassius Dio. Roman History. 43.24.
- ^ Georg Wissowa, Religion und Kultus der Römer, 2nd edition, p. 144f (as cited by Pascal, "October Horse," p. 262.
- ^ Georges Dumezil, "Quaestiunculae indo-italicae 17: Le 'sacrifice humain' de 46 avant J.-C.," REL 41 (1963) 87-89, and La religion romaine archaique (Paris, 1966), p. 160.
- ^ Dio's standard translation of Latin flamen is ἱερεύς (hiereus); Pascal, "October Horse," p. 262.
- ^ Rüpke, Jörg (2007) [2001]. Religion of the Romans. Polity Press. p. 109. originally published in German, 2001
Bibliography
- Dumézil, Georges (1975). Fêtes romaines d'été et d'automne, suivi de Dix questions romaines. Paris: Gallimard.
- Rousseau, Michel (1976). "Le cheval d'octobre (October equus) éclairé par M. Georges Dumézil". Bulletin de l'Académie Vétérinaire de France. 129 (1): 125–127. .
Further reading
- Vanggaard, Jens Henrik (1979). "The October Horse". Temenos. 15. ISSN 2342-7256.