Online Encyclopedia

VIRBIUS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V28, Page 110 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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VIRBIUS  , an old

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Italian divinity, associated with the worship of
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Diana at Aricia (see DIANA) . Under Greek influence, he was identified with Hippolytus (q.v.), who after he had been trampled to
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death by the horses of
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Poseidon was restored to
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life by Asclepius and removed by
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Artemis to the grove at Aricia, which horses were not allowed to enter . Virbius was the
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oldest priest of Diana, the first " king of the grove " (Rex Nemorensis) . He is said to have established the
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rule that any
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candidate for the office should meet and slay in single combat its holder at the time, who always went about armed with a
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drawn sword in anticipation of the struggle . Candidates had further to be fugitives (probably slaves), and as a preliminary had to break off a bough from a specified tree . By the
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eponymous nymph Aricia, Virbius had a son of the same name, who fought on the side of the Rutulian Turnus against
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Aeneas . J . G . Frazer formerly held Virbius to be a wood and tree spirit, to whom horses, in which form tree
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spirits were often represented, were offered in sacrifice . His identification with Hippolytus and the manner of the latter's death would explain the exclusion of horses from his grove . This spirit might easily be confounded with the sun, whose power was supposed to be stored up in the warmth-giving tree . Sauer (in Roscher's Lexikon) also identifies Hippolytus with the "
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health-giving sun," and Virbius with a healing
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god akin to Asclepius .

Frazer's latest view is that he is the old cult

associate of Diana of Aricia (to whom he is related as
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Attis to Cybele or
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Adonis to
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Venus), the mythical predecessor or archetype of the kings of the grove . This grove was probably an oak grove, and the oak being sacred to
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Jupiter, the king of the grove (and consequently Virbius) was a
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local form of Jupiter . A . B . Cook suggests that he may be the god of the stream of Nemi . See Virgil, Aen. vii . 761 and Servius, ad loc . ; Ovid,
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Fasti, iii . 265, vi . 737, Melton. xv . 497; Suetonius, Caligula, 35; Strabo, v. p . 239; G .

Wissowa,

Religion and Kultus der Romer (1902), according to whom Virbius was a divinity who assisted at childbirth (cp. the nizi di) ; J . G . Frazer,
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Golden Bough (1900), ii. p . 313, iii. p . 456, and Early
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History of the Kingship (1905), pp . 24, 281; A . B . Cook in Classical Review, xvi. p . 372 .

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