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Arce Program
“Knowing and sharing the Roman Hispania”

          RELIGIOUS BELIEFS
                 IN
          EMERITA AUGUSTA.

   Roman and Oriental Cults in
     the capital of Lusitania.
   DIDACTIC UNIT: 4º ESO.
   SUBJECT: LATÍN.
UNIT CONTENTS.
• Introduction of a Roman city.
• Survival of the pantheon of Roman gods in Emerita
  Augusta.
• Oriental Cults in the same city.
• Analysis and interpretation of sculptures and mosaics on
  religious themes.
• Seek from a variety of sources and media for data
  collection.
Objectives.
• Identify elements of Romanization in the
  colony of Augusta Emerita according to
  religion.
           Roman gods.
           Oriental deities.
Materials.
• Use of the evidence preserved in the
  Roman Museum of Merida through its
  website.
  http://museoarteromano.mcu.es/
Brief history of the colony.
• The Roman city was founded in the year 25 B.C. It was
  named Augusta Emerita because it would serve as
  withdrawal for Emeriti soldiers, veterans.
• It soon became the capital of the Roman province of
  Lusitania.
ROMAN PANTHEÓN.
ROAN CULTS IN MÉRIDA
It is proved that the gods of the Roman
 pantheon were worshiped in the old
 Merida.

Proof of this is the testimony offered by
the Roman museum in Merida.
THE GODDESS VENUS.

The classical representation of the
goddess of love, mother of the Trojan
Aeneas, hero of the epic Roman, has
different manifestations, so collected in
the museum.
THE GODDESS VENUS.
• The goddess and y her tracks of sculptural
  representation.




         Figura 1                 Figura 2
Iconography of the Goddess in
              Merida.
• Figure 2 refers to the famous Aphrodite of Knidos.
  The goddess drops the cloths in her hands after having
  held a ritual bath.
       Clothes that the venus of Merida wears too.
The goddess of agriculture: Ceres.




   Ceres is the mother of Proserpina,
   who according to mythology was
   abducted by the god Pluto. This Myth
   served to explain the cycle of
   vegetation.
   The Roman Ceres, Demeter to the
   Greeks, was worshiped in different
   parts of the empire.
Ceres in the museum of Mérida.




  The goddess Ceres is represented as a Roman matron, as a
  mature woman. In her hands she usually carries a bunch of
  ears of wheat and a torch.
  The museum displays a figure of a seated Ceres with no arms.
Representation of the goddess
Ceres in the Parthenon, by
Phidias.(British Museum)




  • Demeter and Persephone, mother and
    daughter were represented on the east
    pediment of the Parthenon.The goddess is
    also sitting as the emeritense sculpture.
MERCURIO
             HERMES

•   In classical representations of the god his distinctive elements appear:

         Petaso (hat) on his head, clámide (cloak) attached to his left
    shoulder, bag, caduceus, tortoiseshell lyre and wings on his ankles

•   Mercury, the Greek Hermes is the messenger of god. In the western
    provinces of the Roman Empire he will become the God who will guard
    the roads, related to trade and in some areas it has got a quite salutary
    character related to thermal water sources.
MERCURY
IN THE ROMAN MUSEUM OF
         MERIDA




  This sculpture was found in the house of Mitreo in
 Merida. This dates from the II c. A. C. and Mercury is
 represented with its own iconography, the lyre, a
 stringed musical instrument very important for poets.

 (Recall the origin of the word lyric)
  According to mythology, Mercury was the inventor of the
 instrument.
BACCHUS AND ARIADNE.
Bacchus, the Greek
Dionysus, is the god of
wine and theater.
In classical performances,
the god is crowned with
vine leaves and bare-
chested.
Mythology tells us the
union of the God with the
princess Ariadne,
daughter of Minos.
MOSAIC                                    BACO Y ARIADNA.


The mosaic of the city of Merida tells the
story of Bacchus with Ariadne (who had
been abandoned by Theseus on the
island of Naxos).
The Romans built the mosaics with small
pieces called tiles, hence they referred to
them also as tessellatum opus.
It is signed by the workshop where it was
made: EX OFFICINA ANNIBONI. Late V
century a.C.
In the representation there are lovers and
slaves so as the animals that drew the
chariot of God, the tigers. According to the   OVIDIO:”Ya el dios, encima de su
myth, the god returned from India, when        carro que aparecía repleto de uvas,
                                               aflojaba las riendas doradas a los
he met Ariadne                                 tigres que lo llevaban.”
the Maenads   .
The Maenads are female followers of
Bacchus.
They were attributed a wild life and an
irrational behavior.
In the mythical story of the death of
Orpheus, the Maenads tear him to
pieces because he rejects the cult of
Dionysus in favor of the cult of Apollo,
identified with the sun
MAENADS

                      In Merida Roman museum
                      preserves a sculptural
                      representation of a Maenad (pic.2)
                      It has common characteristics with
                      the Prado Maenad (pic1)
                      The treatment of the folds of her
                      dress, her profile representation,
                      the thyrsus in her right hand and
                      her dance attitude.




Maenad in the Prado                                        Maenad in the Roman
Museum                                                     museum of Merida

   Fig.1                                                     Fig.2
AESCULAPIUS.
•   Asclepius is the Greek Asclepius, god of
    medicine and healing.
     In Greece HE enjoyed a major shrine, the
    sanctuary of Asclepius in Epidaurus, a place
    of pilgrimage throughout antiquity.
     The Romans adopted the cult of this god and
    built a shrine in his honor on the Tiber Island
    and he was taken to different provinces.
    Traces of the cult in Spain are in Ampurias
    (brought by the Greeks), in Cartagena and in
    Merida.
Iconography of Asclepius.
                       The two figures
                       presented the god with
                       with a bare chest and a
                       mantle
                       (Greek himation),
                       that
                       in the representation of
                        Ampurias has
                       taken the form of the
                        Roman toga.




Asclepius. Ampurias.                              Asclepius. Mérida.
THE GODDESS DIANA.
        Diana was the virgin goddess of the hunt and
    protector of nature. Its equivalent is Greek goddess
    Artemis, the twin sister of Apollo.

    This goddess has a temple in Mérida that bears his
    name: Temple of Diana in Merida.
     This title was applied by the resemblance that the
    building shows with the temple of Artemis at Éfeso. It
    is located in the center of town, which fully
    corresponds with the Emerita Augusta Decumanus
    Maximus

(the thistle and decumanus are the two main streets of the Roman city).
THE TEMPLE OF DIANA




Reconstruction of the temple of
Artemis at Ephesus.               Temple of Diana in Merida.
THE PROTECTIVE GENIE OF
           THE FAMILY.
            MANES, PENATES Y LARES.
The geniuses Manes are old family genie, which
 protect the souls of the ancestors, protecting the
 house, along with the Lares and Penates. They
 covered the primitive domestic cult.

   The gods Penates are also geniuses protective
  of home and family and more specifically, of the
  larder (penus in Latin).

   The gods Lares are protective genius of the
  hearth fire.
REPRESENTATIONS OF THE
   PROTECTIVE GENIE




 Pompeian house genius.                           Merida Museum Genius.



The genius is represented in the form of a snake or a young
man frequently with a cornucopia.
DEIFICATIÓN OF EMPERORS.




The deification of the emperors after death was something
usual, from the first of them, Augusto, from whom a
famous museum effigy in Meridades is preserved.
ORIENTAL CULTS
                                                ​
  The Roman Empire was always open to the cults of conquered provinces,it made
that in places like the Lusitania testimonies of Eastern religious cults appeared.
During the Roman period, contacts with religious ideas developed in the eastern
Mediterranean and the lands of the ancient Near East are intensified.



 The sculptures kept in the museum of Mérida are standing proof, so as the
emergence of an important shrine dedicated to oriental divinities in the area near the
archaeological site known as the "House of MyTreo“
GODDESS ISIS.

Isis (Ίσις ancient Greek) is the Greek name of a goddess of
Egyptian mythology. Its Egyptian name was Ast, meaning
throne. It was called "Grand Magus", "Great Mother
Goddess", "Queen of the Gods", "fertilizing force of nature",
"Goddess of motherhood and birth."

 The Romans assimilated the worship of the goddess Isis,
bringing it closer to local deities. It was specifically the
emperor Caligula who officially introduced the worship of this
goddess in Rome.

 Anthropomorphic representations of this divinity present it as
a woman in tight dress crowned with the throne.
                                                                   ISIS
                                                                  MÉRIDA
GOD MITHRAS.
       Mithras was a god known in antiquity, mainly in
Persia and India. Mithra was the god of the sun, of
Persian origin that became part of the Roman Empire.
Various sculptures are preserved, for the most part of
the third century. He is depicted as a young man with a
Phrygian cap, killing a bull with his hands.



  The cult of Mithras was developed as a mystery
religion, and was organized in secret societies,
exclusively male, esoteric in nature. He enjoyed
particular popularity in military enviroments.




                                                          CRONOS O
                                                           MITRA.
HOUSE OF MITREO.

      It is known as the "House of Mitreo" a domus or
manor house located in a place near the site where
remains have been found associated with the cult of
Mithras, a cosmological mosaic and underground rooms.
The house, located outside the walls of the Roman town,
was built in the late l century or early second A. C.
     The cosmological mosaic represents the conception
of the world and the forces of nature that govern it, along
with some human activity.
Mosaic


Cosmological


Of the house


 of Mitreo.

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Creencias Religiosas en Mérida (versión en inglés)

  • 1. Arce Program “Knowing and sharing the Roman Hispania” RELIGIOUS BELIEFS IN EMERITA AUGUSTA. Roman and Oriental Cults in the capital of Lusitania. DIDACTIC UNIT: 4º ESO. SUBJECT: LATÍN.
  • 2. UNIT CONTENTS. • Introduction of a Roman city. • Survival of the pantheon of Roman gods in Emerita Augusta. • Oriental Cults in the same city. • Analysis and interpretation of sculptures and mosaics on religious themes. • Seek from a variety of sources and media for data collection.
  • 3. Objectives. • Identify elements of Romanization in the colony of Augusta Emerita according to religion. Roman gods. Oriental deities.
  • 4. Materials. • Use of the evidence preserved in the Roman Museum of Merida through its website. http://museoarteromano.mcu.es/
  • 5. Brief history of the colony. • The Roman city was founded in the year 25 B.C. It was named Augusta Emerita because it would serve as withdrawal for Emeriti soldiers, veterans. • It soon became the capital of the Roman province of Lusitania.
  • 7. ROAN CULTS IN MÉRIDA It is proved that the gods of the Roman pantheon were worshiped in the old Merida. Proof of this is the testimony offered by the Roman museum in Merida.
  • 8. THE GODDESS VENUS. The classical representation of the goddess of love, mother of the Trojan Aeneas, hero of the epic Roman, has different manifestations, so collected in the museum.
  • 9. THE GODDESS VENUS. • The goddess and y her tracks of sculptural representation. Figura 1 Figura 2
  • 10. Iconography of the Goddess in Merida. • Figure 2 refers to the famous Aphrodite of Knidos. The goddess drops the cloths in her hands after having held a ritual bath. Clothes that the venus of Merida wears too.
  • 11. The goddess of agriculture: Ceres. Ceres is the mother of Proserpina, who according to mythology was abducted by the god Pluto. This Myth served to explain the cycle of vegetation. The Roman Ceres, Demeter to the Greeks, was worshiped in different parts of the empire.
  • 12. Ceres in the museum of Mérida. The goddess Ceres is represented as a Roman matron, as a mature woman. In her hands she usually carries a bunch of ears of wheat and a torch. The museum displays a figure of a seated Ceres with no arms.
  • 13. Representation of the goddess Ceres in the Parthenon, by Phidias.(British Museum) • Demeter and Persephone, mother and daughter were represented on the east pediment of the Parthenon.The goddess is also sitting as the emeritense sculpture.
  • 14. MERCURIO HERMES • In classical representations of the god his distinctive elements appear: Petaso (hat) on his head, clámide (cloak) attached to his left shoulder, bag, caduceus, tortoiseshell lyre and wings on his ankles • Mercury, the Greek Hermes is the messenger of god. In the western provinces of the Roman Empire he will become the God who will guard the roads, related to trade and in some areas it has got a quite salutary character related to thermal water sources.
  • 15. MERCURY IN THE ROMAN MUSEUM OF MERIDA This sculpture was found in the house of Mitreo in Merida. This dates from the II c. A. C. and Mercury is represented with its own iconography, the lyre, a stringed musical instrument very important for poets. (Recall the origin of the word lyric) According to mythology, Mercury was the inventor of the instrument.
  • 16. BACCHUS AND ARIADNE. Bacchus, the Greek Dionysus, is the god of wine and theater. In classical performances, the god is crowned with vine leaves and bare- chested. Mythology tells us the union of the God with the princess Ariadne, daughter of Minos.
  • 17. MOSAIC BACO Y ARIADNA. The mosaic of the city of Merida tells the story of Bacchus with Ariadne (who had been abandoned by Theseus on the island of Naxos). The Romans built the mosaics with small pieces called tiles, hence they referred to them also as tessellatum opus. It is signed by the workshop where it was made: EX OFFICINA ANNIBONI. Late V century a.C. In the representation there are lovers and slaves so as the animals that drew the chariot of God, the tigers. According to the OVIDIO:”Ya el dios, encima de su myth, the god returned from India, when carro que aparecía repleto de uvas, aflojaba las riendas doradas a los he met Ariadne tigres que lo llevaban.”
  • 18. the Maenads . The Maenads are female followers of Bacchus. They were attributed a wild life and an irrational behavior. In the mythical story of the death of Orpheus, the Maenads tear him to pieces because he rejects the cult of Dionysus in favor of the cult of Apollo, identified with the sun
  • 19. MAENADS In Merida Roman museum preserves a sculptural representation of a Maenad (pic.2) It has common characteristics with the Prado Maenad (pic1) The treatment of the folds of her dress, her profile representation, the thyrsus in her right hand and her dance attitude. Maenad in the Prado Maenad in the Roman Museum museum of Merida Fig.1 Fig.2
  • 20. AESCULAPIUS. • Asclepius is the Greek Asclepius, god of medicine and healing. In Greece HE enjoyed a major shrine, the sanctuary of Asclepius in Epidaurus, a place of pilgrimage throughout antiquity. The Romans adopted the cult of this god and built a shrine in his honor on the Tiber Island and he was taken to different provinces. Traces of the cult in Spain are in Ampurias (brought by the Greeks), in Cartagena and in Merida.
  • 21. Iconography of Asclepius. The two figures presented the god with with a bare chest and a mantle (Greek himation), that in the representation of Ampurias has taken the form of the Roman toga. Asclepius. Ampurias. Asclepius. Mérida.
  • 22. THE GODDESS DIANA. Diana was the virgin goddess of the hunt and protector of nature. Its equivalent is Greek goddess Artemis, the twin sister of Apollo. This goddess has a temple in Mérida that bears his name: Temple of Diana in Merida. This title was applied by the resemblance that the building shows with the temple of Artemis at Éfeso. It is located in the center of town, which fully corresponds with the Emerita Augusta Decumanus Maximus (the thistle and decumanus are the two main streets of the Roman city).
  • 23. THE TEMPLE OF DIANA Reconstruction of the temple of Artemis at Ephesus. Temple of Diana in Merida.
  • 24. THE PROTECTIVE GENIE OF THE FAMILY. MANES, PENATES Y LARES. The geniuses Manes are old family genie, which protect the souls of the ancestors, protecting the house, along with the Lares and Penates. They covered the primitive domestic cult. The gods Penates are also geniuses protective of home and family and more specifically, of the larder (penus in Latin). The gods Lares are protective genius of the hearth fire.
  • 25. REPRESENTATIONS OF THE PROTECTIVE GENIE Pompeian house genius. Merida Museum Genius. The genius is represented in the form of a snake or a young man frequently with a cornucopia.
  • 26. DEIFICATIÓN OF EMPERORS. The deification of the emperors after death was something usual, from the first of them, Augusto, from whom a famous museum effigy in Meridades is preserved.
  • 27. ORIENTAL CULTS ​ The Roman Empire was always open to the cults of conquered provinces,it made that in places like the Lusitania testimonies of Eastern religious cults appeared. During the Roman period, contacts with religious ideas developed in the eastern Mediterranean and the lands of the ancient Near East are intensified. The sculptures kept in the museum of Mérida are standing proof, so as the emergence of an important shrine dedicated to oriental divinities in the area near the archaeological site known as the "House of MyTreo“
  • 28. GODDESS ISIS. Isis (Ίσις ancient Greek) is the Greek name of a goddess of Egyptian mythology. Its Egyptian name was Ast, meaning throne. It was called "Grand Magus", "Great Mother Goddess", "Queen of the Gods", "fertilizing force of nature", "Goddess of motherhood and birth." The Romans assimilated the worship of the goddess Isis, bringing it closer to local deities. It was specifically the emperor Caligula who officially introduced the worship of this goddess in Rome. Anthropomorphic representations of this divinity present it as a woman in tight dress crowned with the throne. ISIS MÉRIDA
  • 29. GOD MITHRAS. Mithras was a god known in antiquity, mainly in Persia and India. Mithra was the god of the sun, of Persian origin that became part of the Roman Empire. Various sculptures are preserved, for the most part of the third century. He is depicted as a young man with a Phrygian cap, killing a bull with his hands. The cult of Mithras was developed as a mystery religion, and was organized in secret societies, exclusively male, esoteric in nature. He enjoyed particular popularity in military enviroments. CRONOS O MITRA.
  • 30. HOUSE OF MITREO. It is known as the "House of Mitreo" a domus or manor house located in a place near the site where remains have been found associated with the cult of Mithras, a cosmological mosaic and underground rooms. The house, located outside the walls of the Roman town, was built in the late l century or early second A. C. The cosmological mosaic represents the conception of the world and the forces of nature that govern it, along with some human activity.