List of Roman birth and childhood deities

"Paventia" and "Vitumnus" redirect here. For the genus of moth, see Paventia (moth). For the assassin bug, see Vitumnus (genus).
Relief from a child's sarcophagus depicting a nursing mother with the father looking on (ca. 150 AD)

In ancient Roman religion, birth and childhood deities were thought to care for every aspect of conception, pregnancy, parturition, and infant development. Some major deities of Roman religion had a specialized function they contributed to this sphere of human life, while other deities are known only by the name with which they were invoked to promote or avert a particular action. Several of these slight "divinities of the moment"[1] are mentioned in surviving texts only by Christian polemicists.[2]

An extensive Greek and Latin medical literature covered obstetrics and infant care, and the Greek gynecologist Soranus (2nd century AD) advised midwives not to be superstitious. But childbirth in antiquity remained a life-threatening experience for both the woman and her newborn, with infant mortality as high as 30 or 40 percent.[3] Rites of passage pertaining to birth and death had several parallel aspects.[4] Death in childbirth was common: one of the most famous was Julia, daughter of Julius Caesar and wife of Pompey the Great. Her infant died a few days later, severing the family ties between her father and husband and hastening the civil war that resulted in the end of the Roman Republic.[5] Some ritual practices may be characterized as anxious superstitions, but the religious aura surrounding childbirth reflects the high value Romans placed on family, tradition (mos maiorum), and compatibility of the sexes.[6] Under the Empire, children were celebrated on coins, as was Juno Lucina, the primary goddess of childbirth, as well as in public art.[7] Funerary art, such as relief sculpture on sarcophagi, sometimes showed scenes from the deceased's life, including birth or the first bath.[8]

Only those who died after the age of 10 were given full funeral and commemorative rites, which in ancient Rome were observed by families several days during the year (see Parentalia). Infants less than one year of age received no formal rites. The lack of ritual observances pertains to the legal status of the individual in society, not the emotional response of families to the loss.[9] As Cicero reflected:

Some think that if a small child dies this must be borne with equanimity; if it is still in its cradle there should not even be a lament. And yet it is from the latter that nature has more cruelly demanded back the gift she had given.[10]

Sources

The most extensive lists of deities pertaining to the conception-birth-development cycle come from the Church Fathers, especially Augustine of Hippo and Tertullian. Augustine in particular is known to have used the now-fragmentary theological works of Varro, the 1st-century BC Roman scholar, who in turn referenced the books of the Roman pontiffs. The purpose of the patristic writers was to debunk traditional Roman religion, but they provide useful information despite their mocking tone.[11] Scattered mentions occur throughout Latin literature.

The following list of deities is organized chronologically by the role they play in the process.[12]

Conception and pregnancy

The gods of the marriage bed (di coniugales) are also gods of conception.[13] Juno, one of the three deities of the Capitoline Triad, presides over union and marriage as well, and some of the minor deities invoked for success in conceiving and delivering a child may have been functional aspects of her powers.

Child's sarcophagus (150-160 AD) depicting the festivities attending the birth of Dionysus; the basin at far left represents the baby's first bath

The Parcae

The Parcae are the three goddesses of fate (tria fata): Nona, Decima, and Parca (singular of Parcae), also known as Partula in relation to birthing. Nona and Decima determine the right time for birth, assuring the completion of the nine-month term (ten in Roman inclusive counting).[44] Parca or Partula oversees partus, birth as the initial separation from the mother's body (as in English '"postpartum").[45] At the very moment of birth, or immediately after, Parca establishes that the new life will have a limit, and therefore she is also a goddess of death called Morta (English "mortal").[46] The profatio Parcae, "prophecy of Parca," marked the child as a mortal being, and was not a pronouncement of individual destiny.[47] The first week of the child's life was regarded as an extremely perilous and tentative time, and the child was not recognized as an individual until the dies lustricus (see below).

Birthing

The primary deity presiding over the delivery was Juno Lucina, who may in fact be a form of Diana. Those invoking her aid let their hair down and loosened their clothing as a form of reverse binding ritual intended to facilitate labor.[48] Soranus advised women about to give birth to unbind their hair and loosen clothing to promote relaxation, not for any magical effect.[49]

Swaddled infant (Gallo-Roman terracotta votive)

Into the light

A goddess suckling a toddler and seated in the wicker chair characteristic of Gallo-Roman goddesses (2nd or 3rd century, Bordeaux)

Lucina as a title of the birth goddess is usually seen as a metaphor for bringing the newborn into the light (lux, lucis).[59] Luces, plural ("lights"), can mean "periods of light, daylight hours, days." Diespiter, "Father of Day," is thus her masculine counterpart; if his name is taken as a doublet for Jupiter, then Juno Lucina and Diespiter can be understood as a male-female complement.[60]

Diespiter, however, is also identified in Latin literature with the ruler of the underworld, Dis pater. The functions of "chthonic" deities such as Dis (or Pluto) and his consort Proserpina are not confined to death; they are often concerned with agricultural fertility and the giving of nourishment for life, since plants for food grow from seeds hidden in the ground. In the mystery religions, the divine couple preside over the soul's "birth" or rebirth in the afterlife. The shadowy goddess Mana Genita was likewise concerned with both birth and mortality, particularly of infants, as was Hecate.[61]

In contrast to the vast majority of deities, both birth goddesses and underworld deities received sacrifices at night.[62] Ancient writers conventionally situate labor and birth at night; it may be that night is thought of as the darkness of the womb, from which the newborn emerges into the (day)light.

The cyclical place of the goddess Candelifera, "She who bears the candle,"[63] is uncertain. It is sometimes thought that she provides an artificial light for labor that occurs at night. A long labor was considered likely for first-time mothers, so at least a part of the birthing process would occur at night.[64] According to Plutarch,[65] light symbolizes birth, but the candle may have been thought of as less a symbol than an actual kindling of life,[66] or a magic equivalent to the life of the infant.[67] Candelifera may also be the nursery light kept burning against spirits of darkness that would threaten the infant in the coming week.[68] Even in the Christian era, lamps were lit in nurseries to illuminate sacred images and drive away child-snatching demons such as the Gello.[69]

Neonatal care

Once the child came into the light, a number of rituals were enacted over the course of the following week.[70] An offerings table received congratulatory sacrifices from the mother's female friends.[71] Three deities—Intercidona, Pilumnus, and Deverra—were invoked to drive away Silvanus, the wild woodland god of trees:[72] three men secured the household every night by striking the threshold (limen; see liminality) with an axe and then a pestle, followed by sweeping it.

Drawing of a scene on an Etruscan mirror, in which Uni (Juno) suckles the adult Hercle (Hercules) before he ascends to immortality

In the atrium of the house, a bed was made up for Juno, and a table set for Hercules.[73] In the Hellenized mythological tradition, Juno tried to prevent the birth of Hercules, as it resulted from Jupiter's infidelity. Ovid has Lucina crossing her knees and fingers to bind the labor.[74] Etruscan religion, however, emphasized the role that Juno (as Uni) played in endowing Hercle with his divine nature through the drinking of her breast milk.

Dies lustricus

Nundina presides over the dies lustricus,[78] the purification day when the child was given a name (praenomen). This occurred on the eighth day for girls and the ninth day for boys, a difference Plutarch explains by noting that "it is a fact that the female grows up, and attains maturity and perfection before the male."[79] Until the umbilical cord fell off, typically on the seventh day, the baby was regarded as "more like a plant than an animal," as Plutarch expresses it.[80] The ceremony of the dies lustricus was thus postponed until the last tangible connection to the mother's body was dissolved, and the child was seen "as no longer forming part of the mother, and in this way as possessing an independent existence which justified its receiving a name of its own and therefore a fate of its own."[81] The day was celebrated with a family feast.[82]

On the dies lustricus, the Fata Scribunda were invoked.[83] The "Written Fates" probably refers to a ceremonial writing down of the child's new name, perhaps in a family chronicle.[84] To the Romans, the giving of a name was as important as being born. The receiving of a praenomen inaugurated the child as an individual with its own fate.[85]

Child development

In well-to-do households, children were cared for by nursemaids (nutrices, singular nutrix, which can mean either a wet nurse who might be a slave or a paid professional of free status, or more generally any nursery maid, who would be a household slave). Mothers with a nursery staff were still expected to supervise the quality of care, education, and emotional wellbeing of children. Ideally, fathers would take an interest even in their infant children; Cato liked to be present when his wife bathed and swaddled their child.[86] Nursemaids might make their own bloodless offerings to deities who protected and fostered the growth of children.[87] Most of the "teaching gods" are female, perhaps because they themselves were thought of as divine nursemaids. The gods who encourage speech, however, are male.[88] The ability to speak well was a defining characteristic of the elite citizen. Although women were admired for speaking persuasively,[89] oratory was regarded as a masculine pursuit essential to public life.[90]

Head of a child from the Antonine era
Roman boy wrapped in his cloak (1st century AD)

Children wore the toga praetexta, with a purple band that marked them as sacred and inviolable, and an amulet (bulla) to ward off malevolence.

Later literature

James Joyce mentions a few Roman birth deities by name in his works. In the "Oxen of the Sun" episode of Ulysses, he combines an allusion to Horace (nunc est bibendum) with an invocation of Partula and Pertunda (per deam Partulam et Pertundam) in anticipation of the birth of Purefoy. Cunina, Statulina, and Edulia are mentioned in Finnegans Wake.[105]

See also

References

  1. Giulia Sissa, "Maidenhood without Maidenhead: The Female Body in Ancient Greece," in Before Sexuality: The Construction of Erotic Experience in the Ancient Greek World (Princeton University Press, 1990), p. 362, translating the German term Augenblicksgötter which was coined by Hermann Usener.
  2. Mary Beard, J.A. North, and S.R.F. Price, Religions of Rome: A Sourcebook (Cambridge University Press, 1998), vol. 2, p. 33.
  3. M. Golden, "Did the Ancients Care When Their Children Died?" Greece & Rome 35 (1988) 152–163; Keith R. Bradley, "Wet-nursing at Rome: A Study in Social Relations," in The Family in Ancient Rome: New Perspectives (Cornell University Press, 1986, 1992), p. 202; Beryl Rawson, Children and Childhood in Roman Italy (Oxford University Press, 2003), p. 104.
  4. 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.
  5. Rawson, Children and Childhood in Roman Italy, p. 103.
  6. Rawson, Children and Childhood in Roman Italy, p. 99.
  7. Rawson, Children and Childhood in Roman Italy, p. 64.
  8. Rawson, Children and Childhood in Roman Italy, pp. 101–102.
  9. Rawson, Children and Childhood in Roman Italy, p. 104.
  10. Cicero, Tusculan Disputations 1.93,as cited by Rawson, Children and Childhood in Roman Italy, p. 104.
  11. Beard et al., Religions of Rome,vol. 2, p. 33.
  12. The order is based on that of Robert Turcan, The Gods of Ancient Rome (Routledge, 2001; originally published in French 1998), pp. 18–20, and Jörg Rüpke, Religion in Republican Rome: Rationalization and Ritual Change (University of Pennsylvania Press, 2002), pp. 181–182.
  13. Beard, Religions of Rome: A Sourcebook, vol. 2, pp. 32–33; Rüpke, Religion of the Romans, p. 79.
  14. Augustine, De Civitate Dei 6.9.Ludwig Preller, Römische Mythologie (Berlin, 1881), vol. 1, p. 211.
  15. Festus 55 (edition of Lindsay); Karen K. Hersch, The Roman Wedding: Ritual and Meaning in Antiquity (Cambridge University Press, 2010), pp. 101, 110, 211.
  16. William Warde Fowler, The Roman Festivals of the Period of the Republic (London, 1908), p. 142.
  17. For an extensive look at the knot of virginity, primarily in early Christian culture, see S. Panayotakis, "The Knot and the Hymen: A Reconsideration of Nodus Virginitatis (Hist. Apoll. 1)," Mnemosyne 53.5 (2000) 599–608.
  18. Pliny, Natural History 28.42; Anthony Corbeill, Nature Embodied: Gesture in Ancient Rome (Princeton University Press, 2004), pp. 35–36.
  19. Attributed to Theodorus Priscianus, Additamenta 10; Corbeill, Nature Embodied, p. 37. See also Marcellus Empiricus, De medicamentis 10.70 and 82.
  20. Augustine, De Civitate Dei 6.9.
  21. J.N. Adams, The Latin Sexual Vocabulary (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1982), pp. 155–156. The verb is used in the satiric verses chanted by the soldiers at the triumph of Julius Caesar, where he is said to have caused the Gauls to submit (see Gallic Wars), and to have submitted himself to Nicomedes. A subigitatrix was a woman who took the active role in fondling (Plautus, Persa 227).
  22. Adams, Latin Sexual Vocabulary, p. 182; Augustine, De Civitate Dei 6.9.
  23. The cult of this god was either misunderstood or deliberately misrepresented by Church Fathers as a ritual deflowering during marriage rites; no Roman source describes such a thing. See Mutunus Tutunus.
  24. Sissa, "Maidenhood without Maidenhead," p. 362.
  25. Augustine of Hippo, De Civitate Dei 6.9.3.
  26. Turcan, The Gods of Ancient Rome, p. 18.
  27. Rüpke, Religion in Republican Rome, p. 181.
  28. Fowler, Roman Festivals, p. 289. Macrobius, Saturnalia `1.9, lists Consivius among the titles of Janus from the act of sowing (a conserendo), that is, "the propagation of the human race," with Janus as the auctor ("increaser," source, author). Macrobius says that the title Consivia also belongs to the goddess Ops.
  29. Turcan, The Gods of Ancient Rome, p. 18, citing Augustine, De Civitate Dei 6.9.3.
  30. Rüpke, Religion in Republican Rome, p. 181.
  31. Turcan, The Gods of Ancient Rome, p. 18, citing Augustine, De Civitate Dei 6.9.3: dea Mena, quam praefecerunt menstruis feminarum. This may seem illogically placed in the sequence; Roman girls were not married until they were ready for childbearing, so menstruation would mark the bride as old enough to marry, and conception would halt the flow.
  32. Rüpke, Religion in Republican Rome, p. 181.
  33. Tertullian, Ad nationes 2.11.3; Turcan, The Gods of Ancient Rome, p. 18.
  34. Excerpts from Paulus in Festus, p. 82 (edition of Lindsay): mulieres colebant, quod eam sanguinis fluorem in conceptu retinere putabant.
  35. Juno "is called Fluonia, from the flowing (fluoribus) of seed, because she frees women in childbirth," according to the Third Vatican Mythographer, as translated by Ronald E. Pepin, The Vatican Mythographers (Fordham University Press, 2008), p. 225. Fluoribus might also be translated as "emissions, discharge." The Berlin Commentary to the De nuptiis of Martianus Capella (2.92) compares this moisture to the dew that drips from the air and nourishes seeds; Haijo Jan Westra and Tanja Kupke, The Berlin Commentary on Martianus Capella's De Nuptiis Philologie et Mercurii, Book II (Brill, 1998), p. 93.
  36. In his commentary on the De nuptiis of Martianus Capella, Remigius of Auxerre "explains Fluvonia from the contraceptive use of the discharges of seeds to free women from childbirth"; see Jane Chance, Medieval Mythography from Roman North Africa to the School of Chartres, A.D. 433–1177 (University Press of Florida, 1994), p.286.
  37. Tertullian, De anima 37.1 (Alemonam alendi in utero fetus); Turcan, The Gods of Ancient Rome, p. 18.
  38. Rüpke, Religion in Republican Rome, p. 181.
  39. Rüpke, Religion in Republican Rome, p. 181.
  40. Augustine, De Civitate Dei 7.2–3; see also Tertullian, Ad nationes 2.11.
  41. Preller, Römische Mythologie, p. 208.
  42. Augustine, De Civitate Dei 7.3.1; Rüpke, Religion in Republican Rome, p. 181.
  43. Augustine's point is that a monotheistic concept of deity obviates the need for dispersing these functions and for a divine taxonomy that is based on knowledge rather than faith. One view of the success of Christianity is that it was simple to understand and required a less complex theology; see Preller, Römische Mythologie, p. 208, and Michael Lipka, Roman Gods: A Conceptual Approach (Brill, 2009), pp. 84–88.
  44. Tertullian, De anima 37.1.
  45. Varro, as preserved by Aulus Gellius, Attic Nights 3.16.9–10; Rüpke, Religion in Republican Rome, p. 181.
  46. S. Breemer and J. H. Waszink, "Fata Scribunda," in Opuscula Selecta (Brill, 1979), p. 247.
  47. Breemer and Waszink, "Fata Scribunda," p. 248.
  48. Corbeill, Nature Embodied, p. 36.
  49. Corbeill, Nature Embodied, p. 36.
  50. Festus p. 67 (edition of Lindsay): Egeriae nymphae sacrificabant praegnantes, quod eam putabant facile conceptum alvo egere; Turcan, The Gods of Ancient Rome, p. 18.
  51. Turcan, The Gods of Ancient Rome, p. 18.
  52. Augustine, De Civitate Dei 4.11; Tertullian, Ad nationes 2.11; Rüpke, Religion in Republican Rome, p. 181.
  53. Ovid, Fasti 2.451f.; Rüpke, Religion in Republican Rome, p. 181.
  54. Aulus Gellius 16.1.2.
  55. Pierre Grimal, The Dictionary of Classical Mythology (Blackwell, 1986, 1996, originally published 1951 in French), pp. 311–312; Charles J. Adamec, "Genu, genus," Classical Philology 15 (1920), p. 199; J.G. Frazer, Pausanias's Description of Greece (London, 1913), vol. 4, p. 436; Marcel Le Glay, "Remarques sur la notion de Salus dans la religion romaine," La soteriologia dei culti orientali nell' imperio romano: Études préliminaires au religions orientales dans l'empire romain, Colloquio internazionale Roma, 1979 (Brill, 1982), p. 442.
  56. Persius 2.31–34; Robert Turcan, The Gods of Ancient Rome (Routledge, 2001; originally published in French 1998), p. 20.
  57. Tertullian, De anima 39.2; Augustine, De Civitate Dei 4.21.
  58. Seneca, De ira 1.15.2.
  59. Ovid provides an alternate derivation as the "goddess of the grove" (lucus), but in ancient etymology the word lucus itself was thought to derive from luc-, "light": the lucus as a "sacred grove" was actually the creation of a clearing (i.e., the letting in of light) within a grove to make a sacred place. The sacred grove of Lucina was located on the Esquiline Hill.
  60. Celia E. Schultz, Women's Religious Activity in the Roman Republic (University of North Carolina Press, 2006), pp. 79–81; Michael Lipka, Roman Gods: A Conceptual Approach (Brill, 2009), pp. 141–142
  61. H.J. Rose, The Roman Questions of Plutarch (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1924, 1974), p. 192; David and Noelle Soren, A Roman Villa and a Late Roman Infant Cemetery («L'Erma» di Bretschneider, 1999), p. 520.
  62. Lipka, Roman Gods, p. 154, especially note 22. The animal sacrifices offered to most deities are domestic herd animals normally raised for food; the deity honored is given a portion, and the rest of the roasted flesh is shared by humans in a communal meal. Both birth goddesses and chthonic deities, however, typically receive an inedible victim, often puppies or bitches, in the form of a holocaust or burnt offering, with no shared meal.
  63. Tertullian, Ad nationes 2.11:
  64. The passage in Tertullian has a problematic point that may specify first births; Gaston Boissier, Étude sur la vie et les ouvrages de M.T. Varron (Hachette, 1861), pp. 234–235.
  65. Plutarch, Roman Questions 2.
  66. H.J. Rose, The Roman Questions of Plutarch (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1924, 1974), p. 170.
  67. Eli Edward Burriss, Taboo, Magic, Spirits: A Study of Primitive Elements in Roman Religion (1931; Forgotten Books reprint, 2007), p. 34.
  68. Rose, The Roman Questions of Plutarch, pp. 79, 170.
  69. According to Leo Allatios, De Graecorum hodie quorundam opinationibus IV (1645), p. 188 as cited by Karen Hartnup, On the Beliefs of the Greeks: Leo Allatios and Popular Orthodoxy (Brill, 2004), p. 95.
  70. Rüpke, Religion in Republican Rome, p. 181.
  71. Nonius, p. 312, 11–13, as cited by Turcan, The Gods of Ancient Rome, p. 19.
  72. Augustine, De Civitate Dei 6.9.2.
  73. Servius Danielis, note to Eclogue 4.62 and Aeneid 10.76.
  74. Ovid, Metamorphoses 9.298–299; Corbeill, Nature Embodied, pp. 37, 93.
  75. Turcan, The Gods of Ancient Rome, p. 19.
  76. Augustine, De Civitate Dei 4.11, 21, 34; 7.11.
  77. Plutarch, Life of Romulus 4.1.
  78. Macrobius, Saturnalia 1.16.36.
  79. Plutarch, Roman Questions 102.
  80. See also Aulus Gellius, Attic Nights 16.16, citing Varro in saying that in the womb children are more like trees than a human being.
  81. Breemer and Waszink, "Fata Scribunda," p. 242.
  82. Breemer and Waszink, "Fata Scribunda," p. 251.
  83. Breemer and Waszink, "Fata Scribunda," p. 248.
  84. Breemer and Waszink, "Fata Scribunda," p. 251.
  85. Breemer and Waszink, "Fata Scribunda," pp. 245, 250.
  86. Plutarch, Life of Cato the Elder 20.2.
  87. Varro, Logistorici frg. 9 (Bolisani), as cited by Lora L. Holland, "Women and Roman Religion," in A Companion to Women in the Ancient World (Blackwell, 2012), p. 212.
  88. Preller, Römische Mythologie, p. 211.
  89. For example, according to Roman tradition the speech made by Lucretia in response to her rape sparked the overthrow of the monarchy and the establishment of the Roman Republic.
  90. Joseph Farrell, Latin Language and Latin Culture (Cambridge University Press, 2001), pp. 74–75; Richard A. Bauman, Women and Politics in Ancient Rome (Routledge, 1992, 1994), pp. 51–52.
  91. Augustine, De Civitate Dei 4.11, 34.
  92. Augustine, De civitate Dei 4.11.
  93. Michael Lipka, Roman Gods: A Conceptual Approach (Brill, 2009), pp. 126–127.
  94. Arnobius, Adversus Nationes 4.7–8: Ossipago quae durat et solidat infantibus parvis ossa. Turcan, The Gods of Ancient Rome, p. 20.
  95. George Englert McCracken, commentary on Arnobius's The Case Against the Pagans (Paulist Press, 1949), p. 364; W.H. Roscher, Ausführliches Lexikon der griechischen und römischen Mythologie (Leipzig: Teubner, 1890–94), vol. 2, pt. 1, p. 209.
  96. Lactantius, Divine Institutes 1.20.36.
  97. Tertullian, Ad nationes 2.11; Augustine of Hippo, De civitate Dei 4.11; Gerardus Vossius, De physiologia Christiana et theologia gentili 8.6: Paventia ab infantibus avertebat pavorem, 7.5; Lipka, Roman Gods, p. 128.
  98. Arnobius 4.7.
  99. Augustine of Hippo, De Civitate Dei 4.11; Christian Laes, Children in the Roman Empire: Outsiders Within (Cambridge University Press, 2011, originally published 2006 in Dutch), p. 68.
  100. Augustine, De Civitate Dei 4.21; Tertullian, Ad nationes 2.11.9.
  101. Augustine, De Civitate Dei 4.21: Father Catius, "who makes [children] clever, that is, sharp-witted" (qui catos id est acutos faceret).
  102. Augustine, De Civitate Dei 4.21.
  103. Augustine, De Civitate Dei 4.11.
  104. Turcan, The Gods of Ancient Rome, p. 21.
  105. R.J. Schork, Latin and Roman Culture in Joyce (University Press of Florida, 1997), p. 105.
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