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SEMO SANCUS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V24, Page 632 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SEMO SANCUS  , an

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Italian divinity worshipped by the Sabines, Umbrians and Romans, also called Dius Fidius and (perhaps wrongly) identified with the Italian Hercules . His dual nature, as a
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god of
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light and good faith, is indicated by the names Dius Fidius . Sancus is obviously from sancire, meaning one who hallows the acts in which he takes
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part . Semo has been vatiously explained as: (r) one who presides over seed-time and harvest (serere, cf. the
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female Semonia); (2) a being apart from and
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superior to man (se-homo); (3) a demi-god (semis) . The priests called bidentales, whose existence is attested by inscriptions, were specially connected with his worship, since
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lightning which fell from heaven during the day was looked upon as sent by Dius Fidius, and a
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special class of birds (sanquales) was under his
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protection . As the god of oaths, he protected the sanctity of the
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marriage tie, the rights of hospitality, international
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treaties and alliances . In his sanctuary on the Quirinal, the foundation of which was celebrated on the 5th of
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June, there were shown the
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distaff and spindle of
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Tanaquil, the wife of Tarquinius
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Priscus, and in the eyes of
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Roman matrons the embodiment of all wifely virtues . Dionysius of Halicarnassus (iv . 58) states that the treaty concluded between Tarquinius Superbus and the
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town of
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Gabii was deposited in the same temple of Sancus, whose name he translates by Zevs srivrios . He could only be invoked under the open sky, as partaking of the nature of a god of light and day; hence a round opening was made in the roof of his temple through which prayers might ascend to heaven . If he was invoked in a private house, those who called upon his name stood beneath the opening in the roof called compluvium . The
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bronze orbs mentioned by Livy (viii .

20 . 8) as having been set up in his temple are also supposed to have some connexion with this, although they may be merely symbols of the eternal

power of Rome . There was a second
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chapel of Semo Sancus on the island in the Tiber with an altar, the inscription on which led Christian writers (Justin Martyr, Tertullian, Eusebius) to
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con-fuse him with Simon Magus, and to infer that the latter was worshipped at Rome as a god . The cult of Semo Sancus never possessed very
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great importance at Rome; authorities differ as to whether it was of Sabine origin or not . The plural Semones was used of a class of supernatural beings, a kind of tutelary deities of the state . See Preller, Romische Mythologie; article " Dius Fidius," by Wissowa, in Roscher's Lexikon der Mythologie, and his Religion and Kultus der Romer (19o2), who rejects the identity of Semo Sancus Dius Fidius with Hercules; W . W . Fowler, The Roman Festivals (1899); E . Jannettaz, Etude sun Semo Sancus Fidius (Paris, 1885), according to whom he was a Sabine fire god .

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