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CERES , an old See also: Italian goddess of See also: agriculture
.
The name probably means the " creator " or " created," connected with crescere and creare
.
But when See also: Greek deities were introduced into See also: Rome on the advice of the Sibylline books (in 495 B.C., on the occasion of a severe drought), See also: Demeter, the Greek goddess of seed and harvest, whose worship was already See also: common in See also: Sicily and See also: Lower See also: Italy, usurped the place of Ceres in Rome, or rather, to Ceres were added the religious See also: rites which the Greeks paid to Demeter, and the mythological incidents which originated with her
.
At the same See also: time the cult of Dionysus and Persephone (see See also: LIBER AND LIBERA) was introduced
.
The rites of Ceres were Greek in language and See also: form
.
Her priestesses were Italian Greeks and her See also: temple was Greek in its architecture and built by Greek artists
.
She was worshipped almost exclusively by plebeians, and her temple near the Circus See also: Maximus was under the care of the plebeian aediles, one of whose duties was the superintendence
of the corn-market
.
Her chief festivals were the ludi Cereris or Cerealia (more correctly, Cerialia), See also: games held annually from See also: April 12–19 (Ovid, See also: Fasti, iv
.
392 ff.) ; a second festival, in See also: August, to celebrate the See also: reunion of Ceres and See also: Proserpine, in which See also: women, dressed in See also: white, after a fast of nine days offered the goddess the first-fruits of the harvest (
See also: Livy xxii
.
56); and the Jejunium Cereris, a fast also introduced (191 B.C.) by command of the Sibylline books (Livy See also: xxvi
.
37), at first held only every four years, then annually on the 4th of See also: October
.
In later times Ceres was confused with Tellus
.
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