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The Gods of Ancient Rome - Religion in Everyday Life from Archaic to Imperial Times (Paperback)
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The Gods of Ancient Rome - Religion in Everyday Life from Archaic to Imperial Times (Paperback)
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This is a vivid account of what their gods meant to the Romans from
archaic times to late antiquity, and of the rites and rituals
connected with them. After an introduction into the nature of
classical religion, the book is divided into three parts: religions
of the family and land; religions of the city; and religions of the
empire. The book ends with a discussion of the rise and impact of
Christianity. For the Romans, the author argues, religion was
almost as much a form of insurance as it was a question of belief.
The gods were valued according to the degree of protection they
afforded against natural hazards and occult powers. They were a
crucial source of tactical information in time of war and their
approval was vital to the success of agriculture, marriage and
childbirth. Appeasing the gods and enlisting their help involved
ritual and sacrifice which required the arcane knoweldge of the
priesthood. Because there were so many gods, it might be hard to
know which one to invoke and perilous to get it wrong. The Romasn
took their gods extremely seriously, there was nothing more
complicated than a Roman sacrifice or more precise than the
preparation of the meal offered to the god; the slightest
infringement of the priestly recipe would spoil the feast and might
jeopardise the affairs of Rome itself. Robert Turcan shows that
Roman attitudes towards the gods continued to be pragmatic
throughout the millennium coverd by the book. Useful gods
discovered among conquered peoples of the Empire were adopted
without rejecting any from the old pantheon. Traditional worship
remained strong long after the emperors converted to Christianity,
and many of the early Roman Christians maintained a tactful respect
for older deities. Up-to-date in its archaeological and epigraphic
evidence, and drawing extensively on a wide range of relevant
literary material this book is ideally suited for undergraduate
courses in the history of Romand and its religions. Its urbane
style and lightly worn scholarship will broaden its appeal to
non-academic readers with a serious interest in the classical
world.
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