Online Encyclopedia

DIANA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V08, Page 165 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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DIANA  , in

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Roman
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mythology, an old
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Italian goddess, in later times identified with the Greek
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Artemis (q.v.) . That she was originally an
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independent Italian deity is shown by her name, which is the feminine form of
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Janus (= Dianus) . She is essentially the goddess of the moon and
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light generally, and presides over wood, plain and
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water, the chase and war . As the goddess of childbirth, she was known, like
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Juno, by the name of
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Lucina, the " bringer to light." As the moon-goddess she was also identified with Hecate, and invoked as " three-formed " in reference to the phases of the moon . Her most celebrated shrine was in a grove at Aricia (whence her title of Nemorensis) near the
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modern lake of Nemi . Here she was worshipped side by side with a male deity
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Virbius, a
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god of the
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forest and the chase . This Virbius was subsequently identified with Hippolytus, the favourite of Artemis, who was said to have been brought to
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life by Aesculapius and conducted by Diana to Aricia (Ovid,
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Fasti, iii . 263, vi . 731, Metam. xv . 497; Virgil, Aeneid, vii . 761) . A barbarous custom, perhaps reminiscent of human sacrifice once offered to her, prevailed in connexion with her ritual here ; her priest, called Rex Nemorensis, who was a runaway slave, was obliged to qualify for office by slaying his predecessor in single combat (Strabo v. p .

239 ; Suetonius, Caligula, 35) . This led to the

identification of Diana with the Tauric Artemis, whose image was said to have been removed by
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Orestes to the grove of Aricia (see
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ARIcINI) . After the destruction of
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Alba Longa this grove was for a long time the
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united sanctuary of the neighbouringLatin andRutuliancities, until a.t last it was extinguished beneath the supremacy of Rome . The festival of the goddess was on the ides (13th) of August, the full moon of the hot season . She was worshipped with torches, her aid was sought by
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women seeking a happy deliverance in childbirth, and many votive offerings have been found on the site . The worship of Diana was brought to Rome by Latin plebeians, and hence she was regarded as the protectress of the
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lower classes, and especially of slaves . In accordance with this, her most important temple was that on the Aventine, the chief seat of the plebeians, founded by Servius Tullius, originally as a sanctuary of the Latin
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league (
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Dion . Halic. iv . 26) . No man was allowed to enter the temple, and on the day of its dedication (August 13) the slaves kept
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holiday (Plutarch, Quaest . Rom. loo) . This Diana was identified with the
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sister of Apollo, and at the secular games she was worshipped simply as Artemis .

Another celebrated sanctuary of Diana was that on the slopes of

Mount Tifata near Capua (where she was worshipped under the name of Tifatina), a sanctuary specially favoured by Sulla and
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Vespasian . As Noctiluca (" giving light by
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night ") she had a sanctuary on the Palatine which was kept illuminated throughout the night (Varro, L.L. v . 68) . On the Nemi priesthood see J . ,G . Frazer,
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Golden Bough .

End of Article: DIANA
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DIANA MONKEY

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