Online Encyclopedia

PIETAS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 592 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PIETAS  , in

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Roman
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mythology, the personification of the sense of duty towards
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God and man and the fatherland . According to a well-known story, a young woman in humble circumstances, whose
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father (or
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mother) was lying in prison under sentence of
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death, without food, managed to gain admittance, and fed her parent with milk from her breast . To commemorate her filial affection a temple was dedicated (181 B.C.) by Manius Acilius
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Glabrio to Pietas in the Forum Holitorium at Rome, on the spot where the young woman had formerly lived . The temple was probably originally vowed by the elder Glabrio out of gratitude for the pietas shown duringthe engagement by his son, who may have saved his
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life, as the elder Africanus that of his father at the
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battle of Ticinus (Livy xxi . 46); the legend of the young woman (borrowed from the Greek story of Mycon and Pero, Val . Max. v . 4,
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ext . 1) was then connected with the temple by the identification of its site with that of the prison . There was another temple of Pietas near the Circus Flaminius, which is connected by Amatucci (Rivista di storia antica, 1903) with the story of the pietas of C . Flaminius (Val . Max. v . 4, 5), and regarded by him as the real seat of the cult of the goddess, the Pietas of the sanctuary dedicated by Glabrio being a Greek goddess .

Pietas is represented on coins as a matron throwing

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incense on an altar, her attribute being a stork . Typical examples of " piety " are
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Aeneas and Antoninus
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Pius, who founded games called Eusebeia at Puteoli in honour of Hadrian . See Val . Max. v . 4, 7; Pliny, Nat. hilt. vii . 121; Livy xl . 34; Festus, s.v.; G . Wissowa, Religion and Kultus der Romer (1902); F . Kuntze, " Die Legende von der guten Tochter," in Jahrbucher f2Zr das hlassische Altertum (1904), xiii . 280 .

End of Article: PIETAS
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