Quirinus

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Quirinus
God of the Roman state
Member of the
obverse, and Ceres enthroned on the reverse, a commemoration by a moneyer in 56 BCE of a Cerialia presented by an earlier Gaius Memmius as aedile[1]
Other namesCurinus, Corinus, Querinus, Queirinus
Major cult centerQuirinal Hill
AbodeQuirinal Hill
Symbolsbeard, religious and military clothing
Gendermale
FestivalsQuirinalia
ConsortHersilia-Hora

In

religion, Quirinus (/kwɪˈrnəs/ kwi-RY-nəs,[2] Latin: [kᶣɪˈriːnʊs]) is an early god of the Roman state. In Augustan Rome, Quirinus was also an epithet of Janus, as Janus Quirinus.[3]

Name

Attestations

The name of god Quirinus is recorded across Roman sources as Curinus, Corinus, Querinus, Queirinus and QVIRINO, also as fragmented IOVI. CYRIN[O].[4] The name is also attested as a surname to Hercules as Hercules Quirinus.[5]

Etymology

The name Quirīnus probably stems from Latin

better source needed
]

Some scholars have interpreted the name as a contraction of *Co-Virīnus (originally the protector of the community, cf. cūria < *co-viria), descending from an earlier *Co-Wironos, itself from the Proto-Indo-European noun *wihₓrós ("man").[8][9] Linguist Michiel de Vaan argues that this etymology "is not credible phonetically and not very compelling semantically."[6]

Depiction and worship

Denarius of 126 BC; on the right is the flamen Quirinalis with QVIRIN on his shield.

In earlier Roman art, Quirinus was portrayed as a bearded man with religious and military clothing. However, he was almost never depicted in later Roman art.[why?] His main festival was the Quirinalia, held on February 17.[10]

The priest of Quirinus, the

Pontifex Maximus.[11]

History

Quirinus most likely was originally a Sabine war god. The Sabines had a settlement near the eventual site of Rome, and erected an altar to Quirinus on the Collis Quirinalis, Quirinal Hill, one of the Seven hills of Rome. When the Romans settled in the area, the cult of Quirinus became part of their early belief system. This occurred before the later influences from classical Greek culture.[citation needed]

Deified Romulus

By the end of the 1st century BCE, Quirinus would be considered to be the deified legendary first king, Romulus.[12][13]

In his Life of Romulus, Plutarch wrote that, shortly after Rome's founder had disappeared under what some considered suspicious circumstances, a Roman noble named Proculus Julius reported that Romulus had come to him while he was travelling. He claimed that Romulus had instructed him to tell his countrymen that he, Romulus, was Quirinus.[14]

Brelich's argument for split deification

Historian Angelo Brelich argued that Quirinus and Romulus were originally the same divine entity which was split into a founder hero and a god when Roman religion became demythicised. To support this, he points to the association of both Romulus and Quirinus with the grain spelt, through the Fornacalia or Stultorum Feriae, according to Ovid's Fasti.[10]

The last day of the festival is called the

Quirinalia and corresponds with the traditional day of Romulus' death. On that day, the Romans would toast spelt as an offering to the goddess Fornax. In one version of the legend of Romulus' death cited by Plutarch, he was killed and cut into pieces by the nobles and each of them took a part of his body home and buried it on their land.[citation needed
]

Brelich claimed this pattern – a festival involving a staple crop, a god, and a tale of a slain founding hero whose body parts are buried in the soil – is a recognized

The Grabovian pantheon

The association of Quirinus and Romulus is further supported by a connection with Vofionos, the third god in the triad of the Grabovian gods of

Teutates, in Latium and among the Celts respectively.[16]

The Capitoline Triad

His early importance led to Quirinus' inclusion in the

Over time, however, Quirinus became less significant, and he was absent from the later, more widely known triad (he and Mars had been replaced by Juno and Minerva). Varro mentions the Capitolium Vetus, an earlier cult site on the Quirinal, devoted to Jupiter, Juno, and Minerva,[18][a] among whom Martial makes a distinction between the "old Jupiter" and the "new".[20]

Fade into obscurity

Eventually, Romans began to favor personal and mystical cults over the official state belief system. These included those of Bacchus, Cybele, and Isis, leaving only Quirinus' flamen to worship him.[citation needed]

Legacy

Even centuries after the fall of the Roman Empire, the

Quirinal hill in Rome, originally named from the deified Romulus, was still associated with power – it was chosen as the seat of the royal house after the taking of Rome by the Savoia and later it became the residence of the Presidents of the Italian Republic.[citation needed
]

See also

Footnotes

  1. ^ The Capitolium Vetus was demolished in 1625 by order of Pope Barberini.[19]

References

  1. ^ Orlin, Eric (2010). Foreign Cults in Rome: Creating a Roman Empire. Oxford University Press. p. 144.
  2. ^ "Quirinus". Collins Dictionary. Retrieved 24 September 2014.
  3. fetiales quoted by Livy (I.32.10); Macrobius
    (Sat. I.9.15);
  4. ^ Dupraz, Emmanuel. Les Vestins à l'époque tardo-républicaine. Du nord-osque au latin. France, Rouen: Publications des Universités de Rouen et du Havre. 2010. pp. 125-126.
  5. JSTOR 23618183
    .
  6. ^ a b de Vaan 2008, pp. 509–510.
  7. ^  This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Quirinus". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 22 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  8. .
  9. ^ Matasović, Ranko (2010). "A Reader in Comparative Mythology" (PDF). University of Zagreb.
  10. ^ a b Ovid. Fasti. II, 481 ff.
  11. De Verborum Significatione
    . 198, L. Quirinalis, socio imperii Romani Curibus ascito Quirino
  12. – via Google Books.
  13. – via Google Books.
  14. ^ Plutarch. "Romulus". Lives. ch. 28 p. 2.
  15. ^ Aulus Gellius. Noctes Atticae. 7.7.7.
  16. ^ Brelich, Angelo (1960). Quirinus: una divinita' romana alla luce della comparazione storica. Studi e Materiali di Storia delle religioni.
  17. JSTOR 290109
    .
  18. Varro
    . De lingua latina. V.158.
  19. ^ See Lanciani's work on the "Shrines of Pagan Rome".
  20. ^ Martial. Epigrams. Vol. V. 22.4. Martial remarks on a position on the Esquiline Hill from which one might see hinc novum Iovem, inde veterem, "here the new Jupiter, there the old."

Bibliography

Further reading