Online Encyclopedia

CONSUS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V07, Page 23 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CONSUS  , an

ancient
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Italian deity, originally a
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god of agriculture . The time at which his festival was held (after harvest and seed-sowing), the nature of its ceremonies and amusements, his altar at the end of the Circus Maximus always covered with earth except on such occasions, all point to his connexion with the earth . In accordance with this, the name has been derived from condere (= Condius, as the " keeper " of grain or the " hidden " god, whose
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life-producing influence
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works in the depths of the earth) . Another etymology is from conserere (" sow," cf . Ops Consiva and her festival Opiconsivia) . Amongst the ancients (Livy i . 9;
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Dion . Halic. ii . 31) Consus was most commonly identified with Hovet& v "Limos (Neptunus Equester), and in later Latin poets Consus is used for Neptunus, but this idea was due to the horse and chariot races which took place at his festival; otherwise, the two deities have nothing in
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common . According to another view, he was the god of good counsel, who was said to have " advised "
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Romulus to carry off the Sabine
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women (Ovid,
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Fasti, iii . 199) when they visited Rome for the first celebration of his festival (Consualia) . In later times, with the introduction of Greek gods into the
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Roman theological
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system, Consus, who had never been the
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object of
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special reverence, sank to the level of a secondary deity, whose character was rather abstract and intellectual .

His festival was celebrated on the 21st of

August and the 15th of December . On the former date, the flamen Quirinalis, assisted by the vestals, offered sacrifice, and the puntifices presided at horse and chariot races in the circus . It was a day of puhlic rejoicing; all kinds of rustic amusements took place, amongst them
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running on ox-hides rubbed with oil (like the Gr. avKoXcaorµos) . Horses and mules, crowned with garlands, were given rest from
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work . A special feature of the games in the circus was chariot racing, in which mules, as the
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oldest draught beasts, took the place of horses . The origin of these games was generally attributed to Romulus; but by some they were considered an imitation of the Arcadian IaraoKpareca introduced by Evander . There was a sanctuary of Consus on the Aventine, dedicated by L . Papirius Cursor in 272, in early times wrongly identified with the altar in the circus . See W . W . Fowler, The Roman Festivals (1899) ; G . Wissowa, Religion and Kultus der Romer (19oz) ; Preller-Jordan, Romische Mythologie (1881) .

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