Vejovis

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Vejovis or Vejove (Template:Langx or Script error: No such module "Lang".; rare Script error: No such module "Lang". or Script error: No such module "Lang".) was a Roman god of Etruscan origins (Template:Langx, or Template:Langx).

Representation and worship

Template:Coin image box 1 doubleVejovis was portrayed as a young man, holding a bunch of arrows (or lightning bolts), or a pilum, in his hand, and accompanied by a goat. Romans believed that Vejovis was one of the first gods to be born. He was a god of healing, and became associated with the Greek Asclepius.[1] He was mostly worshipped in Rome and Bovillae in Latium. On the Capitoline Hill and on the Tiber Island, temples were erected in his honour.[2]

Though he was associated with volcanic eruptions, his original role and function is obscured to us.[3] He is occasionally identified with Apollo and young Jupiter.[4][5]

Aulus Gellius, in the Noctes Atticae, written around 177 CE,[6] speculated that Vejovis was an ill-omened counterpart of Jupiter; compare Summanus. Aulus Gellius observes that the particle ve- that prefixes the name of the god also appears in Latin words such as vesanus, "insane," and thus interprets the name Vejovis as the anti-Jove.

Temple

He had a temple between the two peaks of the Capitoline Hill in Rome, where his statue carried a bundle of arrows and stood next to a statue of a she-goat.

Sacrifices

In spring, multiple goats were sacrificed to him to avert plagues. Gellius informs us that Vejovis received the sacrifice of a female goat, sacrificed ritu humano [7] (lit. "by human rite"); this obscure phrase could possibly mean "after the manner of a human sacrifice" or "in the manner of a burial."[8] These offerings were less about the animal sacrificed and more about the soul sacrificed.

Festivals

Vejovis had three festivals in the Roman Calendar: on 1 January, 7 March, and 21 May.[9]

References

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  1. Roman Medicine By John Scarborough
  2. The New Encyclopædia Britannica: in 30 volumes By Encyclopædia Britannica, Chicago University of, Encyclopædia Britannica Staff, Encyclopædia Britannica(ed.) [1]
  3. Classical Quarterly By Classical Association (Great Britain)
  4. The Cambridge History of Classical Literature By E. J. Kenney
  5. Nova Roma: Calendar of Holidays and Festivals
  6. Leofranc Holford-Strevens, "Towards a Chronology of Aulus Gellius", Latomus, 36 (1977), pp. 93–109
  7. Aulus Gellius, Noctes Atticae, [2]
  8. Adkins and Adkins, Dictionary of Roman Religion (Facts On File, 1996) Template:ISBN
  9. The Nature of the Gods By Marcus Tullius Cicero