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See also: ancient See also: Rome, a propitiatory ceremony, consisting of a See also: meal offered to gods and goddesses, represented by their busts or statues, or by portable figures of See also: wood, with heads of See also: bronze, See also: wax or marble, and covered with drapery
.
Another See also: suggestion is that the symbols of the gods consisted of bundles of sacred herbs, tied together in the See also: form of a See also: head, covered by a waxen mask so aS to resemble a kind of bust (cf. the See also: straw puppets called See also: Argei)
.
These symbols were laid upon a See also: couch (lectus), the See also: left arm resting on a cushion (pulvinus, whence the couch itself was often called pulvinar) in the attitude of reclining
.
In front of the couch, which was placed in the open street, a meal was set out on a table
.
It is definitely stated by See also: Livy (v
.
13) that the ceremony took place " for the first See also: time " in Rome in the See also: year
399 B.C., after the Sibylline books had been consulted by their keepers and interpreters (duumviri sacris faciendis), on the occasion of a pestilence
.
Three couches were prepared for three pairs of gods—Apollo and Latona, Hercules and See also: Diana, Mercury and See also: Neptune
.
The feast, which on that occasion lasted for eight (or seven) days, was also celebrated by private individuals; the citizens kept open See also: house, quarrels were forgotten, debtors and prisoners were released, and everything done to banish sorrow
.
Similar honours were paid to other divinities in subsequent times—Fortuna, Saturnus, See also: Juno See also: Regina of the Aventine, the three Capitoline deities (See also: Jupiter, Juno, See also: Minerva), and in 217, after the defeat of lake Trasimenus, a See also: lectisternium was held for three days to six pairs of gods, corresponding to the twelve See also: great gods of Olympus—Jupiter, Juno, Neptune, Minerva, See also: Mars, See also: Venus, See also: Apollo, Diana, See also: Vulcan, See also: Vesta, Mercury, See also: Ceres
.
In 205, alarmed by unfavourable prodigies, the See also: Romans were ordered to fetch the Great See also: Mother of the gods from See also: Pessinus in See also: Phrygia; in the following year the image was brought to Rome, and a lectisternium held
.
In later times, the lectisternium became of See also: constant (even daily) occurrence, and was celebrated in the different temples
.
Such celebrations must be distinguished from those which were ordered, like the earlier lectisternia, by the Sibylline books in See also: special emergencies
.
Although undoubtedly offerings of See also: food were made to the gods in very early See also: Roman times on such occasions as the ceremony of confarreatio, and the epulum Jovis (often confounded with the lectisternium), it is generally agreed that the lectisternia were of See also: Greek origin
.
In favour of this may be mentioned: the similarity of the Greek Oeo vta, in which, however, the gods played the See also: part of hosts; the gods associated with it were either previously unknown to Roman See also: religion, though often concealed under Roman names, or were provided with a new cult (thus Hercules was not worshipped as at the Ara See also: Maxima, where, according to Servius on Aeneid, viii
.
176 and Cornelius See also: Balbus, ap
.
See also: Macrobius, Sat. iii
.
6, a lectisternium was forbidden); the Sibylline books, which decided whether a lectisternium was to be held or not, were of Greek origin; the See also: custom of reclining at meals was Greek
.
Some, however, assign an See also: Etruscan origin to the ceremony, the Sibylline books themselves being looked upon as old See also: Italian " black books." A probable explanation of the confusion between the lectisternia and genuine old Italian ceremonies is that, as the lectisternia became an almost everyday occurrence in Rome, See also: people forgot their See also: foreign origin and the circumstances in which they were first introduced, and then the word pulvinar with its associations was transferred to times in which it had no existence
.
In imperial times, according to Tacitus (See also: Annals, xv
.
44), chairs were substituted for couches in the See also: case of goddesses, and the lectisternium in their case became a sellisternium (the See also: reading, however, is not certain)
.
This was in accordance with Roman custom, since in the earliest times all the members of a See also: family sat at meals, and in later times at least the See also: women and See also: children
.
This is a point of distinction between the See also: original practice at the lectisternium and the epulum Jovis, the goddesses at the latter being provided with chairs, whereas in the lectisternium they reclined
.
In Christian times the word was used for a feast in memory of the dead (Sidonius See also: Apollinaris, Epistulae, iv
.
15)
.
See article by A . Bouche-Leclercq in Daremberg and Saglio, DictionnaireSee also: des anliquites; See also: Marquardt, Romische Staatsverwaltung, iii
.
45, 187 (1885); G
.
Wissowa, Religion and Kultus der Romer, p
.
355 seq
.
; monograph by Wackermann (See also: Hanau, 1888) ; C
.
Pascal, Studii di anlichiti e mitologia (1896)
.
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