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HARUSPICES, or ARUSPICES (perhaps " entrail observers," cf. Skt. Kira, Gr. xopSit) , a class of soothsayers in See also: Rome
.
Their See also: art (disciplina) consisted especially in deducing the will of the gods from the appearance presented by the entrails of the slain victim
.
They also interpreted all portents or unusual phenomena of nature, especially See also: thunder and See also: lightning, and prescribed the expiatory ceremonies after such events
.
To please the See also: god, the victim must be without spot or blemish, and the practice of observing whether the entrails presented any abnormal appearance,
and thence deducing the will of heaven, was also very important in See also: Greek See also: religion
.
This art, however, appears not to have been, as some other modes of ascertaining the will of the gods undoubtedly were, of genuine See also: Aryan growth
.
It is See also: foreign to the Homeric poems, and must have been introduced into See also: Greece after their composition
.
In like manner, as the See also: Romans themselves believed, the art was not indigenous in Rome, but derived from See also: Etruria.' The Etruscans were said to have learned it from a being named See also: Tages, See also: grandson of See also: Jupiter, who had suddenly sprung from the ground near Tarquinii
.
Instructions were contained in certain books called libri haruspicini, fulgurales, rituales
.
The art was practised in Rome chiefly by Etruscans, occasionally by native-See also: born Romans who had studied in the priestly See also: schools of Etruria
.
From the See also: regal See also: period to the end of the republic, haruspices were summoned from Etruria to See also: deal with prodigies not mentioned in the pontifical and Sibylline books, and the See also: Roman priests carried out their instructions as to the offering necessary to appease the anger of the deity concerned
.
Though the art was of See also: great importance under the early republic, it never became a See also: part of the See also: state religion
.
In this respect the haruspices ranked See also: lower than the See also: augurs, as is shown by the fact that they received a See also: salary; the augurs were a more See also: ancient and purely Roman institution, and were a most important See also: element in the See also: political organization of the city
.
In later times the art See also: fell into disrepute, and the saying of See also: Cato the Censor is well known, that he wondered how one haruspex could look another in the face without laughing (Cie
.
De div. ii
.
24)
.
Under the See also: empire, however, we hear of a See also: regular collegium of sixty haruspices; and See also: Claudius is said to have tried to restore the art and put it under the control of the pontifices
.
This collegium continued to exist till the See also: time of Alaric
.
See A
.
Bouch6-Leclercq, Histoire de la divination dans l'antiquite (1879—1881); See also: Marquardt, Romische Staatsverwaltung, iii
.
(1885), pp
.
410-415; G
.
Schmeisser, Die etruskische Disciplin vom Bundesgenossenkriege bis zum Untergang See also: des Heidentums (1881), and Quaestionum de Etrusca disciplina particula (1872); P
.
Clairin, De haruspicibus apud See also: Romanos (1880)
.
Also OMEN
.
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