History Of Ancient Civilization eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 346 pages of information about History Of Ancient Civilization.

History Of Ancient Civilization eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 346 pages of information about History Of Ancient Civilization.

=The Priests.=—­The priest in Rome, as in Greece, is not charged with the care of souls, he exists only for the service of the god.  He guards his temple, administers his property, and performs the ceremonies in his honor.  Thus the guild of the Salii (the leapers) watches over a shield which fell from heaven, they said, and which was adored as an idol; every year they perform a dance in arms, and this is their sole function.

The augurs predict the future.  The pontiffs superintend the ceremonies of worship; they regulate the calendar and fix the festivals to be celebrated on the various days of the year.

Neither the priests, the augurs, nor the pontiffs form a separate class.  They are chosen from among the great families and continue to exercise all the functions of state—­judging, presiding over assemblies, and commanding armies.  This is the reason that the Roman priests, potent as they were, did not constitute, as in Egypt, a sacerdotal caste.  At Rome it was a state religion, but not a government by the priests.

=The Dead.=—­The Romans, like the Hindoos and the Greeks, believed that the soul survived the body.  If care were taken to bury the body according to the proper rites, the soul went to the lower world and became a god; otherwise the soul could not enter the abode of the dead, but returned to the earth terrifying the living and tormenting them until suitable burial was performed.  Pliny the Younger[113] relates the story of a ghost which haunted a house and terrified to death all the inhabitants of the dwelling; a philosopher who was brave enough to follow it discovered at the place where the spectre stopped some bones which had not been buried in the proper manner.  The shade of the Emperor Caligula wandered in the gardens of the palace; it was necessary to disinter the body and bury it anew in regular form.

=Cult of the Dead.=—­It was of importance, therefore, to both the living and the dead that the rites should be observed.  The family of the deceased erected a funeral pile, burned the body on it, and placed the ashes in an urn which was deposited in the tomb, a little chapel dedicated to the Manes,[114] i.e., the souls that had become gods.  On fixed days of the year the relatives came to the tomb to bring food; doubtless they believed that the soul was in need of nourishment, for wine and milk were poured on the earth, flesh of victims was burned, and vessels of milk and cakes were left behind.  These funeral ceremonies were perpetuated for an indefinite period; a family could not abandon the souls of its ancestors, but continued to maintain their tomb and the funeral feasts.  In return, these souls which had become gods loved and protected their posterity.  Each family, therefore, had its guardian deities which they called Lares.

=Cult of the Hearth.=—­Each family had a hearth, also, that it adored.  For the Romans, as for the Hindoos, fire was a god and the hearth an altar.  The flame was to be maintained day and night, and offerings made on the hearth of oil, fat, wine, and incense; the fire then became brilliant and rose higher as if nourished by the offering.

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History Of Ancient Civilization from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.