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THE FLORIDA STATE UNIVERSITY<br />

COLLEGE OF ARTS AND SCIENCES<br />

SHAPE OF THE BEAST: THE THERIOMORPHIC AND THERIANTHROPIC DEITIES<br />

AND DEMONS OF ANCIENT ITALY<br />

By<br />

WAYNE L. RUPP, JR.<br />

A Dissertation submitted to the<br />

Department of Classics<br />

In partial fulfillment of the<br />

Requirements for the degree of<br />

Doctor of Philosophy<br />

Degree Awarded:<br />

Spring Semester, 2007<br />

Copyright © 2007<br />

Wayne L. Rupp, Jr.<br />

All Rights Reserved


The members of this Committee approve the dissertation of Wayne L. Rupp, Jr. defended on<br />

November 22, 2006.<br />

Approved:<br />

_____________________________________<br />

Daniel J. Pullen, Chair, Department of Classics<br />

_____________________________________<br />

Joseph Travis, Dean, College of Arts and Sciences<br />

ii<br />

_______________________________<br />

Nancy de Grummond<br />

Professor Directing Dissertation<br />

_______________________________<br />

Michael Uzendoski<br />

Outside Committee Member<br />

_______________________________<br />

Christopher Pfaff<br />

Committee Member<br />

_______________________________<br />

Daniel J. Pullen<br />

Committee Member<br />

The office of Graduate Studies has verified and approved the above named committee members.


This work is dedicated to my loving wife, Jennifer, and my dear sons, Collin and Andrew.<br />

iii


ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS<br />

I would like to thank Dr. Nancy de Grummond for her guidance and support during the<br />

writing of this dissertation. She was a constant driving force behind the completion of this<br />

undertaking, and I am eternally grateful for her valuable insight.<br />

iv


TABLE OF CONTENTS<br />

List of Figures vi<br />

Abstract xiii<br />

Chapter 1: Introduction 1<br />

Chapter 2: The Serpent 28<br />

Chapter 3: The Wolf and Canines 48<br />

Chapter 4: The Goat 76<br />

Chapter 5: The Bull 94<br />

Chapter 6: Avians 111<br />

Chapter 7: Conclusions 126<br />

Ancient Works Cited 132<br />

References 200<br />

Biographical Sketch 224<br />

v


LIST OF FIGURES<br />

Fig. I.1. Prehistoric Carved Ivory Figurine of a Man with a Lion’s Head from Hohlenstein-<br />

Stadel, Germany, 30,000 BCE, Ulm, Museum Der Stadt. Dim. H. 28.0 cm. Bibl. Conard 2003,<br />

830; Putnam 1988, 467; Sinclair 2003, 774-5. 132<br />

Fig. I.2. Roman Fresco Depicting a Priest of Isis, from the House of Loreius Tiburtinus,<br />

Pompeii, ca. 1 st C CE. Dim. Unspecified. Bibl. De Vos 1990, 77. 133<br />

Fig. II.1. Early Corinthian Alabastron Decorated with the Figure of Typhon, Unknown<br />

Provenance, ca. 610-600 BCE, Hew Haven, Yale <strong>University</strong> Art Gallery. Dim. H. 25.9 cm, W.<br />

11.9 cm, D. 11.9 cm. Bibl. Matheson 2004, 349-52; Touchefeu-Meynier 1997, 147-51. 134<br />

Fig. II.2. Sculpture of the so-called Bluebeard Anguiped from the “Hekatompedon” on the<br />

Athenian Acropolis, ca. 560 BCE, Acropolis Museum. Dim. Unspecified. Bibl. Hurwitt 2001,<br />

108-9. 135<br />

Fig. II.3. Hellenistic Relief of Zeus Battling the Giants, from the Eastern Frieze of the Great<br />

Altar of Pergamon, begun ca. 180 BCE, Berlin, Pergamon Museum. Dim. H. 230.0 cm. Bibl.<br />

Hansen 1971, 264-7, 319-38; Howard 1964, 129-36; Kahler 1945; Pollitt 1986, 96-110; Schmidt<br />

1962; Simon 1975; Stewart 2000, 32-57. 136<br />

Fig. II.4. Etruscan Black Figure Hydria with Scene of Two Youths Attacking a Giant, Vulci, ca.<br />

525-500 BCE, British Museum, London. Dim. H. 44.0 cm. Bibl. De Grummond 2000, 259;<br />

Spivey 1987, Fig. 14b; Vian 1952, 16. 137<br />

Fig. II.5. Detail of an Etruscan Fresco of a Giant from The Tomb of the Typhon, in the<br />

Monterozzi Necropolis, Tarquinia, 3 rd quarter of the 3 rd C BCE. 1 Dim. Unspecified. Bibl.<br />

Cristofani 1969, 213-56; De Grummond 2000, 258-61; Pallottino 1952, 125-8; Steingraber 1985,<br />

347; Steingraber 2000; 240-3. 138<br />

Fig. II.6. Detail of an Etruscan Fresco of Charu(n) from the Entrance Wall of the Tomb of the<br />

Anina Family, in the Monterozzi Necropolis, Tarquinia, 3 rd to 2 nd C BCE. Dim. Unspecified.<br />

Bibl. Krauskopf and Mavleev 1986, 230, 286; Pallottino 1964, 108-23; Ridgway 2000, 303,<br />

307-9, Steingraber 1985, 282. 139<br />

Fig. II.7. Etruscan Fresco of Two Charu(n)s Flanking a False Door on the Right Wall of the<br />

Tomb of the Charu(n)s in the Monterozzi Necropolis, Tarquinia, end of the 3 rd C BCE. Dim.<br />

Unspecified. Bibl. Krauskopf and Mavleev 1986, 230; Moretti 1966, 300-5; Steingraber 1985,<br />

300. 140<br />

1 See Colonna 1984, 23 and Ridgway 1998, 406 for a 3 rd C BCE date of the Tomb of the Typhon.<br />

vi


Fig. II.8. Rear Wall of the Tomb of the Reliefs with Anguiped and Kerberos, Banditaccia<br />

Necropolis, Cerveteri, 3 rd quarter of the 4 th C BCE. Dim. Unspecified. Bibl. Blanck 1986, 18-<br />

9; De Ruyt 1934, 134-5; Giglioli 1935, Pl. 341-3; Haynes 2000, 318; Krauskopf and Mavleev<br />

1986, 234; Proietti 1986, 236-66; Steingraber 1985, 262-4. 141<br />

Fig. II.9. Roman Black Marble Statue of Aesculapius, Antium, ca. 150 CE, Capitoline Museum,<br />

Rome. Dim. H. 145 cm. Bibl. Holtzmann 1984, 878; Kerényi 1959, Ill. 7; Turcan 1988, 33.<br />

142<br />

Fig. II.10. Roman Marble Statue of Aesculapius along with Salus Feeding the Sacred Serpent,<br />

Found in the Forum of Praeneste, Hellenistic Period, Museo Vaticano, Rome. Dim.<br />

Unspecified. Bibl. Helbig I 1985, 138-9; Schouten 1967, Ill. 7; Vatican Museum of Sculpture<br />

1923, 55. 143<br />

Fig. II.11. Roman Bronze Medallion from the Reign of Antoninus Pius Depicting the Entry of<br />

Aesculapius into Rome, Unknown Provenance, ca. 138-61 CE, Cabinet des Medaillés, Paris.<br />

Dim. Unspecified. Bibl. Gnecchi 1968, 9, 1-3; Kerényi 1959, Ill. 8; Mambella 1997, 26; Turcan<br />

1988, 33. 144<br />

Fig. II.12. Detail of a Roman Marble Statue (possibly a copy of a 4 th C BCE Greek original)<br />

Depicting Aesculapius as a Prophetic Deity, ca 130 CE, Pitti Palace, Florence. Dim.<br />

Unspecified. Bibl. Kerényi 1959, 67. 145<br />

Fig. II.13. Lararium from the House of the Vettii (VI.15.1) with Fresco Depicting the Genius,<br />

Lares, and Genius Loci, Pompeii, ca. 1 st C CE. Dim. Unspecified. Bibl. Boyce 1937, 54;<br />

Strocka 1990, 571; Orr 1978, 1577; Tinh 1992, 209; Turan 1988, 44. 146<br />

Fig. II.14. Drawing of a Roman Fresco Depicting the God Harpocrates and the Genius Loci of<br />

Mt. Vesuvius, from Herculaneum, 1 st C CE, Museo Nazionale, Naples. Dim. H. 40.0 cm. L<br />

50.0 cm. Bibl. Boyce 1942, 18-20; Tinh 1971, 82; Tinh, Jaeger, and Poulin 1981, 426. 147<br />

Fig. III.1. Water Color Copy of an Etruscan Fresco Depicting Aita, Phersipnai, and Cerun in the<br />

Tomb of Orcus II, in the Monterozzi Necropolis, Tarquinia, 2 nd half of 4 th C BCE. Dim.<br />

Unspecified. Bibl. Defosse 1972, 492; Del Chiaro 1970, 292-4; Elliott 1995, 21-2; Hostetter<br />

1978, 263-4; Krauskopf 1987, 61-7; Krauskopf 1988, 395; Richardson 1977, 95-6; Simon 1997,<br />

450-4; Steingraber 1985, 329-332; Torelli 1983, 7-17. 148<br />

Fig. III.2. Reconstruction of an Etruscan Fresco Depicting Aita and Phersipnai at a Funerary<br />

Banquet in the Golini Tomb I, from Settecamini, 3 rd quarter of the 4 th C BCE, Orvieto, Museo<br />

Archeologico Nazionale di Orvieto. Dim. Unspecified. Bibl. Defosse 1972, 492; Del Chiaro<br />

1970, 292-4; Elliott 1995, 21-2; Hostetter 1978, 263-4; Krauskopf 1987, 61-7; Krauskopf 1988,<br />

395; Pallottino 1982, 131; Richardson 1977, 95-6; Simon 1997, 450-4; Steingraber 1985, 278.<br />

149<br />

vii


Fig. III.3. Etruscan Red-figured Oinochoe Depicting Phersipnai and Aita from the Torcop<br />

Group, Produced at Caere, 2 nd half of the 4 th C BCE, Paris, Musée du Louvre. Dim. H. 34.5 cm.<br />

Bibl. Defosse 1972, 496; Del Chiaro 1970, 292-4; Richardson 1977, 96. 150<br />

Fig. III.4. Detail of an Etruscan Polychrome Sarcophagus Depicting the Sacrifice of Trojan<br />

Prisoners by Achilles, from Torre San Severo, late 4 th to early 3 rd C BCE, Orvieto, Museo<br />

Claudio Faina. Dim. H. 80.0 cm. L. 210.0 cm. Bibl. De Azevedo 1970, 10-8; Del Chiaro 1970,<br />

292-4; De Ruyt 1934 93-5; Galli 1916, 1-116; Messerschmidt 1930, 175. 151<br />

Fig. III.5. Etruscan Bronze Stauette of a Wolf-Hound Bearing a Dedicatory Inscription Related<br />

to Calu, from Cortona, Date Unknown, Florence, Museo Archeologico. Dim. Unspecified.<br />

Bibl. Defosse 1972, 498-9; Elliott 1995, 24; Richardson 1977, 95. 152<br />

Fig. III.6. Etruscan Bucchero Oinochoe with Anubis-like figure, from Chiusi, ca. 550 BCE,<br />

Museo Nazionale Collezione Cassucini, Palermo. Dim. H. 49.5 cm, Max D. 34.0 cm, Foot D.<br />

19.0 cm, Mouth D. 18.0 cm. Bibl. Downey 1995, 26; Elliott 1986, 70-9; Gàbrici 1928, 80;<br />

Giglioli 1935, Tav. LIII; Lo Porto 1958, 194-6; Tusa 1956, 147-52; 153<br />

Fig. III.7. Roman White Marble Statue of Hermanubis, from Anzio, 1 st -2 nd C CE, Rome, Museo<br />

Gregoriano Egizio del Vaticano. Dim. Unspecified. Bibl. Grenier 1978, 141; Grenier 1993, 42;<br />

Leclant 1981, 866; Malaise 1972, 57. 154<br />

Fig. III.8. Etruscan Painted Terracotta Cinerary Urn Depicting a Family Framed by Underworld<br />

Demons, from Chiusi, 150-100 BCE, Berlin, Staatliche Museen. Dim. L. 65.0 cm. Bibl. Brunn<br />

and Körte 1872-1916 III.100.16; De Ruyt 1934, 83-5; Haynes 2000, 342; Mavleev and<br />

Krauskopf 1986, 233; Messerschmidt 1915, 172. 155<br />

Fig. III.9. Roman Bronze Statuette of Silvanus/Sucellus, from Vienne, ca. 14 CE, Baltimore,<br />

Walters Art Gallery. Dim. Unspecified. Bibl. Nagy 1994, 820; Richardson 1977, 96-7. 156<br />

Fig. III.10. Line Drawing of an Etruscan Alabaster Cinerary Urn Depicting Combat with a<br />

Wolf-Demon, from Chiusi, 2 nd C BCE, Florence, Museo Archeologico. Dim. L. 65.0 cm. Bibl.<br />

Brunn and Körte 1872-1916, III.9.4; Defosse 1972, 488; Elliott 1995, 17-20; Heurgon 1991,<br />

1254-8; Szilágyi 1997, 35. 157<br />

Fig. III.11. Etruscan Travertine Cinerary Urn Depicting Combat with a Wolf-Demon, San Sisto,<br />

2 nd C BCE, Perugia, Museo Archeologico. Dim. L. 61.0 cm. Bibl. Brunn and Körte 1872-<br />

1916, III.10.6; Defosse 1972, 489; Elliott 1995, 17-20; Heurgon 1991, 1254-8; Szilágyi 1997,<br />

36. 158<br />

Fig. III.12. Etruscan Terracotta Cinerary Urn Depicting Combat with Wolf-Demon, from<br />

Perugia, 2 nd C BCE, Perugia, Museo Archeologico. Dim. L. 50.0 cm. Bibl. Brunn and Körte<br />

1872-1916, III.10.5; Defosse 1972, 489; Elliott 1995, 17-20; Heurgon 1991, 1254-8; Szilágyi<br />

1997, 36. 159<br />

viii


Fig. III.13. Etruscan Bronze Ash Urn Depicting Warriors Encircling a Wild Beast, from<br />

Bisenzio, 8 th C BCE, Rome, Museo Etrusco di Villa Giulia. Dim. 32.5 cm. Bibl. De<br />

Grummond 2006, 4; Elliott 1995, 17-20; Haynes 1985, 246; Proietti et al 1980, 96-7; Torelli<br />

1986, 165-6. 160<br />

Fig. III.14. Pontic Plate by the Tityos Painter, from Vulci, ca. 520 BCE, Rome, Museo Etrusco<br />

di Villa Giulia. Dim. H 9.4 cm, D 20.0 cm. Bibl. Cerchiai 1998, 39-44; Cerchiai 2000, 226;<br />

Hannestad 1976, 58; Heurgon 1991, 1253-4; Elliott 1995, 24-6. 161<br />

Fig. III.15. Etruscan Terracotta Statuette of a God Wearing Wolf Skin, from Perugia, ca. 3 rd -2 nd<br />

C BCE, Perugia, Museo Archeologico. Dim. Unspecified. Bibl. Dozzoni 1983, 79-80; Elliott<br />

1995, 26-7; Messerschmidt 1942, 206; Stenico 1947, 75. 162<br />

Fig. III.16. Etruscan Bronze Statuette of a God Wearing a Wolf Skin, from Città di Castello<br />

(Perugia), 3 rd -2 nd C BCE, Perugia, Museo Archeologico. Dim. Unspecified. Bibl. De<br />

Grummond 2006, 179-80; Faraone 1991, 203; Messerschmidt 1942, 207-8; Minto 1927, 475-6.<br />

163<br />

Fig. IV.1. Greek Red Figure Bell Crater Depicting Pan Chasing a Young Shepherd by the Pan<br />

Painter, from Cumae, 470 BCE, Boston, Museum of Fine Arts. Dim. H. 37.1 cm. Bibl.<br />

Beazley 1963, 550; Beazley 1974, 1-2, 10; Borgeaud 1988, 128-9. 164<br />

Fig. IV.2. Roman Bronze Statuette of Faunus Bearing a Branch, Unknown Date, Unknown<br />

Provenance, Paris, Cabinet des Medaillés de la Bibliothéque Nationale. Dim. H. 14.9 cm. Bibl.<br />

Babelon 1928, 34; Babelon and Blanchet 1895, 40-1, Pouthier and Rouillard 1997, 583. 165<br />

Fig. IV.3. Roman Fresco Depicting Pan Amongst the Nymphs from the House of Jason<br />

(IX.5.18) in Pompeii, 1 st quarter of the 1 st C CE, Naples, Museo Archeologico. Dim. H. 120.0<br />

cm. Bibl. Ling 1991, 119; Sampaolo 1999, 670-719. 166<br />

Fig. IV.4. Latin Painted Terracotta Antefix Depicting Juno Sospita, from Antemnae, Beginning<br />

of the 5 th C BCE, Rome, Museo Nazionale Romano. Dim. H. 28.5 cm, W 24.5 cm. Bibl.<br />

Andrén 1939-40, I, 502-3; Cristofani 1987, 115; Cristofani 1990 154; Pensabene-Sanzi Di Mino<br />

1983, 70-1; Quilici-Quilici Gigli 1978, 48-54; Turcan 1988, 23-4. 167<br />

Fig. IV.5. Etruscan “Pontic” Amphora Depicting Hercle and Menerva in Combat with Uni and<br />

Tinia, from Cerveteri, late 6 th C BCE, London, British Museum. Dim. Unspecified. Bibl.<br />

Chiarucci 1983, 61; De Grummond MS 2006, 103; Douglas 1913, Fig. 1; Ducati 1932, 14-5;<br />

Simon 2006, 51-3. 168<br />

Fig. IV.6. Etruscan Bronze Mirror Cover Depicting the Head of Juno Sospita, Odysseus, and<br />

Penelope, from Tarquinia, 3 rd C BCE, Rome, Museo Nazionale Etrusco di Villa Giulia. Dim.<br />

Unspeficied. D. 15.0 cm. Bibl. De Grummond 1982, 18; De Grummond 1997, 53-4; De<br />

Grummond 2000b, 53-4; Richardson 1982, 32. 169<br />

ix


Fig. IV.7. Republican Roman Denarius Minted by L. Roscius Fabatus, Unknown Provenance,<br />

ca. 57 BCE, London, British Museum. Dim. D. 0.7 cm. Weight 61 g. Bibl. Grueber 1910, 422;<br />

Mattingly 1960, 62. 170<br />

Fig. IV.8. Imperial Roman Bronze Coin of Antoninus Pius Depicting Juno Sospita on its<br />

Reverse, London, British Museum. Dim. D. 0.35 cm, Weight 23.9 g. Bibl. Mattingly 1940,<br />

lxxxi, 201. 171<br />

Fig. IV.9. Colossal Marble Statue of Juno Sospita, Unknown Provenance, Antonine Period,<br />

Rome, Vatican Museum. Dim. H. 305.0 cm. Bibl. Chiarucci 1983, 56; Helbig I 1895, 219-20;<br />

Douglas 1913, 62; Lippold 1936, 142-4. 172<br />

Fig. IV.10. Etruscan Bronze Statuette of Menerva, Unknown Provenance, Late Archaic Period,<br />

Modena, Galleria Estense. Dim. H. 22.0 cm. Bibl. Cristofani 1985, 280; Herbig 1965, 40;<br />

Richardson 1983, 346-7. 173<br />

Fig. IV.11. Etruscan Bronze Statuette Identified as Juno Sospita Wearing a Wolf-skin,<br />

Unknown Provenance, 5 th C BCE, Florence, Archaeological Museum. Dim. H. 12.0 cm. Bibl.<br />

Cristofani 1985, 281; De Agostino 1968, 57; Richardson 1983, 360-1. 174<br />

Fig. V.1. Etruscan Engraved Bronze Mirror with the Death of the Minotaur at the Hands of<br />

Hercle, Civita Castellana, ca. 300 BCE, Present Location Unknown. Dim. Unspecified. Bibl.<br />

De Grummond MS 2006,183; Jurgeit 1986, 1071; Woodford 1992, 577. 175<br />

Fig. V.2. Etruscan Black-Figure Amphora Depicting Combat Between Hercle and the Minotaur,<br />

Unknown Provenance, Paris, Louvre. Dim. H. 26.0 cm. Bibl. Banti 1973, 187; Camporeale<br />

1965, 118-20; Spivey 1987, 45; Torelli 2000, 608. 176<br />

Fig. V.3. Etruscan Red-Figure Plate by the Settecamini Painter Depicting a Female Cradling an<br />

Infant Bull-Man, Early 4 th C BCE, Paris, Bibliothéque Nationale, Cabinet des Médailles. Dim.<br />

Unspecified. Bibl. Beazley 1947, 54-5; Bonfante 1989, 88; Brendel 1995, 344; De Ridder 1902,<br />

624-5; Woodford 1992, 577. 177<br />

Fig. V.4. Etruscan Cinerary Urn Depicting the a Scene with the Minotaur as an Infant, Unknown<br />

Provenance, 2 nd C BCE, Volterra, Museo Archeologico. Dim. L. 55cm. Bibl. Beazley 1947,<br />

54; Brunn and Körte II, 11. 178<br />

Fig. V.5. Roman Terracotta Revetment Plaque, from the Regia in the Roman Forum, ca. 610-<br />

600 BCE, Rome, Antiquarium Forense. Dim. H. 10.0 cm. L. 38.7 cm. Bibl. Brendel 1995, 136;<br />

Brown and Scott 1985, 188; Cristofani 1995, 61; Downey 1995, 19-30; Iacopi 1976, 34-5; Massa<br />

Pairault 1992, 43; Romanelli 1955, 203-7; Woodford 1992, 577; Young 1972, 91-2. 179<br />

Fig. V.6. Detail of an Etruscan Fresco Depicting an Ithyphallic Man-bull from the Tomb of the<br />

Bulls, located in the Monterozzi Necropolis, Tarquinia, ca. 540 BCE. Dim. Unspecified. Bibl.<br />

Altheim 1938, 69-71, De Grummond 2006, MS 181-2; Holloway 1986, 447-52; Isler 1970, 176;<br />

Jannot 1974, 769-80; Oleson 1975, 189-200; Steingraber 1985, 350-1. 180<br />

x


Fig. V.7. Etruscan Bronze Mirror Depicting Hercle and Achlae Wrestling, ca. 350 BCE,<br />

Unknown Provenance, Berlin, formerly Antiquarium. Dim. Unspecified. Bibl. De Grummond<br />

MS 2006, 181-2, Gerhard IV 1867, 83-4; Isler 1970, 167; Isler 1981, 26; Pfiffig 1980, 50. 181<br />

Fig. V.8. Etruscan Terracotta Shell Antefix Decorated with the Head of a Horned God (Likely<br />

Acheloos), from the Portanaccio Sanctuary at Veii, End of the 6 th C BCE, Rome, Museo<br />

Nazionale Etrusco di Villa Giulia. Dim. H. 44.5 cm. Bibl. Andrén 1940, 7; 2 Isler 1970, 149;<br />

Jannot 1974, 776-7; 3 Proietti 1980, Fig. 132. 182<br />

Fig. V.9. Etruscan Gold Pendant Representing the Head of Acheloos, Unknown Provenance, 6 th<br />

C BCE, Paris, Louvre. Dim. Unspecified. Bibl. Briguet 1986, 103; Isler 1970, 169; Jannot<br />

1974, 787. 183<br />

Fig. V.10. Etruscan Bronze Boss with Mask of Acheloos, from Tarquinia, beginning of 5 th C<br />

BCE, Rome, Museo Gregorio Etrusco. Dim. D. 40.8 cm. Bibl. Brendel 1995, 213-4; Buranelli<br />

1992, Cat. 24; Haynes 1985, 263-4; Higgins 1961, 152; Isler 1970, 155; Jannot 1974, 781. 184<br />

Fig. V.11. Etruscan Bucchero Oinochoe with the Head of a Calf or Bull, from Chiusi, 550-500<br />

BCE, Florence, Museo Archeologico. Dim. H. 41.3 cm Bibl. Altheim 1938, 73; Brendel 1995,<br />

138-40; Giglioli 1935, 14; Sprenger and Bartoloni 1983, 87-8. 185<br />

Fig. VI.1. Line Drawing of an Etruscan Engraved Bronze Mirror Depicting the Greek Seer<br />

Chalchas Performing the Etruscan Rite of Hepatoscopy, from Vulci, ca. 400 BCE, Rome, Museo<br />

Gregoriano Etrusco. Dim. Unspecified. Bibl. De Grummond 2000b, 37-8; De Grummond<br />

2006, 31; De Grummond MS 2006, 54. 186<br />

Fig. VI.2. Line Drawing of an Engraved Etruscan Bronze Mirror Depicting Athrpa amongst the<br />

Divine Couples Turan and Atunis and Atlenta and Meliacr, Perugia, ca. 320 BCE, Berlin,<br />

Antiquarium. Dim. Unspecified. Bibl. Beazley 1969, 12-3; Bonfante 1998, 53-65; Bonfante<br />

and Bonfante 2002, 160; De Grummond 2000b, 37; Von Vacano 1960, 7-13. 187<br />

Fig. VI.3. Black Gloss Amphora in the Shape of a Woodpecker, Unknown Provenance, 420-400<br />

BCE, New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art. Dim. H. 18.2 cm. Bibl. Cappanna 2000, 225.<br />

188<br />

Fig. VI.4. Terracotta Antefix from Pyrgi Depicting a Man with the Head of a Bird, Late 6 th C<br />

BCE, Rome, Museo Etrusco di Villa Giulia. Dim. H. 43.0 cm, W. 27.5 cm. Bibl. Colonna<br />

1985, 133; Haynes 2000, 176-8; Jannot 2005, 110; Krauskopf 1997, 29-31; Proietti ; Serra<br />

Ridgway 1990, 523-4; Torelli 1986, 185; Verzár 1980, 36-53; von Vacano 1980, 465-7; von<br />

Vacano 1981, 156-7. 189<br />

2<br />

Andrén (1940, 7) provides two other examples of Acheloos antefixes from the Portanaccio series. Pl 3.5 is nearly<br />

identical to Fig. V.6 in this study.<br />

3<br />

Jannot (1974, 776-7) does not cite this specific example but includes two antefixes of the same type from the same<br />

temple, and thus his discussion of these items is relevant.<br />

xi


Fig. VI.5. Reconstruction of Four of Six Antefixes from a Group Which Decorated the Row of<br />

Cells Built in Conjunction with Temple B, from Pyrgi, Late 6 th C BCE, Rome, Museo Etrusco di<br />

Villa Giulia. Dim. H. Antefix A 30.0 cm, Antefix B 26.0 cm, Antefix C 27.5 cm, Bibl. Colonna<br />

1985, 133; Haynes 2000, 176-8, Serra Ridgway 1990, 523-4; von Vacano 1980, 463-75, von<br />

Vacano 1981, 153-60. 190<br />

Fig. VI.6. Monumental Stone Relief of an Assyrian Griffin Demon from the Royal Palace of<br />

King Assurnasirpal II at Kalhu, ca 883-859 BCE, located at Kalhu (modern Nimrud). Dim.<br />

Unspecified. Bibl. Black and Green 1997, 100-1; Krauskopf 1997, 31. 4 191<br />

Fig. VI.7. Etruscan Bronze Statuette of the “Swan Demon,” Unknown Provenance, Late Archaic<br />

Period, Paris, Louvre. Dim. H. 25.4 cm. Bibl. Gerke 1938, 231, no. 89; Herbig and Simon<br />

1965, 31, 49; Messerschmidt 1942, 193-217; Richardson 1983, 362-3. 192<br />

Fig. VI.8. Etruscan Bronze Statuette of the “Swan Demon” Which Decorated a Lamp, Possibly<br />

from the Area of Naples, ca. 300-200 BCE, London, British Museum. Dim. H 29.6 cm. Bibl.<br />

Bailey and Craddock 1978, 75-80; Haynes 1985, 321-2. 193<br />

Fig. VI.9. Etruscan Bronze Statuette of a “Swan Demon” Supported by a Youth Wearing a<br />

Beast’s Skin, Unknown Provenance, ca. 3 rd C BCE, Florence, Museo Archeologico. Dim.<br />

Unspecified. Bibl. Bailey and Craddock 1978, 78; Haynes 1985, 322; Herbig and Simon 1965,<br />

pl.50. 194<br />

Fig. VI.10. Line Drawing of the Tondo in an Apulian Drinking Cup Depicting Ganymede Being<br />

Abducted by a Swan, Unknown Date, Unknown Provenance, Formerly Ruvo, Fenicia Collection<br />

(Now Lost). Dim. Unspecified. Bibl. Krauskopf 1980, 243-5; Reinach 1899, 335; Schauenburg<br />

1969, 133; Sichtermann 1956, K 373; Trendall 1936, 74; Trendall 1987, 144. 195<br />

Fig. VI.11. Fragment of an Etruscan Black Figure Vase from the Orvieto Group Depicting an<br />

Underworld Demon with the Head of a Bird of Prey, Unknown Provenance, beginning of the 5 th<br />

C BCE, Göttingen, Archäologisches Institut. Dim. H. 49.0 cm. Bibl. Krauskopf 1987, 20-3;<br />

Krauskopf 1997, 26. 196<br />

Fig. VI.12. Water Color Rendition of a Fresco Depicting the Demon Tuchulcha Menacing the<br />

Hero These (Greek Theseus) with a Serpent from Tomb of Orcus II, in the Monterozzi<br />

Necropolis, Tarquinia, 2 nd quarter of 4 th C BCE. Dim. Unspecified. Bibl. De Grummond MS<br />

2006, 216-7; De Ruyt 1934, 9-13; Harari 1997, 97-8; Krauskopf 1987, 72-3; Steingraber 1985,<br />

329-32. 197<br />

4 Krauskopf cites a different example of the griffin demon, but her comments apply to this image as well.<br />

xii


ABSTRACT<br />

This dissertation is an interdisciplinary examination of the human-animal hybrid<br />

divinities of ancient Italy and how their iconography, mythic narrative, and cult interrelate. The<br />

deities and demons collected in this text are organized into chapters based on their animal<br />

characteristics represented in both art and literature. These figures are imaged in theriomorphic<br />

(wholly animal) or therianthropic (a combination of human and animal anatomies or a human<br />

form wearing animal dress) forms in addition to their anthropomorphic representations. The<br />

deities and demons included in this study are Aesculapius, Charu(n), and the Genius Loci, who<br />

are depicted with ophidian imagery, Aita, Faunus, Silvanus, and Apollo Soranus with lupine<br />

imagery, Faunus (again), Pan, and Juno Sospita with caprid, the Minotaur and Achelous along<br />

with a discussion of the possible representation of Dionysos in taurine form, Picus and three<br />

unidentified divinities with avian.<br />

By examining these figures, one can see that previous scholarship concerning the Greco-<br />

Roman acceptance of animal worship and the appraisal of these figures as survivals of archaic<br />

religion needs revision. Other issues addressed by this work include the Etruscan and Roman<br />

importation and adoption of foreign gods, goddess and their mythic narratives, the mercurial<br />

nature of pagan deities, the tie between animal imagery and chthonic or liminal figures, the use<br />

of theriomorphic and therianthropic deities as apotropaic devices, and the relationship between<br />

literary and archaeological evidence. These problems are addressed by a close reading of literary<br />

sources and visual analysis of artistic representations of theriomorphic and therianthropic<br />

divinities.<br />

xiii


CHAPTER 1: INTRODUCTION<br />

Until recent times, the idea of a human-animal hybrid belonged only in tales of folklore<br />

and fantasy and the realm of science fiction. The imagination of authors such as H.G. Wells,<br />

who wrote The Island of Dr. Moreau in 1896, brought such creatures to life in novels, but by<br />

2004 technology had advanced to the point at which choosing the sex of one’s child was a real<br />

possibility. This breakthrough prompted politicians to propose some radical legislation reported<br />

by Newsweek, “The President's Council on Bioethics discussed proposals for possible legislation<br />

that would ban the buying and selling of human embryos and far-out reproductive<br />

experimentation, like creating human-animal hybrids.” 1 This topic remained a concern, and in<br />

2006 President George W. Bush made the following appeal to the citizens of the United <strong>State</strong>s<br />

during the <strong>State</strong> of the Union Address.<br />

Tonight I ask you to pass legislation to prohibit the most egregious abuses of<br />

medical research: human cloning in all its forms; creating or implanting embryos<br />

for experiments; creating human-animal hybrids [italics mine]; and buying,<br />

selling or patenting human embryos. 2<br />

Human-animal hybrids have, from ancient to modern times, held the fascination and fear of the<br />

human race and the potential for the creation of such a hybrid merited not only legal action<br />

against this possibility but also the president’s attention in a national speech. From the earliest of<br />

times, composite creatures have fascinated man, and a 32,000 year old ivory statuette, which<br />

could possibly be the oldest representation of the human form in art, is actually that of a lion-<br />

headed man (Fig. I.1). 3<br />

In his discussion of Fig. I.1, J.J. Putnam states, “The world’s earliest known<br />

anthropomorphic figure pushes back in time evidence of the human ability to create symbols;<br />

this may be an attempt to capture the animal’s power.” 4 What is even more provocative is that<br />

this ivory statuette is not a singular occurrence, and a similar figurine combining lion and human<br />

1 Kalb 2004, 47.<br />

2 For a transcript of the <strong>State</strong> of the Union address, see CQ Transcriptions (2006, 31 January, http://www.<br />

washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/01/31/AR2006013101468.html).<br />

3 It is Rice’s (1998, 264) proposal that this ivory figure is representative of the earliest attempt of fashioning art in<br />

the form of a human being.<br />

4 Putnam 1988, 467.<br />

1


physiognomy was discovered at Hohle Fels, in Germany. The practice of blending human and<br />

animal anatomy in a statuette such as this one is likely indicative of the recognition of a link<br />

between man and animal or the animal’s possession of similar, possibly desirable, character<br />

traits.<br />

The animal species usually represented — mammoth, bear and lion — are not<br />

ones that would have been eaten (a common feature with this early art). The<br />

postures of these figurines, and their ears and eyes, reveal a close attention paid<br />

to aggressive animal behaviour. They may be material expressions of the shared<br />

personal qualities of humans and animals, as is perhaps indicated by the small<br />

half-human, half-animal figurine from Hohle Fels, and the larger half-lion, halfhuman<br />

figurine found earlier at Hohlenstein-Stadel. Or they may be expressions<br />

of the shared social qualities of single- and group-living species. 5<br />

Statuettes such as those discussed here are evidence for the great antiquity of linking the human<br />

and animal worlds in artistic representation. As I shall demonstrate over the course of this study,<br />

the creation of hybrid creatures is not a practice limited to early human kind, and certainly not<br />

representative of so-called primitive beliefs. 6 In a classical context, human-animal hybrids were<br />

a common part of the mythological tradition: gorgons, centaurs, satyrs, sirens, and Skylla are all<br />

prominent examples of the mingling of human and bestial form, and all of these creatures<br />

possessed a monstrous aspect. These figures are considered lesser divine beings, not “proper”<br />

gods or goddesses, but some of the most influential and widely worshipped deities possessed an<br />

animal aspect as well. 7<br />

In studies of ancient classical religion and myth, it is often stated that the Greeks and<br />

Romans had gods for all occasions, and that each tree, rock, and stream was inhabited by<br />

divinities, yet scholars do not seem to apply this system to the animal world. Modern studies<br />

state that animal worship was “anathema” to the Greeks and Romans, 8 but in the related field of<br />

Egyptology, it has been noted by A. Thomas that, for early men, the animal world was<br />

representative of an order and hierarchy that implied a divine presence. 9 Man has also tended to<br />

5 Sinclair 2003, 774-5.<br />

6 In general the word “primitive” carries negative connotations. I use this word due to the content of earlier<br />

scholarship, but I do not subscribe to a model of primitive man and/or cultures. In fact, a major point of this work is<br />

to disassociate the iconography of human-animal hybrids from the idea of “primitive man.”<br />

7 Monsters (such as the Minotaur), spirits, and other lesser divinities are discussed in this dissertation at the point<br />

where their iconography is critical to an understanding of the deities and demons featured here.<br />

8 Ray 2002, 90; Leavitt 1992, 248. Some of the literary sources from Greece and Rome seem to demonstrate a<br />

stance against animal worship, and these sources will be evaluated over the course of this study.<br />

9 Thomas 1989, 11.<br />

2


see himself reflected in animal behavior, and sometimes expresses relationships using totemism,<br />

a way of thinking that is considered a characteristic of cultures that have not advanced to the<br />

stage of worshipping anthropomorphic divinities. 10 Due in part to these reasons, scholarship<br />

dealing with the religion of the ancient Etruscans and Romans has neglected an important class<br />

of the divinities of ancient Italy. Gods and goddesses who possess the form of an animal<br />

(theriomorphic) or a combination of human and animal bodies (therianthropic), were an<br />

important part of Etruscan and Roman religion and deserve closer study. For the purposes of this<br />

dissertation, three categories of divinity are considered. These are gods whose bodies are part<br />

human and part animal, gods who wear an animal skin as a conspicuous part of their<br />

iconography in relation to their cult, 11 and gods who are commonly represented in human form<br />

but sometimes take the form of a sacred animal in art and/or literature.<br />

Does the notion that the classical world, especially the pragmatic Romans, rejected the<br />

practice of worshipping animals or composite figures hold true under careful examination of the<br />

literary and archaeological sources? R. Turcan indicates that “… Egyptian zoolatry remained an<br />

inexhaustible topic of mockery or indignation among Rome’s pagans” 12 until the High Empire.<br />

One famous passage written by Valerius Maximus, which is often quoted by scholars, seems to<br />

bear this statement out as it does indeed vilify the cult of Isis.<br />

Now I come to those whose safety was procured by a trick. The Plebian Aedile<br />

Marcus Volusius was proscribed. After donning the costume of a priest of Isis,<br />

he made his way through the streets and public roads begging for small offerings<br />

and did not allow any of those whom he met to know his true identity, and, with<br />

this type of trick, he arrived at the camp of Marcus Brutus. Even more wretched<br />

is that he did this out of necessity, which forced a magistrate of the Roman<br />

people to cast aside the mark of his office and go through the city hidden behind<br />

the trappings of a foreign cult! O, they were too desirous of their own well-being<br />

10 Lang 1968, 105; Lévi-Strauss (1963) discusses the problems with defining the term totemism.<br />

11 Lada-Richards (1998, 51) discusses the wearing of animal masks in initiatory rituals and comes to the conclusion<br />

that “masks… when placed on the face of human ritual celebrants, transform them into hybrid beings.” I propose<br />

that the conspicuous use of animal skins in the iconography of a divinity function in the same way. The possibility<br />

of the same figure represented as a true hybrid blending human and animal iconography or a human donning an<br />

animal skin can be found in Chapter Three in my discussion of lupine deities. I must note, however, that I have<br />

excluded Hercules from this study due to his acquisition of the Nemean Lion’s skin as a component of his<br />

iconography. This lion skin serves as a trophy for Hercules and it thus fulfills a different role than the other uses of<br />

animal skins in this study.<br />

12 Turcan 1996, 124.<br />

3


or for the death of someone else, who themselves endured or who forced others<br />

to endure such things as this. 13<br />

But before we assume that this quote speaks out against animal worship, we should<br />

consider its context. K. Dowden suggests that a key component to the “Isis-kit” worn by<br />

Volusius was a “dog’s-head mask,” 14 and this seems to be the prevailing scholarly opinion.<br />

Dowden further notes that “Anubiaci” were priests specifically devoted to the jackal-headed god<br />

Anubis, and this term is parallel to the designation “Isiaci,” priests of Isis. 15 Volusius is<br />

designated as taking up the garb of one of the “Isiaci,” priests who shaved their heads and wore<br />

the “Isis knot.” 16 It is important to note that there is no mention of Volusius donning a mask of<br />

the god Anubis; he is merely stated as having worn the garb of an Isiaci, not one of the Anubiaci.<br />

It is also important to consider that the cult of Isis constitutes a special case in that this cult<br />

suffered a great many reversals of fortune in regards to its reputation amongst the Roman elite.<br />

We should consider that many wealthy houses must have been decorated with Egyptian motifs,<br />

as is suggested by the great number of houses in Pompeii decorated in the Third Pompeian style<br />

(Fig. I.2). 17 We can not use Valerius Maximus’ testimony to argue that the most offensive aspect<br />

of Isaic worship was the inclusion of the god Anubis in the cult. I would argue that Valerius<br />

Maximus does not speak out against the cult of Isis because of the worship of therianthropic<br />

figures but instead speaks out against the fact that a member of the Roman upper-class was<br />

13<br />

Val. Max. VII.3.8. Latin Text taken from Valerius Maximus Memorable Doings and Sayings, Loeb Classical<br />

Library, Vol. 2, edited by D.R. Shackleton Bailey, Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 2000, pp. 135, 137.<br />

(Translation by Author.)<br />

Veniam nunc ad eos, quibus salus astutia quaesita est. M. Volusius aedilis pl. proscriptus adsumpto Isiaci [Italics<br />

mine] habitu per itinera viasque publicas stipem petens quisnam re vera esset occurrentes dinoscere passus non est<br />

eoque fallaciae genere tectus in M. Bruti castra peruenit. quid illa necessitate miserius, quae magistratum populi<br />

Romani abiecto honoris praetexto alienigenae religionis obscuratum insignibus per urbem iussit incedere? o nimis<br />

aut hi suae vitae aut illi alienae mortis cupidi, qui talia vel ipsi sustinuerunt uel alios perpeti coegerunt!<br />

14<br />

Dowden 1998, 124.<br />

15<br />

Dowden 1998, 124.<br />

16<br />

Turcan 1999, 111.<br />

17<br />

Ling (1990, 52) outlines the basic characteristics of the Third Pompeian Style as wall-painting that abandoned the<br />

illusionistic character of the previous phase for “surface effects and fastidious ornament.” Roman wall painting<br />

between the years of 20 BCE and CE 45 is also characterized by tall, slender structures that do not adhere to<br />

architectonic logic, small panels that depict genre or landscape scenes (sometimes with a sacred or mythological<br />

character), and large swathes of solid color (typically red, black, or yellow). The House of Loerius Tiburtinus is<br />

replete with Egyptianizing motifs and objects including another fresco depicting a second priest of Isis and statues of<br />

sphinxes, the god Bes, and crocodiles. The Augustan Period is known to have been one in which an Egyptianizing<br />

vogue was prominent in the Roman Empire. It is quite possible, that the owner, or a member of his family, was<br />

involved in the cult of Isis, which enjoyed great popularity in Pompeii. It is also important to note, that the priest<br />

shown in Fig. I.2. possesses no animal attributes.<br />

4


forced to adopt the trappings of a foreign religion (in opposition to the mos maiorum) and also to<br />

beg as a way to save his life during a civil war.<br />

As the primary example of theriomorphic and therianthropic cult in the Mediterranean<br />

world, Egyptian religion requires some special treatment here. In 1984 in an important article<br />

that deals with the perception of Egyptian religion and animal worship in the ancient world,<br />

K.A.D. Smelik and E.A. Hemelrijk collected the literary evidence that has been used to<br />

substantiate the claim that the Romans categorically rejected animal deities. 18 (In 1998, K.<br />

Dowden produced his study, a similar, but considerably shorter, article in much the same vein.) 19<br />

The evidence collected by these scholars does not completely support a negative appraisal of<br />

Egyptian religion and seems instead to bolster the idea that there were “…two attitudes current in<br />

the Roman world with regard to animal worship: animal worship as a ridiculous and despicable<br />

phenomenon, and animal worship, although outrageous at first glance, as a symbol for hidden<br />

wisdom.” 20 A more careful reading of some of these sources and an understanding of the<br />

author’s agenda or the genre of the piece are necessary for a proper assessment of the Roman<br />

reception of animal worship. 21 We may also appreciate the way in which these literary sources<br />

have influenced the modern appraisal of animal worship in general.<br />

Smelik and Hemelrijk’s study is an admirable attempt at assessing the Roman perception<br />

of Egyptian religion, and therefore animal worship, but their article is hampered by a number of<br />

factors. The earliest literary evidence that we may use for evaluating the conceptualization of<br />

Egyptian animal worship in the Greco-Roman world, and by extension the Roman perception of<br />

theriomorphic and therianthropic gods, is Cicero, and thus Smelik and Hemelrijk’s study<br />

immediately faces several problems. 22 Their article does not contain literary sources that deal<br />

with native Italian deities or religious practices as comparative material for the Egyptian<br />

evidence. Material culture is also not used to support their conclusions, and thus the reader is<br />

18 Smelik and Hemelrijk 1984, 1852-2000.<br />

19 Dowden (1998, 113-33) falls prey to the same problems as Smelik and Hemelrijk. Just like Smelik and<br />

Hemelrijk, several of Dowden’s statements indicate the complexity of the Roman view of Egyptian theriomorphic<br />

and therianthropic deities. For example, Dowden (1998, 120) states “Yet this disparagement of Egyptian religion<br />

contrasts sharply with the use of Egypt as a sign of deep knowledge resulting from a sacred tradition of unparalleled<br />

lenth.”<br />

20 Smelik and Hemelrijk 1984, 1968. I believe that narrowing the possibilities down to two viewpoints remains<br />

restrictive, but at least these scholars suggest that the Romans were capable of accepting the worship of animal and<br />

hybrid divinities. Unfortunately, they subordinate any possibility of a positive appraisal (and also their evidence) to<br />

a more negative stance.<br />

21 The sources used here are selected from those gathered by Smelik and Hemelrijk.<br />

22 Smelik and Hemelrijk 1984, 1855.<br />

5


left with an incomplete appraisal of animal worship. Cicero, like the other authors used to<br />

support Smelik and Hemelrijk’s claims, was a member of the upper class in Rome, and thus his<br />

views may or may not reflect those of the common man. Along similar lines, there may also be<br />

differences between the religious practices that occurred in the city as opposed to those which<br />

occurred in rustic regions. Something else to consider is that due to a lack of Etruscan literature<br />

and substantial remains of Italic literature, textual sources cannot be gathered to study the<br />

opinions held by the other peoples of Italy. For assessing the views of the Etruscans and Italic<br />

tribes we must turn to the archaeological evidence. Cicero and other authors can offer only an<br />

incomplete picture of this complex religious phenomenon.<br />

Even so, the literary sources do allow us a glimpse at what a specific class of Romans<br />

thought about animal worship. At De Re Publica III.9,14, during a discussion of what is just and<br />

unjust, Cicero refers to the Egyptians as uncorrupted and points to the antiquity of their religious<br />

practice.<br />

… first, he would see [those things] in the most pure people of Egypt, a race<br />

which holds the memory of written records of ages and events beyond<br />

numbering, that they thought a certain bull was a god, whom the Egyptians call<br />

Apis, and among them many other marvels and animals of all kinds are set apart<br />

as sacred to a number of the gods. 23<br />

We may infer that the Romans must have thought of animal worship as an “ancient” practice. 24<br />

Here Cicero does not make a negative assessment of the Egyptians’ religion, he simply states<br />

that it was old and unchanging. Cicero further indicates his appraisal of Egyptian religion<br />

through the discussants of his De Natura Deorum at I.29,81 by contrasting the “barbarous”<br />

practice of animal worship with the impiety practiced by the Romans who worship<br />

anthropomorphic gods, for doubts concerning the godhood of their deities are unknown to the<br />

Egyptians. Again, we are left with an assessment that is far from negative. In fact, those who<br />

23 Cic. De Rep. III.14. Latin Text taken from Cicero De Re Publica, De Legibus, Loeb Classical Library, Vol. 16,<br />

Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 2000, p 193. (Translation by Author.)<br />

…videat primum in illa incorrupta maxume gente Aegyptiorum, quae plurimorum saeculorum et eventorum<br />

memoriam litteris continet, bovem quendam putari deum, quem Apim Aegyptii nominant, multaque alia portenta<br />

apud eosdem et cuiusque generis beluas numero consecratas deorum…<br />

24 In Chapter Three, while discussing the Lupercalia, I shall return to this point. Scholars seem particularly keen to<br />

point to the Greek region of Arcadia as a place where animal worship would have taken place due to the retention of<br />

ancient practices there. For example, Borgeaud (1988, 3-4) refers to Arcadia as a “veritable storehouse of archaism<br />

in politics, language, and religion.”<br />

6


worship animals are thought to be more pious and devoted to their religion than those who<br />

worship gods in human form.<br />

speaks.<br />

Cicero seems to express a different opinion at De Natura Deorum III.19,47 when Cotta<br />

If those are gods, whom we worship and accept, why do we not count Serapis<br />

and Isis amongst them? And, why deny the gods of the barbarians? Therefore,<br />

we should place oxen and horses, ibises, hawks, serpents, crocodiles, fish, dogs,<br />

wolves, cats, in addition to many other beasts amongst the proper number of the<br />

gods. 25<br />

At first glance, this quote seems quite opposed to Egyptian religion due to the implication that<br />

the Romans do not place beasts amongst the gods. But Cotta’s statement is taken in the larger<br />

context of his argument, we see that he is attacking not only Egyptian religion. Cotta goes on to<br />

question the godhood of Greek and Roman deities.<br />

And if we reject those, we must also reject those who bore them. What then? Is<br />

Ino to be considered a goddess called Leukothea by the Greeks and Matuta by us,<br />

since she was a daughter of Cadmus; moreover are Circe, Pasiphae, and Aeetes,<br />

daughters of Perseis (a daughter of Ocean) and of father Sun, to be held in the<br />

number of the gods? 26<br />

Cotta’s remarks are not designed to attack animal worship but the acceptance of the existence of<br />

deities in general. We can see from these examples that Cicero’s depiction of animal worship is<br />

by no means wholly negative and primarily functions as a way of denoting the antiquity of the<br />

Egyptians and their foreign qualities.<br />

One literary topos used as evidence of a negative appraisal of animal worship is the trope<br />

of Anubis latrans, or barking Anubis. 27 This phrase appears in Vergil’s Aeneid during his<br />

25 Cic. Nat. D. III.19,47. Latin Text taken from Cicero Nature of the Gods, Academics, Loeb Classical Library,<br />

Vol. 19, edited by J. Henderson, Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 2000, pp. 330, 332. (Translation by<br />

Author.)<br />

… si di sunt illi, quos colimus et accepimus, cur non eodem in genere Serapim Isimque numeremus? quod si<br />

facimus, cur barbarorum deos repudiemus? Boves igitur et equos, ibis, accipitres, aspidas, crocodilos, pisces, canes,<br />

lupos, faelis, multas praeterea beluas in deorum numerum reponemus.<br />

26 Cic. Nat. D. III.19, 47-8. Latin Text taken from Cicero Nature of the Gods, Academics, Loeb Classical Library,<br />

Vol. 19, edited by J. Henderson, Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 2000, p. 332.<br />

Quae si reicimus, illa quoque, unde haec nata sunt, reiciemus. Quid deinde? Ino dea ducetur et a<br />

Graecis, a nobis Matuta dicetur, cum sit Cadmi filia, Circe autem er Pasiphaë et Aeeta e Perseide Oceani filia natae<br />

patre Sole in deorum numero non habebuntur?<br />

27 In addition to the Vergilian example produced here, Propertius III.11,41 refers to Anubis as latrantem in reference<br />

to the conflict between Antony as Cleopatra’s pawn, and Augustus.<br />

7


presentation of the Battle of Actium as Antony and Cleopatra are readied to engage Octavian’s<br />

fleet in combat.<br />

All types of gods and monsters and Anubis the Barker<br />

Hold their weapons against Neptune, Venus, and Minerva. 28<br />

This small excerpt is part of a larger passage in which Antony is made into a foreign enemy as<br />

the thrall of Cleopatra, a point that Smelik and Hemelrijk note but then seem to forget. 29<br />

Vergil’s purpose here is not to criticize Egyptian cult but to demonize Antony. Association with<br />

Egyptian deities is one tool Vergil uses to make Antony less Roman. We must remember,<br />

though, that Vergil is not writing a commentary on the merits of religion; he is dealing with one<br />

of the most politicized events of Roman history. The most commonly noted characteristic of<br />

Egyptian deities is that they were hybrids, and this is surely the reason that Vergil chooses to<br />

emphasize this aspect of their character, to point out that they are “a wondrous phenomenon from<br />

a strange and far-away country.” 30<br />

Smelik and Hemelrijk also point to Pliny the Elder as an example of anti-Egyptian<br />

sentiment. They note, though, that Pliny does not specifically address the issue of animal<br />

worship, except in the case of the Apis bull, a cult he treats favorably. 31 In order to turn this into<br />

an anti-animal sentiment, Smelik and Hemelrijk state,<br />

One gets the impression from this passage and from the fact that according to<br />

Pliny the Apis-bull approved and appreciated his veneration, that Pliny was less<br />

negative in his judgment of the Apis-cult than in that of animal worship in<br />

general. This can probably be seen in relation to the high regard Pliny holds for<br />

the ox… this example shows that the personal attitude towards the (or an)<br />

animal can influence the conception one has of Egyptian animal worship. 32<br />

If we follow Smelik and Hemelrijk’s analysis of Pliny’s testimony, Pliny does not appear to be<br />

entirely adverse to animal cult, and Smelik and Hemelrijk are forced to minimize his positive<br />

feelings towards the Apis bull by stating that Pliny’s personal bias towards the ox influences his<br />

28 Verg. Aen. VIII.670-3. Latin Text taken from Virgil Aeneid 7-12, The Minor Poems, Loeb Classical Library, Vol.<br />

2, edited by G.P. Goold , Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 1998, p. 108. (Translation by Author.)<br />

omnigenumque deum monstra et latrator Anubis / contra Neptunum et Venerem contraque Minervam / tela tenent.<br />

29 Smelik and Hemelrijk (1984, 1855) state that “Virgil wants to use the Roman abhorrence of Egyptian<br />

theriomorphic gods in order to create a hostile feeling towards Anthony and Cleopatra.” This is an overstatement of<br />

great proportion.<br />

30 Smelik and Hemelrijk (1984, 1958) state this in relation to Tibullus I.7 and also Ovid’s mention of the Apis bull at<br />

Amores II.13, 13-4.<br />

31 Smelik and Hemelrijk 1984, 1960.<br />

32 Smelik and Hemelrijk 1984, 1960.<br />

8


opinion. This is a weak argument in support of a negative assessment of animal cult, but it does<br />

point out that personal opinion is one large factor that we must take into account when dealing<br />

with these literary sources. Again, the author’s viewpoint may or may not apply to the populace<br />

at large.<br />

Plutarch’s assessment of animal worship in his treatment of the cult of Isis and Osiris has<br />

been interpreted in two, quite opposite, ways. Based on their reading of Plutarch’s text, Smelik<br />

and Hemelrijk produce contradictory statements that support both a negative and positive view<br />

of animal worship. At one moment they state that,<br />

… Plutarch makes it clear that he cannot accept animal worship as such and that<br />

his interpretation of it is only an effort to present what was in fact unacceptable<br />

to himself and to his public, in such a way that it might be valued. 33<br />

This opinion is no doubt based upon a passage in Plutarch in which he states the following:<br />

But not least are the Egyptians well used to this in reference to the<br />

animals they honor. The Greeks, on the other hand, speak correctly in relation to<br />

these matters and regard the dove as the sacred animal of Aphrodite, the serpent<br />

of Athena, the raven of Apollo, and the dog of Artemis. Thus Euripides says,<br />

“You shall be a dog, an image of bright Hekate.”<br />

The majority of Egyptians, though, worship the animals themselves and<br />

treat them as gods, thus not only have they confounded the sacred rites with<br />

laughter and mockery, but this is the least evil of their stupidity; a terrible belief<br />

is implanted which subverts the weak and guileless into impotent superstition,<br />

but the more cunning and rash fall into godless and savage reasoning. 34<br />

But this is not the whole picture, as Smelik and Hemelrijk indicate in reference to the following<br />

passage. “Therefore, we should not honor these, but through them honor the Divine since they<br />

33 Smelik and Hemelrijk 1984, 1961. The assumption that Plutarch is wholly against animal worship is based<br />

primarily on Plut. De Is. et Os. 71, at which point he refers to the practice as a “stark superstition.” This is not the<br />

complete picture, however, as can be seen from numerous other points in Plutarch’s text and the Greek examples of<br />

animal cult he provides.<br />

34 Plut. De Is. et Os. 71. Greek Text taken from Plutarch’s De Iside et Osiride, edited by J G Griffith, Cambridge:<br />

<strong>University</strong> of Wales Press, 1970, p. 228, 230. (Translation by Author.)<br />

! " # $% &&' ( ) *<br />

( & + ( , - . / 0 , '( 1 2 3 . 4 5(<br />

/ ' 6 ( . / &&" ( . 5( / (7 8 ( % , (9<br />

:;% 4 '( < & 0" 0 " * =:9<br />

9 ," / - && ( 1 ( 8 ( >( &" ( )<br />

?& &@ ( - , (7 A && 5( A B & ' , ( C&4 ? C 9<br />

/C 0 3 >( ) A D( A 4 ( ( < E , 3 , 7 D( )<br />

( ( ( A ( C , ' ( & (#<br />

9


are more distinct mirrors by the nature of their birth also.” 35 Plutarch thus indicates that animal<br />

worship is acceptable when viewed as a metaphor for honoring the gods.<br />

In the latter instance, animal worship is not viewed in a negative light, and one can argue<br />

that Plutarch depicts it in a favorable fashion by supporting the opinion that the Egyptians had<br />

discovered secret knowledge unknown to Plutarch’s audience, and that, when interpreted as an<br />

allegory, animal worship was quite reasonable. 36 Scholars such as D.S. Richter read Plutarch’s<br />

text as wholly negative and see Plutarch’s treatment of Egyptian myth as a critique of the<br />

practice of animal worship. Richter 37 proposes that Plutarch’s account of the myth of Isis and<br />

Osiris and the cult that accompanied it is a Middle-Platonic quest to prove the primacy of Greek<br />

philosophy over Egyptian religion, and argues that the Greeks understood the concept of divinity<br />

better than the Egyptians.<br />

Before continuing with an analysis of the texts gathered by Smelik and Hemelrijk, we<br />

may pause, for there are two important points to make. The first of these is that the literary<br />

sources are not wholly negative, and are at worst ambivalent to the worship of animals. We<br />

cannot use them as firm proof that the Romans were as strongly opposed to animal worship as<br />

past scholarship has led us to believe. Secondly, it seems problematic to ascribe the beliefs of<br />

these authors to the population at large who would be practicing the religions in question. 38<br />

Certainly, this is true of Plutarch, a member of the wealthy, elite, and educated class, who<br />

disavowed superstition. The Romans classified ritual practices in one of two ways: religio or<br />

superstitio, 39 and it is possible that the Roman upper-class would have thought of animal worship<br />

as a rustic practice categorized as superstitio. In fact, Egyptian gods and their images are<br />

prevalent in the practice of magic. 40<br />

If we follow Richter and the notion that Plutarch seeks to justify Greco-Roman religious<br />

practice through Middle-Platonic philosophy, we can safely assume that he is not representative<br />

35<br />

Plut. De Is. et Os. 76. Greek Text taken from Plutarch’s De Iside et Osiride, edited by J G Griffith, Cambridge:<br />

<strong>University</strong> of Wales Press, 1970, p.240. (Translation by Author.)<br />

…[ F G (7 A && " . D 8 ( C " C " 0<br />

" #<br />

36<br />

Smelik and Hemelrijk 1984, 1968.<br />

37<br />

Richter 2001, 194, 209.<br />

38<br />

North (2000, 8) states, “The extant evidence generally reflects not the experience of the mass of individual<br />

Romans, but the religious activity that affects the state and its activities, above all the doings of magistrates and<br />

priests.”<br />

39<br />

Beard, North, Price 1998, 214-27.<br />

40 Graf 1997, 5.<br />

10


of the common man who did not have time for philosophical pursuits. It may be that class<br />

played a role in the acceptance of theriomorphic and therianthropic figures. The members of the<br />

elite class who were required to uphold traditional values may have had to, at least publicly,<br />

disavow the worship of animal or hybrid divinities. Yet we have evidence for the acceptance of<br />

deities such as Juno Sospita, who donned an animal skin, over a large span of time; she was<br />

embraced by Archaic Etruscans and Latins of the 6 th century BCE as well as the 2 nd century CE<br />

Roman emperor Antoninus Pius. 41 As will be demonstrated in Chapter Four, Juno Sospita’s<br />

traditional iconography reveals her kinship to liminal theriomorphic and therianthropic deities.<br />

Smelik and Hemelrijk base the title of their article, “ ‘Who knows not what monsters<br />

demented Egypt worships?’ Opinions on Egyptian Animal Worship in Antiquity as Part of the<br />

Ancient Conception of Egypt,” on Juvenal’s Satire XV, which begins with a remark on Egyptian<br />

religion.<br />

Who does not know, Bithynian Volusius, 42 what sort<br />

Of portentous gods the crazy Egyptian worships?<br />

Some worship the crocodile, some tremble at the ibis sated with serpents.<br />

A golden effigy of a monkey gleams,<br />

Where magic chords resound from cloven Memnon<br />

And ancient Thebes of one hundred gates lies ruined.<br />

Whole cities worship cats here, or river-fish there,<br />

There they worship a dog, no one venerates Diana. 43<br />

Smelik and Hemelrijk translate portenta as “monstrous” here instead of “portentous” or<br />

“marvelous.” It is important to remember that labeling something a monster is not an<br />

uncomplicated idea. Just as the Latin word monstrum can possess several different definitions,<br />

so too can the English equivalent. I. Lada-Richards sums up the idea of monstrosity as follows:<br />

If we were to look for one single element of constancy within the ever- changing<br />

borders of ‘monstrosity’, this would almost certainly be the relativity of the<br />

‘monster’ as a humanly constructed concept, that is to say, the simple truth that<br />

41 In this instance, there is a clear acceptance of a therianthropic deity by the upper-classes. Note, however, that she<br />

is a native Latin divinity and not a Greek or Egyptian import.<br />

42 Rudd (1991, 229) refers to this Volusius as “otherwise unknown;” however, one must wonder if Juvenal was not<br />

familiar with the Volusius mentioned at Val. Max. VII.3.8 since both of these passages deal with an abhorrence of<br />

Egyptian religious practice.<br />

43 Juv. Sat. XV.1-8. Latin Text taken from D. Ivnii Ivvenalis Savrae XIV, edited by J.D. Duff, Cambridge, MA:<br />

Cambridge <strong>University</strong> Press, 1966, p. 106. (Translation by Author.)<br />

Quis nescit, Volusi Bithynice, qualia demens / Aegyptos portenta colat? crocodilon adorat / pars haec, illa pavet<br />

saturam serpentibus ibin. / effigies sacri nitet aurea cercopitheci, / dimidio magicae resonant ubi Memnone chordae /<br />

atque vetus Thebe centum iacet obruta portis. / illic aeluros, hic piscem fluminis, illic / oppida tota canem<br />

venerantur, nemo Dianam.<br />

11


its prerogatives and its essence are powerfully interlocked with the perennial<br />

dialectic of ‘Otherness’ with respect to ‘Norm’. And, as norms are culturally<br />

determined, ‘monsters’ too become inevitably culture-specific products. 44<br />

It is interesting that literary sources do not treat theriomorphic or therianthropic gods native to<br />

Italy in the same way as Egyptian gods. As we shall see in Chapter Two, the Romans were quite<br />

at home with representations of serpents in their household shrines and did not label them as<br />

“monstrous.” 45 Latin sources indicate a difference in the degree of acceptance of Roman deities<br />

as opposed to Egyptian deities.<br />

Thus, we may accept the translation of portenta as “monstrous,” but this meaning may<br />

partially obscure the goal of Juvenal’s satire, which is not strictly focused on condemning animal<br />

worship. 46 In order to fully appreciate this text, we must take two things into account: Juvenal’s<br />

genre and the tradition of his exile. 47 Firstly, satire is a genre filled with invective; Juvenal’s<br />

poems are no exception and are often bitter in tone. (Smelik and Hemelrijk ignore this fact.)<br />

Secondly, assuming that Juvenal is not simply adopting a satiric persona for his writing, 48 we<br />

must be mindful that he was exiled to Egypt, a fact that would not likely have inclined him to<br />

paint a favorable picture of the country. Green states the following in relation to Juvenal’s<br />

feelings toward Egypt and its people: “We know, on his own testimony, that he had visited<br />

Egypt, and loathed the Egyptians, with a xenophobic ferocity that eclipses even his distaste for<br />

the Greeks.” 49 Thus we must ask ourselves if we should take any statement he makes at face<br />

value. Something else to consider is that his poems were not well received until several<br />

44 Lada-Richards 1998, 46.<br />

45 Due to this double-standard of dealing with foreign gods, I have chosen to restrict the deities dealt with in this<br />

paper to either native deities and demons found on Italian soil or those that have been officially sanctioned in some<br />

way. Aesculapius serves as the primary example of the latter category. Egyptian deities met with varying degrees<br />

of acceptance in different time periods and form a special case that is beyond the scope of this study.<br />

46 Smelik and Hemelrijk (1984, 1966) believe that Juvenal’s extreme hatred of the Egyptians caused him to lose<br />

sight of what was the original topic of this poem. “In the fifteenth satire Juvenal concentrates so much on<br />

expressing his antipathy to the Egyptians who give themselves over to bestial cruelties beyond all reason and no<br />

longer suitable to the times (at least according to Juvenal’s judgment) that he completely loses sight of his original<br />

subject, animal worship.” Are we to believe that Juvenal’s emotions caused him to be a sloppy author?<br />

47 Green (2004, xiv-v) notes that Juvenal was exiled by either Domitian of Trajan and the location of this exile was<br />

likely Egypt. Some accounts of Juvenal’s life place his exile in Scotland. It is not certain when he wrote his Satires,<br />

but one tradition holds that he edited them while exiled in Egypt. Green expresses his doubts in relation to the late<br />

editing of the Satires.<br />

48 Green 2004, xxvii-xxix.<br />

49 Green 2004, xxii.<br />

12


centuries after his death. 50 Thus his opinions should not be taken uncritically as representative of<br />

his time.<br />

It is not until Lucian, a satirist like Juvenal, that one can point to a text that specifically<br />

ridicules Egyptian worship of human-animal hybrids. But even in the text of Lucian, there is a<br />

debate as to the merit of the Egyptian gods, and we are again dealing with a satirical author who<br />

writes for dramatic effect. While the character of Momus in the Deorum Concilium attacks the<br />

presence of theriomorphic and therianthropic gods on Mount Olympus, Zeus defends them. It is<br />

thus difficult to state whether or not Lucian was in favor of animal cult.<br />

As we can see from this brief literary survey one cannot demonstrate unequivocally a<br />

dislike of animal worship among the Romans. The archaeological evidence introduced later in<br />

this study in relation to the cult and mythical narratives of individual gods also bears out this<br />

point. In the opinion of this author, those who exclude animal worship from the realms of<br />

Etruscan and Roman religion are closed minded. The ancient peoples of Italy primarily<br />

worshipped gods in anthropomorphic form, but conceiving of gods in the shape of man does not<br />

strictly forbid the conception of gods as animals or a combination of man and beast.<br />

Further reasons for not accepting the proposition that the classical world patently rejected<br />

the idea of animal worship can be found in cult titles of various gods. In a Greek context, R.D.<br />

Miller’s dissertation The Origin and Original Nature of Apollo addresses two of Apollo’s<br />

epithets which seem to point in the direction of Apollo as a therianthropic deity, Apollo<br />

Smintheus and Apollo Lykeios. 51 Apollo is here associated with two distinct animals, the mouse<br />

and wolf respectively, which were important to two aspects of his cult. In both of these contexts,<br />

Apollo is regarded as an animal and as the “averter” of the very same animal. To support<br />

Apollo’s appearance as a sacred wolf, Miller notes that an inscription of the 5 th C BCE records<br />

the presence of wolf-skins at the temple of Apollo in Delphi. 52 Miller draws support from<br />

Farnell’s Cults of the Greek <strong>State</strong>s, which refers to<br />

… a very primitive period of religious thought when Apollo was still the wooddeity<br />

of a race of hunters and shepherds, and the fierce beast of the wood was<br />

regarded as his natural and sacred associate and occasional incarnation. 53<br />

50 Green 2004, xiv.<br />

51 Miller 1939, 34-7.<br />

52 Miller 1939, 36. Farnell (1907, 117) proposes “that it was as ( or " ( that the god first delivered<br />

his Pythian oracles, as in other places we find the wolf-god dealing in divination.” Richardson (1977, 93) also notes<br />

the close connection between the wolf and Apollo at Delphi.<br />

53 Farnell 1896-1909, iv.116. I shall return to this notion of the worship of therianthropes as primitive in a moment.<br />

13


Given the importance of the cult of Apollo at Delphi, one cannot simply dismiss animal worship<br />

in the classical world out of hand.<br />

The perception that the ancients abhorred animal worship is no doubt one contributing<br />

factor to the scant treatment these theriomorphic and therianthropic deities received in major<br />

works on Etruscan and Roman religion. In Archaic Roman Religion, G. Dumézil attempted to<br />

prove that Roman religion was founded upon Indo-European roots, conspicuously demonstrated<br />

by an archaic triad formed by the gods Jupiter, Mars, and Quirinus. 54 Dumézil’s argument,<br />

which is not convincing, does not discuss the possible worship of animals in ancient Rome, nor<br />

does he address this topic in his appendix dedicated to Etruscan religion. A recent work, M.<br />

Beard, S. Price, and J. North’s Religions of Rome, which has become a basic textbook for<br />

students of Roman religion, also pays little attention to theriomorphic and therianthropic<br />

divinities.<br />

In fact, the topic that is most commonly addressed in the study of Etruscan and early<br />

Roman religion is the influence of the Greeks upon the people of Italy. 55 (This is indeed a topic<br />

worthy of discussion, and it is addressed several times in the present work in relation to<br />

theriomorphic and therianthropic gods.) One misconception which must be addressed deals with<br />

the nature of Etruscan and Roman myth. In the past, scholars such as H.J. Rose and R.M.<br />

Ogilvie were both guilty of reducing Roman myth to a mere derivation of Greek models. 56 The<br />

influence of Greek myth on the Romans and Etruscans should not be dismissed, but it should<br />

also not be overemphasized. D. Feeney has recently spoken out in favor of the Roman utilization<br />

of Greek myths as a dynamic process and a creative strategy of appropriation, and N. de<br />

54 Dumézil 1970, 141-282.<br />

55 Altheim (1938, 124) poses the question of Roman adoption of Greek gods as one of time and comprehension of<br />

the divine but yet comes to the conclusion that “When the Greeks came, it was discovered that on them too the<br />

divine reality had shone, but that both in picture and cult, it had been incomparably more plainly seen and worked<br />

out in more convincing and appealing forms.” Richardson (1976, 128) implies that the proper way to makes sense<br />

of Etruscan myth and cult is to fit it into a “Greek pattern.” North (2000, 4) summarizes the derisive view of Roman<br />

myth as follows: “It has sometimes been said that the Romans simply had no mythology of their own and that it was<br />

for that reason that they later borrowed the mythology of the Greeks… In so far as they [Romans] tell such stories<br />

they always seem to reflect Greek myths in Roman guise.”<br />

56 Rose (1929, 305-334) offers the title “Italian Pseudo-Mythology” for what is commonly thought of as Roman<br />

myth. In this section of his text, Rose (1929, 306) states, “Italian gods were vague personalities, with definite and<br />

limited functions, and are not thought of as marrying, having children, forming connexions of love or friendship<br />

with mortals, or doing any of the things which Greek imagination ascribed to the Olympians.”<br />

14


Grummond has done the same for the Etruscans. 57 It would seem that many scholars who<br />

consider Etruscan and Roman myth do not keep in mind the important truth that myths<br />

…frequently show variations from place to place or from time to time (i.e.<br />

synchronically or diachronically), and to be understood, each myth should be<br />

studied within its own temporal and spatial context.” 58<br />

Another consideration brought up by Feeney is that at a certain point, a Greek import can<br />

become more Roman than Greek. In the proper context, an import can be imbued with meanings<br />

which it did not originally possess. Small also endorses this point of view when she states,<br />

The scholarly tendency to label ancient things as purely Greek, Etruscan, or<br />

Roman has confused the issue by opposing Greek stories to local legends.<br />

Indeed the two formed a continuous whole for both the Hellenistic Etruscan and<br />

Roman. 59<br />

This tendency to appropriate narratives also applies to deities and their iconography, and we<br />

must be mindful of the dynamic interchange of ideas and the shifting nature of paganism when<br />

dealing with theriomorphic and therianthropic deities.<br />

Scholarly works focused on Greek religion dealing with the topic of theriomorphic and<br />

therianthropic deities factor into the current study; even so they labor under the problems I have<br />

just discussed. The cults of these divinities are considered oddities and remnants of<br />

unsophisticated culture. The region of Arcadia seems to be considered a nexus for such<br />

archaism, and M.N. Nilsson repeatedly refers to the cults found there as “backward.” 60 In his<br />

article of 1894, A.B. Cook discussed the many animal “gods” that one can find represented in the<br />

prehistoric Bronze Age and commented upon their connections to cults found in Greece during<br />

historic times. 61 A recent exhibition catalogue, The Centaur’s Smile: The Human Animal in<br />

Early Greek Art ed. by J.M. Padgett, deals with the iconography of human-animal hybrids in<br />

ancient Greece, but it primarily covers “daimones” and “genies” such as satyrs, centaurs, sirens,<br />

and sphinxes and only two deities, Pan and Achelous. Even so, this material remains relevant for<br />

the present study.<br />

57 Feeney 1998, 66-70; De Grummond 2006a, xii.<br />

58 De Grummond 2006a, xii. Along similar lines, Childs (2004, 63) stresses the selectivity of the Greeks in<br />

borrowing elements from the Near East. When the Etruscans or Romans borrow a figure or motif, scholars are not<br />

generous enough to refer to them as “selective” and instead imply that they are derivative or worse.<br />

59 Small 1986, 89-90.<br />

60 Nilsson 1961, 9, 22.<br />

61 Cook 1894, 159.<br />

15


In general, theriomorphic and therianthropic deities are accepted as a commonplace only<br />

in the context of Egyptian religion. Local and state gods often took the form of a human figure<br />

with an animal head, and these figures abound in Egyptian art. Interestingly enough, the<br />

influence of the Egyptians on the cultures of Greece and Italy has been noted in many contexts,<br />

including religion, and yet the possibility of Etruscan or Roman worship of theriomorphic and<br />

therianthropic deities is still left out of the discussion of Etruscan and Roman cult. For the<br />

Egyptians, “Animals functioned much as did cult statues, and were simply one vehicle through<br />

which the gods could make their will manifest, and through which the faithful could demonstrate<br />

their devotion to the gods.” 62 There is evidence in the religion of ancient Italy for the belief in a<br />

divine presence in the animal world, but scholarly literature primarily focuses on animals as<br />

instruments of revealing divine will. 63 Because of this, the possibility of Egyptian and other<br />

Near Eastern prototypes in the creation of the iconography of Etruscan and Roman therianthropic<br />

deities is one topic explored in this study.<br />

There are various theoretical frameworks we might apply to the myths of theriomorphic<br />

and therianthropic divinities. A useful summary and critical appraisal of these approaches<br />

appears in G.S. Kirk’s The Nature of Greek Myths, 64 and thus, such a summation need not be<br />

attempted here. Nevertheless, some relevant points bear repeating. No universal theory can<br />

wholly account for the variations present in all myths, but the relationships among nature, ritual,<br />

cult, images, and myth must be considered. Each interpretation presents the student of myth with<br />

a tool that may be used to gain insight into an individual tale, and thus I employ a selective use<br />

of mythological theory in this study. By relating theriomorphic and therianthropic gods to these<br />

various theories and examining them through different “lenses,” we can come closer to<br />

understanding these beings.<br />

The theoretical framework in which these gods have been discussed in the past may be<br />

another reason that they are not addressed in more depth in recent studies of Roman and Etruscan<br />

religion; they are associated with older, “out-dated” scholarship and ideas, such as the writings of<br />

62 Thompson 2002, 70.<br />

63 The practice of studying the flight and behavior of birds, augury, is one example of using animals to interpret the<br />

intentions of the gods. Hepatoscopy, examining the liver of a sacrificial victim, is another example of how the<br />

cosmos can be reflected in an animal. On the other hand, at least one of Horace’s poems (Ode 3.18) seems to be<br />

closer to an Egyptian standpoint, in which a god manifests itself as an animal as opposed to using the animal as an<br />

instrument. Animals sent as omens, such as the wolf wandering among the lambs without slaughtering them, are<br />

one example.<br />

64 Kirk 1974, 38-91.<br />

16


A. Lang and J.G. Frazer. Both of these scholars now suffer from a degree of notoriety, and<br />

their theories are sometimes dismissed by current scholarship as learned but extreme. This<br />

notoriety stems from their adherence to the theory that myth and ritual are one and the same, and<br />

the inadequacy of proposing such an equation as a universal explanation for the entirety of Greek<br />

myth. 65 While the work of Frazer and Lang will not be wholly accepted in this dissertation, in<br />

my opinion, it is relevant to the myths and cults of theriomorphic and therianthropic gods since<br />

understanding rituals may help us understand the nature of a deity.<br />

Lang was a proponent of the notion that these gods were leftovers of an early stratum of<br />

ancient religion, and that they were eventually replaced by more advanced and civilized<br />

anthropomorphic deities. 66 Frazer proposes a similar idea in The Golden Bough, when he deals<br />

with the regenerative “corn spirit.” After cataloguing many of the guises the corn-spirit could<br />

take throughout Europe, 67 Frazer proceeds to discuss the various animal forms gods took in<br />

antiquity. 68 The gods he covers include Dionysos, Pan, Demeter, Persephone, Adonis, Attis, and<br />

Osiris. His conclusion is that the animal embodiments of each of these gods and goddesses is<br />

representative of the shift from an early conception of the god in theriomorphic form to a later<br />

conception of the god in anthropomorphic form. 69 He attempts to support this idea with the<br />

assumption that each god was once incarnated as the animal that was sacrificed to him or her; he<br />

goes so far as to suggest that since pigs were sacrificed to both Demeter and Persephone during<br />

the ritual of the Thesmophoria and, because pigs are associated with the corn-spirit in European<br />

folklore, these two goddesses must once have been conceived of as sacred pigs. 70 Certainly, the<br />

sacrifice of an animal represents an extreme act of devotion on the part of the worshipper. One<br />

is offering up a valuable possession to the god, and, in the case of some animals, one that<br />

guarantees the continued prosperity of a household or community. (This action is by necessity<br />

65 Kirk 1974, 67.<br />

66 Lang 1968, 118.<br />

67 Frazer 1922, 466-74.<br />

68 Frazer 1922, 475-97.<br />

69 Along these lines, one issue which must be dealt with is totemism. Theriomorphic and therianthropic deities are<br />

often assumed to be part of a primitive tendency of man to worship a totem animal. Since not all of the<br />

theriomorphic and therianthropic deities conform to the tenets of totemism outlined by Frazer, I shall briefly treat<br />

totemism in Chapter Six during my discussion of the god Picus, whom Frazer thought was the best possibility for<br />

identifying totemism in ancient Italy.<br />

70 Frazer 1922, 484. Bevan (1986, 69) states the following in relation to this theory, “A myth in which Demeter or<br />

Persephone were transformed into swine would lend support to Frazer’s idea; but as far as I know none survives.”<br />

17


paradoxical, as the loss of a valuable resource is meant to secure that same resource. 71 ) But such<br />

a sacrifice need not mean that a god or goddess was believed to take the form of the sacrificial<br />

animal. 72<br />

The example of Aesculapius, who was often conceived of in the form of a snake, serves<br />

to refute Frazer’s hypothesis. While the snake was key to Aesculapius’ cult, there are no<br />

examples of snakes being sacrificed to him. There are also numerous other instances of animals<br />

sacred to but not sacrificed to classical deities. For example, both the woodpecker and the wolf<br />

were sacred to the Roman god of war, Mars, yet these two animals are never sacrificed to the<br />

god. There are also no instances in which Mars is ever depicted as a wolf, wearing a wolf-skin,<br />

or in the form of a woodpecker. In fact, the appearance as a wolf is associated with chthonic<br />

deities such as the Etruscan Aita or sylvan deities such as Faunus. If Mars were to take the form<br />

of animals sacrificed to him, then we would also expect to see him in the form of a horse, since<br />

the horse was the victim of an important sacrifice to the deity. 73 Thus we can see that the<br />

equating of deity with sacrificial animal often does not hold true.<br />

Frazer also proposes the idea that an animal that injures a deity in a myth was once a<br />

representation of the deity. It is by confusion of the ritual, which the myth attempts to explain by<br />

using the animal as an enemy of the deity, that the animal becomes vilified. His theory is that<br />

there is a shift in which the animals are sacrificed as the god, then to the god for their actions.<br />

He bases this idea on various myths associated with the gods Attis, Adonis, and Osiris, and then<br />

further applies them to Athena and Virbius. 74 Again, I believe that Frazer is inferring too much<br />

from these myths and is ungrounded in his assumptions. It is too much to ask that since a boar is<br />

71 Rice (1998, 42) outlines the theory of sacrifice described in the body of this chapter (pgs. 17-18) in reference to<br />

the practices of the ancients, a model based on the concept of “do ut des.” A different approach to the paradoxical<br />

nature of sacrifice is explored by R. Brightman in his text Grateful Prey: Rock Cree Human-Animal Relationships.<br />

Brightman (1993, 224-6) defines sacrifice as a gift exchange instead of a commodity exchange. This model posits a<br />

world in which the gods show great favor to mortals who offer them small gifts. The sacrificial animal also<br />

participates in this mode of gift exchange by offering its flesh to the men and women who consume it during the<br />

ceremonial feast. Godelier (1999, 186) posits a similar view that sacrifice is gift exchange between the gods and<br />

man but further specifies that man is incapable of giving gifts equal to those that the gods give to man.<br />

72 Kirk (1970, 4) sums up the problem with much of Frazer’s work when he states that “…Frazer tossed in<br />

catalogues of vague similarities drawn from a dozen different cultures in apparent support of highly dubious<br />

theories…”<br />

73 On March 15, a chariot race was held in the Field of Mars. The right-hand horse of the victorious team was then<br />

sacrificed to Mars. This was done as a way to insure the fertility of crops and livestock. Frazer sees this horse as an<br />

embodiment of his corn-spirit.<br />

74 Frazer 1922, 486-95.<br />

18


part of the plot of a myth that it was originally an incarnation of the god or that since Athena is<br />

clad in a goatskin and a goat is sacrificed to her once a year that she was once a sacred goat.<br />

Lastly, while many of the gods dealt with in this study do have quite ancient roots, the<br />

blending of animal and human form in the iconography of a god does not always indicate early<br />

imagery or cult practice. For example, gods such as Aesculapius and Charu do not become<br />

prominent in Italy until the Classical and Hellenistic periods, which can hardly be considered<br />

“primitive.” Aesculapius’ entry into Rome is recorded by Ovid in his Metamorphoses, and in<br />

this text, the god journeys to Rome in the form of a sacred snake who chooses the location of his<br />

shrine on the Tiber Island. In the case of Charu, he, like the other Etruscan “death-demons,”<br />

does not appear until Etruscan culture experiences a depression in the Classical Period, and<br />

snake imagery is a key part of his iconography. 75 The use of animals and the blending of human<br />

and animal bodies to express the nature of the divinity remained a popular and poignant form of<br />

artistic expression for some time.<br />

As mentioned earlier, one approach to the study of myth which is useful for examining<br />

therianthropic deities is that proposed by Jung. The “collective unconscious” and the use of<br />

archetypes has been applied to bull deities by M. Rice in his text, The Power of the Bull. 76 Rice<br />

claims that<br />

The tendency to represent gods in animal form… is common to all mankind, at all<br />

periods of human history. It offers, in itself, most convincing proof of the<br />

accuracy of the vision of the collective unconscious, the inheritance of all men<br />

and of the archetypes which well up out of the unconscious and the common<br />

neuro-physiological and neuro-psychological mechanisms of which they are a<br />

part. 77<br />

I agree with Rice that the use of animals to symbolize the divine is common to many cultures,<br />

but I do not think that we need fully accept Jung’s biodeterministic propositions. Man’s basic<br />

curiosity, facility of observation, and need to find meaning are reasons enough for the creation of<br />

these gods. Because animals appear to demonstrate various traits that man finds admirable or<br />

reprehensible, he is going to see in an animal a representation of himself or a god. Man’s<br />

closeness to animals in antiquity was greater than ours is now, and thus animals offered a<br />

75 Hostetler (2003) makes much of this in her thesis.<br />

76 Whether or not one agrees with his Jungian approach, Rice does compile a great deal of information concerning<br />

bull worship. Rice (1998, 8) also claims to discuss bull cults which span from “south-Western Europe to the borders<br />

of India” but his work falls short of dealing with Italy.<br />

77 Rice 1998, 10.<br />

19


metaphor that could be used by man to explain himself. The collective unconscious may lead<br />

man to seek out powers greater than himself and to create gods, but I do not wholly agree with<br />

the creation of universal archetypes since the meaning of symbols varies from place to place or<br />

changes over time in the same location.<br />

Rice appropriates Jung’s theory of archetypes and goes on to state that “The archetypes<br />

are, at one level, the source of the multitude of gods and goddesses which humans have invented,<br />

either to provide comfort or to effect control.” 78 Archetypes are useful but can be somewhat<br />

problematic when followed too strictly. Similarity in symbols and ideas can be noted without the<br />

creation of as complex a system as universal and inherited archetypes, and one is also forced to<br />

determine how far the recognition of basic human concerns takes us for the study of<br />

mythology. 79 A second point to consider when dealing with archetypes and animal symbolism is<br />

that an animal might be used to symbolize a deity or demon, but surely not every ancient culture<br />

will see all of the same qualities in the particular animal. These vary according to what is<br />

important to each society and the way that the animal interacts with the environment. When<br />

discussing the Minotaur, Rice attempts to refute Jung’s interpretation of the Minotaur as the<br />

attempt of the Greeks to overcome man’s animal nature. 80 Instead, Rice sees the Minotaur as the<br />

embodiment of Jung’s “Shadow” 81 and an expression of man’s animal nature, an issue that still<br />

plagues modern scholars. One can see man coming to grips with his animal side in works such<br />

as Midgley’s Beast and Man: The Roots of Human Nature. 82 We can only approximate the<br />

meaning that the Greeks, Etruscans, or Romans would have attached to a particular symbol,<br />

though, and we must be careful not to superimpose a modern viewpoint over the views of the<br />

ancients.<br />

In the pursuit of making sense of animal symbolism, Lévi-Strauss’s structural approach<br />

to myth also must be dealt with for it has influenced scholars such as W. Burkert and G.S. Kirk.<br />

Kirk sums up Lévi-Strauss’ position nicely.<br />

78 Rice 1998, 34.<br />

79 Kirk 1974, 78.<br />

80 Rice 1998, 262.<br />

81 Segal (1998, 79) presents a collection of Jung’s work dealing with mythology in which the Shadow archetype is<br />

defined by Jung as the “dangerous aspect of the unrecognized dark half of the personality.”<br />

82 There are also a great many cultures in which the differentiation between man and beast is not as clearly defined<br />

as one might assume. Cultures that possess shamanistic beliefs in which animals are thought of as having their own<br />

form of consciousness and perceptions are less likely to draw a firm line between man and animal. De Castro (1998,<br />

469-88) demonstrates this concept of “perspectivism.”<br />

20


Claude Lévi-Strauss’s theory entails that all myths are speculative, or problemreflecting,<br />

when properly understood. Proper understanding requires<br />

concentration on an underlying structure of relationships, rather than on their<br />

overt content or any narrowly allegorical interpretation. 83<br />

Kirk suggests that Lévi-Strauss attempts to create a universal interpretation of myth,<br />

which is the greatest flaw of his theory. 84 Even if “structuralism” fails to account for the<br />

interpretation of all myths, I do believe that we can profit from Lévi-Strauss’ scholarship in<br />

several ways. The first is his notion that myths help to mitigate contradictions. In the case of<br />

theriomorphic and therianthropic deities, we may observe a dualistic system symbolized by the<br />

mingling of human and animal forms and in the often contradictory and opposite facets of their<br />

nature. I believe that the iconography of such gods lends itself to the process of mediation<br />

between opposites using a visual method much in the way mythology accomplishes this effect<br />

through narrative. This leads to the second idea that can help us, that animals are “good to<br />

think;” Lévi-Strauss makes this deduction based on the notion that the choice of animals as<br />

symbol is based on empirical data that is then related to man’s attempt to express ideas and<br />

relationships. 85 I believe the iconography used in the representation of theriomorphic and<br />

therianthropic gods demonstrates this theory.<br />

Following the notion that animals are good to think with, the process of myth-making<br />

should not be separated from the creation of iconography. Images and textual narratives are both<br />

critical in understanding the complex nature of ancient deities. Greco-Roman mythology is<br />

somewhat unusual due to its highly literary nature; 86 yet we have little preserved writing which<br />

features theriomorphic and therianthropic deities. Even so it remains important to examine the<br />

impact that scholarly opinions concerning “originality” in myth have had on the reception of<br />

Etruscan and Roman mythology because the same biases which dominate the study of literature<br />

are also present in the study of iconography and visual narratives. Feeney sums up the largest<br />

problem facing the scholar of Etruscan and Roman myth in Literature and Religion At Rome:<br />

Cultures, Contexts, and Beliefs.<br />

“…in myth more than any other cultural sphere the primacy and energy of the<br />

Greeks' activity appears automatically to weaken any Roman counterpart. 'Myth'<br />

simply is 'Greek myth', not only to contemporary classicists but to the first<br />

83 Kirk 1970, 7.<br />

84 Kirk 1970, 7.<br />

85 Lévi-Strauss 1962, 89.<br />

86 Kirk 1974, 112.<br />

21


students of comparative religion in the early nineteenth century and for at least a<br />

century afterwards. Myth at Rome is consequently often seen as derivative and<br />

parasitic, a borrowing from a more creative foreign culture in order to make up<br />

for something naturally missing: 'The Greeks were far more advanced and<br />

original than the Romans, supplying them from very early times with many of the<br />

myths and ideas about their own gods.'” 87<br />

For countless years, this has been the typical viewpoint of many scholars. It is only within the<br />

last three decades, that the Romans, and also the Etruscans, have been credited with a<br />

mythological prerogative. 88<br />

It is not difficult to see how such an attitude could develop. The study of Etruscan and<br />

Roman culture has long labored under the shadow of Greek influence. In the field of art history,<br />

scholars such as Johann Winckelmann in 1764 in his Geschichte der Kunst des Alterthums<br />

referred to Roman art as a pale copy of Greek art. This attitude has plagued the study of Roman<br />

art up to the present day and is in no small part due to the fact that the Romans were indeed<br />

enamored with Greek culture. One is reminded of Horace’s verse, “Captive Greece captured her<br />

fierce captor and brought the arts into uncultured Latium.” 89<br />

In a similar manner to the preference given to Greek myth over Etruscan and Roman<br />

myth, there is preference given to literary sources over archaeological ones. A perfect example<br />

of this problem is, as I noted earlier, that Smelik and Hemelrijk’s study was completely devoid of<br />

archaeological evidence. There is not a simple relationship between art and text, i.e. one does<br />

not necessarily represent or copy the other. We must view these two different types of evidence<br />

on their own merits and recognize that variations will exist, for a myth or cycle of myths did not<br />

simply take one form. One scholar who has made great strides in analyzing the relationship<br />

between myth and text is J.P. Small. Her text, The Parallel Worlds of Classical Art and Text,<br />

hints at this dichotomy by implying in its title that art and text need not “intersect.” She even<br />

treats changes in the iconography of human and animal hybrids and its relation to the myth-<br />

making process when she states<br />

That the Sirens are not always the same in form is less bothersome than the<br />

number, since not only does each generation need up-to-date translations of<br />

87 Feeney 1998, 47. Here Feeney quotes Ogilvie 1981, 4.<br />

88 Oleson (1975, 189-91) presents a cogent appraisal of the relationship between Greek and Etruscan mythology.<br />

89 Hor. Epist. II.1.156-7. Latin Text taken from Horace Satires, Epistles, Ars Poetica, Loeb Classical Library,<br />

edited by G.P. Goold , Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 1999, p. 408. (Translation by Author.)<br />

Graecia capta ferum victorem cepit et artes / intulit agresti Latio.<br />

22


literary works, but also each generation often requires up-to-date renderings,<br />

especially of monsters, who change in conception over time. 90<br />

We can apply the idea of “up-to-date renderings” to the corpus of the theriomorphic and<br />

therianthropic deities and demons. Images and the conception of the divine were not static in<br />

antiquity, and, as we shall see in this study, there was room for striking change. There may not<br />

always be a canonical version of a narrative or image of a god.<br />

A further problem to deal with is the afore-mentioned lack of Etruscan literature. Since<br />

no preserved Etruscan texts offer a mythic narrative for us to follow, we must turn to the visual<br />

sources as our only source for identifying the plot of a myth. This is not always possible with the<br />

remains we possess. As de Grummond states in her recent text, Etruscan Myth, Sacred History<br />

and Legend:<br />

Still, much remains unknown; stories told in representations in art often assume<br />

that the viewer already knows the story, and without a written narrative taking<br />

place in time it is difficult to reconstruct the sequence of an action. 91<br />

Etruscan divinities may be overlooked in general studies of religion and myth since they<br />

seem to be perceived as minor figures compared to the greater, Olympian gods. The<br />

reduplication of figures such as Charu and Pan is one reason for treating theriomorphic and<br />

therianthropic deities and demons as possessing a lesser divine status. The abundance of human-<br />

animal hybrids and other “monsters” that appear in classical myth may have also affected the<br />

way that scholars view these figures. For example, Pan often seems to be treated as a glorified<br />

satyr, and his importance as a rustic divinity is often forgotten. Perhaps, this was even the case<br />

in antiquity since Pan accused the Athenians of ignoring him during the Persian War. 92 Another<br />

factor to consider alongside the conception of their “divine status” is the amount of material that<br />

preserves the memory of these gods and goddesses. When discussing different types of gods<br />

worshipped by the Romans, Beard, North, and Price state that, “Some deities had no closely<br />

defined personality and remained outside the traditions of myth and legend. Although, to us,<br />

they may seem more ‘shadowy’ for that reason, they were not necessarily less important in<br />

Roman times.” 93 Some theriomorphic and therianthropic deities fall in this category; in short<br />

90 Small 2003, 29.<br />

91 De Grummond 2006a, 11.<br />

92 Hdt. 6.105.1.<br />

93 Beard, North, Price 1998, 30.<br />

23


there is not a wealth of literary narrative or archaeological evidence from which to draw<br />

information for each of the gods treated in this dissertation.<br />

The idea that there could be different types of divine figures is one that is perhaps odd to<br />

a modern audience not acquainted with the study of ancient religions. In the Mediterranean<br />

world, though, there were a great many divine beings and not all of them are easily classified.<br />

This is the reason for the qualification in my title “deities and demons,” as the figures discussed<br />

in this dissertation do not all possess the same characteristics. For example, do they receive cult?<br />

Are they prominent in both the Greek and Roman world? In this context, I use the word<br />

“demon” in a broad way as well, to denote the function of a mythological character and not<br />

necessarily a creature with a malevolent nature.<br />

This dissertation addresses a wide chronological span beginning with evidence for the<br />

earliest Etruscan and Roman rituals (roughly 800 BCE) and stretching into the high empire (2 nd<br />

C CE). The reason for such a wide chronological range is that later material may preserve traces<br />

of earlier religious practices that did not otherwise survive. 94 This dissertation also addresses the<br />

breadth of the Italian peninsula even though there are a number of distinct tribes that developed<br />

there. The Romans, Etruscans, Sabines, Samnites and other tribes possessed a “shared body of<br />

Italian experience and religious practice” 95 and thus must be treated together. Some gods, such<br />

as Apollo Soranus, Etruscan uri, and Juno Sospita qualify as Pan-Italic in the same way that<br />

Zeus was a Panhellenic deity. These cultures influence each other in a dynamic way, trading<br />

ideas as well as objects, amongst themselves. This study presents a modern survey of the<br />

therianthropic gods of Italy organized according to the animals they represent. The gods<br />

discussed in this study were chosen because of their significance in the art, religion, and myths of<br />

Italy and are organized as follows.<br />

The serpent (Chapter Two), which was one of the most widely diffused cultic symbols, 96<br />

is represented in Italy by the imported god Aesculapius, 97 the Etruscan “death demon” Charu(n),<br />

94<br />

Bevan (1986, 12) uses similar logic in her study Representations of Animals in Sanctuaries of Artemis and Other<br />

Olympian Deities.<br />

95<br />

De Grummond (2006a, xii) makes this statement in reference to the Etruscans and Romans, but I suggest that it is<br />

possible to extend this idea to include other Italic tribes as well.<br />

96<br />

Mundkur 1983, 41. While I do not agree with all of Mundkur’s theories, he is certainly right that the serpent<br />

enjoyed considerable standing (albeit holding different meanings) in a great many cultures around the world.<br />

97<br />

The importation of the god Aesculapius into Italy is substantially different from the import of other foreign gods.<br />

Aesculapius is brought from Epidaurus to Rome at the behest of the Roman Senate. As we shall see in Chapter<br />

Two, his entry into Rome was sanctioned by a prophecy taken from the Sibylline books. He, like the Magna Mater,<br />

was “naturalized” by the Romans in a way which other therianthropic deities in the ancient world were not. A<br />

24


and the Genius or Genius Loci. In the case of Aesculapius, we are presented with a god depicted<br />

in art most often as a man accompanied by a serpent, 98 but in literature he often takes the form of<br />

a sacred snake. The most notable example of an ophidian Aesculapius appears in his arrival in<br />

Rome, described by Ovid (Metamorphoses, XV) and Livy (Perioichai, XI). I have chosen Charu<br />

as an example of Etruscan death demons, who regularly possess ophidian characteristics. One<br />

demon, who appears in the Tomb of the Reliefs with what may be snakes’ tails for legs, has been<br />

interpreted in the past as Charu(n). The relationship between this figure and other anguipeds in<br />

Etruria will be examined. Charu(n) and other demons are sometimes shown with snake-skin<br />

patterns on their wings, and it may be that the blue-green color of the demons’ skin is meant to<br />

represent the effects of poisonous snake bites. 99 My last representative of the serpent, the Genius<br />

or Genius Loci, formed a key component of Roman domestic religion. The importance of snake<br />

symbolism to the private worship of the Romans is a point that deserves great emphasis.<br />

The wolf (Chapter Three) is represented by Aita, Apollo Soranus, Faunus, and Silvanus.<br />

Aita is depicted on a number of artifacts that show him with a common iconography. He is<br />

shown as a mature, regal, bearded male who wears a wolf-skin cap. Aita’s wolf-skin cap is<br />

linked to his chthonic nature as is indicated by connections to another infernal Etruscan deity,<br />

Calu. The word Calustla appears inscribed on a figurine that takes the shape of a wolf-hound.<br />

Apollo Soranus is a second god associated with the wearing of a wolf’s skin, but this time it is<br />

the priests of the god who wear the wolf pelt. The priests seem to do this in imitation of their<br />

god’s form as a key part of their worship. Again, the wolf indicates a chthonic nature, and<br />

Apollo Soranus is known from other evidence to be an underworld deity. Faunus, who in the<br />

past has mainly been associated with goats, also seems to have a lupine nature, and I believe that<br />

I have isolated a mythic narrative that may be compared to visual representations of an Etruscan<br />

wolf-god to prove this. Faunus’ lupine nature may also be tied to his syncretism with the Roman<br />

god Silvanus and the Celtic god Sucellus. These gods are part of a complex of mingled identities<br />

and religious syncretism.<br />

second possible exception is the god Anubis, who is discussed in Chapter Three, but he does not appear to have<br />

attained the same degree of acceptance as Aesculapius, and the jackal-headed deity served as a subsidiary god in the<br />

worship of Isis.<br />

98<br />

Aesculapius is also accompanied by the rooster and dog, although these animals do not have the same degree of<br />

significance in his cult.<br />

99<br />

Hostetler’s innovative theory can be found at Hostetler (2002, 11 December, http://www.open.ac.uk/Arts/classtud<br />

/etruscans-now/papers/hostetler.htm).<br />

25


Faunus and Silvanus are also associated with the goat (Chapter Four) beginning with<br />

their syncretic connections to the Greek goat god Pan. In this chapter, the relationship between<br />

Faunus, Silvanus, and Pan is further problematized since images of Faunus and Silvanus do not<br />

often take the form of a goat-man hybrid in art even though Faunus is portrayed as such in<br />

literature. Goat iconography continues with the goddess Juno, who was worshipped as Juno<br />

Sospita or Juno Caprotina. In the past, this aspect of Juno was separated from the womanly<br />

spheres of marriage and childbirth even though she was associated with an oracular shrine<br />

inhabited by a snake that tested the chastity of young maidens. I would argue that being a civic<br />

goddess and the protectress of a city does not rule out the possibility of being associated with<br />

marriage, childbirth, and fertility.<br />

The bull (Chapter Five), an exceedingly significant animal in ancient religion, is<br />

represented by the god Achelous. Achelous is a typical river god and therefore a shape changer.<br />

He is often depicted as having a fish’s tail and a bull’s horns, but this is not the only hybrid form<br />

he takes. He can also appear as a bull with a man’s head, and the man-bull present in the Tomb<br />

of the Bulls in Tarquinia may well represent Achelous or another river god like him. Numerous<br />

akroteria from Etruscan temples are also decorated with images of a man’s head that sprouts<br />

bull’s horns. The identification of these figures as Achelous is called into question by the Greek<br />

Dionysos’ association with bulls. Dionysos was much more than a god of wine and theater and<br />

was the god of coursing liquids and the raw, pulsing life present in the blood of men and animals.<br />

He is often referred to as the horned god in literature but, like Aesculapius, it is difficult to find<br />

secure theriomorphic or therianthropic representations of this god in art. It is also not clear if<br />

there was ever a “standard” iconographic type for Dionysos Tauromorphos; was he a bull-man or<br />

a man-bull? This problem is particularly evident in an Italian context in which Dionysos is often<br />

linked to the Etruscan god Fufluns and the Latin god Liber, who may or may not share in the<br />

taurine associations of their Greek counterpart. In the discussion of the uncertainty of<br />

identifying certain images of man-bull hybrids, the myth of the Minotaur and its use in Etruria is<br />

also discussed.<br />

The final chapter dedicated to an animal type focuses on birds (Chapter Six). Birds were<br />

an important part of both Etruscan and Roman religion as can be seen from the prominence of<br />

the practice of augury in these cultures. This chapter focuses on a number of problematic deities<br />

about whom we possess little secure information. The first of these is the god Picus, a figure<br />

26


who appears in myth as a man transformed into a woodpecker by the witch, Circe. He ascends to<br />

immortality and becomes a rustic deity who accompanies Faunus in some stories. The<br />

significance of this god to the people known as the Picentes has been used to suggest that early<br />

Italians practiced totemism, and this idea is examined in Chapter Six. There are several<br />

examples of a winged figure shown wearing a swan-headed cap. The identity of this figure is<br />

unknown even though several possible identifications have been suggested. Yet another<br />

example of a bird god with an uncertain identification is the bird-headed figure that decorates an<br />

antefix from the sanctuary at Pyrgi; this object is discussed in terms of its possible connections to<br />

Greek and Near Eastern mythology. This chapter also returns to the Etruscan conception of the<br />

Underworld in order to examine the demon Tuchulcha and an unnamed demon that possesses the<br />

head of a bird of prey.<br />

The title of this dissertation embraces a somewhat broad scope by necessity. As<br />

mentioned earlier, a wide variety of divine figures is included in this study. These figures are not<br />

always easily classifiable, and thus I have settled on the term “demon” as a descriptor for those<br />

whose do not receive cult. This term is not meant in a pejorative sense, as it may be used today,<br />

but is instead closer to the idea of a daemon or, perhaps, a genie. The last note I would like to<br />

add concerns the contents of each chapter. While theriomorphic and therianthropic divinities<br />

each share similar characteristics, the amount and type of evidence that preserves the memory of<br />

these figures is quite varied. Thus each chapter’s length and content are somewhat different.<br />

Ultimately, I hope to prove that we can no longer gloss over the importance of theriomorphic and<br />

therianthropic imagery in Etruscan and Roman religion. Each of the deities and demons<br />

discussed in this chapter held an important place in the religion and/or myth of the Etruscans and<br />

Romans. They were not minor figures or simple curiosities for modern scholars to puzzle over.<br />

It is my intention that this study add another layer to our understanding of Etruscan and Roman<br />

culture by examining what I believe to be some of the most interesting archaeological and<br />

literary remains they have left behind for us.<br />

27


CHAPTER 2: THE SERPENT<br />

The serpent has always stood for two diametrically opposed ideas, namely as the<br />

foe of mankind and the symbol of evil on the one hand, and as man’s protector<br />

and saviour in disease and distress on the other. 100<br />

Serpent imagery is common in the myths and folk tales of cultures around the world.<br />

Apep, the great night-serpent, harried the solar god Ra during his journey through the<br />

underworld from the sun’s setting in the west to its rising in the east. 101 The Norsemen believed<br />

that the god Thor would one day die in battle with the world-serpent Jormungand. 102 The Greek<br />

god Apollo acquired his most famous and prestigious oracle, Delphi, by slaying the great Python<br />

who originally inhabited the site. The Babylonian god Marduk was forced to fight the primeval<br />

goddess, Tiamat, who could take the form of a serpent, in order to re-establish order in the<br />

universe. 103 Thus, the serpent, often in monstrous and/or draconic form, played the roles of the<br />

“other” and enemy to both gods and heroes. In a classical context, this seems to be the role of<br />

the serpent in mythic narrative, but the cultic associations of this animal were not solely<br />

negative. In fact, snakes were more often healers or benevolent guardians of hearth and home 104<br />

and represented the procreative power of man and the gods. Rumors of gods taking the form of<br />

serpents in order to impregnate women were associated with Augustus’ mother, Atia, 105 and<br />

Alexander the Great’s mother, Olympias. 106 Thus, a wide array of meanings is attached to the<br />

symbol of the serpent.<br />

I shall begin with hybrids associated with the more fearsome aspects of snakes before<br />

moving to benevolent serpent deities that offered boons to mankind. The most prominent<br />

classical expression of ophidian imagery as a danger to the order of the cosmos can be found in<br />

100<br />

Schouten 1967, 1.<br />

101<br />

Spence 1990, 131.<br />

102<br />

Sturluson 1954, 88.<br />

103<br />

Dalley 2000, 251-3.<br />

104<br />

Bevan (1986, 261) states that the snake served as a guardian for both mortal and divine property. This assertion<br />

is born out by the roles of the deities discussed in this chapter.<br />

105<br />

Suet. Aug. 94. In this passage, Suetonius records the story that Atia conceived Augustus by Apollo disguised in<br />

serpent form.<br />

106<br />

Plut. Vit. Alex. II.9. Plutarch records that Philip found Olympias in bed with a snake after participating in the<br />

rites of Sabazius and that this incident may have alienated Philip from her company. See also Turcan 1999, 291.<br />

28


the stories of the Giants and their even more monstrous brother Typhon, 107 a creature associated<br />

with the primal, destructive powers of fire, wind, and water. 108<br />

When the gods had conquered the giants, Ge exceedingly enraged came together<br />

with Tartarus in Cilicia, and bore Typhon, having a nature blending man and<br />

animal. He was greater in size and strength than all the other children of Ge. To<br />

the ends of his thighs, he took the shape of a man of immense magnitude, such<br />

that he exceeded all of the mountains, and his head often touched the stars. One<br />

hand stretched to the east and the other the west, and from them sprang one<br />

hundred dragon heads. Down from his thighs he had huge coils of serpents,<br />

which, stretched out, reached his head and emitted a loud hissing. His body was<br />

winged, rough hair streamed from his head and cheeks, and fire shone in his<br />

eyes. 109<br />

Typhon appears in Greek literature as early as Homer, 110 but his description is by no<br />

means fixed in the way that Apollodorus describes him. 111 Hesiod, for example, provides him<br />

with human legs and feet and only refers to a hissing sound when he speaks. 112 In Apollodorus’<br />

account of this monster’s birth, Typhon was the son of Gaia and Tartaros and was Zeus’ greatest<br />

adversary, an embodiment of Gaia’s outrage and desire for vengeance after the outcome of the<br />

Gigantomachy. The earliest classical representations of this monster, which can be found on<br />

terracotta alabastra, are from Corinth and date to the seventh century BCE (Fig. II.1). 113 A large<br />

Early Corinthian alabastron is nearly covered by the figure of Typhon, whose serpentine form<br />

wraps around the vessel. (Empty spaces are filled with the rosettes typical of this period of<br />

107<br />

In contrast to Typhon, who serves as my primary example of a threatening serpent hybrid, one might consider a<br />

positive, Greek example, the Athenian king Erichthonius, who was also born with serpents’ tails in the place of<br />

human legs. According to Lada-Richards (1998, 73), Erichthonius “despite his highly abnormal birth, is not a<br />

monster like the gêgeneis Giants, but a culture-hero, a hero-founder of many rituals and institutions...” Cecrops<br />

conforms to a similar pattern as well.<br />

108<br />

Matheson (2004, 349) notes Typhon’s association with wind and fire, but Vian (1960, 23) also suggests that he<br />

may be associated with “hydrological” phenomena.<br />

109<br />

Apollod. Bibl. 1.6.3. Greek Text taken from Apollodorus The Library, Loeb Classical Library, Vol. 1, edited by<br />

G.P. Goold, Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 1999, p. 46. (Translation by Author.)<br />

;H( IC 4 ' - J 4 " 7 J5 6 && ? &" D , 4 K 7 L<br />

M C N & ,O 7 ' *? M A .( ' , # F ( ) 4<br />

4 " @ P ( C ' J57 Q ) 1 ) < ? ' < & ( A M 7<br />

R E ? ) 4 " + 7 S ) M &3 &&4 ( < " *T 9? D ( )<br />

2? 3 ) C 3 U C ' 3 ) C ( A &4 (9C " ) C D? U .<br />

M & " # ) A . ' , ( 2? E ( C? 7 V W& .( 3<br />

C M 3 . &> C , # 6 ) . " 7 ? ' ) C<br />

M &5( " ,? ( C ' " 7 ) C D( X #<br />

110<br />

Hom. Il. 2.783-4.<br />

111<br />

Apollod. Bibl. 1.6.3.<br />

112<br />

Hes. Theog. 820-1<br />

113<br />

Matheson 2004, 349. Vian (1960, 25-6) notes that the Greeks likely borrowed anguiform iconography from<br />

Babylonian art and cites cylinder seals depicting “serpent gods” as one possible source for the image of Typhon.<br />

29


Corinthian vase painting.) In this example, Typhon is bearded and winged, and possesses a<br />

singular, long snake tail as a substitute for his legs. His arms indicate that he is in motion since<br />

they resemble arms of other Archaic figures who are shown running. Near the end of Typhon’s<br />

tail, there is a large, black dolphin, which suggests a marine setting for this scene. The<br />

convention of using wings and serpents’ tails as a way to represent Typhon is also used as a way<br />

to depict the giants whose battle against Zeus and the gods occurs before Typhon’s assault.<br />

One figure typically not discussed in the context of the Gigantomachy is “Bluebeard,” the<br />

triple-bodied anguiped which decorated the pediment of the Archaic “Hekatompedon” built on<br />

the acropolis of Athens ca. 560 BCE (Fig. II.2). The identity of “Bluebeard” is far from secure<br />

although a number of possibilities have been offered. J. Hurwitt summarizes these theories,<br />

which include Typhon, Geryon, a composite of Okeanos, Pontus, and Aither, or “a benign<br />

allegory of Attic political union.” 114 Hurwitt further notes that “Bluebeard” belongs to an<br />

Athenian tradition of snake-legged figures such as Kekrops and Erichthonius. 115 This<br />

unidentified figure is not present in the secure context of a Gigantomachy, but given the<br />

prominence of its location in the city of Athens, it may have influenced the conception of giants<br />

and other anguipeds in antiquity. Nevertheless, we must look elsewhere for the inspiration of the<br />

motifs and iconography of this epic battle.<br />

The most famous example of anguiped giants is the Great Altar of Pergamon (Fig. II.3),<br />

often cited as the source for depictions of snake-legged giants in Etruria. 116 De Grummond has<br />

demonstrated that this is not the case, and that, even though the earliest representations of a<br />

single anguiped can be found on the Corinthian alabastra, the motifs common to depictions of the<br />

114 Hurwitt 1999, 108-9.<br />

115 Hurwitt (1999, 109) mentions that Kekrops appeared on the west pediment of the classical Parthenon; however,<br />

he was depicted with human legs and accompanied by a serpent, “a reminiscence of his chthonic origins.” Hurwitt<br />

also notes that Pausanias interpreted the snake present next to the statue of Athena Parthenos as Erichthonius.<br />

116 For the theory of the Great Altar of Pergamon as inspiration for the decoration in the Tomb of the Typhon see<br />

Pallottino 1952, 128. Even though it can no longer be considered as the source for the image of the anguiped giant<br />

in Italy, the Great Altar of Pergamon retains pride of place in any discussion of serpent hybrids. Many of the giants,<br />

who do battle with the gods, possess serpentine legs and are winged as a way of emphasizing their chthonic origins,<br />

and one can clearly see this feature on the giant at the far right of Fig. II.3. In addition to the serpent-legged giants,<br />

the gods also fight lion, bull, and bird hybrids, which Hansen interprets as the reflection of Greek interest in Hittite<br />

and Assyrian art. Hansen (1971, 322) further identifies one of the giants as Typhon. “Next to her [Adrasteia] a<br />

nude bearded god, recognizable as a Cabir by the hammer which he swings in both hands behind his back, attacks<br />

Typhon, a huge giant, half as large again as the other figures, with serpent legs, and the neck, ears, horns, and tail of<br />

a bull.” Hansen (1971, 320) also suggests that the Gigantomachy, as a whole, is an allegory for the contemporary<br />

struggles against the enemies of the Attalids. For a concise account of the many questions still remain concerning<br />

this magnificent structure (dedicator, dedicatee, specific function, and date are as yet uncertain) see Stewart 2000,<br />

39-41.<br />

30


Gigantomachy appear to have developed in Etruria. 117 An Etruscan black-figure hydria<br />

attributed to the Micali Painter (ca. 525-500 BCE) provides one such example (Fig. II.4). 118 The<br />

decoration of the upper register of Fig. II.4 contains an image of two armored youths attacking a<br />

giant. This monstrous foe is depicted as having a head with three-faces, 119 wings sprouting from<br />

his back, and two serpentine legs which each split, ending in a total of four serpent heads. He<br />

also lifts a large stone above his head with which he surely intends to crush the youths. The<br />

youths are shown wielding spears and shields and wearing a cuirass and greaves. They do not<br />

possess helmets but, nevertheless, they resemble hoplites. De Grummond cites this black-figure<br />

vessel as the earliest known general Gigantomachy and chooses not to identify this figure as<br />

Typhon since the image does not fit with a myth of Zeus’ battle against his most terrifying foe. 120<br />

This vessel is representative of a strong tradition of snake-legged creatures in Etruria, a logical<br />

occurrence when one considers that the locus for the battle of the gods and giants was most<br />

commonly set in nearby Campania, and the final resting place of Typhon was below Mt. Aetna<br />

in Sicily. 121<br />

The Tomb of the Typhon in Tarquinia also contains a splendid example of the<br />

iconographic convention of using serpents as a substitute for legs (Fig. II.5). 122 This tomb<br />

possesses rich painted decoration including the appearance of two winged anguipeds on the<br />

pillars that support the tomb’s ceiling. 123 These figures are likely meant to be giants, not<br />

reduplicated figures of Typhon as the name of the tomb seems to indicate. These serpent-legged<br />

giants are accompanied by a single goddess from whose waist vine tendrils sprout as<br />

replacements for legs, a Rankenfrau, whom I have identified elsewhere as Cel Ati, the Etruscan<br />

Mother Earth. 124 Both giants and Rankenfrau seem to function as Telamones, humanoid figures<br />

117 A further variation on the theme of the gigantomachy appears on a Praenestine cista that depicts giants with fish<br />

tails for legs.<br />

118 De Grummond 2000a, 259.<br />

119 One must wonder if the triple-bodied creature from the pediment of the “Hekatompedon” is not somehow linked<br />

to this triple-headed figure.<br />

120 De Grummond 2000a, 259. In contrast, Spivey (1987, 15) refers to the giant as a Typhon-figure.<br />

121 Vian 1988, 191-2. For all of Typhon’s geographic associations, see Vian 1960, 19-23.<br />

122 De Grummond (2000a, 259-61) shows that the depiction of the anguiped giants in the Tomb of the Typhon could<br />

not have been influenced by the Great Altar of Pergamon.<br />

123 These figures closely resemble the giants of the Great Altar but are earlier in date, as demonstrated by Colonna<br />

(1983, 1).<br />

124 Rupp Forthcoming 2007. The presence of a single Rankenfrau indicates to me that the reduplication of the<br />

anguiped figures implies that they are not a single personality such as Typhon and are instead representative of a<br />

group of divinities. On the Great Altar of Zeus, for example, Gaia, as the lone female figure against the gods, rises<br />

from the earth amongst many giants. Massa Pairault (1992, 195) labels this figure a Nike.<br />

31


used as decorative support elements, and are fitting as decorations in a tomb due to their<br />

chthonic nature. 125 The giants’ facial features, filled with pathos, make one wonder if the artist<br />

envisioned their support of the tomb’s ceiling and the earth above them as a punishment for their<br />

rebellion against the gods.<br />

The integration of the serpent with the denizens of the underworld can also be seen in the<br />

“death demons” that populate images of the Etruscan afterlife. At the end of the classical period,<br />

the Etruscan conception of the underworld admitted a host of terrifying demons into its<br />

landscape. 126 These demons are fearsome creatures who possess animalistic features, blue-green<br />

flesh and an assortment of armaments. Hostetler suggests that the coloration of the demons’ skin<br />

may represent the results of a viperid bite and that the diamond, zigzag pattern present on many<br />

of the demons’ wings is meant to represent the same markings on the Vipera berus berus, the<br />

indigenous, poisonous snake of Etruria. 127 The demons are not often labeled or named, but two<br />

notable exceptions to this rule exist, Tuchulcha and Charu(n). More will be said of Tuchulcha’s<br />

appearance in Chapter VI in a discussion of bird demons, but it is interesting to note that<br />

Tuchulcha’s wings bear the same markings as the viper he holds. There can be no doubt that<br />

demon and serpent are inextricably linked. 128 Charu(n) takes a different form but, like<br />

Tuchulcha, is closely linked to the serpent.<br />

One example of Charu(n)’s iconography appears in the entryway to the Hellenistic tomb<br />

owned by the Anina family (Fig. II.6). In this instance, the doorway of the tomb is flanked by<br />

the two most common Etruscan death demons, Charu(n) and Vanth, who are here identified by<br />

inscriptions. A winged Charu(n) with shaggy hair and beard is shown in typical fashion wearing<br />

a short, red tunic along with hunting boots and holding a hammer. 129 Vanth is also shown in a<br />

typical fashion - winged, carrying a torch, and wearing a pale and red garment which leaves her<br />

breasts bare. 130 These two figures stand watch over the doorway through which the family<br />

would have entered the tomb, and it is possible that the door represents both the entrance to the<br />

125<br />

Cristofani (1969, 223-4) refers to the giants as Telamones and the Rankenfrau as a Caryatid and notes that the<br />

“decorative” function of the giants has a long history in Etruria. He also suggests that the identification of the figure<br />

as Typhon is “probable.”<br />

126<br />

Krauskopf (2006, 73) notes that the Tomb of the Blue Demons is the earliest example of the appearance of such<br />

creatures.<br />

127<br />

Hostetler 2003, 52-3, 56.<br />

128<br />

Hostetler 2003, 52.<br />

129<br />

Charu(n)’s iconography does vary from image to image, but this example can be taken as representative of his<br />

general characteristics.<br />

130 Steingraber 1985, 282.<br />

32


tomb and also the underworld. A second Charu(n) and Vanth, this time much smaller, appear on<br />

the left wall of the tomb amongst a number of inscriptions that record, among other things, the<br />

names of three members of the Anina family (Arnth, Vel, and Larth) buried in the tomb. 131<br />

Charu(n) most often wields a hammer or mallet but sometimes brandishes snakes as<br />

weapons. 132 The Tomb of the Charu(n)s, is representative of the iconographic variation of this<br />

demon since it contains several Charu(n)’s flanking two of the false doors in this tomb. The<br />

Tomb of the Charu(n)s is also unique in that the representations of Charu(n) present here are<br />

differentiated by epithets. 133 In Fig. II.7, the Charu(n) wielding a hammer and standing on the<br />

left hand side of the false door, possibly meant to again stand for the entrance to the underworld,<br />

wears a winged hat and is labeled with the inscription ?arun ?un?ules. 134 The Charu(n) on the<br />

right side of the door exhibits the black and blue, “splotchy” skin that Hostetler claims represents<br />

the effects of a snake bite, 135 and also holds a hammer. He is labeled ?arun huths. 136 It is not<br />

clear what these epithets mean.<br />

Charu(n)’s flesh is nearly always tinctured with the blue-green color of putrefaction, and<br />

he is often winged. 137 However, the iconography of Etruscan death demons admits some<br />

variation, and the painted stucco decoration of the Tomb of the Reliefs, brings us back to the<br />

iconography of the giants in the Tomb of the Typhon. In the Tomb of the Reliefs, located in the<br />

Banditaccia Necropolis, Cerveteri, two monstrous creatures are depicted amongst the myriad<br />

items from daily life (Fig. II.8). Below the stucco-modeled funeral couch of the back wall’s<br />

central niche are two figures of the underworld: on the left is a shaggy-haired, possibly<br />

anguiped demon 138 wearing a tunic and wielding an oar in his right hand and a snake in the other<br />

and, on the right, Kerberos, the three-headed, canine guardian of Hades’ gates, appears. Some<br />

scholars have suggested that the two “portrait” heads that flank this niche may be Aita and<br />

131<br />

Steingraber 1985, 282.<br />

132<br />

De Grummond (2006a, 215) notes that Charu(n) may wield a sword or axe as well.<br />

133<br />

De Simone (1997, 203) confirms that this is the only example of a binary name applied to Charu(n). Steingraber<br />

(1985, 300) notes that only 5 other inscriptions bearing the name Charu exist.<br />

134<br />

Rix 1991, Ta. 7.80.<br />

135<br />

Hostetler<br />

136<br />

Rix 1991, Ta. 7.81.<br />

137<br />

De Ruyt (1934, 237-41) suggests an oriental, possibly Babylonian origin for the iconography of Charu(n) and<br />

Tuchulcha due to the combination of human and bestial elements as well as Charu(n)’s characteristic mallet.<br />

138<br />

Haynes (2000, 318) suggests that the demon holding the oar actually possess fishtails for legs instead of snake<br />

tales.<br />

33


Phersipnai, but these heads are badly damaged, so a secure identification is not possible. 139 Of<br />

the two infernal creatures depicted below the funeral couch, only the identity of Kerberos is<br />

secure. The demon holding the oar wears the typical dress of Charu(n) and is bearded; on the<br />

other hand, an oar has replaced Charu(n)’s usual mallet, and snake-like tails spring from this<br />

figure’s waist. 140 This figure has been identified as Charu(n) but also Skylla. 141 This may indeed<br />

be an anguiped Charu(n) since the oar may refer to the journey one makes to the afterlife. Even<br />

so, the oar should not necessarily be taken as a direct reference to the Greek ferryman of the<br />

dead, Charon, since there is little similarity between Charon and Charu(n) and the dead may<br />

proceed to their final rest over both land and water. 142<br />

Due to the absence of Etruscan literature, we possess no narratives that feature Charu(n),<br />

nor are there dedications that indicate that he received cult. 143 Charu(n) is also rarely the sole<br />

subject of an art object, and is more generally a subsidiary figure, either added to known<br />

narratives such as the sacrifice of Trojan prisoners by Achilles or to generic scenes of the<br />

departure of the deceased to the underworld. Charu(n) is also often multiplied and may refer to a<br />

type of demon as opposed to an individual. 144 These factors result in a difficultly in defining<br />

Charu(n)’s “personality.” 145 The actions of this demon in art further confuse the issue, as<br />

sometimes he casually leans on his hammer as if to converse with other figures around him, 146 or<br />

he raises his hammer in a menacing fashion. These conflicting views are reflected in scholarship<br />

dealing with this demon. For example, E. Richardson states, “Sinister though he may look, his<br />

139 Proietti 1986, 237.<br />

140 Matheson (2004, 350) discusses the possibility of Typhon having two serpent tails for legs as well.<br />

141 Mavleev and Krauskopf (1984, 234) include the Tomb of the Reliefs in the LIMC entry on Charu(n) and list the<br />

anguiped figure as Charu(n)-Skylla. Blanck (1986, 18-9) and De Ruyt (1934, 135) refer to this figure as an<br />

anguiped, masculine Skylla.<br />

142 De Ruyt (1934, 229-30) links Charu(n) and Charon linguistically, but notes that this is where the resemblance<br />

ends. A ferryman appears in the Tomb of the Blue Demons, but he does not possess the same iconographic<br />

attributes as Charu(n). Krauskopf (2006, 67-9) notes the variations in which the dead reach the afterlife as well as<br />

the importance of the journey in and of itself.<br />

143 Richardson 1976, 243.<br />

144 Jannot 1997, 141. Charu(n)’s reduplication may be similar to the presence of Faunus and many fauni; the<br />

possibility of a group of demons sharing the same name does not rule out the presence of an individual personality<br />

amongst them. When comparing Charu(n) and Typhon, one may note a further problem with identifying the<br />

anguiped figures in the Tomb of the Typhon as multiple “Typhons.” In Greek myth, Typhon is always a single<br />

figure and is not part of a larger group such as the Giants. In Etruscan art, the appearance of several demons that all<br />

bear the label Charu(n) on the same monument indicates a different conception of identity.<br />

145 For Charu(n) as individual or multiplicity see De Grummond 2006a, 214.<br />

146 The appearance of a “conversational” Charu(n), which may be seen in Beazley 1947, Pl. XXXI.2, may be similar<br />

to the euphemistic taming of hostile spirits through wordplay such as calling the Furies the Eumenides.<br />

34


gestures are sometimes gentle and compassionate,” 147 but de Grummond indicates that Charu(n)<br />

can strike the head of the deceased soul as is shown on the sarcophagus of the Etruscan<br />

magistrate Laris Pulenas. 148<br />

Even if his exact role is ambiguous, his meaning is somewhat easier to define. Charu(n)<br />

is a creature who is part of the transition between the worlds of the living and the dead. He is<br />

liminal, and his monstrous features may be intended to represent his “otherness” and transitional<br />

nature in much the same way as the Gorgon. 149 A further comparison to the Gorgon may be<br />

made in that Charu(n)’s hideous countenance may also be an apotropaic symbol meant to ward<br />

off evil; 150 Charu(n), like the fearsome Gorgon, incorporates the serpent into his physical form.<br />

This may help to explain Charu(n)’s confusing role as guard or enemy. Just as the Gorgon, a<br />

monster and a threat whom Perseus defeated, becomes a protective force, so Charu(n), perhaps<br />

meant as an incarnation of the deadly aspects of the serpent, becomes a tomb guardian. 151<br />

Charu(n) may also be an embodiment of the fear of death, sometimes shown as threatening,<br />

sometimes shown as friendly. 152<br />

Thus while Charu(n)’s iconography seems to be associated with the fearsome aspects of<br />

the serpent as a representative of the afterlife and death, his appearance in art is not so simple.<br />

Like the snake, a creature that moves in an undulating fashion without the aid of legs, Charu(n)<br />

is alien in coloration, form, and physique; he is humanoid, but certainly something other than<br />

human. The snake also possesses such ambiguity and is at once a venomous predator but also a<br />

mild and friendly household guardian 153 much as Charu(n) may menace the dead but also act as a<br />

psychopomp, 154 protector, or a participant in conversation. Like the serpent, Charu(n) is a<br />

147 Richardson 1976, 243.<br />

148 De Grummond 2006a, 215.<br />

149 Lada-Richards (1998, 68) suggests that the liminality and otherness of a mythological figure (Cheiron the centaur<br />

serves as her example) is representative of the ability of that figure to facilitate the transition of a mortal from one<br />

state to another while the “monstrous” character retains its own ambiguous nature.<br />

150 Croon (1955, 13) suggests that the gorgoneion preceded a “fully-formed” Gorgon and that it was intended as a<br />

representation of an underworld goddess meant to fulfill an apotropaic function. Croon’s interpretation of the<br />

gorgoneion’s origins as that of a mask used in ritual dances may suggest similar uses of Charu(n) masks which have<br />

been found in tombs.<br />

151 Howe (1954, 212-4) proposes that the Gorgon was originally “an expression of the terror the lonely wanderer felt<br />

in the beast-haunted night, and though solely of imaginative origin, the head was given this generalized animal-like<br />

form.” She follows this statement with the conclusion that by creating an image of the Gorgon, one could gain<br />

power of it and use it to one’s advantage. A further stage in conquering the fear symbolized by the Gorgon was her<br />

decapitation by Perseus.<br />

152 Ridgway (2000, 313) suggests that Charu(n)’s ugly appearance is a concrete representation that death is frightful.<br />

153 Edelstein and Edelstein 1945, 228-9.<br />

154 De Ruyt 1934, 224.<br />

35


creature of the earth, and even his frequent possession of the mallet may be indicative of this.<br />

Charu(n)’s hammer, which may menace the dead or unbar the door to allow entry into the<br />

underworld, 155 is likely parallel to the hammer held by Athrpa, the Etruscan Atropos, represented<br />

on the Athrpa mirror (Fig. VI.2), i.e. it is meant to denote finality and the inescapable nature of<br />

death. 156 There is no celestial Charu(n) as opposed to a figure such as Turms (Etruscan Hermes)<br />

who sometimes appears as Turms Aitas, the Turms of Aita (Etruscan Hades); thus Charu(n) is<br />

strictly chthonic but not necessarily malevolent.<br />

There are other serpent deities who are wholly beneficial to man. Apollo’s son,<br />

Aesculapius, savior of man and patron of healers, is one such benevolent serpent divinity. 157<br />

While he is not consistently depicted as a serpent in art or literature, cultic traditions indicate that<br />

his worshippers believed that the god could manifest himself in the sacred snakes associated with<br />

his temples, particularly when new sanctuaries were founded. 158 This animal was so closely<br />

associated with Aesculapius that poets could refer to the “Epidaurian snake,” and their audience<br />

would immediately know that they meant the god of healing, for Aesculapius was brought to<br />

Italy from his sanctuary at Epidauros. 159 The persistence of the association of god and serpent<br />

can be seen in the emblem of the American Medical Association, Aesculapius’ staff. 160<br />

A brief discussion of select myths associated with Aesculapius is in order to illuminate<br />

the nature of this god. There are several different accounts of Aesculapius’ birth, yet none of<br />

them directly associate him with serpents. On the other hand, the stories of his origins do accord<br />

with a god directly associated with the boundary between life and death. Servius records one<br />

version of Aesculapius’ birth and death in his commentary on the Aeneid.<br />

155 Jannot 2005, 65.<br />

156 Beazley (1949, 13) and Krauskopf (1987, 47) note this connotation of the hammer in relation to Athrpa. I would<br />

argue for a similar interpretation of Charu’s hammer. For the varied uses of Charu(n)’s hammer, see De Grummond<br />

2006a, 215.<br />

157 Schouten (1967, 7) notes that Aesculapius’ name is spelled many ways including Haisklapios, Aisklapios,<br />

Aischlabios, Aiskalapios, Aisclapius, Aisculapius, and Aescolapius as well as Asklepios or Asclepius. De<br />

Grummond (2006a, 187) notes that this god’s name was Esplace in Etruria. For consistency, I shall use Aesculapius<br />

unless quoting another scholar’s text or a primary source.<br />

158 Edelstein and Edelstein (1945, n. 16) state that the practice of venerating the snake as a representation of<br />

Aesculapius indicates the persistence of theriomorphic form throughout antiquity and that Aesculapius was not<br />

unique in being worshipped in animal form. They go so far as to suggest that all the gods were worshipped in<br />

animal form due to myths which record the shape-changing of gods into animals. While I agree that theriomorphic<br />

gods were venerated throughout antiquity, I am less convinced that all of the gods were worshipped in this way.<br />

159 Edelstein and Edelstein 1945, 231.<br />

160 American Medical Association, 2006. Hermes also bore a rod entwined with a serpent, the caduceus.<br />

36


Then Diana, stirred to pity by his [Hippolytus’] chastity, recalled him to life<br />

through Aesculapius the son of Apollo and Coronis, and he was born when his<br />

mother’s womb was cut open. The reason for this was that when Apollo had<br />

heard from the raven, her guardian, that she had committed adultery, he angrily<br />

struck Coronis down with his arrows, at the very moment she was about to give<br />

birth – moreover, he made the raven black instead of white – and, after cutting<br />

open her womb, he thus delivered Aesculapius, who became an expert in<br />

medicine. Afterwards, Jupiter did away with him because he had called<br />

Hippolytus back to life. 161<br />

Aesculapius was born after his mother had been killed, and he was slain by Jupiter for returning<br />

another mortal from the dead. 162 His myths represent him as a liminal figure who straddles the<br />

boundary between life and death in a way that other mortals, and many gods, do not, 163 and<br />

Burkert refers to him as a deity who is at home neither on Mount Olympus nor in the<br />

underworld. 164 Thus, the serpent is the perfect symbol for a deity who can subvert the norms of<br />

nature due to its ability to slough off old skin and be rejuvenated, as if from illness, and possess<br />

restored youth, as if it was reborn. 165<br />

If we examine Aesculapius’ parentage and life, we meet with a number of animal<br />

associations that compound his liminal nature. Coronis is linked to the crow, a bird sacred to<br />

Apollo, who is in turn connected to the dog/wolf in several of his guises, including Apollo<br />

Maleatas and Apollo Lykeos. Apollo, under the guise of Maleatas, was worshipped along with<br />

Aesculapius at Epidaurus, and dogs were sacred to both deities. 166 According to Isyllos’ version<br />

161 Serv. ad. Aen. VII, 761. Latin Text taken from Asclepius: A Collection and Interpretation of the Testimonies,<br />

edited by EJ and L Edelstein, Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins Press, 1945, p. 30-1. (Translation by Author.)<br />

Tunc Diana eius castitate commota revocavit eum in vitam per Aesculapium, filium Apollinis et Coronidis, qui<br />

natus erat exsecto matris ventre, ideo quod, cum Apollo audisset a corvo, eius custode, eam adulterium committere,<br />

iratus Coronidem maturo iam partu confixit sagittis – corvum vero nigrum fecit ex albo – et exsecto ventre<br />

Coronidis produxit ita Aesculapium, qui factus est medicinae peritus. Hunc postea Iuppiter propter revocatum<br />

Hippolytum interemit.<br />

162 Aesculapius’ death at the hands of Jupiter is tantalizing in relation to the study of animal imagery. Just as<br />

Aesculapius is associated with the serpent, so Jupiter is associated with the eagle. The hostility between serpent and<br />

eagle is mentioned by a number of ancient authors in reference to the sacred serpents of Aesculapius. One example<br />

occurs in Nicander’s Theriaca, a medical text dedicated to poisons. Nicander states “From old the royal bird, the<br />

eagle, has been wrathful towards the serpent and with its beak engages it in hostile battle, when it sees the serpent<br />

crawling along the ground.” The enmity between Jupiter and Aesculapius seems to be mirrored in nature.<br />

163 The tales of his life and death also link Aesculapius to the healing arts, for his birth is reminiscent of a Caesarian<br />

section, and he dies only after conquering death itself.<br />

164 Burkert 1985, 214. Strab. XIV.1.39 records that Aesculapius was born in Trikka on the banks of the Lethaios<br />

River, which certainly calls to mind the geography of the underworld.<br />

165 Edelstein and Edelstein 1945, 228.<br />

166 Edelstein and Edelstein 1945, 227. Burkert 1985, 214.<br />

37


of Aesculapius’ birth, a goat nursed the young deity while he was guarded by a dog. 167<br />

Aesculapius also possesses blood ties to the race of centaurs through Koronis, sister of Ixion, the<br />

father of this hybrid race, 168 in addition to being taught the art of medicine by Chiron. 169<br />

The typical image of Aesculapius was that of a middle-aged, bearded man with a<br />

benevolent countenance (although he could take the form of a beardless youth as well) 170 who<br />

generally leans on a staff about which a serpent is entwined. Fig. II.8 is an example of one<br />

common representation of this tradition, the Anzio Type delineated by Holtzmann in his<br />

discussion of the iconography of Aesculapius. 171 Statues of Aesculapius typically depict the god<br />

wearing a chiton and sandals, articles of clothing which would not be worn by an Olympian<br />

deity. 172 Aesculapius is also on occasion accompanied by his daughter and female counterpart,<br />

Greek Hygeia or Roman Salus. 173 Fig. II.9 is one such statue in which Salus is cast as a young<br />

goddess standing alongside her father and feeding a sacred serpent; this closeness to her father<br />

and association with the serpent is typical of her cult images. Salus was the goddess most<br />

frequently connected with Aesculapius and seems to have personified the abstract idea of good<br />

health as opposed to the practice of medicine represented by her father. Both of these images<br />

point to the fact that even though the images of Aesculapius in human form are more common,<br />

they are nearly always accompanied by the serpent, whether it is beneath a seated Aesculapius,<br />

entwined about his staff, or just next to him.<br />

Images of Aesculapius are typically anthropomorphic with the serpent as an attribute or<br />

attendant, and this was one way in which epiphanies of this god were imaged. One of the earliest<br />

literary sources that treats the cult of Aesculapius, Aristophanes’ Plutus, records one, albeit<br />

fictional, example. Aristophanes mocks the keeping of sacred snakes by the cult of Aesculapius<br />

in the following passage in which Cario, the play’s protagonist, imitates a sacred snake.<br />

Cario:… Now when the old hag heard the sound I was making<br />

167<br />

Kerényi 1959, 28-9. Kerényi (1959, 32) also notes that the dog is a transitional animal associated with both life<br />

and death, light and dark. This will be further discussed in Chapter 4.<br />

168<br />

Kerényi 1959, 98-9.<br />

169<br />

Hom. Il. IV.218-9; Pind. Nem. II.54-6.<br />

170<br />

Schouten (1967, 25) and Burkert (1985, 214) note that Aesculapius often resembles Zeus but has a “gentler,<br />

kindlier expression” and that the serpent and staff are key attributes in distinguishing the iconography of the two<br />

deities. Kerényi (1959, Ill. 41) states that a young Aesculapius “was not rare in antiquity.”<br />

171<br />

Holtzmann 1984, 878.<br />

172<br />

Edelstein and Edelstein (1945, 217) suggest that this indicates an acknowledgment of his heroic past as none of<br />

the Greek gods who dwelled on Olympus would be depicted clothed. Nudity was traditional for the great gods.<br />

173<br />

Kerényi 1959, 56. Schouten (1967, 57) states that Salus is occasionally Aesculapius’ wife. For Epione as wife of<br />

Aesculapios, see Kerényi 1959, 56.<br />

38


she put her hand in the pot. Then, hissing, I grabbed it<br />

with my teeth like a snake. 174<br />

The aping of a serpent would have no comic effect, if it did not imitate actual practice or the<br />

belief of the worshippers. Likewise, in the same play, Aristophanes creates an epiphany of the<br />

god in which serpents aid Aesculapius in healing a patient.<br />

Cario: Then he sat down next to Wealth,<br />

and first he felt his head,<br />

thereupon taking a clean towel,<br />

he daubed Wealth’s eyelids. Panacea<br />

spread a red cloth on his head<br />

and his whole face. Then the god whistled.<br />

Two serpents darted forth from the temple,<br />

they were exceedingly large.<br />

Wife: O good heavens!<br />

Cario: They quietly slid below the red cloth<br />

and licked his eyelids, or so it seemed to me. 175<br />

The subordination of the serpent to a role as an attendant does not rule out worship of the god in<br />

theriomorphic form as a sacred snake, and J. Schouten states that this must have been his original<br />

aspect. 176 As mentioned earlier, the transferal of the god’s cult from one place to another usually<br />

took the form of moving a sacred snake from the sanctuary of Epidauros to the new location. 177<br />

A medallion from the reign of Antoninus Pius, 138-161 CE, commemorates one of the most<br />

celebrated foundations in the cult’s history, the acceptance of Aesculapius into Rome (Fig.<br />

174<br />

Ar. Plut. 687-90. Greek Text taken from Aristophanes Frogs, Assemblywomen, Wealth, Loeb Classical Library,<br />

Vol. 1, edited by J. Henderson, Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 2002, p. 526. (Translation by Author.)<br />

N N ," ," 9 W - >( 4 # Y . Z I8 ( [ \4 ] . T M 7 3 ?<br />

D /C , 9 ^ , ( C _ Y + C& B ' 7 8 ( , ( ` XM (#<br />

175<br />

Ar. Plut. 727-38. Greek Text taken from Aristophanes Frogs, Assemblywomen, Wealth, Loeb Classical Library,<br />

Vol. 1, edited by J. Henderson, Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 2002, p. 530. (Translation by Author.)<br />

N N ," ," 9 1 a & " b 7 Y ) 3 5( M &5( CM @T 7 Y<br />

* . S B & B_ Y B& M T ' 9S a 4 ) Y I 3<br />

M &3 M , Y 6 . " 9 2 I W .( C # Y C = 4 ' c<br />

4 I C _ Y E M D( . (#<br />

J J @9 @<br />

d M ,& ,#<br />

N N ," ," 9 " IE . 3 M , IE IS ?e Y B& M & ? 7 R ( IC D#<br />

176<br />

Schouten 1967, 39. As noted in Chapter I, I do not believe that having an animal attendant means that the<br />

possession of an anthropomorphic form necessitates the surpassing of an original theriomorphic conception in every<br />

instance. This may indeed be the case with Aesculapius, though there is no sure way to tell.<br />

177<br />

Edelstein and Edelstein 1945, 230. Sacred snakes were transferred to Rome, Halies, Athens, Sicyon, and<br />

Epidauros Limera.<br />

39


II.11). On this medallion, a personification of the Tiber looks on and stretches out his hand in a<br />

welcoming gesture to the foreign god. 178 This medal shows that the tale of Aesculapius’ arrival<br />

remained popular and was accepted by the Romans well into the Imperial period. Thus the<br />

medal demonstrates that Aesculapius could still be conceived of as a snake god even in the mid<br />

second century CE.<br />

Aesculapius’ entry into Italy was relatively late, but Rome was an important center for<br />

this divinity. 179 The circumstances for this transferal of cult are preserved in a number of literary<br />

sources. 180 Livy records a plague that harried the Romans during the years 295 and 293 BC. In<br />

order to cure this plague, the Romans turned first to the god Apollo, whose oracles had been<br />

recorded in the Sibylline Books. Through this instrument, the god instructed them to bring his<br />

son, Aesculapius, from the great healing sanctuary in Epidaurus to the city of Rome. Livy notes<br />

that the consuls of 293 BCE were unable to act immediately because they were occupied with<br />

wars against the Etruscans and Samnites, but the god was successfully incorporated into the<br />

Roman pantheon in 291 BCE. 181<br />

Livy’s account of the transfer of Aesculapius unfortunately does not survive except in the<br />

Perioichai. Ovid, however, records the transfer and entry of the god into the city of Rome in<br />

Book XV of the Metamorphoses, and the presence of the god in the form of a sacred snake<br />

appears in both accounts, albeit Ovid’s account is more dramatic. In Ovid’s version of the tale,<br />

the Epidaurians were at first reluctant to give up their god to the Romans; Aesculapius appeared<br />

in a dream to Quintus Ogulnius, the leader of the Roman emissaries, and gave his assent to be<br />

transferred to Rome. In the dream, Aesculapius appeared to Ogulnius in anthropomorphic form,<br />

but, when he approached the ship to be transferred to Rome, he took the form of a sacred serpent.<br />

O Roman, when the health-bearing god, seemed to stand in your dreams<br />

Before your bed just as he is wont to in his temple,<br />

Holding a rustic staff in his left hand,<br />

Stroking his long beard with his right,<br />

178 Kerényi (1959, 15) interprets the figure greeting Aesculapius as Faunus, but it seems more likely that this is the<br />

personification of the Tiber River since he rises from the water and the bare chest and wreathed head resemble other<br />

images of river gods. Mambella (1997, 26) includes this medallion in the LIMC catalogue for Tiberis, Tiberinus in<br />

accordance with this interpretation. Turcan (1988, 33) also identifies the reclining god as the Tiber. The Tiber also<br />

carries an object that may be an anchor. Interestingly, this medallion is not included in the LIMC entry for<br />

Asklepios.<br />

179 Schouten (1967, 13) lists the “principal shrines” of the god as Epidauros, Athens, Pergamum, Cos, and Rome.<br />

180 Livy and Ovid’s text are discussed here, but Valerius Maximus (I.8.2) and the anonymous author of De Viris<br />

Illustribus (22, 1-3) also record this event and even add a brief stop at the port of Antium.<br />

181 Livy X.XLVII.7<br />

40


And uttered such words with a calm heart:<br />

“Shed your fear! I shall come and leave my image behind.<br />

Now this serpent, which encircles my staff,<br />

Look on it and mark it with your sight, so that you might recognize it!<br />

I shall change to this: but I shall be larger and seem as great<br />

As the celestial bodies ought be when changing. 182<br />

Ovid’s account encapsulates both types of Aesculapius’ iconography, the form taken by statues<br />

of the god and his appearance in an epiphany; it is a clear formulation of the belief that the god<br />

could take the form of a snake. 183 Livy echoes this sentiment in his summary.<br />

When the state was oppressed by a plague, legates were sent to bring from<br />

Epidauros to Rome the image of Aesculapius, namely, a snake which had crawled<br />

aboard their ship, and in which it was believed the god had embodied himself.<br />

The temple of Aesculapius was built on Tiber Island at that very place where it<br />

had disembarked. 184<br />

This belief was strong enough to attract the attention of Christian apologists such as Arnobius,<br />

who derided the belief that Aesculapius would deign to take the form of such a lowly, ground-<br />

dwelling animal. 185<br />

Furthermore, in Ovid’s dramatization of the event, the serpent acts with human<br />

awareness, and it is the serpent, not the Romans, which chooses the location of its temple on the<br />

Tiber Island. 186 The agency of the snake in choosing a location for the cult is echoed in other<br />

literary accounts that record foundations of Aesculapius’ cult. Another transfer in which a<br />

182 Ov. Met. XV.653-62. Latin Text taken from Ovid Metamorphoses Books IX-XV, Loeb Classical Library,<br />

Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 1994, p. 410. (Translation by Author.)<br />

…cum deus in somnis opifer consistere visus / ante tuum, Romane, torum, sed qualis in aede / esse solet,<br />

baculumque tenens agreste sinistra / caesariem longae dextra deducere barbae / et placido tales emittere pectore<br />

voces: / “pone metus! veniam simulacraque nostra relinquam. / hunc modo serpentem, baculum qui nexibus ambit, /<br />

perspice et usque nota visu, ut cognoscere possis! / vertar in hunc: sed maior ero tantusque videbor, / in quantum<br />

verti caelestia corpora debent.”<br />

183 Epiphanies of the god in snake form: Marinus’ Vita Procli Cp. 30 (Edelstein 1945, 256)<br />

Epiphanies of the god with snakes: Hippocrates, Epistulae 15 (Edelstein 1945, 258-9)<br />

184 Liv. Per. XI. Latin Text taken from Asclepius: A Collection and Interpretation of the Testimonies, edited by EJ<br />

and L Edelstein, Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins Press, 1945, p. 431. (Translation by Author.)<br />

Cum pestilentia civitas laboraret, missi legati, ut Aesculapi signum Romam ab Epidauro transferrent, anguem, qui se<br />

in navem eorum contulerat, in quo ipsum numen esse constabat, deportaverunt; eoque in insulam Tiberis egresso<br />

eodem loco aedis Aesculapio constituta est.<br />

185 Arn. Adv. Nat. VII, 44-48. We must keep in mind that the Romans were obviously not adverse to accepting gods<br />

in non-anthropomorphic form. Cybele, the Magna Mater, came to Rome as a sacred black stone, possibly a<br />

meteorite, in the form of a betyl, also under the directive of the Sibylline Books.<br />

186 Interestingly enough, the serpent chooses a location sacred to other liminal, hybrid deities, the gods Faunus and<br />

Vediovis.<br />

41


serpent chooses both the time and place of healing the sick as well a place to found a new branch<br />

of the cult is documented in an inscription testifying to the god’s healing powers.<br />

Thersandrus of Halieis with consumption. He, when in his [Asclepius’] temple<br />

sleep saw no vision, was carried back to Halieis on a wagon; one of the sacred<br />

serpents, however, was sitting on the wagon and remained for the greater part of<br />

the journey coiled around the axle. When they came to Halieis and Thersandrus<br />

was resting on his bed at home, the serpent descended from the wagon and cured<br />

Thersandrus. When the city of Halieis made an inquiry as to what had happened<br />

and was at a loss regarding the serpent, whether to return it to Epidauros or to<br />

leave it in their territory, the city resolved to send to Delphi for an oracle as to<br />

what they should do. The god decided they should leave the serpent there and put<br />

up a sanctuary of Asclepius, make an image of him, and set it up in the temple.<br />

When the oracle was announced the city of Halieis erected the sanctuary of<br />

Asclepius and followed the rest of the god’s commands. 187<br />

An ordinary snake would not be represented with such awareness. In the case of Rome, Kerényi<br />

notes that the choice of the Tiber Island as a residence was odd for the god of healing. This<br />

island must have been chosen more because of religious significance than its character as a<br />

healthful place, something which it certainly was not. 188 Kerényi states, “Here, side by side with<br />

Faunus, the snake of Asklepios was to glitter in a wolflike nocturnal world and yet with its cold<br />

body symbolize as it were the warm light of life…” 189 This Greek god had been ritually adopted,<br />

“en toto,” by the increasingly powerful settlement on the Tiber River. 190<br />

As a god of healing, who could predict the outcome of a patient’s life, Aesculapius was<br />

also considered a god of prophecy (Fig. II.12). 191 Kerényi identifies Fig. II.12 as a “synthesis of<br />

187<br />

IG IV.1. nos. 122.XXXII. Greek Text taken from Asclepius: A Collection and Interpretation of the Testimonies,<br />

edited by EJ and L Edelstein, Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins Press, 1945, p. 227, 235-6. (Translation by Edelstein<br />

and Edelstein.)<br />

fgh G ( ; & .( M , # i (7 8 ( C " g Gj XT kkgUG '7 CM /l ( g< &G<br />

A ,( ( ; & D(7 4 " ( kg G - C g6 ( l G4 ( ( Q(7 . g&G> 6 (<br />

W ' kg& G ( g G < & # & " /g G g G ( ; & D( kg G<br />

h g4 G & ( mg G7 W 4 " A . 6 ( l 4 kg G( B g( G. h 4 #<br />

g 6 ( G) & ( ; & kkgC G gbG ( . ' g (G XM kg (7<br />

G ( /% , A ,b" gn . G ? C kg 7 *G 6 & ( o &M >( A<br />

D& g ? ' G (7 kg G 9W ) h .( *? ' . XM C5 g D -G g(<br />

k/ G & ( g' G ( A h g (Gkk . - # A &h ( )<br />

? ' g<br />

g Gk<br />

l & G( l<br />

C &<br />

; &<br />

#<br />

gA M Gk ( / & g < && E . G<br />

188<br />

Kerényi 1959, 16.<br />

189<br />

Kerényi 1959, 17.<br />

190<br />

Altheim (1938, 283, 286) stresses the importance of Aesculapius as a representative of a new infusion of Greek<br />

culture at a critical point in Rome’s history.<br />

191 Kerényi 1959, 66.<br />

42


the writer-physician and the divine seer.” 192 Two elements of the statue’s pose reflect this<br />

possibility: the scroll, an item on which a prophecy may be written, and the gesture of raising<br />

the hand to the chin, a sign of thoughtfulness. As mentioned earlier, Aesculapius might provide<br />

an oracle for a patient during the period of incubation spent in the god’s shrine. Thus, Faunus’<br />

shrine on this island is appropriately placed next to Aesculapius since Faunus may also provide<br />

oracles through the same process of sleeping in the god’s temple precinct. 193 Likewise, the snake<br />

was associated with oracles through its connection to the earth, 194 not the least of which was the<br />

Delphic oracle, seized from Mother Earth by Aesculapius’s father Apollo. In Latium, a serpent<br />

oracle was closely associated with another deity discussed in this study, Juno Sospita. 195<br />

Aesculapius’ parentage may also predispose him to the mantic arts. In the cult of Aesculapius,<br />

prophecy was practiced through the process of incubation. 196<br />

Aesculapius was not the only benevolent, divine figure that could take the form of a<br />

serpent. The concept of the Genius, often thought of as representative of “old Roman religion”<br />

with roots in Etruscan cult, 197 is nebulous and vague and could be attached to a variety of ideas<br />

ranging from the Genius of the paterfamilias of a household to the Genius of the Roman people<br />

or emperor. 198 The Genius of a household represented reproductive power, in particular the<br />

power that passed from father to son in each generation and preserved the continuity of the<br />

gens. 199 When the Genius was represented in art he was typically shown as a male wearing a<br />

toga (often capite velato), holding a patera, cornucopia or both, and making an offering at an<br />

altar. 200 The Genius does not appear alone, though, and is often associated with other Roman<br />

192 Kerényi 1959, 65.<br />

193 Palmer 1974, 139.<br />

194 Schouten 1967, 36-7.<br />

195 Since there is no indication that Juno Sospita was conceived of as a serpent, I shall hold discussion of the serpent<br />

oracle associated with her cult until Chapter Four where it serves as an indicator of her chthonic character.<br />

196 Kerényi 1959, 36-8.<br />

197 Andersen (1993, 55) concludes that the domestic cult was an integral part of Etruscan family life in the Iron Age<br />

and early Orientalizing period. This practice continued throughout their history. Weinstock (1946, 109-14, 126)<br />

also demonstrates that the Etruscans had a conception of household deities such as the Genius and the Lares in his<br />

discussion of Martianus Capella’s text. Weinstock concludes his article with a statement regarding the great<br />

difficulty of using this text and the problems of interpreting an Etruscan document which has been influenced by<br />

Greek religion and passed down by a Roman antiquarian. Altheim (1938, 60-1) notes that the concept of genius was<br />

common to both the Etruscans and Romans. De Grummond (2006a, ) convincingly proposes that the Roman<br />

concept of Genius is parallel to the Etruscan Mari . Boyce (1942, 20) notes the development and expansion from<br />

the household god to state divinity.<br />

198 Fowler (1969, 14), following the old-fashioned tenets of so-called Roman animism, proposes that the Genius<br />

formed a core Roman belief that was not harmed by the advent of anthropomorphic deities.<br />

199 Altheim 1938, 59; Fowler 1969, 17.<br />

200 Romeo 1997, 606.<br />

43


household divinities such as the Penates and the Lares and/or accompanied by a serpent or pair<br />

of serpents. 201 Fig. II.13 is a reproduction of a rather elaborate lararium from the west wall of a<br />

small atrium located in the House of the Vettii, Pompeii. This lararium consists of a fresco<br />

framed by a shallow aedicula that possesses a rectangular niche flanked by two Corinthian half-<br />

columns supporting an architrave and pediment decorated with implements of sacrifice. The<br />

fresco that decorates this lararium also contains an image of a beardless, togate Genius flanked<br />

by two rhyton-bearing Lares represented as youths. The bottom zone of decoration contains a<br />

crested and bearded serpent that makes its way towards a square altar topped with offerings of<br />

eggs and fruit. 202 These elements are the traditional, common components of household shrines<br />

in Pompeii and demonstrate the importance of serpent imagery in Roman domestic religion. 203<br />

The standard interpretation of this serpent is that it is at one time sacred to and a symbol<br />

of the Genius, but G.K. Boyce does not accept this idea, limiting the role of the serpent to a<br />

function as the Genius Loci, the guardian of a particular, often sacred, place. 204 A snake is<br />

labeled as such in one painting from Herculaneum that depicts the god Harpocrates along with<br />

the Genius Loci of Mount Vesuvius. Fig. II.14 depicts an image of the young god Harpocrates<br />

bearing a branch and standing near an altar. 205 A serpent, labeled Genius Huius Loci Montis,<br />

coils about the altar and lifts an offering from its top. Boyce deduces that the mountain<br />

mentioned in the inscription must be Mt. Vesuvius, and, surely, this is correct given that the<br />

fresco was found in Herculaneum, a city in the shadow of this infamous volcano. 206 Boyce<br />

further notes that nothing is known of the wall on which this fresco was found, but it may have<br />

been part of a household shrine.<br />

Only one literary example of such a serpent receiving offerings exists, and it appears in<br />

the Aeneid when Aeneas sacrifices at his father’s grave.<br />

Aeneas said these things, when a slippery serpent from the base of the shrine<br />

Drew out seven huge coils, seven folds apiece,<br />

Embracing the tomb peacefully and slithering over the altars;<br />

201<br />

On the entrance wall to Golini Tomb II, two serpents much like those depicted in Roman house shrines appear in<br />

the pedimental area of the painting.<br />

202<br />

Boyce 1937, 54. Pavlick (2006, 80) suggests that the Genius, Lares, and Genius Loci (in the form of a serpent)<br />

formed the “core domestic trio” or Roman household gods.<br />

203<br />

Dowden (1998, 116) cites the serpent as the only “substantial instance of animal-veneration” in a Greco-Roman<br />

context.<br />

204<br />

For a history of the association of the serpent and the Genius, see Boyce 1942, 15-6. For the serpent as Genius<br />

Loci see Boyce 1942, 19-20, Pavlick 2006, 46-79, Wiseman 2004, 221, Turcan 2000, 17.<br />

205<br />

For the identification of this youthful figure as Harpocrates, see Tinh, Jaeger, and Poulin 1981, 426.<br />

206 Boyce 1942, 20.<br />

44


His back was marked with sky-blue spots<br />

And his scales burned with a sheen of gold, as a rainbow<br />

Casts a thousand different colors among the clouds by bending the sunlight.<br />

Aeneas was thunderstruck at the site. That serpent, with its long coils,<br />

At last amongst the bowls and the polished cups<br />

Ate the offerings, and harmlessly crawled<br />

Below the tomb again, and left behind the altars where he fed.<br />

That much more did Aeneas renew the rites he had begun for his father,<br />

Uncertain whether he thought the serpent<br />

was the spirit of that place or the attendant of his father. 207<br />

In this example, Aeneas’ offerings consumed by the serpent before it returns to the tomb include<br />

two vials of milk, wine, and the blood of a sacrificial animal. 208 These offerings, made in the<br />

context of the cult of the dead, are analogous to the egg and pine cone shown in household<br />

shrines. The serpent is often shown entwined about an altar or receiving offerings of eggs and<br />

pine cones. Boyce makes much of the distinction in the types of offerings made to each type of<br />

genius, 209 and, while noting that the offering of an egg finds a parallel in the Greek cult of the<br />

dead, he states, “… by no stretch of the imagination can we connect the house altars with the cult<br />

of the dead.” 210 The pine cone was typically associated with gods such as Dionysos, Poseidon,<br />

and Aesculapius and was representative of “vitality and fertility,” 211 two traits that fit with the<br />

concept of the genius as a chthonic creature. 212<br />

I propose that Boyce’s rejection of the association of the Genius Loci with the cult of the<br />

dead does not hold. Confusion among the various household gods is not limited to modern<br />

scholars. The Lares and Penates are sometimes thought to be the same by ancient authors in the<br />

Late Roman period, and these figures are both associated with the ancestors of a gens. 213<br />

207 Verg. Aen. V.84-96. Latin Text taken from Ovid Metamorphoses Books IX-XV, Loeb Classical Library,<br />

Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 1994, p. 476, 478. (Translation by Author.)<br />

dixerat haec, adytis cum lubricus anguis ab imis / septem ingens gyros, septena volumina traxit, / amplexus placide<br />

tumulum lapsusque per aras, / caeruleae cui terga notae maculosus et auro / squamam incendebat fulgor, ceu nubibus<br />

arcus / mille iacit varios adverso sole colores. / obstipuit visu Aeneas. Ille agmine longo / tandem inter pateras et<br />

levia pocula serpens / libavitque dapes, rursusque innoxius imo / successit tumulo, et depasta altaria liquit. / hoc<br />

magis inceptos genitori instaurat honores, / incertus, geniumne loci famulumne parentis / esse putet…<br />

208 Verg. Aen. V.77-8.<br />

209 Boyce 1942, 20.<br />

210 Boyce 1942, n. 41.<br />

211 Edelstein and Edelstein 1945, 226.<br />

212 Like the egg, the pine cone was also present in funerary art, and numerous examples of pine cone shaped stele<br />

exist.<br />

213 For an opposing view to the interpretation of the Lares as ancestors see Palmer (1974, 115). My own feeling is<br />

that the diversity in epithets given to the Lares in addition to their association with powers of fertility and increase<br />

does not rule out the possibility of their association with a household’s ancestors.<br />

45


Vergil’s statement that Aeneas was unsure whether the snake embodied the Genius Loci or his<br />

father’s attendant spirit indicates that the same confusion must have affected the Genius Loci and<br />

the Genius of an ancestor. It is also important to note that, Aeneas is performing rites for his<br />

dead father when the Genius Loci emerges from Anchises’ tomb; this indicates a clear<br />

connection to the cult of the dead. The constant grouping of Lares, Genius, and serpent is<br />

instructive, and it is difficult to say whether or not a Roman would have conceptualized these<br />

figures as entirely distinct entities. The generative powers of the Genius are closely tied to the<br />

grave and the ancestors, 214 and the serpent, as we have seen, is a symbol of both fertility and<br />

death. Even if we limit the serpent’s role to function as a guardian spirit of a particular place, 215<br />

its consistent appearance in household shrines with or without other figures associated with the<br />

cult of the ancestors indicate that the Genius and Genius Loci share similar meaning and<br />

function. 216 The Lares, Penates, Genius, and Genius Loci are all part of the same cultic context,<br />

and the worship of one’s ancestors was of critical importance to the ancient Romans. 217 It was<br />

part of a family’s duties and the mos maiorum. 218 As Turcan notes,<br />

There was nothing more specifically Roman than domestic worship; it was what<br />

immediately distinguished Roman religion, for example on Delos, from the Greek<br />

environment, in the case of the colonists who lived on the island. 219<br />

It is thus significant, that a key feature of Roman identity involves cult focused on a deity<br />

in serpent form.<br />

As one can see from this assortment of deities, the serpent’s symbolism is manifold. It is<br />

associated with both the healing and harmful forces of nature, fertility and procreative power, and<br />

life and death in a more general way. In Aesculapius, the embodiment of all these ideas, we also<br />

find an example of a Greek god imported to Italy whose myths and cult were adopted with little<br />

change by the people of Rome. Aesculapius also serves as an example of a therianthropic deity<br />

whose depictions in literature and art are not consistent with his worshippers’ conception in cult.<br />

214 Altheim 1938, 169.<br />

215 Wiseman (2004, 22) refers to the Genius as a “guardian angel” of the paterfamilias and the Lares as protectors of<br />

the home. Fowler (1969, 19) refers to the Genius as “permanent companion and protector throughout life.”<br />

216 Boyce 1942, 13. It should also not seem odd that the Genius Loci, a chthonic spirit, received offerings associated<br />

with the cult of the dead. In fact, it is quite logical.<br />

217 Fowler (1969, 23) notes that the deified ancestors were thought of collectively as the di parentes (in the case of a<br />

specific family) or the di Manes (for all of the dead). Groups of gods with indistinct identities are characteristic of<br />

the Roman conception of the ancestors in the afterlife.<br />

218 It is the close association with Roman family values that made the Genius Augusti such a powerful part of<br />

Augustus’ propaganda. For Augustus as paterfamilias of the state, see Turcan 2000, 136.<br />

219 Turcan 2000, 14.<br />

46


A god such as this may take on multiple forms, be they human, animal, or a combination of the<br />

two. We must be mindful of this over the course of the study and not limit ourselves too strictly<br />

to known types. The serpent was also integral to Roman domestic religion and could be found at<br />

the heart of a Roman home in the lararium. The presence of the serpent at the center of Roman<br />

domestic religion in household shrines as a figure that accompanies the Lares and Genius should<br />

dispel the notion that animal worship was completely shunned by the people of Italy and<br />

demonstrate that theriomorphic and therianthropic deities could hold a prominent place in cult<br />

practice.<br />

47


CHAPTER 3: THE WOLF AND CANINES<br />

Down through the ages, the wolf has never had a neutral relationship with<br />

humanity. It has either been hated, despised, and persecuted or revered,<br />

respected, and protected. It has been, and continues to be, a subject of myth and<br />

legend, folklore and fairy tale. 220<br />

For the inhabitants of the ancient world, the wolf was an animal charged with meaning.<br />

In Norse myth, the wolf was the enemy of the gods and order. According to Norse myth, at the<br />

time of Ragnarok, an epic battle in which the earth would be destroyed and nearly all the gods<br />

slain, two wolves, who had been chasing the sun and moon since the creation of the universe,<br />

would devour their prey, and the wolf Fenrir would swallow whole Odin the All-father. 221 The<br />

wolf was also used to symbolize the enemy of man in Greek literature, and the wolf is<br />

characterized by cruelty and savagery as early as Homer, who labels the creature “deadly and<br />

bloodthirsty.” 222<br />

On the other hand, the wolf, primarily through its relative the dog, could also be<br />

conceived of as a loyal guardian. The ancient Egyptians worshipped several canid deities.<br />

Anubis, to whom I shall return below, and Up-uaut were underworld gods depicted with the head<br />

of a jackal. Anubis was the guide of the dead to the underworld, and Up-uaut was the “Opener<br />

of Ways;” both fulfilled the role of psychopomp. 223 The wolf and dogs were also associated with<br />

gods and goddesses of the underworld by the Greeks. The chthonic goddess Hekate, who was<br />

sometimes conceived with canine attributes, was accompanied by a pack of baying hounds as she<br />

roamed the earth at night, and red dogs were sacrificed to her at crossroads, liminal places often<br />

associated with black magic. 224 Certainly, no one can forget that the guardian of the entrance of<br />

Hades was the three-headed dog, Kerberos. Numerous examples from other cultures could be<br />

220 Mech and Boitani 2003, xvii.<br />

221 Richardson 1977, 97.<br />

222 Hom. Il. 16.156<br />

223 Spence 1990, 106.<br />

224 For canine attributes, see Jenkins 1957, 60, for associations with hounds and magic, see Soren 1999, 620-3.<br />

Bevan (1986, 116-8) also explores the relationship between Hekate and canines and even suggests that the obscure<br />

goddess known only as Kynagia may be an incarnation of Hekate.<br />

48


cited to demonstrate the importance of canines in myth and their relationship to the underworld<br />

in particular. 225<br />

In Italy, though, the wolf was an animal of singular importance. In the guise of the Lupa<br />

Capitolina or Capitoline She-Wolf, the wolf was a protectress and surrogate mother for the twin<br />

founders of Rome. Lupa was also a word associated with the sexual appetite; a lupa could either<br />

be a she-wolf or a prostitute, 226 and a lupanar was a brothel. The Latin word for wolf, lupus, is<br />

also remarkably similar to the Etruscan verb to die, lupu. 227 This is not likely a coincidence, as<br />

the Etruscan lord of the underworld, Aita, wore a wolf-skin cap, perhaps as an indicator of his<br />

fearsome nature. As with all of the animals dealt with in this study, the wolf possessed a<br />

complex nature and was a symbol of life and death. A number of gods worshipped in Italy were<br />

associated with the wolf or other canines, and the ones treated here include Aita, Apollo Soranus,<br />

Faunus, and Silvanus. 228<br />

It seems best to begin with the god for whom we possess the most concrete evidence,<br />

Aita. Unlike his Greek equivalent Hades, Aita sometimes possesses a wolf-skin cap in addition<br />

to other regalia such as a scepter. 229 The monuments in which he appears wearing this cap<br />

include the Tomb of Orcus at Tarquinia (Fig. III.1), the Golini Tomb at Orvieto (Fig. III.2), a<br />

red-figure oinochoe of the Torcop group (Fig. III.3), 230 and a sarcophagus from Torre San Severo<br />

at Orvieto (Fig. III.4); all of these objects date from the late 4 th to early 3 rd C BCE. Aita’s<br />

iconography is similar in each of these images; he is shown as a bearded, mature, regal male<br />

whom, outside of a chthonic context, we might mistake for either of his brothers, Tinia or<br />

Nethuns, were he not wearing his distinctive headgear.<br />

225<br />

In a discussion of a terracotta plaque from the Regia (Rupp Fig. V.5) Brendel (1995, 137), notes the presence of a<br />

dog on a so-called Totenbett of the early 6 th century BCE. I would like to speculate that the significance of this<br />

animal goes beyond the presence of a pet and suggest that it may be part of the funerary iconography of the dog in<br />

Etruscan art.<br />

226<br />

This alternate meaning led some Roman antiquarians to interpret Romulus and Remus’ foster mother as a<br />

prostitute instead of a she-wolf. To my knowledge, this tradition is not recorded in art and seems to be a<br />

rationalization of the myth.<br />

227<br />

Elliot 1995, 24.<br />

228<br />

Faunus and Silvanus are not always accepted by scholars as wolf deities, but evidence will be presented to secure<br />

this connection.<br />

229<br />

Hostetter 1978, 263.<br />

230<br />

Del Chiaro (1970, 293) notes that Aita’s beard is shown in an “early stage, somewhat neglected and shaggy,”<br />

which he links to other characters of the Etruscan underworld such as the demon Charu and to the practice of<br />

allowing one’s physical appearance to become more rugged during times of mourning. Del Chiaro also posits that<br />

the confronting female figure must be Phersipnai, and this seems likely.<br />

49


P. Defosse proposes that the connection between Aita and the wolf goes back to an<br />

“original” Etruscan god of death, Calu. 231 This connection is based on a dedicatory inscription,<br />

: calu tla, 232 found on a figurine from Cortona in the shape of a wolfhound (Fig. III.5).<br />

Richardson comes to the conclusion that this wolfhound is actually a representation of Calu,<br />

whose assumption of anthropomorphic form is in question, but she does offer several possible<br />

representations which show the god in human shape. 233 In scholarship, this god is sometimes<br />

referred to as Aita-Calu, but, following epigraphic evidence, Simon notes a distinction between<br />

Aita as a mythological persona and Calu as a god who receives cult worship. 234 It is true that<br />

Calu, as Tinia-Calusna at the Belvedere sanctuary in Orvieto, 235 does receive cult worship, but<br />

we may be hasty in drawing a distinct line between Calu and Aita. In Greek religion and myth,<br />

Hades is sometimes called the “Chthonic Zeus.” 236 Instead of separating Aita from Calu, what<br />

we should perhaps read is the syncretism of these two gods. Perhaps after the influx of Greek art<br />

and culture into Etruria, Calu, the god of death could not help but be equated with his Greek<br />

counterpart. Aita-Calu then adopted components of Hades’ iconography (a mature, bearded man<br />

of regal stature) as part of a mythological koine but also retained his Etruscan roots and so was<br />

depicted with a wolf-skin cap.<br />

On what then is the connection between the underworld and the wolf based? The wolf is<br />

a creature of the night that inspires terror and fear. The wolf’s howl is eerie, its eyes glow in the<br />

darkness, and its fangs and teeth are the sure signs of a predator. The wolf hunts primarily by<br />

231<br />

Defosse 1972, 313-5. By original, we are no doubt meant to understand Calu as a native god free of Greek<br />

influence. Defosse (1972, 499) interprets this statuette as a theriomorphic representation of the Etruscan “ravager”<br />

and death god Calu in the shape of a canine. The exact species of the statuette is not clear and may be meant to<br />

represent a wolf, but Richardson (1977, 95) believes that the creature is more hound than wolf. We can but wonder<br />

if naturalistic details were a priority of the artist, or, if it was enough to represent Calu as a canine. The link to Calu<br />

is secured in either case by the inscription. Defosse (1972, 499) also links this figurine to the cinerary urns depicting<br />

a wolf-man (Fig. III.10-12), and one may be reminded of the scene on the urns by the wolf-hound’s outstretched<br />

paw.<br />

232<br />

TLE 642; Rix (1991, Co 4.10) lists the inscription as (elan l) : calu tla but does not provide a reason for his<br />

variant reading. N. de Grummond has remarked that Rix’s reading of this inscription would appear to link Fig. III.5<br />

to Selvans. If we are able to accept Rix’s version of the inscription and that Selvans and uri were worshipped<br />

together at Tarquinia according to Colonna (1994, 355), then we may possess a further connection amongst the<br />

various lupine deities discussed in this chapter.<br />

233<br />

Richardson 1977, 95, 99-101.<br />

234<br />

Simon 2006, 57.<br />

235<br />

De Grummond 2006a, 55; Hostetter (1978, 264) suggests that Tinia Calusna may appear on a bronze handle from<br />

Spina, and, while there are no iconographical elements to secure this identification, the composition of the handle<br />

indicates that Hostetter is likely correct.<br />

236<br />

Burkert 1985, 196. See also Hom. Il. 9.457, Hes. Erga. 465, Aesch. Suppl. 231.<br />

50


smell in forested areas, so it has the “appearance of slinking,” which is fearful to man. 237 When<br />

necessary, the wolf supplements its diet by scavenging and eating carrion and it has been known<br />

to approach human settlements at night in order to find garbage for dining. 238 Despite the wolf’s<br />

habit of living and hunting in packs, it is also viewed as solitary creature, an outsider. The wolf<br />

was one of the largest predatory animals present in ancient Italy, and its dependence on flocks of<br />

sheep and other livestock for food kept it in close contact with man. 239 It was perceived as fierce<br />

and wild and a direct contrast to its domesticated descendents. Even today, the wolf remains a<br />

potent symbol for negative characteristics such as cruelty and ravenous behavior. 240 The<br />

association between the gods of the underworld and a fearsome creature such as the wolf seems<br />

quite logical due to man’s innate fear of both.<br />

The perceived character of the animal is not the only thing that may have influenced the<br />

Etruscan conception of a lupine death god, though. Elliott has suggested that Calu’s iconography<br />

may be a result of Egyptian influence through imagery of the god Anubis being transferred to<br />

Etruria. 241 This goes against a dictum that one meets when trying to discuss animal worship in a<br />

classical context. Leavitt states, “It is not clear how the gods of the dead from ancient Egypt,<br />

represented as a jackal or in human form with the head of a dog, could be tolerated in the<br />

classical world that scornfully rejected zoolatry.” 242 But as has been argued in Chapter I, the<br />

presence of theriomorphic and therianthropic deities in the art and literature of the Etruscans and<br />

Romans argues against the idea that animal worship was entirely rejected.<br />

A bucchero oinochoe currently housed in the Museo Nazionale di Palermo depicts the<br />

tale of Medusa’s death at the hands of the hero Perseus (Fig. III.6). 243 Perseus and the Gorgon<br />

237 Midgley 2001, 185.<br />

238 Boitani 1982, 163. Presumably, garbage is part of the wolf’s diet since it is plentiful and easily obtained; it does<br />

not require a great deal of energy.<br />

239 Boitanti 1982, 166. Fritts, Stephenson, Hayes, and Boitani (2003, 308-9) suggest that wolves do not prey on<br />

livestock as much as one might think, but the perceived threat to livestock, and therefore human interests, is great<br />

nonetheless.<br />

240 Midgely 2001, 183.<br />

241 Elliott 1986, 73.<br />

242 Leavitt 1992, 248.<br />

243 The type of oinochoe and details of its creation suggest an Archaic date and production in Chiusi. The scene<br />

represented is the death of Medusa at the hands of Perseus, common in both Greek and Etruscan art. Stock elements<br />

of the scene include the hideous gorgon, Athena as Perseus’ aide, and an armed figure of Perseus. The artist who<br />

crafted this vessel has added a second warrior and a dog-headed demon. The addition of Etruscan figures to Greek<br />

myths has been noted elsewhere, and one famous example is the scene of Achilles sacrificing Trojan prisoners in the<br />

François Tomb, Vulci. The further addition of the dog-headed demon to this scene need not confuse us. Perhaps<br />

Anubis’ role as psychopomp, one point of contact between Hermes and the Egyptian god, is meant to indicate the<br />

51


are not alone on this vessel, and one figure in particular stands out, a canine-headed man. (In<br />

Fig. III.6, the canine-headed man is the fourth figure from the left of the image. Thus, from left<br />

to right, the figures present in this scene are Athena, the Gorgon, Perseus, and the canine<br />

therianthrope. Due to this vase’s state of preservation, a large portion of the figure is missing.<br />

Even so, his canine features are quite clear.) V. Tusa suggests that this figure is Anubis and that<br />

in this scene he performs the function of an Etruscan death demon, Vanth (i.e. a signifier of<br />

impending death, in this case the death of Medusa and the final journey to the underworld). 244<br />

Anubis’ roles as a psychopomp and guardian or as a menacing underworld figure are in accord<br />

with the functions Vanth and Charu seem to fulfill in Etruscan art, and this suggestion is<br />

appealing. But the question of whether this figure is meant to be Anubis remains. There are no<br />

inscriptions on the oinochoe, and so iconography must be used to determine the identity of this<br />

figure.<br />

The Etruscans were familiar with Egyptian deities, as attested by numerous<br />

representations of the god Bes, and so perhaps we should be open to the presence of Anubis on<br />

Italian soil in the sixth century BCE. Etruscan tomb groups discovered in cities such as<br />

Tarquinia, Cerveteri, Vetulonia, and Vulci also indicate an Etruscan interest in Oriental imports<br />

in the seventh century BCE; a famous example is the Tarquinian tomb that contained the<br />

Bocchoris Vase. 245 Ideas as well as goods were no doubt transported by the merchants who<br />

brought such items to Etruria in search of iron and other metals. Among the earliest objects<br />

brought to Italy were Egyptian faience figurines and amulets which represented the Egyptian<br />

gods in their typically therianthropic guises. 246 The Etruscan, Roman, and Italic traditions of<br />

local wolf-gods make the importation of the canine Anubis more likely. 247 It is perhaps an<br />

approaching death of the Gorgon. Hostetter (1978, 265) notes that the Etruscan Hermes, Turms, also guides the<br />

deceased to the underworld and in this capacity is labeled as Turms Aitas.<br />

244<br />

Tusa 1956, 151.<br />

245<br />

Rathje 1979, 150-2, 177.<br />

246<br />

For Bes, see Rathje 1979, 179.<br />

247<br />

Turcan (1999, 81-85) outlines the progress of Isis’ cult “From the Nile to the Mouth of the Tiber.” He points to a<br />

progression of Egyptian deities from the Nile Delta to Athens at Piraeus in the 5 th C BCE in the form of Egyptian<br />

sailors and merchants worshipping Isis before a temple was built at Piraeus in 333 BCE. Turcan then notes that the<br />

island of Delos was instrumental in spreading Isis’ cult to Italy through its function as a free port in the 2 nd C BCE.<br />

Inscriptions there record the offerings of Romans and Italians to Isis as well as Anubis. Cumont (1956, 79-80),<br />

tracking the progress of Isis’ cult around the Mediterranean, also makes a point of the Romans’ importation of the<br />

Hellenized character of the cult of Isis and points to the acceptance of Isis by the Greeks as a critical step for the<br />

Roman acceptance of this goddess. It was also probably in the 2 nd C BCE that Pompeii received its first Iseum<br />

along with Naples’ first Serapeum. Egyptian religion had taken root on the Italian peninsula, and Rome would<br />

begin its love-hate relationship with Isis in the mid-first century BCE. It seems safe to conclude that knowledge of<br />

52


overstatement to suggest that Anubis could easily be translated to Aita or uri, 248 for Anubis’<br />

role is not that of the lord of the underworld. 249 Whatever the exact function or identity of the<br />

canine demon on the oinochoe may be, what is notable is the presence of therianthropic wolf-<br />

men in Etruscan art, a demonstration of the Etruscans’ ability to conceive of divinities in animal<br />

form.<br />

Anubis could have served as a model for the iconography of an underworld god even if<br />

his cult and worship were not adopted wholesale by the Etruscans; however, the cult of Anubis<br />

was later accepted in the Greco-Roman world as part of the worship of the goddess Isis. Romans<br />

involved in the cult of Isis seem to have adopted Anubis, as is shown by the presence of the<br />

syncretic figure, Hermanubis, a fitting conflation of Greco-Roman and Egyptian gods due to<br />

their similar function as guides of the dead. 250 Fig. III.7, a sculpture originally from Anzio but<br />

found in the Villa Pamphili in 1749, represents a Roman mingling of the iconography of Anubis<br />

and Hermes-Mercury. This jackal-headed statue wears a Roman style tunic and holds a<br />

caduceus in its left hand and a sistrum in its right. As a mediator between life and death,<br />

Hermanubis partook of the celestial and infernal realms and was sometimes linked to the<br />

horizon, a place of transition which linked the worlds of the living and the dead. 251 A blend of<br />

animal and human iconography seems quite fitting for this liminal deity. Thus in contrast to Isis,<br />

Osiris, and Horus, Anubis seldom loses his canine features in art; one example appears in a<br />

household shrine in the Casa degli Amorini Dorati in Pompeii, in which Hermanubis appears<br />

along with Harpocrates, Isis, and Serapis. 252 In literature Anubis’ hybrid nature is emphasized<br />

Anubis and his iconography traveled alongside the cult of Isis. See Grenier (1977, nos. 61, 62) for the text of the<br />

inscriptions which equate Anubis and Hermes.<br />

248<br />

uri, the Etruscan name for Apollo Soranus, is dealt with below.<br />

249<br />

Elliott (1986, 75) notes that the broad iconographic connections between Apollo and Anubis do not wholly<br />

justify this idea.<br />

250<br />

Grenier 1977, 171. According to Witt (1971, 199) Anubis’ role in the cult of Isis was not only one of guide and<br />

guard but also as a representative of the possibility of eternal life. I believe that this is an important factor in the<br />

iconography of this god. Smelik and Hemelrijk (1984, 1968) state the following in reference to the naturalism of<br />

Hermanubis: “This image shows the impossibility of incorporating the theriomorphic conception of gods into the<br />

interpretatio graeca/romana of the Egyptian religion.” If anything, the retention of the jackal head in the<br />

iconography of Anubis shows that the two religious traditions can be merged, and likely emphasizes his role as<br />

psychopomp and protector since trained dogs can function both as guides and guardians.<br />

251<br />

Witt 1971, 205.<br />

252 Boyce 1937, 56-7.<br />

53


y reference to his barking, 253 and it would appear that the jackal’s head was integral to the<br />

character of this god. 254<br />

A second appearance of a wolf-headed demon as a subsidiary figure can be seen on a<br />

painted, terracotta cinerary urn from Chiusi (Fig. III.8). 255 The figures present on this highly<br />

unusual urn make up a scene of departure for the underworld and thus fit with a theme that is<br />

common in Etruscan art. Two arches are present to indicate the boundaries between the lands of<br />

the living and the dead, and a figure stands in each arch. On the left, a man with a pointed cap,<br />

possibly a priest, shakes the hand of a seated woman who holds a small child. This is perhaps a<br />

husband (in the garb of a haruspex) bidding farewell to his wife and child. 256 Another man steps<br />

forth from the second arch, and this figure has been interpreted as Aita coming to greet the<br />

deceased. Between the arches, two Vanths holding torches are present. On the right hand side of<br />

the urn, the figure of Charu, recognizable by his hammer, is present. Above Charu, near the top<br />

of the arch is a dog-headed demon. Corresponding figures may have been present on the<br />

opposite side of the urn as a torso is preserved near the top of the left arch, but the head of this<br />

figure is missing. Even though no mythological narrative is present in this image, the purpose of<br />

the dog-headed demon is likely the same. He appears along with Charu and Vanth, and thus we<br />

may infer he is one of the many Etruscan demons present at the transition between life and death.<br />

Two of the many figures present on this urn are pertinent to the discussion of wolf gods:<br />

the animal-headed figure in the upper right hand corner of the urn, and a tall man wearing a fur<br />

cap who emerges from the right arch. The latter figure has been identified as Aita by Haynes,<br />

and this seems likely due to the cap he wears and his position under the right arch. 257 The<br />

underworld context and the elongated snout of the animal-headed figure indicate that this second<br />

creature is a wolf hybrid. It is difficult to determine the identity of this hybrid. He may be Aita-<br />

Calu. The Etruscans have no qualms about duplicating a figure in a scene, or depicting different<br />

253<br />

Witt 1971, 200. Isis’ cult was one of the most popular mystery cults in antiquity, and one component of mystery<br />

cults was the revelation of sacred and secret doctrine. The wearing of jackal masks by priests of the gods surely<br />

links the iconography directly to rituals practiced by the priests and perhaps even beliefs held by the initiates. Along<br />

similar lines, Smelik and Hemelrijk (1984, 1968) suggest that animal worship, which may seem ludicrous at first<br />

may be a “symbol of hidden wisdom.” Again, this seems to follow with the syncretization of the religious figures of<br />

Hermes and Anubis.<br />

254<br />

Griffiths (1975, 198) notes that priests of Anubis donned masks in the shape of a jackal’s head.<br />

255<br />

Brunn and Körte (1872-1916, III.118-20) provide no information concerning the provenance of this urn.<br />

256<br />

Brunn and Körte 1872-1916, III.119.<br />

257<br />

Haynes 2000, 342; De Ruyt (1934, 84) remarks that the cap worn by this figure does not resemble the wolf-cap<br />

present in either the Tomb of Orcus or the Golini Tomb.<br />

54


aspects of the same god on one object, and so this figure might be the therianthropic counterpart<br />

to the anthropomorphic god. 258 Even so, I am not convinced that the dog-headed figure is Aita-<br />

Calu, since he is relegated to a subsidiary position on this urn, much like the other death demons,<br />

the Vanths. I would instead group this urn along with Figs. III.10-16 as an example of the lupine<br />

iconography of Faunus, which will be discussed shortly. If we relate the wolf demon to a lupine<br />

aspect of the god Faunus, the problem of identifying him is solved, for he is differentiated from<br />

Aita-Calu by being a second, individualized chthonic deity or one of a multitude of chthonic<br />

divinities, the Fauni.<br />

The use of the wolf skin in the iconography of underworld divinities, while absent in<br />

Greece, was not peculiar to the Etruscans in Italy. The Samnites acknowledged the god of Mt.<br />

Soracte, Apollo Soranus (Etruscan uri), 259 who was in turn associated with the Latin Dis Pater<br />

(and sometimes Veiovis 260 ), as a lupine god of the underworld. 261 Apollo- uri was worshipped<br />

in the Southern Sacred Area at the site of Pyrgi, at Tarquinia in conjunction with Selvans, at<br />

Vulci, Bettona, Perugia, and other locations. 262 This is one case in which the practice of treating<br />

the deities of the whole of Italy seems particularly useful and justified as Apollo Soranus is<br />

worshipped by Romans, Samnite, and Etruscans. He is a Pan-Italic divinity. Vergil briefly<br />

mentions the rites of the Hirpi Sorani in the Aeneid.<br />

258 Hostetter (1978, 264) notes the “iconographical symmetry” of the celestial and infernal Tinia on a bronze handle<br />

from Spina. Charu(n) as noted in Chapter III is also duplicated on many objects.<br />

259 Our knowledge of uri’s nature is limited, but this seems to be the Etruscan name for this aspect of Apollo. See<br />

Colonna (1994, 345-75) for the fullest description of this god. Haynes (2000, 182) notes that uri is paired with<br />

Cav(a)tha, a solar goddess, at Pyrgi. At this sanctuary, Cav(a)tha takes on a chthonic aspect.<br />

260 Veiovis is yet another shadowy figure associated with the early days of Rome, in particular, Romulus and the<br />

band of outlaws which he drew to him in the asylum. Two temples were dedicated to this god in Rome, one was<br />

“inter duos lucos” (in the saddle of the Capitoline hill) and the other on the Tiber Island. Beard, North, and Price<br />

(1998, 89) note that the standard interpretations of the nature of Veiovis is that he is either an “anti-Jupiter,” i.e.<br />

malevolent and chthonic as opposed to the helpful sky god, or a youthful Jupiter. Kerényi (1959, 58) refers to him<br />

as a youthful Apollo associated with the Underworld and the cypress tree. He may also be associated with a Gallic<br />

god taken over by the Romans and given a Latin name. It is interesting to note that the temple dedicated on the<br />

Tiber Island is associated with a shrine to Faunus.<br />

261 Miller (1939, 37) notes the Greek veneration of a lupine Apollo, Apollo Lykaios, who is an averter of the wolf<br />

and a protector of herdsmen. In this guise, the wolf is Apollo’s companion. One must wonder if Aita/Calu and<br />

Apollo Soranus/ uri were conceptualized as separate divinities if they can both be syncretized with Dis Pater as the<br />

lord of the underworld.<br />

262 Colonna 1994, 355. Colonna (1994, 355, 361) also connects uri to Tinia Calusna at Orvieto because uri can be<br />

worshipped as Apa uri, or Father uri, which is reminiscent of Dis Pater, the name Servius gives to this god in his<br />

commentary on Aeneid XI.785. Lastly, Colonna (1994, 363-5) argues for the syncretization of uri with Veiovis.<br />

As will be demonstrated later in this chapter, both uri and Selvans can be connected to wolves. The link between<br />

uri and Selvans at Tarquinia thus seems all the more significant. Colonna (1994, 372) suggests that uri’s<br />

association with Selvans is an attempt to make uri into a helpful guardian as opposed to a frightful king of the<br />

dead.<br />

55


<strong>Final</strong>ly seizing the moment, Arruns 263 hurled his spear<br />

From the ambush and called upon the gods with this prayer:<br />

Greatest of gods, Apollo, guardian of holy Soracte,<br />

Whom we, before all others, worship, for whom the burning pine<br />

Is fed in a heap, and for whom we worshippers walk<br />

Through the midst of fire supported by our piety and<br />

Press our feet on many live coals… 264<br />

Vergil’s mention of Apollo Soranus refers only to the Hirpi’s rite of walking through fire; there<br />

is no mention of wolves. Servius, however, points out that the priests were called the Hirpi, or<br />

wolf-men since hirpus is the Samnite word for wolf, due to their ritual of an animal masquerade.<br />

Servius recounts a story in which the Hirpi dressed as wolves in order to drive away a pestilence,<br />

which they brought upon themselves by following a pack of wolves to their lair after the<br />

creatures had stolen a sacrifice to the god Dis Pater. 265 In this context, Apollo is shown in his<br />

traditional role as the bringer and averter of disease, one of the earliest guises he took in both<br />

Greece and Italy. 266<br />

Apollo’s lupine guise has stimulated much controversy, 267 but it may seem more natural<br />

given the chthonic associations of Apollo’s son, Aesculapius, who is closely linked to the<br />

serpent, and Leto’s taking the form of a wolf for twelve days while she was pregnant with<br />

Apollo. 268 Also, the wolf’s dualistic nature as both a friend and enemy to man is mirrored in<br />

Apollo’s capacity to both inflict and cure disease. 269 Unfortunately, this is the extent of our<br />

knowledge of this cult of Apollo. We do, however, possess one more reference to a connection<br />

between the Samnites and wolves, and that is through the name of two Samnite tribes, the<br />

Hirpini and the Lucani. Both of these tribal names mean “wolf-men” and were acquired by the<br />

Samnites after their founding a settlement to which they were led by a wolf during the Samnite<br />

263 It is interesting to note that the character calling on Apollo Soranus is an Etruscan.<br />

264 Verg. Aen. XI.783-8. Latin Text taken from Virgil Aeneid 7-12, The Minor Poems, Vol. 2, edited by G.P.<br />

Goold, Loeb Classical Library, Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 1998, p. 288. (Translation by Author.)<br />

telum ex insidiis cum tandem tempore capto / concitat et superos Arruns sic voce precatur: / 'summe deum, sancti<br />

custos Soractis Apollo, / quem primi colimus, cui pineus ardor acervo / pascitur, et medium freti pietate per ignem /<br />

cultores multa premimus vestigia pruna…<br />

265 Servius Ad Aeneid 11.785.<br />

266 Burkert (1985, 145-7) points out Apollo’s role in the Iliad as the bringer and averter of pestilence.<br />

267 Miller 1939, 36.<br />

268 Aris. Hist. An. 580a14. Leto disguised herself as a wolf in order to escape Hera’s anger over Zeus’ philandering<br />

behavior.<br />

269 In his capacity to bring plague and diseased, Apollo is also associated with the mouse as Apollo Smintheus.<br />

56


practice of the ver sacrum. 270 One is reminded of the Hirpi Sorani’s pursuit of the wolves who<br />

had stolen their sacrifice.<br />

These Italic priests and tribes were not the only wolf-men of classical antiquity; stories of<br />

men physically taking on the shape of a wolf also emerge from classical literature. By looking at<br />

myths and tales related to lycanthropes, we may gain a further understanding of the rituals<br />

practiced by the priests. 271 The story of Lycaon was adopted by the Romans and preserves the<br />

tale of the first werewolf, or versipellis “skin changer,” in which Jupiter punishes Lycaon for<br />

attempting to serve him human flesh as a meal.<br />

But at the same time, Lycaon set out a table, I with my vengeful flame<br />

Brought the house down on household gods worthy of such a master;<br />

Lycaon himself fled and finding the silent fields<br />

Howls and tries to speak in vain: from itself<br />

His mouth gathers foam and with his usual desire for slaughter<br />

He turns against the flock and even now he rejoices in bloodshed.<br />

His clothes change into shaggy fur, and his arms into legs.<br />

He becomes a wolf and preserves traces of his old form,<br />

The same grey hair, the same savage face,<br />

The same eyes burn, and his countenance is that of bestial fury. 272<br />

In this passage, Jupiter curses Lycaon by transforming him into a wolf so that his savage and<br />

bestial inner nature is reflected by his outer form. This myth may be meant to explain why the<br />

practice of lycanthropy is associated with the cults of both Lycaean Zeus and Apollo and their<br />

worship on Mt. Lycaon in Arcadia. (The resemblances between this Apollo and the Apollo of<br />

Mt. Soracte can surely be no coincidence.) Pausanias records the practices of these werewolf<br />

cults in his Guide to Greece.<br />

For example, they say that since the time of Lykaion, some man becomes a wolf<br />

at the sacrifice of Lykaion Zeus, but that the change is not for the whole of his<br />

life. When he is a wolf, if he abstains from eating human flesh, he again takes on<br />

270 Richardson 1997, 93. For the Hirpini see Salmon 1989, 225-35.<br />

271 Buxton (1964, 67) would separate werewolfism from lycanthropy by distinguishing between the “belief that<br />

people are able to turn into wolves” and a “psychotic disorder according to which one believes that one has oneself<br />

turned into a wolf.” This delineation seems unnecessary, and throughout this work, I shall refer to both as<br />

lycanthropy.<br />

272 Ov. Met. I.230-9. Latin Text taken from Ovid Metamorphoses Books I-VIII, Vol. 3, edited by G.P. Goold, Loeb<br />

Classical Library, Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 199, p. . (Translation by Author.)<br />

quod simul inposuit mensis, ego vindice flamma / in domino dignos everti tecta penates; / territus ipse fugit<br />

nactusque silentia ruris / exululat frustraque loqui conatur: ab ipso / colligit os rabiem solitaeque cupidine caedis /<br />

vertitur in pecudes et nunc quoque sanguine gaudet. / in villos abeunt vestes, in crura lacerti: / fit lupus et veteris<br />

servat vestigia formae; / canities eadem est, eadem violentia vultus, / idem oculi lucent, eadem feritatis imago est.<br />

57


the shape of a man, from that of a wolf, after nine years, but if he should taste<br />

human flesh, he stays a beast forever. 273<br />

Pliny the Elder also echoes this complex in a description of the werewolves of Arcadia; no doubt<br />

Pausanias and Pliny share sources.<br />

Euanthes, not scorned among Greek authors, writes that the Arcadians<br />

traditionally choose someone from the family of a certain Anthius by lot who is<br />

led to a marsh in that region and hanging his clothes on an oak tree, he crosses<br />

the marsh and goes off into deserted areas and is changed into a wolf, and, lives<br />

with the rest of the same kind for nine years. If in this time he abstains from<br />

human flesh, he returns to that same marsh, and, when he has crossed it again, he<br />

recovers his old form, with nine years of age added to his original appearance;<br />

and in addition to this Euanthes records the more amazing detail that he gets the<br />

same clothes back! 274<br />

Ritual lycanthropy, such as this, seems to share similar elements from culture to culture.<br />

Herodotos records the practices of the Neuri, a werewolf tribe who also become wolves on a<br />

more temporary basis.<br />

For the Scythians, and the Greeks living in Scythia, say that once a year each one<br />

of the Neuri become wolves for a few days and then return again to their<br />

previous forms. Now, I cannot believe this tale; but even so they tell it and swear<br />

it is true. 275<br />

Furthermore, in Petronius’ Satyricon appears a werewolf story that preserves common elements<br />

of the lycanthropic ritual.<br />

273 Paus. 8.2.6. Greek Text taken from Pausanias Description of Greece III Books VI, VII, VIII (Chaps. i-xxi), Loeb<br />

Classical Library, Vol. 3, edited by G.P. Goold, Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 1988, p. 352.<br />

(Translation by Author.)<br />

C ) 1 && ) 4 & B4 7 ) * < 2 @ C(<br />

>( && >( - D( A &' C ( CT # & 3 8 ( 4 ( i A ,<br />

( C A & ( , C e ,O , o (7 , ) C( p . B, 9<br />

W ) m' & (7 ) A ? A " , " 7 i * 4 K M . c (<br />

< " C & , 7 4 ) C( A ' , #<br />

274 Plin. NH 8.81. Latin Text taken from Pliny Natural History Books 8-11, Vol. 3, edited by G.P. Goold, Loeb<br />

Classical Library, Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 1997, p. 58, 60. (Translation by Author.)<br />

Euanthes inter auctores Graeciae non spretus scribit Arcadas tradere ex gente Anthi cuiusdam sorte familiae lectum<br />

ad stagnum quoddam regionis eius duci vestituque in quercu suspenso tranare atque abire in deserta transfigurarique<br />

in lupum et cum ceteris eiusdem generis congregari per annos IX; quo in tempore si homine se abstinuerit, reverti ad<br />

idem stagnum et, cum tranaverit, effigiem recipere, ad pristinum habitum addito novem annorum senio, addit<br />

quoque fabulosius eandem reciperare vestem!<br />

275 Hdt. IV.105.2. Greek Text taken from Herodotos Books III-IV, Loeb Classical Library, Vol. 2, edited by J.<br />

Henderson, Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 1995, p. 306. (Translation by Author.)<br />

& E . q " ;% &&@ " C e q e ' " 8 ( * ( U 4 p<br />

r s ( & ( , S ( +&, ( c ( + , " C( t . , # C )<br />

& ( , 7 & ) ) u 7 + ) & (#<br />

58


My master happened to have left for Capua to take care of some odds and ends.<br />

Seizing the opportunity, I persuade my guest to come with me to the fifth<br />

milestone. He was a soldier and strong as hell. We got our asses moving at cock<br />

crow; the moon was shining like it was noon. We came to the tombstones, and<br />

my friend began to crap right on the headstones. I sat down, and, singing,<br />

counted the stars. As I looked back at my companion, he stripped off his clothes<br />

and put them all on the side of the road. My heart was in my throat, I stood<br />

frozen like a dead man. He pissed in a circle around his clothes, and immediately<br />

became a wolf! Don’t think I’m kidding; I wouldn’t lie about this for any<br />

amount of fortune. But, as I was saying, after he turned into a wolf, he began to<br />

howl and fled into the woods. 276<br />

Common components of these tales include the symbolic leaving behind of clothing (the<br />

trappings of civilization), the adoption of the form of a wolf (by donning a wolf-skin or by<br />

transformation into the animal), the isolation of the lycanthrope from society during which time<br />

he lives as a wild beast, and an eventual return and reintegration into society. Lycanthropic<br />

episodes from other cultures preserve some of these same elements such as in the Norse Saga of<br />

the Volsungs in which Sigmund and Sfinjotli don mystical wolf-skins and are transformed into<br />

wolves. 277 The transformation into a wolf appears to be one way in which man satisfies, or<br />

perhaps rather pacifies his animal nature.<br />

I would further compare it to Bacchic ritual in which there is a similar abandonment of<br />

civilization and a connection to a wild, ecstatic state. 278 These rituals function to mediate<br />

between nature and culture, an action that is corroborated by Buxton’s statement, “The wolf<br />

stands for one who by his behavior has set himself beyond humanity.” 279 Buxton goes so far as<br />

to suggest that the Arcadian lycanthropes represent a class of young men who underwent a rite of<br />

276 Petron. Sat. 62. Latin Text taken from Petronius Satyricon Seneca Apocolocyntosis, edited by G.P. Goold, Loeb<br />

Classical Library, Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 1997, p. 134, 136. (Translation by Author.)Forte<br />

dominus Capuam exierat ad scruta [scita] expedienda. Nactus ego occasionem persuadeo hospitem nostrum, ut<br />

mecum ad quintum miliarium veniat. Erat autem miles, fortis tanquam Orcus. Apoculamus nos circa gallicinia; luna<br />

lucebat tanquam meridie. Venimus inter monimenta: homo meus coepit ad stelas facere; sedeo ego cantabundus et<br />

stelas numero. Deinde ut respexi ad comitem, ille exuit se et omnia vestimenta secundum viam posuit. Mihi anima<br />

in naso esse; stabam tanquam mortuus. At ille circumminxit vestimenta sua, et subito lupus factus est. Nolite me<br />

iocari putare; ut mentiar, nullius patrimonium tanti facio. Sed, quod coeperam dicere, postquam lupus factus est,<br />

ululare coepit et in silvas fugit.<br />

277 Saga of the Volsungs Section 8.<br />

278 The Maenads also perform a change of costume in which they don the dappled fawn skin or nebris. We should<br />

not necessarily interpret this custom as indicating a transformation of a woman into a deer, but the wearing of<br />

animal skins is an indicator of the liminal nature of the Maenads. Bacchic rites are also performed on a famous, or<br />

rather infamous, mountain peak, Cithairon, and after a period of ecstasy, the worshippers are reintegrated into<br />

society. Dodds (1960, xiv) notes that during this period of ecstasy, the participants in the ritual have their<br />

personalities actually replaced by the god Dionysos.<br />

279 Buxton 1994, 69.<br />

59


passage, 280 which would accord with other rites of renewal and rebirth in ancient religions. The<br />

shedding of humanity and rites in which a youth undergoes a major change are both liminal in<br />

nature. 281 A second way in which the wolf and werewolf are used to symbolize the other and<br />

liminality is through their association with criminals, outsiders, and outlaws. 282 M. Midgley has<br />

noted that man projects vice, evil, and wickedness onto the wolf more so than on any other<br />

animal. 283 It has also been noted that the ancients observed both the communal nature of the<br />

wolf pack and the phenomenon of the “lone wolf,” which was then used as a symbol of exile and<br />

separation from the community. 284 It is possibly the observation of the lone wolf’s behavior that<br />

contributed to the development of the werewolf myth, for Aristotle observed that it was only the<br />

lone wolf that ate men. 285<br />

Connections between the wolf and the gods Aita and Apollo are made clear by lupine<br />

iconography, religious rituals, and tales of werewolves, but traditions of wolf-priests and<br />

lycanthropy were not limited to these two deities. I would assert, as others have done in the past,<br />

that both Faunus and Silvanus also possess a lupine nature. Even more than Aita and Apollo<br />

Soranus, Faunus and Silvanus underwent a process of syncretization and are sometimes difficult<br />

to separate; thus they must be dealt with together. By examining the evidence indicating a<br />

connection between Faunus and wolves, the syncretization of Faunus with Silvanus, and Ovid’s<br />

account of a myth in which Faunus plays a central role, I advance my own hypothesis of Faunus’<br />

lupine nature for which there is an Italian literary tradition.<br />

The god Faunus is generally taken as a Latin equivalent of the Greek god Pan. While this<br />

connection is predominant after the age of Augustus, the matter is not a simple one. 286 Evidence<br />

indicates that Faunus was, in his earliest incarnation, a wolf-man hybrid, not a goat-man hybrid<br />

280<br />

Buxton 1994, 71.<br />

281<br />

Eliade (1972, 5-7) notes that the transformation of a young man into a soldier is accompanied by the symbolic<br />

transformation into a predatory animal, oftentimes a wolf.<br />

282<br />

Eliade 1972, 3-4.<br />

283<br />

Midgley 2001, 182.<br />

284<br />

Buxton 1994, 63. Buxton (1994, 62) notes that cooperation among wolf packs was also recognized by the<br />

ancient Greeks. See also Eliade 1972, 4.<br />

285<br />

Aris. Hist. An. 488b17. Buxton (1994, 62) suggests that any attack on a man was due to the limited availability<br />

of other prey.<br />

286<br />

Pan was adopted by the Romans, and I shall discuss the caprid nature of Faunus and his links with Pan in the next<br />

chapter. Holleman (1974, 146) sees the reign of Augustus as a pivotal point in the history of the Lupercalia.<br />

According to his opinions, Augustus tamed the Lupercalia and sublimated many of its darker aspects. Schilling<br />

(1992, 127) asserts that “In the third century B.C.E , the Latin interpretation of Pan was not Faunus, but Silvanus.”<br />

This distinction is not clear as Faunus and Silvanus were closely tied in Roman religion. What it may indicate,<br />

though, is that Pan and Faunus were not simply mirror images of one another.<br />

60


like Pan. This evidence comes from his association with the Lupercalia, the etymologies of the<br />

name Faunus, and the syncretization of Faunus with other divinities.<br />

That Faunus is the god worshipped in the Lupercalia is an assertion of Ovid and several<br />

modern scholars. 287 Since it was one of the earliest festivals of the Romans, the Lupercalia went<br />

through numerous changes throughout the Roman Republic and Empire, and even the ancient<br />

sources disagree on the details of the rituals. 288 The “final” form of the festival seems to involve<br />

two groups of youths, either naked or wearing the skins of sacrificed goats, who run a course<br />

around the city of Rome on February 15, all the while striking the women of the city to induce<br />

fertility. 289 It is interesting that Plutarch mentions that a dog is sacrificed in this ritual as well,<br />

suggesting a link between this festival and the underworld, since dogs are typically sacrificed to<br />

chthonic divinities. 290 The Lupercal itself was thought to be a cave that also served not only as<br />

the location in which Romulus and Remus were sheltered and suckled by the she-wolf but also as<br />

a gate to the underworld, reinforcing this notion of the involvement of a chthonic divinity. 291 A<br />

further indication that this ritual is associated with such a deity has been noted by W. Barr, who<br />

states that the structure of Horace Ode I.4 demonstrates a link between the festival of Faunus and<br />

the Parentalia, a festival related to the spirits of the dead that was celebrated shortly after the<br />

Lupercalia in the same month of February. 292 In fact, February seems to be a nexus for such<br />

religious rites related to the underworld, fertility, and purification. 293<br />

Plutarch’s mention of the sacrifice of a dog is suggestive in relation to the costumes of<br />

the Luperci. What is interesting is that when Plutarch mentions the ritual of donning the skins of<br />

the sacrificial animals, he does not specify that it is only the goat skin that is worn. W.<br />

Mannhardt hypothesizes that the two collegia of youths who ran through the city may have worn<br />

the goat and dog skin, respectively; 294 perhaps this version of the festival occurred early in the<br />

287 Wiseman 1995a, 2; see also Parker 1997, 98, n.10.<br />

288 Wiseman 1995b, 82. Basing his conclusion on the disparity of the ancient testimony, North (2000, 50) uses the<br />

Lupercalia as an example of a ritual that could contain many different meanings; there is no one single way to define<br />

the character of the Lupercalia.<br />

289 Wiseman 1995b, 80-1.<br />

290 Plut. Rom. XXI.5. One such deity who received dogs as a sacrifice was the goddess Hekate; see Reitler 1949, 30.<br />

291 Holleman 1974, 98. The emphasis on the Lupercal seems in line with the practices of early Etruscan and Roman<br />

religion which were focused on natural, geographical features. This is one more indication that the Lupercalia<br />

belongs to the earliest strata of Roman religion.<br />

292 Barr 1962, 5-11.<br />

293 Holleman (1974, 114-8) further notes that the story of Tacita Muta, the mother of the Lares, coincides with the<br />

Lupercalia and Parentalia in the Fasti. This is yet one more tale related to the dead.<br />

294 Mannhardt 1884, 101.<br />

61


history of the Lupercalia and the wearing of the goat skin may be a later development. 295 A.J.<br />

Holleman goes so far as to suggest a wolf-masquerade and that the Luperci may have worn<br />

masks in the form of wolves’ heads. 296 The Luperci do indeed bear some similarities to the<br />

Hirpi, and etymological evidence may be of some use here. In his entry on Faunus in Roman<br />

and European Mythologies, R. Schilling states that the epithet Lupercus, which is applied to<br />

Faunus in his connection to the Lupercalia by Justin, 297 surely means, “wolf-man,” and, as<br />

mentioned earlier, this is what the priests of this festival were called, the Luperci or wolf-men. 298<br />

When one considers that there were priests and priestesses respectively named the Tauroi and<br />

Arktoi in Greece, who were copies of their gods, it seems safe to conclude that the wolf-men of<br />

Rome were meant to copy a wolf deity. 299<br />

The epithet Lupercus also bears some analysis. It seems likely that the name Lupercus is<br />

the Latin equivalent of the Greek name Lykaios, which may in turn connect Faunus with Pan<br />

Lykaios 300 and the werewolf cults of Arcadia. 301 Augustine, following Varro, believes this to be<br />

the case as he states in City of God. 302 It is possible that we should view Lupercus as one aspect<br />

of the god Faunus in much the same way that Tinia Calusna, the chthonic Tinia, is one aspect of<br />

the celestial Tinia. 303 Thus perhaps we should interpret Faunus Lupercus as the more fearsome<br />

aspect of an otherwise generally benevolent deity. A second link to werewolf cults can again be<br />

found in the costuming of the Luperci. At some point in the history of the festival, the Luperci<br />

may have run their circuit around the city of Rome in the nude. As noted earlier, the shedding of<br />

clothes is a common component of werewolf stories, and there may be a connection between the<br />

nudity of lycanthropes and the ritual nudity of the Luperci. 304 These notions must, however,<br />

remain in the realm of speculation.<br />

295<br />

Fowler 1925, 317.<br />

296<br />

Holleman 1974, 31-3.<br />

297<br />

Justin Apol. XLIII.1.7.<br />

298<br />

Eliade (1972, 3) states, “The fact that a people takes its ethnic name from the name of an animal always has a<br />

religious meaning. More precisely, the fact cannot be understood except as the expression of an archaic religious<br />

concept.” Nevertheless, Schilling (1992, 126) tries to deny the lupine nature of Faunus and explain away the name<br />

of his priests. Schilling’s brief article on Faunus is full of contradictory statements.<br />

299<br />

Altheim 1938, 207.<br />

300<br />

Wiseman 1995b, 85; see also Ov. Met. 221-39.<br />

301<br />

Buxton 1994, 67.<br />

302<br />

August. De civ. D. 18,17.<br />

303<br />

Hostetter (1978, 263-4) demonstrates the dual nature of Tina as celestial and infernal in his discussion of a bronze<br />

handle from Spina.<br />

304 Buxton 1994, 69.<br />

62


Further etymologies, both modern and ancient, may shed light on Faunus’ nature. In the<br />

past, scholars have suggested that the name Faunus appears to be linked to wolves. In the article,<br />

“Daunus/Faunus in Aeneid 12,” J.D. Noonan argues that the mythological names Daunus and<br />

Faunus share the root, dhau-. This root implies a meaning of “to throttle or strangle” and has<br />

been taken to mean “wolf or jackal” since these are two animals that throttle their prey. 305<br />

Noonan is not alone. G. Radke, R. Coleman, and F. Bömer are among those who support this<br />

assertion. 306<br />

Two further attempts at explaining the meaning of the name, Faunus, are possible.<br />

Neither of these seems to take away from the identification of Faunus as a wolf-man but instead<br />

adds to a general description of the god. The name Faunus may have been linked to the verb<br />

favere, to favor, in antiquity. We cannot be sure whether to take this as a “positive qualifier or a<br />

euphemistic expression.” 307 In either case, this association could be used to tame this god much<br />

as many other chthonic gods were. In Greece, the Furies become the Eumenides in an attempt to<br />

make the avenging spirits into a force for good. In Rome, the Di Manes are considered “the<br />

Good Gods” a euphemistic term used to describe the formless, shapeless mass of dead spirits<br />

inhabiting the underworld. 308 This euphemistic etymology leads to a kinder, gentler Faunus.<br />

Faunus’ shift from wolf-man to goat-man may be another occurrence of a complex,<br />

dualistic nature of therianthropic deities as mentioned earlier in this chapter in relation to Apollo.<br />

A rustic divinity is turned from the ravager of the flock into the protector of the flock by<br />

changing his name or associating him with a new divinity. Either way, the shepherds would<br />

have prayed to him for the same reason, the well being of their livestock. This could perhaps be<br />

related to the ritual of the Lupercalia and the rites of Lycaean Pan. The priests of Faunus and<br />

Pan are sometimes interpreted as those who avert the evil of the wolf and protect the flock. This<br />

transition in iconography, and perhaps ritual meaning, had completed its course by the Augustan<br />

305 Noonan 1993, 112-3.<br />

306 Radke 1965, 119-21; Schilling 1992, 126; Holleman 1974, 56, n. 29. Coleman (1977, 182 n. 27) sums up<br />

Faunus’ nature as follows. “In origin Faunus, whose name is cognate with Greek thos ‘jackal’, thaunon ‘wild beast’,<br />

seems to have been an Italian forest-god, part man part wolf; hence his connection with the Lupercalia… In<br />

humanized form he appears in legend as Faunus king of Latium and Daunus king of Apulia. The god was<br />

assimilated to Pan and the satyrs, the goat replaced the wolf in his iconography, his more sinister aspects were<br />

suppressed and he was pluralized. Fauni were often associated with nymphs. Besides their patronage of country life<br />

and hunting they posses the power of prophecy.”<br />

307 Schilling 1992, 127.<br />

308 Phillips 1996, 916.<br />

63


Period in Rome as can be seen in art and in literature such as the Odes of Horace and much of<br />

Ovid’s work. 309<br />

The name of the god may also have been derived from the verb to speak, fari. 310 This<br />

etymology offered by Varro, relates to the prophetic powers of the god and the great noises he<br />

makes. In the Aeneid Book VII, Latinus seeks oracular advice from his father, Faunus,<br />

concerning the wedding of his daughter Lavinia. 311 According to Cicero in the De Divinatione,<br />

the fauni were also often heard making noise in the woods, particularly during battles. 312 Varro,<br />

Vergil, and Cicero all point to the prophetic power of Faunus and the Fauni. 313 It may be that the<br />

howls of wolves heard in the night were the strange noises that partly inspired this etymology.<br />

Wolves are quite vocal at different times of the year and would, no doubt, have left more of an<br />

impression on a listener than the bleating of goats. 314<br />

This last reference is important for demonstrating the link between Faunus and Silvanus.<br />

Livy’s account of the battle near the Arsian forest between the Etruscans and Romans records the<br />

prodigy of a voice heard from the forest announcing that the Etruscans had lost one more man<br />

than the Romans, who should be declared the victors. 315 Livy records this voice as belonging to<br />

Silvanus, but here Silvanus is performing a function ascribed to the fauni by Cicero in the De<br />

Divinatione. 316 These two pieces of evidence would not be enough to identify Faunus with<br />

Silvanus by themselves, but there are other literary sources to support the identification. For<br />

example, the Origo gentis Romanae of Pseudo-Aurelius Victor states, “The majority have said<br />

that Faunus is the same as Silvanus from the woods, also the god Inuus, who is certainly Pan.” 317<br />

309<br />

The Odes of Horace that contain references to Faunus as the patron of shepherds are I.4, I.17, I.22, III.18. In<br />

these poems, Faunus is mentioned as warding away wolves and sending the omen of the peaceful wolf. Noonan<br />

(1993, 113) takes these references to mean that the god was inherently lupine in nature. Perhaps we can interpret the<br />

peaceful wolf as an epiphany of the god.<br />

310<br />

Varro Ling. VII.36.<br />

311<br />

Verg. Aen. VII.80-6.<br />

312<br />

Cic. Div. I.101.<br />

313<br />

Palmer (1974, 79-83) notes that Faunus may also have granted his worshippers prophecies through the practice of<br />

incubation, which was tied to chthonic powers.<br />

314 For the details of wolf communication see Harrington and Asa 2003, 66-103.<br />

315 Livy Peri. II.VII.2.<br />

316 Cic. Div. I.XLV.101.<br />

317 Pseudo-Aurelius Victor Origo Gentis Romanae III.6. Latin Text taken from Pseudo-Aurelius Victor, Les<br />

Origines du Peuple Romain, edited by Jean-Claude Richard, Paris: Budé/Belles Lettres, 1983. (Translation by<br />

Author.)<br />

“Hunc Faunum plerique eundem Silvanum a silvis, Inuum deum, quidam etiam Pana esse dixerunt.” The name<br />

Inuus presents its own complications. Holleman (1974, 96) notes that nightmares are characterized as hairy demons<br />

that strangle their victims in their sleep.<br />

64


Silvanus is sometimes shown accompanied by a dog and is also syncretized with the Celtic gods,<br />

Sucellus and Nodens, who were associated with death and canines. 318 An argument linking<br />

Sucellus to a Dis Pater mentioned in Caesar’s Gallic Wars as the national god of the Celts was<br />

made by Grenier. 319 A bronze statuette of Sucellus, ca. CE 14, represents this god as nude,<br />

except for a wolf-skin (Fig. III.9). Richardson notes that this statuette is a Gallo-Roman version<br />

of Silvanus and that he is a god of both forests and the underworld. 320 The presence of the wolf-<br />

skin, not the typical iconography for Sucellus and likely borrowed from Silvanus, argues for a<br />

closer association of the wolf with Silvanus. 321<br />

Silvanus’ iconography is difficult to categorize due to its fluidity. P. Dorcey’s The Cult<br />

of Silvanus: A Study in Roman Folk Religion is useful as a compilation of the archaeological and<br />

literary evidence for the cult of Silvanus, but this text does not always follow its own doctrines.<br />

Dorcey states that “Ancient deities were complex religious entities with many seemingly<br />

unrelated or contradictory sides, overlapping more often than not with those of other<br />

divinities.” 322 Yet when discussing the connections between the Latin Silvanus and the Etruscan<br />

Selvans, he rules out any relationship between the two; one reason he does this is that Selvans is<br />

often represented as a youth, and Silvanus is generally represented as aged. 323 Even so, he<br />

concedes that Silvanus is sometimes represented as a young man as well. 324 Dorcey notes that<br />

the relationship between Faunus and Silvanus seems to stretch back before the fourth century<br />

BCE when Pan is introduced to Italy, 325 but that Silvanus does not appear to be linked to Pan<br />

before the early second century BCE. 326 In general, the distinctions Dorcey creates to separate<br />

Pan, Silvanus, and Faunus from each other seem arbitrary and adverse to the rule that deities may<br />

possess diverse attributes and character.<br />

The author of the Origo Gentis Romanae mentions the name of one more god, Inuus,<br />

who is related to these other woodland deities. Livy also reports that Inuus was another name for<br />

318<br />

For Sucellus see Macmullen 2000, 91, Richardson 1977, 96, for Nodens see Green 1992, 199. Dorcey (1992, 58)<br />

states that the evidence for linking Silvanus and Sucellus is inconclusive.<br />

319<br />

Grenier 1955-6, 131-3; Caes. B. Gall. 6.18.1.<br />

320<br />

Richardson 1977, 96.<br />

321<br />

Waites (1920, 250) notes a confusion between the Lares and Silvanus after mentioning that the Lares sometimes<br />

wore the skins of dogs according to Plutarch.<br />

322 Dorcey 1992, 14.<br />

323 Dorcey 1992, 11-2.<br />

324 Dorcey 1992, 16.<br />

325 Dorcey 1992, 33.<br />

326 Dorcey 1992, 42.<br />

65


Pan or Faunus, 327 but Inuus seems to have a more sinister aspect. Inuus, who could also be<br />

multiplied to create Inui, was a god of nightmares who entered the dreams of sleeping women in<br />

order to rape them. 328 These nightmares have been associated with the feeling of strangulation,<br />

which returns us to the meaning of the root dhau- as “wolf” or “strangler.” The connection<br />

between Faunus as Inuus and a demon of nightmares also fits with the chthonic character of<br />

Faunus and his association with the Lupercalia. Holleman points out that the beginning and<br />

ending of the course of the Lupercalia at the Lupercal could be interpreted as the loosing from<br />

and returning to the underworld (the chthonic realm of the wolf) of the savage Luperci. 329<br />

This evidence forms the basis for previous scholars’ attempts to link the gods Faunus and<br />

Silvanus to wolves, and it would be wise not to rule out the interpretation of Faunus and Silvanus<br />

as wolf-gods based only on their syncretic connections to the Greek god Pan. It must be<br />

remembered that for the Etruscans and Romans, the nature of the gods was not static, and there<br />

seems to have been a certain vagueness in their forms, nature, and attributes. 330 One may also<br />

turn to the Egyptian prototype of animal worship in order to find gods who are represented by<br />

more than one animal. The god Thoth, god of magic, knowledge, and countless other spheres of<br />

influence, was often represented with the head of an ibis or in the form of an ibis; however, this<br />

was not the sole animal associated with this god. He could also take the form of a baboon, and it<br />

was possible for the god to appear several times, in different form, on one object. 331 We must be<br />

careful not to forget that polyvalency is a common characteristic of pagan deities.<br />

I would like to add two further pieces to the list of evidence for sustaining the lupine<br />

nature of these gods. I believe that I have isolated a mythic narrative and an image that tell a tale<br />

of the god Faunus. In literature, the myth appears in Ovid’s Fasti 3.291-326, and in art, it<br />

appears on a series of Etruscan cinerary urns (Figs. III.10-12) featured in this study. These urns<br />

have been known for some time, and there are several other interpretations that must first be<br />

refuted before progressing to my own. These urns also demonstrate how one divinity may be<br />

represented in all three categories of theriomorphic and therianthropic iconography: wholly in<br />

the form of an animal, a human wearing an animal skin, and also a hybrid blending the anatomy<br />

327 Livy 1.5.2<br />

328 Holleman 1974, 95. August. De civ. D. 15.23, attributes this function of the god to Silvanus as well.<br />

329 Holleman (1974, 98.) suggests that the Luperci were representatives of the dead ancestors of the Romans.<br />

330 Pallottino 1975, 140. Faunus in particular possessed a vague nature. Besides a problem distinguishing between<br />

his lupine or caprid nature, Babcock (1961, 15) notes that, by the time of Augustus, Faunus was the king of the<br />

Latins, one of the race of Fauni, an oracular power, and also conflated with Pan.<br />

331 Smelik and Hemelrijk 1984, 1861.<br />

66


of both humans and beasts. Because the urns all share similar elements, with variations<br />

according to the execution of the artist, I will treat them as a group.<br />

A wolf, wolf-man, or a man wearing a wolf-skin rises from a cylindrical feature, which is<br />

probably a well. The figure is bound by a chain attached to the well or held by some of the other<br />

figures that surround him. On almost every example, a bearded man stands above or near the<br />

wolf-creature, emptying the contents of a patera onto the wolf-man with his right hand. He often<br />

holds a sword in his left hand. To the left of, or surrounding, the bearded figure, are a number of<br />

warriors bearing arms. A Vanth often appears in this scene standing above or near one of the<br />

attendants or soldiers being attacked by the wolf-man. In several examples, an attendant is on<br />

the ground dead or dying.<br />

E. Simon argues that the bearded male wearing a cap and holding a patera is Sisyphos,<br />

who has captured and chained Thanatos. 332 I believe that Simon’s idea is plausible, but it is not<br />

the best choice of the possible interpretations. She identifies one of the figures in the scene as<br />

Ares, the Greek god of war; however, there are no iconographic elements to distinguish this<br />

warrior from any of the others on the ash urn. Another problem with this interpretation, which is<br />

tied to a larger issue, is that Simon has sought a Greek solution to this Etruscan scene. As<br />

mentioned in Chapter One, this trend is all too prevalent in the study of Etruscan myth. 333 While<br />

not as many clearly identifiable Etruscan myths have survived as their Greek counterparts, the<br />

Etruscans no doubt possessed a rich mythology of their own as is indicated by the great many art<br />

objects which preserve visual narratives in addition to the myths recorded in Greek and Roman<br />

texts. An Italian source for the scene on this urn may provide a better match given the number of<br />

artifacts that feature the wolf-man and the significance of the wolf in Italy.<br />

There is yet another interpretation of the scene on these urns, and it is the one that has<br />

been most accepted by scholars even though it seems to me the least likely. This scene was<br />

linked by H. Brunn and G. Körte to a passage in Pliny the Elder’s Natural History. 334<br />

The annals record the memory of lightning being coerced or compelled by certain<br />

rites and prayers. There is an old report in Etruria, concerning the coming of the<br />

monster, called Olta and summoned by Porsenna, to the city of Volsinii after it<br />

332 Simon 1997, 454, and Krauskopf 1987, 67. The tale of Sisyphus chaining of Death is not preserved in the Iliad<br />

but in a scholium to Iliad 6.153 and in a fragment of Phrynicus (fr. 119 Jacoby). Hostetter (1978, 264) proposes that<br />

these scenes may be the chaining of Aita-Calu, but he does not propose a narrative to accompany the scene. No<br />

doubt this follows Simon’s interpretation but merely shifts the name from Greek to Etruscan.<br />

333 De Grummond 2006a, xii.<br />

334 Brunn and Körte 1872-1916, 16-24.<br />

67


had been devastated at the time when Porsenna was king. Before him, Lucius<br />

Piso, an important author, records in his Annals I that this was first done more<br />

wisely by Numa, a rite which Tullius Hostilius likewise copied but was struck by<br />

lightning. 335<br />

This passage mentions a monstrum called Olta. It does not, however, describe Olta in any way.<br />

The only information to be gleaned from this passage is that Olta is somehow connected to<br />

lightning and divination, and that the king Porsenna was involved in summoning or exorcising<br />

him. At no point does this passage mention that Olta is a wolf-headed “monster.” “Monstrum”<br />

can be translated as “portent;” it is not necessarily a strange and terrifying creature. Even though<br />

there is no basis for assuming Olta to be a wolf-man and the entry in I rilievi delle urne etrusche<br />

concerning these urns indicates that Brunn and Körte were not entirely convinced of this<br />

association between text and image, 336 many scholars, e.g. J. Elliot, J. Heurgon, and J. Szilágyi<br />

have accepted this identification and have used it to identify the other wolf-men in Etruria as<br />

Olta. 337 This is an instance in which we have a hypothesis that has managed to slip into<br />

scholarship as fact due to its age and the influence of the work in which it appeared. 338<br />

Instead of these possibilities, I propose that these urns represent a mythologem found in<br />

Fasti Book 3.291-326. In his poem concerning the Roman calendar, Ovid recounts a tale of the<br />

Roman king Numa attempting to expiate a thunderbolt. The proper ritual is unknown to Numa,<br />

and his wife Egeria advises him to seek out knowledge from the gods, Faunus and Picus, who are<br />

native to the soil of Italy. She tells him that he must go to a spring at which these gods drink and<br />

bind them in chains. Numa goes to the spring, offers the sacrifice of a sheep, and sets out bowls<br />

of wine for them to drink. When the gods arrive, they take their fill of the wine and fall into a<br />

drunken slumber. During their nap, they are shackled by Numa. When they rise from their<br />

sleep, they struggle and fight to break free of the chains but are unsuccessful. Numa questions<br />

them and receives the information he desired. 339 One can only speculate that this may be why<br />

335 Plin. HN. 2.54.140. Latin Text taken from Pliny Natural History Books 1-2, Vol. 1, edited by G.P. Goold, Loeb<br />

Classical Library, Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 1997, p. 276,. (Translation by Author.)<br />

Exstat annalium memoria sacris quibusdam et precationibus vel cogi fulmina vel inpetrari. vetus fama Etruriae est<br />

inpenetratum, Volsinios urbem depopulatis agris subeunte monstro quod vocavere Oltam, evocatum a Porsina suo<br />

rege. et ante eum a Numa saepius hoc factitatum in primo annalium suorum tradit L. Piso, gravis auctor, quod<br />

imitatum parum rite Tullum Hostilium ietum fulmine.<br />

336 The entry identifying this figure as Olta is punctuated with a question mark.<br />

337 Elliott 1995, 17-33; Heurgon 1991, 1253-9; Szilágyi 1997, 35-7.<br />

338 De Grummond 2006a, 14.<br />

339 Ov. Fast. 3.291-326.<br />

68


Pliny refers to Numa as frequently practicing the rite of expiating lightning when discussing the<br />

monstrum, Olta.<br />

Working with the assumption that Faunus once possessed a lupine aspect and that it is<br />

during the Augustan period that his depiction in art has completed its iconographical shift, this<br />

narrative can be applied to the scene on the cinerary urns. As indicated by iconographical<br />

elements that match the narrative from the Fasti, the urns capture one moment of Numa’s story<br />

in which the god Faunus struggles to break free of his chains. The relevant passage is as follows.<br />

“…But Picus and Faunus, both gods of Roman soil,<br />

Will be able to relate the rite of purification, but<br />

They will not tell without coercion, use chains to bind them as captives.”<br />

Thus Egeria taught Numa by what trick they would be able to seize the gods.<br />

There is a grove dark with the shade of holm-oaks under the Aventine,<br />

Where you are able to say, on sight, “There is a divinity here.”<br />

Grass is in the middle, and covered by green moss,<br />

A cleft in the rock pours out a never-ending stream:<br />

There Faunus and Picus were accustomed to drink alone.<br />

King Numa came here and sacrificed a sheep at the spring,<br />

And put out cups full of fragrant wine,<br />

And when he did this, he hid himself in a cave.<br />

The forest gods come to their accustomed spring<br />

And they relieve their dry throats with much pure wine.<br />

Sleep followed the wine, and Numa came forth from the icy cave<br />

And he put chains on the sleeping ones’ hands.<br />

As sleep left them, they tried to break the chains with a struggle.<br />

The chains held the warring gods all the stronger.<br />

Then Numa spoke, “Gods of the forest, forgive my deeds.<br />

If you know wickedness is absent from my mind,<br />

And show me how a thunderbolt can be expiated.” 340<br />

Numerous narrative elements from this myth can be compared to parts of the scene on the<br />

urns. The first is that the wolf-headed figure rises out of what seems to be a well. The scene in<br />

340 Ov. Fas. 3.291-311. Latin Text taken from Ovid Fasti, Vol. 5, edited by G.P. Goold, Loeb Classical Library,<br />

Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 1996, p. 140, 142. (Translation by Author.)<br />

sed poterunt ritum Picus Faunusque piandi / tradere, Romani numen utrumque soli. / nec sine vi tradent: adhibe tu<br />

vincula captis.” / atque ita qua possint edidit arte capi. / lucus Aventino suberat niger ilicis umbra, / quo posses viso<br />

dicere “numen inest.” / in medio gramen, muscoque adoperta virenti / manabat saxo vena perennis aquae: / inde fere<br />

soli Faunus Picusque bibebant. / huc venit et fonti rex Numa mactat ovem, / plenaque odorati disponit pocula<br />

Bacchi, / cumque suis antro conditus ipse latet. / ad solitos veniunt silvestria numina fontes / et relevant multo<br />

pectora sicca mero. / vina quies sequitur; gelido Numa prodit ab antro / vinclaque sopitas addit in arta manus. /<br />

somnus ut abscessit, pugnando vincula temptant / rumpere: pugnantes fortius illa tenent. /tum Numa: “di nemorum,<br />

factis ignoscite nostris / si scelus ingenio scitis abesse meo, / quoque modo possit fulmen monstrate piari.”<br />

69


Ovid takes place at a water source or spring (perennis aquae). 341 Previous interpretations of this<br />

scene have labeled this stone ring a gate to the underworld. This interpretation is not in conflict<br />

with the lupine iconography of a chthonic Faunus since the Lupercal, as mentioned earlier, was<br />

considered to be a gate to the underworld. 342 A kingly figure stands above the wolf-man<br />

emptying a patera, possibly an offering of wine, over the divinity. 343 Instead of the sacrifice of a<br />

sheep and the setting out of wine in bowls (rex Numa mactat ovem / plenaque odorati disponit<br />

pocula Bacchi), 344 which is present in Ovid, we are shown a libation that is perhaps made as a<br />

preparation for sacrifice. In either case, the kingly figure may be Ovid’s Numa with his<br />

followers (cum suis). 345<br />

One of the most important details in Ovid’s account for my interpretation is that when<br />

Faunus awakens, he is chained and attempts to gain his freedom through combat (somnus ut<br />

abcessit, pugnando vincula temptant / rumpere: pugnantes fortius illa tenent). 346 On the urns, as<br />

Faunus attacks one of Numa’s men, he is restrained by the others who hold tight to his chains<br />

and/or is bound to the well to hamper his movement. 347 In some instances, one of the men has<br />

been slain, and this may account for the presence of Vanth. As mentioned earlier, Etruscan<br />

artists were wont to insert Vanth into scenes in which someone had died or was bound to die.<br />

Her appearance on a vessel containing the ashes of the dead should not surprise anyone even if<br />

she is not present in Ovid’s narrative.<br />

Obviously, there are some differences between the account given by Ovid and the scene<br />

depicted on the urns. As mentioned earlier, by the time of Ovid, Faunus had already been<br />

syncretized with Pan, the goat-man. In Ovid’s account, Faunus is described as shaking his horns<br />

(quatiens cornua). 348 Also, there is no Picus present in the scene on the urns. 349 However,<br />

341<br />

Ov. Fas. 3.298.<br />

342<br />

Brunn and Körte 1872-1916, 21.<br />

343<br />

The elements of a kingly figure visiting a prophetic god at a water-source located in the deepest woods with a<br />

chthonic connection appear in Verg. Aen.VII.80-6 when Latinus visits Faunus at a spring from which dark vapors<br />

rise out of the earth. Vapors do seem to be a common component of oracle myths as they may have been the source<br />

of the prophetic powers of the Delphic oracle.<br />

344<br />

Ov. Fas. 3.300.<br />

345<br />

Ov. Fas. 3.302.<br />

346<br />

Ov. Fas. 3.307-8.<br />

347<br />

The motif of capturing or binding a prophet to obtain his secrets occurs in literature and art. An Etruscan mirror<br />

in the British Museum showing a scene from the myths of the Vipenas brothers depicts them capturing the seer<br />

Cacu, and, in Virgil’s Eclogues, the woodland god Silenus, a figure remarkably similar to Faunus, is chained with<br />

wreaths of flowers to coerce song from him. adgressi - nam saepe senex spe carminis ambo / luserat – inciunt ipsis<br />

ex vincula sertis. (Verg., Ecl. VI.18-9).<br />

348<br />

Ov. Fas. 3.312.<br />

70


Ovid’s association of Faunus and Picus is provocative. Both are descendants of Mars according<br />

to some sources, and, if Faunus was a wolf-man at one point, the two animals sacred to Mars, the<br />

wolf and the woodpecker, are paired together in Ovid’s account. 350 What we probably have in<br />

Ovid’s account is the reflection of an earlier myth (approximately 150 years separate urns and<br />

text) that Ovid has adapted for his own purposes in his poetic calendar.<br />

Changing an Etruscan myth to fit a Roman context is typical of the way Ovid uses myths.<br />

Ovid’s myths are highly “literary” in nature; he is not merely compiling an anthology in works<br />

such as the Metamorphoses and the Fasti. 351 We should also keep in mind that myths were by<br />

no means standardized, as Kirk states, “Myths are not uniform, logical and internally consistent;<br />

they are multiform, imaginative and loose in their details. Moreover their emphases can change<br />

from one year, or generation, to the next.” 352 This dictum is often forgotten when comparing<br />

visual evidence to literature, a problem addressed by Small in her text The Parallel Worlds of<br />

Classical Art and Text. Small outlines several difficulties in relating a myth to a particular<br />

literary source: artists did not need to rely on a text when creating an image, there was no<br />

“original” source for a myth, and, in antiquity, imitation had little to do with “mimetic<br />

fidelity.” 353<br />

A bronze ash urn (Fig. III.13) that dates to the end of the 8th C BCE has been identified<br />

as “the best candidate for mythical subject matter in the earliest Etruscan period.” 354 This may<br />

be the earliest version of this story on an object that served the same function as the urns of the<br />

3 rd C BCE. The similarity of the scenes is striking. The urn has a number of armed, naked,<br />

ithyphallic warriors surrounding the central figure and moving clockwise around it. This central<br />

349 The absence of Picus may not be such a hindrance to identifying this scene as the chaining of Faunus. Oleson<br />

(1975, 192) notes the absence of Polyxena from the ambush of Troilos in the Tomb of the Bull, and so this is<br />

referred to as a variation. The scene remains accepted as the ambush of Troilos.<br />

350 Dion. Hal. Ant. Rom.I.31.2. Dionysius states that Evander and his Arcadian followers were welcomed into Italy<br />

by Faunus, a native Italian, who was in control of the lands they wished to settle. Immediately after the Arcadian<br />

presence was established, they set up a temple to Lycaean Pan. Altheim (1937, 67, 226), in his discussion of Mars<br />

as a bull-god, remarks that Faunus belongs to the circle of Mars and further links the wolf and the woodpecker in the<br />

forms of Faunus and Picus in his discussion of the woodpecker god. Rosivach (1980, 143) vigorously asserts that<br />

this story of Faunus and Picus has nothing to do with the god Mars because of the playful nature of the account. I<br />

disagree and would point out that Ovid often treats serious subjects playfully.<br />

351 Barchiesi (1997, 47-51) makes this quite clear in relation to the Fasti, but Ovid’s “playful” nature can be seen in<br />

all of his works.<br />

352 Kirk 1974, 29.<br />

353 Small 2003, 156-9.<br />

354 De Grummond 2006a, 2.<br />

71


figure has been identified as a wolf or wolf-man. 355 This wolf-man is bound by a chain at the<br />

neck, and its hands, or paws, are raised in a threatening manner. There is no doubt in my mind<br />

that this represents the same story as the urns. De Grummond also notes the ritual character of<br />

this scene. 356 The importance of the practice of expiating lightning within Etruscan religion has<br />

been demonstrated by S. Weinstock. 357 That the earliest recognizable mythic narrative in<br />

Etruscan art may be linked to a religious ritual that makes up part of the Etrusca disciplina 358<br />

should surprise no one.<br />

With this material in the background, we can now attempt to identify the subject of<br />

several artifacts that depict a god wearing a wolf-skin or a therianthrope. The first of these is a<br />

Pontic plate by the Tityos Painter, dated ca. 520 BCE (Fig. III.14). In Roma: Romulo, Remo, e<br />

la fondazione della città, L. Cerchiai designates the wolf-headed figure in the tondo of the plate<br />

as Faunus. 359 Around the rim of the plate is a scene convincingly interpreted as Herakles<br />

attacking the centaur Nessos as the latter pursues Deianeira. Cerchiai suggests a mythological<br />

context for the images on the plate. He links the running wolf-man to the scene of Herakles,<br />

Nessos, and Deianeira with the burlesque story of Faunus’ failed attempt to rape Omphale. 360 He<br />

makes this connection because of a common theme of “the chase.” It must be admitted that the<br />

visual elements of the decoration on this plate do not clarify the link between the wolf-man and<br />

the other figures present in the outer zone of decoration. The wolf-man is oriented in the same<br />

direction as Herakles, Nessos, and Deianeira, moving counterclockwise, but his position in the<br />

tondo isolates him from the other narrative. It is difficult to say if he is meant to be viewed as<br />

somehow related to the scene surrounding him, or, if he belongs to a separate mythological<br />

context. Perhaps we are meant to interpret him as an apotropaic in the manner of gorgoneia that<br />

appear in other drinking vessels.<br />

The story of Faunus’ misadventure with Hercules and Omphale occurs in Ovid’s<br />

treatment of the Lupercalia in the Fasti as one aition for the nudity of the Luperci. 361 Cerchiai<br />

355<br />

De Grummond 2006a, 13; Elliott 1992, 20.<br />

356<br />

De Grummond 2006a, 14.<br />

357<br />

Wienstock 1951, 122-53.<br />

358<br />

The Etrusca Disciplina was a body of written knowledge which contained books on prophecy, interpreting<br />

omens, the underworld, and other important religious doctrine. Unfortunately, no original Etruscan sources are<br />

preserved for us, and we must rely on references to the Etruscan disciplina in Greek and Roman sources.<br />

359<br />

Cerchiai 2000, 226-7. See also Elliott 1995, 27 for an interpretation of this figure as the mysterious Olta.<br />

360<br />

Ov. Fas. 2.303-58.<br />

361<br />

I shall return to this myth in my discussion of the character of Faunus in the following chapter.<br />

72


theorizes that Faunus wants to chase Deianeira as he chased Omphale, 362 but this is not entirely<br />

convincing even if the figure in the tondo can be identified as Faunus since the stories of<br />

Omphale and Deianeira share no narrative elements in common. Perhaps we should instead<br />

interpret the running wolf-man as an indication of the fate of the characters in the outer register<br />

and read a chthonic symbolism into this figure. Nessos brings about his own death because he<br />

attempts to rape Deianeira; Herakles slays him using arrows which had been dipped in the blood<br />

of the Lernean Hydra. Deianeira in turn slays Herakles with a cloak soaked in Nessos’ poisoned<br />

blood.<br />

A terracotta statuette housed in the archaeological museum of Perugia (Fig. III.15) may<br />

also be a representation of Faunus. 363 There are no narrative details that could lead to a secure<br />

identification of this figure since the sculpture is merely a seated deity. The youthful god wears<br />

only an animal skin and hunting boots. The identity of the animal skin is not entirely certain and<br />

scholars have argued that it is either a wolf or a lion. The possibility that the skin is meant to be<br />

that of a lion has led to the identification of this figure as Herakles, 364 but I would argue against<br />

this identification, based on the similarity of this figure to the wolf-man on the urns, the absence<br />

of Herakles’ club or bow, and my own observation of the skin, the physical features of which<br />

(shape of head, snout, etc) appear more canine than leonine. If indeed the skin is that of a wolf,<br />

then this figure is the lupine god of the Etruscans. An important detail mentioned by B.<br />

Dozzini 365 in a brief discussion of this piece is that the hands of the god seem to make apotropaic<br />

gestures. The left hand is in the shape of the manu cornuta and the right, although the fingers are<br />

broken, seems to have had an extended middle finger.<br />

A second interpretation of this iconography was proposed by A. Stenico, who suggests<br />

that this statuette follows a pattern of iconography for the Lares as recorded by Plutarch, who<br />

notes that the Lares can be clad in dog skins as well as accompanied by dogs. 366 Stenico’s<br />

362 Cerchiai 2000, 226-7.<br />

363 Dozzoni (1983, 79) notes one unusual detail is that a Latin artist, Caius Rufius Sigillator actually signed this<br />

statuette and made his role in its sculpting clear by the use of the verb “finxit.”<br />

364 Dozzini (1983, 79) identifies this figure as Herakles even though he identifies the skin as that of a mastiff.<br />

365 Dozzini 1983, 79-80; Messerschmitt (1942, 206) suggests that this is a type of Hercules Epitrapezios, a seated<br />

Herakles, after the model of Lysippos’ famous sculpture.<br />

366 Stenico 1947, 75. Plut. Quaes. Rom. 51. Waites (1920, 250-2) discusses the possibility of presenting the Lares<br />

as wearing dog skins following Plutarch but provides no examples of this iconography. She also notes that the<br />

wearing of dog skins by the Lares may be part of their assimilation to Silvanus. In his discussion of the nature of the<br />

Silvanus Lar agrestis, Palmer (1974, 116) makes the following statement, “Suffice it to recall for the moment that<br />

the dedication to the Lares at Tor Tignosa was found in the place of Faunus’ oracle, and that Faunus is notoriously<br />

73


suggestion is plausible, but due to the other appearances of the wolf-god in art and the lack of<br />

any other examples of a Lar clad in a wolf-skin, I would argue for identifying the statuette as<br />

Faunus based on the similarity of this figure to Fig. III.12. 367<br />

In the case of the plate and the statuette we cannot say for certain which god is<br />

represented. It could be any one of the wolf-deities discussed in this text. Because of my<br />

hypothesis that Faunus is represented on the cinerary urns depicting a combat with a wolf-god<br />

(Fig. III.10-12), I am inclined to suggest that both the plate and statuette are representations of<br />

the god Faunus. The variance in iconography, a wolf-man on the plate and a god wearing a<br />

wolf-skin in the statuette, can be compared to the varying appearance of the wolf-god on the<br />

cinerary urns. The youth of the statuette, lacking a beard, may parallel the god depicted on the<br />

terracotta urn from Perugia (Fig. III.12). Even so, the lack of a beard does not wholly secure the<br />

identification of these two figures since Tinia is often beardless and youthful as opposed to his<br />

Greek counterpart, Zeus who is regularly shown as an older, bearded male. 368 Youth may also<br />

indicate that the statuette is a representation of Apollo Soranus or uri, but it is difficult to say<br />

for sure since another of the statuette’s details, the hunting boots, may argue for identification as<br />

a rustic deity, such as Faunus.<br />

One last piece that bears discussion is a bronze figurine that defies easy explanation but<br />

has been identified as Herakles due to iconography that makes use of an animal skin and a club-<br />

like weapon (Fig. III.16). This identification is not certain, though, as the animal skin is not that<br />

of a lion, but more likely a wolf, and the weapon could be a lagobolon. The wolf-skin takes the<br />

form of a cap and stops at his shoulders; it does not extend down the back of the figure. If<br />

indeed this figure carries a lagobolon, then the combination of wolf-skin and hunting stick<br />

suggest Faunus instead of Herakles. The most curious characteristic of this figurine is that its<br />

confused with Silvanus and the local deity, Inuus. Capella’s Lar Omnium Cunctalis “All Lar of All Things” may be<br />

considered a rendition of Pan (=omne), who was the Romans’ Faunus or Silvanus. If he is Pan, he supplies an<br />

analogue to the Silvanus Lar agrestis.”<br />

367 Boyce (1937, 58) describes the “usual” type of painted Lar in lararia at Pompeii as “wearing elaborate girded<br />

tunics with loose folds which fly out from their bodies as they dance on the tips of their toes” and holding a rhyton<br />

and/or a situla. He makes no mention of the convention of a Lar clad in a wolf-skin. Orr (1978, 1568-9) describes a<br />

similar iconography and also makes no mention of wolf skins.<br />

368 De Grummond 2006a, 12. When discussing the iconography of Aesculapius, Edelstein and Edelstein (1945, 219)<br />

point out that chronology and local variation can also determine whether or not a god is depicted as bearded or clean<br />

shaven. Thus, the presence of or lack of a beard does not secure the identity of the god.<br />

74


head has been turned 180 degrees. 369 This twisting of the head has been interpreted by Faraone<br />

as a common feature of a binding spell, and thus the statue represents the curtailing of this god’s<br />

power. 370 If we accept Minto’s identification of this figure as Herakles, 371 we must ask ourselves<br />

why he is “bound” in such a way. Faraone notes that Herakles was not only a savior but also one<br />

who was thought of as a “sacker of cities,” 372 but this god’s wolf-skin argues against the<br />

identification of this figurine as Greece’s greatest hero. (In Etruria, Herakles also seems to have<br />

a primarily positive aspect.) If not Herakles, in light of the evidence for the prominence of wolf-<br />

gods in Etruria, perhaps we can interpret this as Faunus. If so, we may have yet another link to<br />

the binding and control of Faunus, the theme that appears on the Bisenzio ash urn and the<br />

Hellenistic urns. This argument makes sense when combined with the idea of Faunus as a<br />

creature of nightmare, and his links to Inuus the ravager of sleeping women. The figurine may<br />

represent a magical attempt to ward off night-terrors and evil spirits during one’s sleep. More<br />

information about the find spot of this figurine might help to illuminate its exact function.<br />

As we can see from all of the evidence for lupine gods in Italy, the wolf was a<br />

representative of chthonic powers tied to fertility and death. The physical characteristics and<br />

behavior (large fangs, glowing eyes, role of predator, howling at night, and prowling the edges of<br />

human towns in search of food) make it an animal ideally suited for association with gods of the<br />

underworld. It is concretely associated with the gods Aita and Apollo Soranus, and may have<br />

given its shape to the Etruscan death god, Calu or Tinia-Calusna. Canine iconography may have<br />

been partly a result of Etruscan familiarity with the Egyptian psychopomp and god of<br />

embalming, Anubis, who was accepted into Greco-Roman tradition in relation to the cult of Isis.<br />

The appearance of the wolf in Italic religion extends beyond Etruria into Latium and<br />

Samnium as well. Three groups of priests, the Lucani, Hirpi, and Luperci bear the name “Wolf-<br />

men,” and their rituals are mirrored in fantastic tales of lycanthropy as well as the rites of the<br />

cults of Lycaean Zeus and Apollo. The etymology of the name Luperci, the rituals of the<br />

Lupercalia, and links to deities such as Silvanus and Sucellus hint at a lupine nature of the god<br />

Faunus as well. If this is the case, then a series of cinerary urns from Etruria may preserve a<br />

369 Faraone (1991, 203) mentions that the legs of this figurine are broken off at the knees, but he does not specify<br />

whether or not this has anything to do with a binding ritual or with an accident of preservation.<br />

370 Faraone (1992, 171) notes that the Spartans honored a statue of Ares Enyalius which was fettered. They<br />

represented the god in this way in order to curtail the wanton, destructive power of the god.<br />

371 Minto 1927, 475-6.<br />

372 Faraone 1992, 58-9.<br />

75


narrative and alternative iconography of this god, and we can use these to identify other<br />

representations of the wolf-god in Etruria. All in all, the presence of the wolf is strongly felt in<br />

Etruscan and Roman religion, and perhaps this figure is beginning to come out of the shadows.<br />

76


CHAPTER 4: THE GOAT<br />

The earliest, and at the same time the most striking, representation of such a<br />

sudden attack is painted on side A of a [Greek] bell crater in Boston, which shows<br />

a young goatherd pursued by the god [Pan, Fig. IV.1]… On the other side of the<br />

vase… Actaeon, attacked by his dogs, has just been struck down by the arrow of<br />

Artemis… There is a remarkable parallel between the two scenes: one has to do<br />

with the wild, the other with the domestic, one with hunting, the other with<br />

herding, but in both a power that holds sway over animal life turns against a<br />

human who is himself a specialist in animals. The roles are reversed, as if to tell<br />

us that human technique, in this sphere, can never completely eliminate the<br />

irrational forces it works to master, nor establish as irreversible the difference it<br />

tries so hard to define. 373<br />

Like the serpent and the wolf, the goat played an important part in the religious<br />

symbolism of the Etruscans and Romans. Thus, even though Borgeaud makes the above quote<br />

in relation to the Greek goat-god Pan, as depicted on the name vase of the Pan Painter (Boston<br />

10.185) the notion of tension between rational, human forces and wild, animal impulses in nature<br />

is again demonstrated by the use of hybrid iconography. The scene of the chase takes place in a<br />

rustic setting indicated by an ithyphallic herm positioned on an outcrop of rock. According to<br />

Beazley, the Pan Painter was an artist known for his taste in “out-of-the-way subjects.” 374<br />

Beazley states,<br />

The god Pan is almost unknown in Attic art before the Persian wars: he had<br />

ground complaining to Philippides, on the eve of Marathon, that the Athenians<br />

neglected him. After the Persian wars Pan becomes quite popular at Athens: but<br />

not in this context: only here is he seen pursuing a boy. 375<br />

The Greek goat hybrid Pan was appropriated by the people of Italy and sometimes associated<br />

with their native, sylvan god Faunus. Juno Sospita, who wore the goat skin as the most<br />

conspicuous part of her iconography, was one of the most widely worshipped Latin goddesses,<br />

and her image appears on numerous antefixes as part of the decorative program of many temples.<br />

In each of these cases, the goat is associated with the power to induce both fear, in order to repel<br />

both men and evil spirits, and also fertility, in order to increase the growth of vegetation and the<br />

373 Borgeaud 1988, 128-9.<br />

374 Beazley 1974, 2.<br />

375 Beazley 1974, 2.<br />

77


eproduction of animals. 376 These are characteristics that appear to be common to the liminal,<br />

theriomorphic and therianthropic deities.<br />

In the previous chapter, we encountered the problem of defining Faunus’ animal<br />

associations. While examining many facets of Faunus’ character, I proposed that he was not<br />

strictly the Roman equivalent of Pan and may even have originally taken the form of a lupine<br />

deity. As Wiseman notes, “It was never clear to the Romans whether or not Pan and Faunus<br />

were identical. Silvanus, too, was not easy to distinguish from either of them.” 377 This problem<br />

is discussed by Pouthier and Rouillard, who proposed that a fixed iconography for Faunus,<br />

including a horn of plenty and goat or panther skin, was an invention of nineteenth-century<br />

classical scholars 378 and not a product of the ancient world. Thus we must be skeptical when<br />

Schilling proposes that “Faunus is merely a Latin disguise for Pan” 379 or Palmer states, “Faunus,<br />

of course, was a goat god.” 380 Palmer also asserts that Faunus’ caprid character is supported by<br />

his association with other deities, which, as demonstrated earlier in Chapter Three, may instead<br />

support a lupine nature for this god.<br />

In our subsequent pursuit of the origins of Roman Vediovis, certain goatish<br />

divinities of Gaulish influence will clarify the relationship and character of<br />

incubation and the oracular gods Faunus, Vediovis, Jupiter, and Silvanus, as well<br />

as the goddesses normally called Fauna and Silvana. 381<br />

No other scholar indicates that Vediovis (Veiovis) was conceived of as a goat; he is generally<br />

linked to wolves through his connection to Apollo Soranus. Thus, associating Latin divinities<br />

such as Faunus and Veiovis with Gallic divinities does not really clear matters up. 382<br />

376 Several of these ideas are embodied in the scene of Pan chasing the goatherd in Fig. IV.1. Perhaps we may look<br />

upon the image of the young shepherd chased by Pan as comic, but Borgeaud’s description of the tension between<br />

wild nature and civilization is surely closer to the mark. In this instance, the fleeing shepherd represents the effect<br />

that goat-man hybrids have on those who face them; the shepherd runs in fear. The argument for the fearsome<br />

nature of this scene is strengthened by the artist’s choice to paint a scene of the death of Actaeon on the other side of<br />

this vase.<br />

377 Wiseman 2005, 79-80. Nagy (1994, 769) notes that Silvanus can sometimes take the form of a goat-man hybrid,<br />

but this phenomenon is sporadic and typically isolated to the region of Dalmatia.<br />

378 Pouthier and Rouillard 1986, 105-6. Dorcey (1992, 34) seems to agree with this suggestion when he states,<br />

“Further complicating matters is the complete lack of iconographical evidence for Faunus.”<br />

379 Schilling 1992, 127.<br />

380 Palmer 1974, 147. Palmer (1974, 167) also asserts that “Vediovis and Faunus were principally concerned with<br />

Netherworld oracles, fertility and birth. Their bestial associations tended toward the goat after whom Faunus was<br />

physically modeled.”<br />

381 Palmer 1974, 139.<br />

382 See Ch. 3 no. 32. Veiovis is sometimes interpreted as an infant Jupiter (Ov. Fas. 3.437-8, 447-8) who was<br />

nursed by a goat, and a goat did sometimes accompany images of this god. See Aul. Gel. Att. Noct. 1-12 for a full<br />

discussion of Veiovis’ name and his association with the goat. The presence of the goat in this god’s mythical<br />

78


Nevertheless, literary evidence beginning in the Augustan period presents Faunus as a hybrid of<br />

man and goat. 383 It is my position that we must not forget the evidence of the lupine character of<br />

the god, and that he actually had a dual nature, as a “wolf in goat's clothing,” so to speak.<br />

In the tale of Numa’s capture of Faunus and Picus, Ovid refers to Faunus as quatiens<br />

cornua, shaking his horns. 384 Elsewhere, Ovid describes him as semicaper deus, or half-goat<br />

god. 385 As mentioned earlier, I believe this is either a part of an iconographic shift that fully<br />

linked Faunus to one aspect of Arcadian Pan or the continuation of a dual conception of this god<br />

as both the protector and ravager of flocks. It is worth noting that even when depicted as a<br />

humorous character by Ovid, Faunus never fully loses the fearsome, chthonic aspect<br />

demonstrated in Chapter Three. If we remember that Faunus was associated with Inuus, a god<br />

who sexually assaults women in their sleep, then Horace’s depiction of Faunus as a Nympharum<br />

fugientum amator, a “lover of fleeing Nymphs,” takes on a new dimension. 386<br />

A second hint of the less-than-benevolent nature of Faunus can be found in Horace’s Ode<br />

1.17. In this example, the poet mentions sacrificial offerings to Faunus in his role as protector of<br />

the herd.<br />

Often swift Faunus exchanges Mt. Lycaeon<br />

For pleasurable Lucretilis<br />

And wards off the fiery heat and the constant wind<br />

And rains from my she-goats.<br />

They, straying safely through the grove,<br />

Seek arbutes and thyme, wives of a smelly<br />

Husband, and they do not fear greenish vipers,<br />

Nor the savage wolves of Mars. 387<br />

In this example, Horace mentions Mt. Lycaeon, a clear reference to the Arcadian cult of Lycaeon<br />

Pan, whom we have met earlier in the context of werewolf cults. This epithet reminds us of the<br />

dual nature of this god, which Horace perhaps reinforces in his remark regarding the wolves of<br />

tradition does not, however, make him a goat god anymore than Aesculapius or Zeus who were both nursed by<br />

goats.<br />

383<br />

Schilling 1992, 127.<br />

384<br />

Ov. Fas. 3.312.<br />

385<br />

Ov. Fas. 4.752.<br />

386<br />

Hor. Car. 3.18.1. For Inuus as a nighttime terror see Holleman 1974, 95. This pursuit of fleeing nymphs also<br />

brings to mind Pan and the shepherd as depicted on Fig. IV.1.<br />

387<br />

Hor. Car. 1.17.1-10. Latin Text taken from Horace Odes and Epodes, Vol. 3, edited by G.P. Goold, Loeb<br />

Classical Library, Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 1999, p. 52. (Translation by Author.)<br />

Velox amoenum saepe Lucretilem / mutat Lycaeo Faunus et igneam / defendit aestatem capellis / usque meis<br />

pluviosque ventos. / inpune tutum per nemus arbutos / quaerunt latentis et thyma deviae / olentis uxores mariti / nec<br />

viridis metuunt colubras / nec Martialis haediliae lupos…<br />

79


Mars in line nine. Similarly, Turcan notes in regard to the dedication of the temple of Faunus on<br />

the Tiber Island, which took place on February 13, 196 BCE.<br />

The god of woods and flocks, Faunus deifies the forces of nature which the<br />

peasant both fears and entreats. So in this instance he was propitiated on the<br />

fringes of the city and civilized life, in a temple built with the product of fines<br />

inflicted on farmers of public grazing land. 388<br />

The date of this dedication in February also stresses the possibility of the dual aspect of the god.<br />

Pouthier and Rouillard note that Faunus retains his “infernal” nature in addition to being a<br />

fertility god. 389 The dedication of a temple to this god in the month of February is particularly<br />

appropriate due to this month’s association with the dead. 390<br />

Of course, the dedication of a temple to Faunus is not the only reason that the month of<br />

February is significant to the god, for the Lupercalia also takes place in that month. By the time<br />

the ritual activities of the Lupercalia are recorded with any consistency, it is a goat-skin that is<br />

donned by the Luperci. The connection between the goat and Faunus is further strengthened by<br />

the ritual of using a thong made of goat-skin to purify Rome’s matrons and instill fertility in<br />

them. This thong is referred to as the amiculum Iunonis, 391 a name that links Faunus to the<br />

goddess Juno, a goddess also conceived of in goat form. In his treatment of the Lupercalia in the<br />

Fasti, Ovid again exploits Faunus in a comic light in a farcical etiology for the nudity of the<br />

Luperci, priests who participated in one of Rome’s most ancient religious rituals. 392 Faunus is<br />

lusting after Omphale:<br />

He [Faunus] enters and the reckless paramour wanders to and fro,<br />

And he stretches out his cautious hands in pursuit.<br />

He had come to the longed for beds where they were stretched out<br />

And at his first chance, he is almost lucky.<br />

As he feels the skin, shaggy with the hairs of a tawny lion,<br />

He holds back his hand and fears for himself,<br />

Thunderstruck he pulls back in fear, as a traveler often<br />

Takes a step back, shocked by seeing a serpent.<br />

Then, he touches the soft veils of the other bed,<br />

Which is very close, and he is deceived by a false sign.<br />

388<br />

Turcan 2000, 64. The edge of the city was the place for outsiders and outlaws, and as noted in Chapter 3, both<br />

this location and its inhabitants are associated with wolves.<br />

389<br />

Pouthier and Rouillard 1986, 106.<br />

390<br />

Fowler 1925, 306-7.<br />

391<br />

Festus 76,1; Ov. Fas. 2.429-46.<br />

392<br />

The exact “costume” of the Luperci is a matter of debate as mentioned earlier. The Luperci are depicted in art as<br />

wearing a garment wrapped around their waist, but references to the nudity of the Luperci (such as in Ovid) confuse<br />

the issue.<br />

80


He climbs up and lies down bringing himself nearer,<br />

And his penis is swollen even harder than horn.<br />

Meanwhile, he draws up the tunic from its hem<br />

Rough legs bristled with thick hair.<br />

Immediately, the Tirynthian hero kicks him off<br />

While he tests the rest: He falls from the top of the bed…<br />

The god, deceived by clothing, hates garments<br />

That deceive the eye and decrees nude worshippers for his rites. 393<br />

This trivialization of sacred practice is common in Ovid’s Fasti and is representative of the role<br />

of Faunus in Roman myth; he is used as comic relief. We may wish to interpret Faunus’ lustful<br />

behavior as being typical of Satyrs, but I would also suggest that Inuus may lurk in the shadows<br />

of this narrative. 394 While Faunus’ foiled attempt to rape Omphale is humorous, the deity is<br />

again acting in the character of one who ravages women in the night. Dorcey states that Faunus<br />

had become little more than “a literary topos” 395 by the beginning of the Imperial Period and<br />

labels him as a god who either may not have ever had a cult of great significance 396 or whose cult<br />

faded and was preserved only in obscure rites not understood by those who practiced them.<br />

While literature of the Augustan period securely links Faunus to the goat, iconography<br />

does not always do the same. In their short entry for Faunus in LIMC, Pouthier and Rouillard<br />

provide as images only three bronze statuettes of the god. This meager evidence is striking when<br />

compared to the great number of artifacts and monuments produced for other gods. In addition<br />

to this, not one of these is reproduced in the accompanying volume of plates, nor are any of them<br />

described as possessing the parts of a goat or wearing an animal skin securely identified as that<br />

of a goat. In fact, these statuettes are characterized as holding a cornucopia, a rhyton, or a<br />

393<br />

Ov. Fas. 2.335-50, 357-8. Latin Text taken from Ovid Fasti, Vol. 5, edited by G.P. Goold, Loeb Classical<br />

Library, Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 1996, p. 80, 82. (Translation by Author.)<br />

Intrat, et huc illuc temerarius errat adulter / et praefert cautas subsequiturque manus. / venerat ad strati captata<br />

cubilia lecti / et felix prima sorte futurus erat. / ut tetigit fulvi saetis hirsuta leonis / vellera, pertimuit sustinuitque<br />

manum, / attonitusque metu rediit, ut saepe viator / turbatus viso rettulit angue pedem. / inde tori qui iunctus erat<br />

velamina tangit / mollia, mendaci decipiturque nota. / ascendit spondaque sibi propiore recumbit, / et tumidum cornu<br />

durius inguen erat. / interea tunicas ora subducit ab ima : / horrebant densis aspera crura pilis. / cetera temptantem<br />

subito Tirynthius heros / reppulit: e summo decidit ille toro… / veste deus lusus fallentes lumina vestes / non amat,<br />

et nudos ad sua sacra vocat.<br />

394<br />

We may remind ourselves of the image of Pan and the goatherd in Fig IV.1, which has overtones of more than<br />

just lust and the fancy of the god.<br />

395<br />

Dorcey 1992, 34.<br />

396<br />

Fowler 1925, 258. One problem with the view that Faunus did not ever have a cult of great importance deals<br />

with the festival of the Lupercalia. If we accept Faunus’ association with this festival, it is difficult to label him as<br />

deity of no import, due to the great significance of this festival.<br />

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anch, 397 objects that likely stress Faunus’ nature as a beneficent god who brings abundance and<br />

fertility. One example provided by Pouthier and Rouillard represents Faunus holding a branch<br />

and wearing the skin of a beast (perhaps that of a goat) is a bronze statuette of unknown<br />

provenance currently housed in the Bibliothéque Nationale (Fig. IV.2). This iconographic type<br />

reminds us of Faunus’ links to the forest god, Silvanus, who may be depicted in a similar<br />

manner. 398<br />

A bronze statuette (Fig. IV.2) depicts Faunus as a god of fertility. The right hand of the<br />

figurine holds a poorly preserved drinking horn and the left a fruit-bearing branch. Faunus wears<br />

a spiky head dress but is otherwise mostly nude, except for an animal skin draped across his<br />

shoulders and a pair of rustic sandals or boots. J. Babelon did not identify the species of animal<br />

skin, and it is not clear in any images of this statuette (both photos and line drawings) whether it<br />

is that of a goat or some other animal. In this instance, he is shown as a bearded, regal male and<br />

does not possess any of the comic overtones demonstrated in the literary accounts of Ovid. Nor<br />

does he possess the same character as Pan represented in a fresco dating to the first quarter of the<br />

first century CE in the House of Jason in Pompeii (Fig. IV.3).<br />

Fig. IV.3 depicts a goat-man identified as Pan who is reminiscent of depictions of Faunus<br />

in contemporary literature. Ling cites this painting as an example of the “restrained and<br />

balanced” painting typical of Augustan classicism. 399 The representation of the nude Pan raising<br />

his syrinx to lips as he calmly sits on a stone in the presence of three nymphs or maidens is<br />

strikingly different from the scene of Pan pursuing the young shepherd boy on the name vase of<br />

397<br />

Pouthier and Rouillard (1997, 582-3) maintain the absence of a distinct iconography for this god but do note the<br />

cornucopia and rhyton.<br />

398<br />

Dorcey, in The Cult of Silvanus, analyzes the evidence demonstrating that these two gods were often confused by<br />

ancient authors; however, he is quite selective in which evidence he chooses to accept. He is also quick to make<br />

statements that minimize evidence that does not support his argument and base his conclusions on his own<br />

assumptions. In reference to the prophetic powers of Silvanus, Dorcey (1992, 35) states, “Silvanus does not share<br />

much of Faunus’ ability to deliver prophecies and oracles, either in dreams or in forest settings. Livy (2.7.2) and<br />

Valerius Maximus (1.8.5) do attribute the pronouncement of the defeat of Tarquinius Superbus in battle to Silvanus;<br />

however Dionysius of Halicarnassus (5.16.2-3), in narrating the same episode, has Faunus announce the Roman<br />

military victory.” Instead of interpreting this as evidence linking Silvanus and Faunus, Dorcey (1992, 35) assumes<br />

that the ancient authors are “mistaken in this instance, since there are many sources for the oracular talents of<br />

Faunus, and no other for those of Silvanus.” There are no other sources, except for the ones Dorcey has chosen to<br />

doubt. Dorcey (1992, 42) goes so far as to state, “What is indeed interesting about Silvanus is how much he retained<br />

his individuality vis-à-vis other rustic deities,” after he has collected a staggering amount of evidence that indicates<br />

just the opposite. I believe that Dorcey is too ready to dismiss evidence which he views as exceptions to rules he has<br />

established for his study. Both iconographic and literary sources point to the confusion of the identities of these<br />

gods.<br />

399<br />

Ling 1991, 119.<br />

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the Pan Painter (Fig. IV.1). The fresco shows this god, known for his wild nature, in repose, and<br />

is surely influenced by the social and political climate of the day. Perhaps this change in the<br />

god’s demeanor is representative of a shift in the perception of Faunus from the wild forest god<br />

to the potentially more docile or comic deity known to the Augustan poets. The discrepancies<br />

between the iconography of Faunus in Fig. IV.2 and Pan in Fig. IV.3, as well as the image of<br />

Faunus in literature, highlight both the fact that art and text need not mirror one another and also<br />

the complex character of this god, who is not simply a Roman equivalent of the Greek Pan. One<br />

last fact that helps to distinguish between Pan and Faunus is that before the Imperial Period,<br />

there are few images of goat-man hybrids identified as Pan in Latium and Etruria, and all of<br />

these are found in a Dionysiac context. 400 The earliest example provided by Boardman in the<br />

LIMC entry for Pan is a bronze relief attachment dating to the fifth century BCE that depicts a<br />

squatting goat therianthrope playing a syrinx. 401 One may wonder then, if so few images of<br />

goat-man hybrids can securely be identified as Pan, a god whose nature is surely linked to the<br />

goat, how we might identify a goat therianthrope as Faunus, whose nature is in question.<br />

The multiplicity of Faunus bears mentioning as this is yet another factor that adds to the<br />

problematic nature of the god. As we shall see by the end of this study, a number of the<br />

theriomorphic and therianthropic deities can appear as pluralized or reduplicated creatures. In<br />

relation to Faunus, scholars have sought to determine which came first, the singular or plural<br />

forms. Fowler views Faunus as a deity who began as a “lower, multiple, daemonistic form” who<br />

became something “more uniform and more rigid.” 402 Wissowa, on the other hand, proposes that<br />

Faunus’ multiplicity was in fact the result of his identification with Pan, 403 which we have seen<br />

to be problematic. There is no sure way to determine which, either the singular or plural, aspect<br />

of Faunus came first or if this was even a concern to an ancient Etruscan or Roman. We may<br />

speculate that Faunus may have originally been an individual deity before the late Republic when<br />

authors such as Varro and Cicero refer to Fauni. 404<br />

The use of a goat skin as a conspicuous component of a deity’s iconography was not<br />

limited to rustic, forest gods such as Pan and possibly Faunus. The great goddess Juno could<br />

400 Boardman 1997, 939.<br />

401 Boardman 1997, 939.<br />

402 Fowler 1925, 260.<br />

403 Wissowa 1454.<br />

404 See Ch. 3 notes 310 and 316. It is also difficult to determine the impact the presence of Satyrs has had on the<br />

iconography of Faunus and the Fauni. Satyrs are plentiful in Greek, Roman, and Etruscan art but are not always<br />

depicted as goat-man hybrids and sometimes have horses’ tails as a component of their iconography.<br />

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appear as Juno Sospita, clad in a goatskin and armed with shield and spear. 405 Juno’s byname<br />

likely derives from either the Greek verb b , 406 which means to save or preserve, or the<br />

Sanskrit noun, sapati, a protector, but attempts to find this goddess’ origins in the light and the<br />

heavens have also led to a derivation from Latin sidus, or star, which would indicate that Juno<br />

Sospita was a celestial power. 407 A close connection to the moon has been posited for this<br />

goddess and for Juno in general. 408 Whatever the origin of the epithet Sospita, it is clear that this<br />

goddess was prominent throughout Latium and appears also in Etruria; Latin Juno becomes<br />

Etruscan Uni. 409 Of course, the greatest cult center of Juno Sospita was in Latium at<br />

Lanuvium. 410 It is tempting to suggest that Juno’s association with the goat may be tied to one of<br />

the earliest conceptions of the goddess, and some of the earliest images of Juno Sospita are found<br />

in Etruria.<br />

One example of an antefix bearing the image of Juno Sospita, of which there were many<br />

in both Latium and Etruria, comes from Antemnae (Fig. IV.4). The widespread use of the head<br />

of Juno Sospita as an antefix, in addition to her appearance in many different media of art,<br />

testifies to the pan-Italic quality of this goddess. Antefixes that make use of her visage appeared<br />

in Rome, Falerii Veteres, Fidenae, Satricum, and other cities of Latium 411 as well as Cerveteri in<br />

Etruria. 412 These antefixes conform closely to the image evoked by Cicero in De Natura<br />

Deorum 1.29.82 quoted below. Juno is here shown with both the horns and ears of the goat<br />

projecting from her head. There is no doubt that they also served as an apotropaic device due to<br />

405 Sospita is the most common form of this epithet that appears in texts dealing with Roman religion, but this Juno<br />

could also be labeled Juno Sispes, Sispita, or Seispes. Gordon (1938, 24) notes that Sospita is the only form of this<br />

epithet appears in literature and epigraphic evidence except in Festus. This Juno is also sometimes referred to as<br />

Juno Sospita Mater Regina. An excellent discussion of the goddess Juno can also be found in Simon 1990, 94-106.<br />

406 Douglas (1913, 68) and Shields (1926, 69) note a connection between Juno Sospita and Athena Soteria. More<br />

will be made of the connection between these two goddesses shortly.<br />

407 Shields 1926, 67. While it may not seem etymologically sound to derive this particular aspect of Juno from<br />

sidus, Juno’s association with the sky is quite clear. Her relationship to Jupiter in Rome and her assimilation to<br />

Astarte at Pyrgi are only two pieces of much evidence for her role as queen of heaven.<br />

408 Shields 1926, 72.<br />

409 Jannot 2005, 157. De Grummond (2006a, 79) notes that the Italian name Juno may derive from an Indo-<br />

European root, iuni, meaning “young.” Simon (2006, 61) is in agreement that Uni is derived from Juno as well.<br />

410 This does not necessarily imply that Juno Sospita was not conceived of in anthropomorphic form as proposed by<br />

Douglas (1913, 67-8), who adheres to the notion that Roman deities were not given human form until the Greeks or<br />

Etruscans influenced the Romans. Douglas (1913, 69) also suggests that this image type may have originated in<br />

Falerii.<br />

411 Chiarucci 1983, 62.<br />

412 Palmer 1974, 43. Andrén (1939-40, Pl. 9) provides one Etruscan example from the site of Caere.<br />

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the ability of horns to ward off evil. 413 The belief in the evil-eye and the powers of malevolent<br />

spirits was quite prominent on the Italian peninsula, and there is further evidence of attempts to<br />

ward off the evil-eye in tomb painting. 414<br />

A second example of this goddess’ presence in an Etruscan context appears on a “Pontic”<br />

vase (Fig. IV.5), on which Uni is again represented with the iconography of Juno Sospita. 415 The<br />

upper register of decoration on one side of the belly of this “Pontic” amphora represents one<br />

facet of the relationship between Uni and Hercle. The enmity between Herakles and Hera is well<br />

known in Greek mythology, as Hera often sought to punish Zeus’ illegitimate child for his<br />

father’s transgressions, 416 and perhaps this enmity is reflected on this “Pontic” vase. It may be<br />

that we are meant to interpret this scene as an Etruscan attribution of this aspect of Hera’s<br />

character to the goddess Juno Sospita. This scene is reminiscent of the battle between Herakles<br />

and Apollo for the tripod of Delphi as the conflict between Hercle and Uni is here set amongst<br />

two large dinoi decorated with snake protomes. Perhaps Hercle and Uni are struggling for<br />

dominance over a shrine. Hercle and Uni are not the only deities depicted in this register of<br />

decoration; Menerva appears behind Hercle, Tinia 417 behind Uni, perhaps to support the<br />

combatants or to end the fight between them. The role of the supporting deities is not clear.<br />

Thus while the earliest recognizable images of this goddess date to the Archaic Period,<br />

the image of Juno clad in a goat skin persisted through the Hellenistic Period, as can be seen on<br />

Etruscan bronze mirrors (Fig. IV.6.), and into the High Empire (Figs. IV.8).The unchanging<br />

nature of Juno Sospita’s iconography is reflected not only in art but also in literature. Cicero<br />

describes her iconographic type briefly in the De Natura Deorum I.82.<br />

And why indeed do you think that Apis, sacred bull of the Egyptians, seems to be<br />

a god to them? For, by Hercules, just such a goddess is your Sospita, whom you<br />

never see, not even in sleep, without a goat skin, spear, shield, and shoes with<br />

turned up toes. But Argive Hera is not like this, and neither is Roman Juno.<br />

Therefore, there is one likeness of Juno for the Argives, another for the men of<br />

413 Moss and Cappannari 1976, 9.<br />

414 Moss and Cappannari (1976, 5,8) note that the belief in the evil-eye was present on the whole of the Italian<br />

peninsula and that “horning the fingers” is an apotropaic gesture made to avert this baleful force. This gesture is<br />

made by one of the dancers in the Tomb of the Lionesses.<br />

415 De Grummond (2006a, 81) states “She [Uni] does appear with weapons, however; like Astarte, Uni had a warlike<br />

aspect. She was sometimes represented armed, and instead of a helmet and breastplate, she wore the skin of a<br />

horned goat, occurring elsewhere in Italy in the Latin cult of Juno Sospita at Lanuvium.”<br />

416 Euripides’ tragedy, The Madness of Herakles, in which the goddess Lyssa, at Hera’s request, drives Herakles<br />

mad and forces him to murder his wife and children, is perhaps the most vivid example of Hera’s hatred for her<br />

stepson.<br />

417 Douglas (1913, 62) identifies the god standing behind Uni as Poseidon.<br />

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Lanuvium, and indeed there is one likeness for us on the Capitoline, and another<br />

for the Africans of Jupiter Ammon. 418<br />

The Romans appropriated this goddess after conquering the Latins and making Lanuvium a part<br />

of the Roman federation in 338 BCE. 419 Juno Sospita then received a temple in the Forum<br />

Holitorium in 194 BCE as the fulfillment of a vow made by Cornelius Cethegus, consul in 197<br />

BCE, when he routed the Cenomani and the Insubres. 420<br />

Unfortunately, no literary narratives recording myths of Juno Sospita survive for us. Yet,<br />

the visual evidence provides us hints at several stories. In Etruscan art, Juno Sospita is<br />

sometimes shown in conflict with satyrs and occasionally aided by her step-son, Hercle, even<br />

though he can also replace the Satyrs as her enemy. 421 It is tempting to see a connection between<br />

this conflict and the use of both Juno Sospita’s image and images of Satyrs as antefixes that<br />

decorated the beams of many temples throughout Italy. Simon suggests that the use of the head<br />

of Juno Sospita as an antefix is in accordance with a myth in which Uni makes peace with the<br />

Satyrs, who had previously been her enemy, 422 but as mentioned earlier, no such myth is known<br />

in literature. A concord between “goat divinities” may exist in the connection between Juno and<br />

Faunus through the rites of the Lupercalia, but, as I have stated earlier, I am not convinced that<br />

Faunus was conceived of as a goat deity in the Archaic Period in Italy unless he was<br />

simultaneously thought of as both goat and wolf. On the other hand, we may just as easily<br />

attribute the combining of images of Juno and Satyrs to the scenes of their conflict, for which we<br />

at least do have visual representations. Perhaps we may contextualize the combination of images<br />

418 Cic. Nat. D. I.29.82. Latin Text taken from Cicero Nature of the Gods, Academics, Vol. 19, edited by J.<br />

Henderson, Loeb Classical Library, Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 2000, p. 78. (Translation by<br />

Author.)<br />

Quid igitur censes? Apim illum sanctum Aegyptiorum bovem nonne deum videri Aegyptiis? Tam, hercle, quam tibi<br />

illam vestram Sospitam. Quam tu numquam ne in somnis quidem vides nisi cum pelle caprina, cum hasta, cum<br />

scutulo cum calceolis repandis : at non est talis Argia nec Romana Iuno. Ergo alia species Iunonis Argivis, alia<br />

Lanuinis. Et quidem alia nobis Capitolini, alia Afris Hammonis Iovis.<br />

419 Shields 1926, 67. Gordon (1938, 22) points out that the city was given Roman citizenship only after they agreed<br />

to allow the Romans share in the worship of this goddess. Citizenship was an important political tool used by the<br />

Romans during the conquest of Italy, and this underlines the significance of the goddess.<br />

420 Livy 32.30.10.<br />

421 De Grummond 2006a, 82.<br />

422 Simon 2006, 51-2.<br />

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of Juno and satyrs in a larger framework of mythological conflicts used as architectural<br />

decoration. 423<br />

Representations of Juno Sospita can be found on the coins of the Roman Republic and<br />

Empire. When various members of the Roman elite from the area of Lanuvium came to power,<br />

they took advantage of their standing to mint coins bearing her likeness. A silver denarius struck<br />

by L. Roscius Fabatus (Fig. IV.7) is typical of issues that make use of Juno Sospita’s<br />

iconography on the coin’s obverse. The earliest appearance of Juno Sospita on the obverse of a<br />

coin occurs on an issue of L. Thorius Balbus ca. 105 BCE, 424 and takes a form similar to the coin<br />

of Fabatus, i.e. a profile head shown wearing the goat-skin cap. 425 (The device represented to the<br />

left of the goddess’ head is not clear.) On the reverse of Fabatus’ coin, an additional reference to<br />

the cult of Juno Sospita can be seen in the maiden and snake that appear before her. This is no<br />

doubt meant to represent a chthonic, oracular serpent, whose task it was to determine the purity<br />

of the young maidens of Lanuvium in order to secure the prosperity of the city. (The device<br />

behind the maiden is reminiscent of either the prow of a ship or a rudder.) Juno was also<br />

associated with coinage in her guise as Juno Moneta, the goddess of the mint located in her<br />

temple on the Capitoline hill. 426<br />

Perhaps the most important Roman from Lanuvium to adopt this practice was the<br />

emperor Antoninus Pius (Fig. IV.8). He continued the tradition of Roman notables before him<br />

and referenced his place of birth on his coinage, in this case an issue minted in Rome. 427 We<br />

may also speculate that by linking himself to this goddess, who was a protector of the state, the<br />

emperor may have also have meant to cast himself in this role as a guarantor of the safety of the<br />

Roman people and the government. In this instance, instead of showing just the goddess’ head,<br />

as on the obverse of Fabatus’ coin, the whole body of the goddess is shown much in the same<br />

way as in a statue from the Antonine Period currently housed in the Vatican (Fig. IV.9). On the<br />

coin, Juno’s right leg is bent as if she is striding forward. She raises her right hand which holds a<br />

spear, and a shield is strapped to her left arm. The inscription on this coin reads IUNONI<br />

423 Brendel (1995, 234-6) discusses the Pyrgi columen plaque which demonstrates the conflict between Tydeus and<br />

Melanippus and its peculiarly Etruscan character. This plaque is one of many striking examples of battle themes in<br />

ancient architectural art, which is replete with Gigantomachies, Centauromachies, Amazonomachies, etc.<br />

424 Gordon 1938, 23.<br />

425 Both issues were minted in Rome.<br />

426 Grueber 1910, 422; Mattingly 1960, 62-3.<br />

427 Mattingly 1940, lxxxi.<br />

87


SISPITE and demonstrates the variation in the spelling of the epithet of this aspect of Juno. The<br />

obverse of the coin was decorated with a portrait of the emperor.<br />

Juno Sospita’s representation in Roman art is thus remarkably consistent with Cicero’s<br />

description of her iconography, and yet there exists one anomalous occurrence of this goddess in<br />

Etruscan art. A small, bronze statuette of Juno Sospita wearing what seems to be a wolf-skin<br />

must be examined for its possible implications regarding the iconography of this goddess as well<br />

as other therianthropes (Fig. IV.11). 428 Perhaps, we should again return to the link between Juno<br />

and Faunus that is present through the festival of the Lupercalia. The amiculum Iunonis, the<br />

goat-skin thong used to induce fertility in maidens and matrons, creates a direct connection<br />

between Faunus and Juno. Certainly, these two deities share a concern with fertility. This link<br />

may help clarify the shift in iconographic types for this goddess; if it is possible that Faunus<br />

could don the skin of the wolf and/or the goat, the same variance may be possible for Juno<br />

Sospita. The martial nature of this aspect of Juno may be an important factor here. The wolf, as<br />

an animal associated with Mars, is appropriate for a civic goddess whose concern is to protect<br />

the state, but the wolf can also connote fertility. The same can be said of the goat, associated<br />

with Pan and his ability to strike fear into the hearts of soldiers and also the aegis worn by<br />

Athena (Fig. IV.10). Thus, the goat can be both a martial animal as well as one associated with<br />

fecundity and increase. Following the model proposed in the previous discussion of Faunus’<br />

iconography, I would speculate that Juno Sospita may have been envisioned as both a “predator”<br />

and protector.<br />

What is it about this goddess that made her so important to the people of Italy? Previous<br />

scholars have examined her iconography and the rituals associated with her worship, but these<br />

have not led to conclusive results concerning her character and sphere of influence. It is my<br />

belief that the conclusions drawn in the past have restricted this goddess and do not fully<br />

appreciate her nature. The first point to be addressed is whether Juno Sospita can be considered<br />

a chthonic goddess and if a chthonic nature rules out connections with celestial bodies, in<br />

particular the moon.<br />

In an attempt to prove that the temple found on the arx of Lanuvium was actually the<br />

temple of Juno Sospita and not a Capitolium, Galieti used the presence of beans and chickpeas as<br />

428 De Agostino (1968, 57) states that in this example, Juno wears the wolf-skin as opposed to her more usual goatskin.<br />

He also notes that her feet also lack the typical calcei repandi. See also Richardson 1983, 361.<br />

88


an indicator that a chthonic deity must have been worshipped there. A chthonic deity would<br />

therefore rule out the presence of the Capitoline Triad. 429 Gordon states that this does not<br />

necessarily mean that the deity worshipped in the temple was chthonic, but that the presence of<br />

the remains does rule out the possibility that the flamen dialis could have been involved in<br />

whatever cult was practiced here. 430 Gordon concludes the following:<br />

Whatever the nature of Juno (or Juno Sospita) may be, it is not, I believe,<br />

chthonian. The only evidence for such a character, other than that just discussed,<br />

is her connection with a peculiar snake ritual that formed the motif of an annual<br />

festival at Lanuvium, and it is questionable whether this connection has any such<br />

significance. 431<br />

This festival was well-known in antiquity and bears further discussion. I believe that we should<br />

not divorce this festival from Juno Sospita as has been done in the past.<br />

The Umbrian elegiac poet Propertius (IV.8.3-14) describes the maidens’ ritual visit to the<br />

serpent of Lanuvium:<br />

Lanuvium is from old guarded by an ancient serpent:<br />

Such that a moment of brief pause is not wasted for you here;<br />

Where a sacred stair is swallowed in a blind chasm,<br />

Where a maiden enters, (maiden beware all such roads!)<br />

The repute of the hungry serpent, when it seeks its annual meal<br />

And hurls the deepest hisses from the earth.<br />

Maidens, sent to such rites, turn pale,<br />

When their hand is rashly trusted to the serpent’s mouth.<br />

He snatches the dishes brought near for him from the virgins:<br />

The very baskets tremble in the young girl’s hands.<br />

If they have been chaste, they return to the embrace of their parents,<br />

And the farmers cry out, “It will be a fruitful year!” 432<br />

This festival seems to serve two purposes, determining the chastity of Lanuvium’s maidens as<br />

well as insuring the fertility of the crops. The origin of the rite is disputed, and it is theorized<br />

429<br />

Galieti 1916, 23-5.<br />

430<br />

Gordon 1938, 27-8.<br />

431<br />

Gordon 1938, 28.<br />

432<br />

Prop. IV.8.3-14. Latin Text taken Sexti Properti Carmina, edited by E.A. Barber, Oxford: Clarendon Press,<br />

1953, p. 156-7. (Translation by Author.)<br />

Lanuvium annosi uetus est tutela draconis, / hic tibi tam rarae non perit hora morae; / qua sacer abripitur caeco<br />

descensus hiatu, / qua penetrat (uirgo, tale iter omne caue!) / ieiuni serpentis honos, cum pabula poscit / annua et ex<br />

ima sibila torquet humo. / talia demissae pallent ad sacra puellae, / cum temere anguino creditur ore manus. / ille sibi<br />

admotas a virgine corripit escas : / virginis in palmis ipsa canistra tremunt. / si fuerint castae, redeunt in colla<br />

parentum, / clamantque agricolae "Fertilis annus erit."<br />

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that it may be Greek. 433 Gordon states that the serpent did not play an important role in Roman<br />

religion and mythology, except in relation to the cult of the Genius, 434 but the importance of this<br />

cult and its connection to fertility have already been stressed in Chapter III. There is no reason<br />

to assume that the rite is Greek in origin, and scholars previous to Gordon have argued for its<br />

Italic nature. 435 We may also not want to limit this serpent strictly to agrarian fertility as Gordon<br />

does. 436 An Etruscan mirror cover demonstrates that Juno Sospita is related to more than just<br />

crops.<br />

The visage of Juno Sospita appears on an Etruscan bronze mirror cover from Tarquinia<br />

(Fig. IV.6). Richardson interprets the scene on this mirror as the reunion of Odysseus and<br />

Penelope. 437 Building upon this interpretation, De Grummond suggests that the appearance of<br />

the goddess relates to an oracle regarding Penelope’s fidelity thereby linking Juno Sospita to the<br />

realms of womanly affairs and marriage. 438 This mirror is also significant for determining the<br />

character of the goddess as a whole, for it demonstrates that this Juno was a goddess of womanly<br />

affairs. Even when depicted as a warrior or civic goddess, Juno no doubt retained her status as a<br />

fertility figure and mother goddess; I see no reason to assume that these two aspects of the<br />

goddess are mutually exclusive.<br />

Shields suggests that connection with the serpent need not imply that Juno Sospita is<br />

chthonic, 439 yet the addition of a serpent to Juno’s attributes makes excellent sense if she is<br />

associated with fertility. Chiarucci takes the connection to the earth one step further and asserts<br />

that this chthonic form of Juno is not only the protectress of Lanuvium and its soldiers, a symbol<br />

of earthly and feminine fertility, but also a funerary goddess. 440 We must not forget that the<br />

celestial goddesses of Greece and Italy find their roots in earlier mother goddesses, and thus they<br />

433 Gordon 1938, 39.<br />

434 Gordon 1938, 39.<br />

435 Douglas (1913, 62, 71) seems indecisive as to the relationship between serpent and goddess when she makes the<br />

following two statements, “This cave and snake have been connected with Iuno Sospita, and although no ancient<br />

writer actually says this, the occurrence of a snake on the coins of Iuno Sospita seems fair proof of it…” and “The<br />

two rites remained distinct and incongruous, that of Iuno as Sospita in her temple on the arx, and the terrible rite of<br />

the serpent in the dark grotto on the hillside.” For support of the link see Frazer 1912, 18; Galietti 1916, 16;<br />

Tomassetti 1910; 280. Galietti remains the strongest supporter of the Italic, prehistoric nature of the serpent cult.<br />

436 Gordon 1938, 41.<br />

437 Richardson 1982, 32<br />

438 De Grummond 2000b, 53-4.<br />

439 Shields 1926, 68.<br />

440 Chiarucci 1983, 75.<br />

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often retain their connection with the snake. 441 Thus, when scholars such as Shields suggest that<br />

a connection with the Lanuvine serpent need not imply a chthonic aspect for Juno, 442 we must be<br />

skeptical. The presence of the goddess’ temple on the top of a mountain need not exclude her<br />

from the chthonic realm either, as Apollo Soranus, discussed earlier in Chapter Three, was the<br />

god of Mt. Soracte.<br />

Furthermore, there are other indications of Juno Sospita’s chthonic nature. Her festival<br />

was celebrated on the first of February, an ill-omened month associated with purification,<br />

fertility and the dead. Fowler states, “If pleasure is the object of the mid-winter festivals, the<br />

fulfillment of duties towards the gods and the manes would seem to be that of the succeeding<br />

period.” 443 This is the character of the month opened by the worship of Juno Sospita and the<br />

dedication of her temple in Rome. 444 During the month of February, there are further<br />

connections between Juno and fertility rites; Turcan notes that Juno is also worshipped in<br />

February under the guise Juno Caprotina, or Juno Februata. Fowler goes on to associate the rites<br />

of Juno Caprotina with those of the Lupercalia suggesting that she was likely represented as<br />

wearing the goat skin of Juno Sospita and was thus linked to the generative power of the he-<br />

goat. 445 Juno Caprotina was also worshipped on July 7, the Nonae Caprotinae. The Nonae<br />

Caprotinae involved a role reversal of matrons and their hand-maidens in addition to the<br />

sacrifice of a goat under a sacred fig tree, a caprificus, in the Campus Martius. Like Juno<br />

Sospita, Juno Caprotina was a Latin goddess and was also associated with the goat, a creature<br />

known in antiquity for its fertility. In this instance, there is no doubt that Juno is associated with<br />

female fertility and the earth. 446 It has also been suggested that the rites of the Nonae Caprotinae<br />

may also have been intended as purificatory and the sacred goat sacrificed to Juno was a<br />

representation of Caprotina herself. 447 Given all of this evidence, it is not clear whether Juno<br />

Caprotina and Juno Sospita were separate goddesses. 448<br />

Juno Sospita was a polyvalent goddess not limited strictly to female concerns. As<br />

mentioned earlier, she was also the great protectress of Lanuvium. Regardless of whether or not<br />

441 Bevan 1986, 266<br />

442 Shields 1926, 68.<br />

443 Fowler 1925, 299.<br />

444 Fowler 1925, 302.<br />

445 Turcan 2000, 35.<br />

446 Fowler 1925, 178; Shields 1926, 49.<br />

447 Johnson 1960, 114.<br />

448 Grueber 1910, 370 n.3.<br />

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the etymology of her name indicates a military role, her iconography certainly does. The goat<br />

skin, spear, and the serpent that categorize this aspect of the goddess also link her<br />

iconographically to Greek Athena. In Athens, Athena wore the aegis, a goat skin (although it is<br />

not always represented as such) that bore the head of the Gorgon, and was often dressed in her<br />

panoply. The Etruscan Menerva and Roman Minerva followed this iconographic type (Fig.<br />

IV.10). While Menerva wears the aegis, a goat skin decorated with the head of the Gorgon<br />

Medusa, it is clear that she is not as closely associated with the goat as Juno Sospita. Menerva’s<br />

goat skin is draped across her shoulders and chest and lacks the emphasis of the legs and hooves.<br />

More importantly, Menerva is often depicted wearing a helmet and not a cap made of a goat<br />

head displaying prominent horns. These iconographic elements are present in the iconography<br />

of Juno Sospita, who is a better candidate for a theriomorphic or therianthropic goddess.<br />

She was also associated with the serpent baby Erechthonius and the Athenian king<br />

Erechtheus, both of whom were envisioned as a serpent or serpent hybrid. 449 The linguistic link<br />

between Juno Sospita and Athena Soteria has already been mentioned, and it is possible that the<br />

Italian Juno of Lanuvium was influenced by an Ionic form of Athena. 450 This visual resemblance<br />

between the two goddesses is important but does not necessitate a direct transference of a Greek<br />

Ionian deity to Italian shores. While Athena is shown with an aegis draped about her shoulders,<br />

she does not wear the goat’s head as her helmet. Likewise Juno does not possess a gorgoneion<br />

on her goatskin. Athena, while primarily a military goddess, occasionally does take on<br />

characteristics similar to those of a mother goddess in both Greece and Etruria. 451<br />

Further light may be shed on the character of Juno Sospita by examining the goddesses<br />

with whom she may have been associated. Like many other sanctuaries in Latium and Etruria,<br />

the one at Pyrgi, the port town of Etruscan Caere, was decorated with antefixes in the likeness of<br />

Juno Sospita. The dedicatee of Temple B, Uni-Astarte, 452 was at the heart of a web of syncretic<br />

connections. If we assume that Temple B is referred to by Strabo and Diodorus Siculus, then the<br />

449 Bevan 1986, 263-4, 273-4.<br />

450 Shields 1926, 69.<br />

451 See Luyster (1965, 136-6) for a discussion of Athena’s relation to mothers and (1965, 145-7) for Athena’s<br />

association with snakes as an emblem of fertility and a prophetic animal. See De Grummond (2006a, 74-5; 2006b)<br />

for a discussion of Menerva’s role in the care of the “Mari babies.”<br />

452 Palmer (1969, 301-9) argues that a shrine of Uni-Astarte is the subject of the Pyrgi laminae and not Temple B,<br />

which he assigns to the goddess Venilia. While it is possible that the dedication was of a shrine and not the entire<br />

temple building, there is no evidence recording the presence of the goddess Venilia. Serra Ridgway (1990, 529)<br />

following Colonna identifies the dedicate of Temple B as Uni-Astarte and Temple A as Thesan, the Etruscan<br />

equivalent of Greek Leucothea and Roman Mater Matuta.<br />

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form of Uni worshipped here is associated with the Latin Juno, Phoenician Astarte, and Greek<br />

Ino-Leucothea and Eileithuia. 453 Jannot does not assign Ino-Leucothea as the dedicatee of<br />

Temple B and instead asserts that she was venerated in Temple A as Ino-Leucothea or Mater<br />

Matuta. 454 The difference in attribution of the dedicatees of the temples does not rule out the<br />

possibility of syncretism for Uni and Ino-Leucothea. 455 Perhaps, these two temples were meant<br />

to venerate different aspects of the same goddess. This is not out of the question since well-<br />

known sanctuaries, such as that of Hera at Paestum or the Acropolis of Athens, possessed<br />

multiple temples dedicated to the same goddess. Paestum is also comparable in that it was a port<br />

city. If these temples were dedicated to different goddesses, a comparison might be found in the<br />

St. Omobono sanctuary in Rome, which possessed temples dedicated to Fortuna and Mater<br />

Matuta. In any case, the abundance of Etruscan images of Juno Sospita, which begin in the<br />

Archaic period, and the fact that this iconographic type may have been created by Etruscan<br />

artists 456 lead me to conclude that the worshippers of Uni-Astarte may have associated her<br />

directly with Juno Sospita. 457 Since Juno Sospita, Uni, and Astarte are all civic goddesses, who<br />

are in turn associated with womanly affairs, 458 an antefix in the form of the head of Juno Sospita<br />

would make perfect sense for the decoration of a temple in the religio-political context of a<br />

multicultural port town. That the Etruscans may also have conceived of Uni-Astarte in the guise<br />

of Juno Sospita may be supported by the images of other deities who have been influenced by<br />

Near-Eastern iconography, as will be demonstrated in Chapter VII.<br />

Thus, as we have seen in the previous chapters with examples of deities that take on<br />

serpent and wolf forms, the choice to use animal iconography is indicative of a complex and<br />

multivalent nature. Juno Sospita is an excellent example of an important goddess whose nature is<br />

clouded rather than clarified by the use of a goat skin as a conspicuous element of her<br />

iconography. Faunus’ iconography is by no means certain, and this problem stems from<br />

conflicting ways of depicting the god. There seems to be a discrepancy between the presentation<br />

453<br />

Fitzmeyer 1966, 288.<br />

454<br />

Jannot 2005, 90.<br />

455<br />

Serra Ridgway (1990, 529) uses the expression “aspects of the manifold powers of the Mother Goddess Uni (or<br />

Astarte)” to describe the dedicatees of this sanctuary.<br />

456<br />

Douglas 1913, 64-8.<br />

457<br />

Simon (2006, 61) suggests that because Astarte was a warrior goddess, the Etruscans were more likely to<br />

conceive of Uni as being in combat.<br />

458<br />

Palmer (1974, 46) states the following, “If Juno’s relation to womankind remains vague in our meager sources,<br />

Astarte had been venerated for her fecundity long before she even came to Etruria.” This supports the notion that<br />

we must not exorcise fertility from Juno Sospita.<br />

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of Faunus in poetry and art, which respectively depict him as a frivolous or foolish god or a<br />

mature, stately figure. Both Faunus and Juno Sospita are also syncretized with a number of<br />

deities from Italy and/or from foreign shores, and their distinctive character is that much more<br />

difficult to discover as a result.<br />

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CHAPTER 5: THE BULL<br />

No one book can fully explain the whys and whats of the Minotaur’s existence. Most of<br />

the time the Minotaur is able to forget that his history has been duly chronicled for<br />

anyone to see. It has been a long time since his life had any relevance outside his<br />

immediate circumstances, and as time passes fewer and fewer people seem to know or<br />

care who he is, so he feels cloaked in a tenuous veil of complicated anonymity. Granted,<br />

a creature half man and half bull doesn’t go unnoticed doing his laundry… 459<br />

Deities in many cultures manifest themselves in the form of a bull. The bull’s imagery<br />

appears from “late Upper Paleolithic times to the end of antiquity.” 460 The Apis and Mnevis<br />

bulls of Egypt, the bull imagery in Crete, and the many transformations of gods into bulls in<br />

classical mythology all testify to the prominence of this animal. 461 Furthermore, in animal<br />

sacrifice, which formed the central core of ritual behavior in the ancient world, no animal could<br />

claim as high a status as the bull. 462 The domesticated bull was not only the victim of sacrifice<br />

but was also a hard-working laborer that fulfilled many roles on the farm and in the city, 463 and<br />

at the same time the wild bull was recognized as a symbol of strength and power and appeared in<br />

both mythic narratives and the arena as the antagonist of heroes and warriors. 464 One expression<br />

of this legacy appears in the animal iconography of the Italian socii who fought Rome in the<br />

Social War and used the bull as a symbol of Italia on their coins. 465<br />

Another result of the awe man felt for the power of the bull was the creation of the man-<br />

bull hybrid, a fearsome creature that had a long and distinguished pedigree. The earliest<br />

appearance of the man-bull may go back as far as the fourth millennium B.C.E on cylinder seals<br />

from Northern Mesopotamia, and the Greeks’ use of the man-bull for the figure of the Minotaur<br />

459 Sherrill 2000, 237. The premise of Sherrill’s novel deals with the trials and tribulations of being a bull-man in<br />

the modern day in the deep south. It offers a fictional perspective of the life of a therianthropic being. While not a<br />

scholarly text, it is worth reading as an example of how these figures still captivate our imagination.<br />

460 Rice 1998, 5.<br />

461 Rice 1998, 44-50.<br />

462 Burkert (1985, 55) states this idea in relation to Greek religion, but it is equally applicable to Roman worship as<br />

well.<br />

463 One other point to consider is that the slaughter of an ox denotes a certain degree of wealth and status since one<br />

can give up so valuable an animal.<br />

464 Toynbee 1973, 148-52.<br />

465 Altheim (1938, 66-8) links the name Italia to the Itali, the bull people.<br />

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probably derives from Sumerian models. 466 The bull remains a symbol of nobility, strength, and<br />

power for modern man, but, as mentioned earlier, we are more greatly removed from nature, and<br />

many of us reach maturity without ever seeing a bull first hand. This was not the case in<br />

antiquity, when men would have likely seen an ox pulling a cart or plow or possibly attended a<br />

bull sacrifice and afterwards participated in a communal feast.<br />

The potency of the bull manifests itself in two main types of hybrid that blend the<br />

features of bull and man. The first of these is the bull-man that possesses the body of a man and<br />

the head of a bull. This type is perhaps the most familiar to students of myth due to the depiction<br />

of Theseus’ adversary, the Minotaur, in this fashion. The myth of the Minotaur reached Italian<br />

shores but met with different degrees of interest in Etruscan and Roman art. While the Romans<br />

do not seem to have been particularly interested in the Minotaur, he was popular with the<br />

Etruscans from early on. 467 As one would imagine, though, the use of this myth in an Etruscan<br />

and Roman context demonstrates considerable variation from that of the Greeks. The most<br />

notable difference can be found on an Etruscan mirror that represents the death of the Minotaur<br />

at the hands of Hercle instead of These (Fig. V.1). 468 The identity of the Minotaur is confirmed<br />

by the presence of an inscription labeling the bull-man as Thevrumines and the addition of<br />

Ariatha and Mine, the Etruscan Ariadne and Minos. 469<br />

It is not possible to dismiss this variant of the myth as Etruscan ignorance due to the<br />

representation of Hercle in combat with the Minotaur on an earlier vessel (Fig. V.2). 470 The<br />

substitution of Hercle for These on this piece not only calls the nature of Etruscan appropriation<br />

of Greek myth into question but also suggests other problems such as, who made the decision to<br />

make this replacement, artist or patron? Was there a specific reason that Hercle was substituted<br />

466 Rice 1998, 264-5.<br />

467 Woodford 1992, 580-1. The Romans appear to have adopted the image of the Minotaur for floor mosaics that<br />

depicted him at the center of a labyrinth, while the Etruscans created images that reflect various stages of the mythic<br />

narrative. Woodford goes on to suggest that the Minotaur may be a representation of death residing in an<br />

otherworldly labyrinth. Brommer (1981, 1-12) collects images of objects from a wide chronological span and<br />

different media to demonstrate the presence of Theseus and the Minotaur in Etruscan art.<br />

468 From left to right, the figures present in this scene can be identified (according to inscriptions around the edge of<br />

the mirror) as Mine (Minos), Menerva, Vile (Iolaos), Ariatha (Ariadne), and Hercle, who reclines over the corpse of<br />

the Thevrumines (Minotaur). An unidentified youth reaching out towards a bird appears in the upper exergue of the<br />

mirror, and a marine scene fills the lower exergue. A tendril scroll runs around the border of the mirror, and a wavy<br />

line which may indicate the atmosphere appears within the border.<br />

469 Here the Minotaur is labeled as such indicating his nature and heritage. He is not given his “proper” name,<br />

Asterios or Asterion. Rice (1998, 210) notes that this name probably means “the Starry One” and may hint at a<br />

celestial component of the Minotaur myth. Even so, the bull gods discussed in this chapter are more frequently<br />

connected with the earth and the natural world as opposed to the heavens.<br />

470 De Grummond 2006a, 12, 186.<br />

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for These? Is this mirror representative of a conflation of Hercle’s labor to conquer the Cretan<br />

Bull and Theseus’ slaying of the Minotaur? We may never be able to answer these questions<br />

reliably. While this is an extreme (and yet not solitary) example of variation in myth, it is an<br />

important reminder that myths, just as the gods featured in them, are fluid and changeable.<br />

A second appearance of Hercle in combat with the Minotaur is represented on an<br />

Etruscan black-figure amphora. In Fig. V.2, the figure on the left, wielding a club and wearing a<br />

lion skin, is clearly Hercle, the Etruscan Herakles. Hercle lunges forward towards a fleeing<br />

therianthrope. One might be tempted to identify the therianthrope as Pan or a satyr due to the<br />

popularity of scenes in which these figures do battle. 471 This therianthrope is also visually<br />

similar to the image of Pan on Fig. IV.1, a later Greek vase imported into Etruria. Nevertheless,<br />

two elements of this scene argue for a different interpretation. The therianthrope shown here is<br />

not ithyphallic, and the curve of the horns is closer to that of a bull than a goat or ram. G.<br />

Camporeale and N. Spivey suggest that instead of an image of Hercle pursuing a fleeing satyr,<br />

we should instead identify this scene as Hercle in combat with the Minotaur. 472 This is indeed<br />

possible due to the presence of the defeated Minotaur on Fig. V.1.<br />

Small suggests that appearances of the Minotaur in Etruscan art are due to an Etruscan<br />

interest in monsters, or perhaps Daedalus, who immigrated to Italy, instead of the customary<br />

Greek focus on the hero Theseus. 473 Other Etruscan and Roman images of the bull-man are<br />

problematic, and there appears to be no scholarly consensus as to the identity of this hybrid when<br />

it appears in art. The iconography of therianthropic bull-men is variously interpreted as<br />

representing the Minotaur, Dionysos, or Achelous. F. Altheim also suggests that Mars was<br />

conceived of in bull form but provides neither examples of the war god’s iconography in which<br />

he is shown as having taurine features nor literary evidence to this effect. 474<br />

471<br />

Simon 2006, 51; for an example of the combat between Hercle and Satyrs see Brendel 1995, Fig. 146, 147.<br />

472<br />

Camporeale 1965, 118; Spivey 1987, 45.<br />

473<br />

Small 1986, 91.<br />

474<br />

Altheim (1938, 65-79) uses linguistic evidence (see note 7) and the fact that a bull was sacrificed to Mars to<br />

indicate that Mars was conceived of as a bull. The possibility of Mars taking on bull form is intriguing; however,<br />

there does not seem to be enough supporting evidence to conclude that he could do so. In Chapter 3, I argue for<br />

Faunus being conceived of in wolf form based on linguistic testimony in the form of his priests’ name and an epithet<br />

applied to the god’s name, the unusual sacrifice of a dog during the rites of the Lupercalia, and a number of artifacts<br />

which represent a lupine god. In the case of Mars, there is no etymological connection between the name Mars and<br />

the bull nor are there Roman or Etruscan priests that bear the name of “Bull-men.” We may also not conclude that<br />

the sacrifice of a bull is a basis for Mars taking on taurine form due to the common occurrence of bull sacrifices to<br />

many gods and goddesses, who did not all take on bull or cow form. As will be demonstrated in this chapter,<br />

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A bull therianthrope identified as either the Minotaur or the god Dionysos appears on an<br />

Etruscan red-figure cup by the Settecamini Painter (Fig. V.3). This cup is important for a<br />

number of reasons. Scholars such as Brunn and S. Woodford have suggested that the inspiration<br />

for this image was Euripides’ lost tragedy, Cretans. In his discussion of five Etruscan cinerary<br />

urns of the Hellenistic Period, Brunn provides a short synopsis of the plot of the Cretans, which<br />

begins after the birth of the Minotaur and presumably ends with Pasiphae’s suicide. 475 An ash<br />

urn in Volterra (Fig. V.4) serves as one example of this series of cinerary urns. The figural<br />

decoration on these urns presents the infant Minotaur in the company of Pasiphae, Minos,<br />

Daedalus, Icarus and others. 476 These urns certainly do not represent an episode in the life of<br />

Dionysos, as is evident from the multiplicity of figures and, as can be seen in Fig V.4, the<br />

occasional presence of a bull, who must be none other than the Minotaur’s father. The presence<br />

of a narrative tradition concerning the Minotaur’s childhood on the cinerary urns makes it seem<br />

more likely to me that the Settecamini Painter also meant to represent the Minotaur and not<br />

Dionysos. While the Settecamini Painter may or may not have been consciously trying to<br />

represent the plot of Euripides’ play, this drama could have been the vehicle through which<br />

traditions of the Minotaur’s childhood were transferred to Etruria. Furthermore, Brendel uses the<br />

cup by the Settecamini Painter to demonstrate that a sophisticated Etruscan literary culture must<br />

have existed in which the Etruscans were able to appreciate the “ferocious” or “comic” side of<br />

Greek myth. He further states, “The absurdity of the maternal idyll serves as a reminder: even<br />

the monster was once a dear child.” 477 If we interpret this child as the Minotaur, then the woman<br />

holding the bull-man in her lap must be none other than Pasiphae, wife of Minos and queen of<br />

Crete.<br />

This argument is both logical and appealing, but a second interpretation exists. In his<br />

discussion of the animal forms of Dionysos, Frazer suggests that a “red-figured vase” shows<br />

Dionysos “portrayed as a calf-headed child seated on a woman’s lap.” 478 In his discussion of this<br />

representations of bull therianthropes are problematic and not easily identifiable, and thus I must rule out the<br />

possibility of Mars being represented in theriomorphic or therianthropic form.<br />

475 Brunn and Körte 1872-1916, 83; Woodford 1992, 581.<br />

476 Beazley (1947, 54) concurs with this identification; for a discussion of the cinerary urns, see Brunn and Körte<br />

1872-1916, pl. 28,3, 29,4, 29,5, 29,5a, and 30,6.<br />

477 Brendel 1995, 344.<br />

478 Frazer (1922, 399) lists the various objects that represent Dionysos in partial bull form. “Types of the horned<br />

Dionysus are found amongst the surviving monuments of antiquity. On one statuette he appears clad in a bull’s hide,<br />

the head, horns, and hoofs hanging down behind. Again, he is represented as a child with clusters of grapes round<br />

his brow, and a calf’s head, with sprouting horns, attached to the back of his head. On a red-figured vase the god is<br />

98


cup, J. Beazley notes that previous scholars have both shared and disputed the opinion that this<br />

may be Dionysos. 479 Could we be looking at a representation of the infant Dionysos with one of<br />

his nurses? No other iconographical elements represented on this plate are significant enough to<br />

suggest that identifying the child as the Minotaur is possible. The seated female could be a<br />

member of a royal family but may also be a nymph. The cista and goose in the background of<br />

the image do not aid in the identification of the scene. The apparent age of the child is not a<br />

factor in this decision as the representation of children and infants may or may not reflect the<br />

actual age of the individual depicted by a piece of art, and realistic representation of children<br />

does not begin until the Hellenistic Period. 480<br />

In the context of Greek myth, Dionysos was born with bull’s horns, but the myths do not<br />

state that he was born with a calf’s head. 481 This discrepancy between literary tradition and<br />

artistic evidence does not rule out the possibility that the seated woman holding this monstrous<br />

child could be Ino cradling her ward 482 or one of the nymphs of Nysa, who were also reputed to<br />

be nurses of Dionysos. The outside of the cup is even decorated with a Dionysiac theme, the<br />

sparagmos of Pentheus; thus perhaps two myths related to Dionysos are represented on the<br />

cup. 483 Nevertheless, I remain hesitant to accept this figure as the god of the vine, due to the<br />

aforementioned association of a bull-headed child with the literary tradition of Eurpides’<br />

Cretans.<br />

Another controversial piece is a fragmentary terracotta revetment plaque that once<br />

decorated the Regia in the Roman Forum (Fig. V.5). The plaque includes a bull-headed man<br />

wearing a short tunic and two flanking panthers. This bull-man has been identified as a<br />

Minotaur by N. Winter, who views the Regia plaque as a demonstrable link between the<br />

terracotta decoration of the Regia and the Bacchiad family of Corinth. 484 This connection to<br />

Corinth likely means that the panthers flanking the therianthropic figure are somehow tied to the<br />

animal style prominent on Corinthian pottery. I. Iacopi suggests a different identification, and<br />

portrayed as a calf-headed child seated on a woman’s lap.” Frazer does not, however, provide any further details or<br />

citations for these objects. In the case of Fig. V.3, we may speculate that this is the cup Frazer mentions.<br />

479<br />

Beazley 1947, 54; De Ridder 1902, 624-5; Frazer 1922, 399.<br />

480<br />

Pollitt 1986, 128.<br />

481<br />

Eur. Bacch. 100.<br />

482<br />

Pipili (1991, 145) notes that the tradition of Ino taking on the care of Dionysos may not have been a secondary<br />

tradition everywhere and that later Roman writers seemed fond of this version of the story.<br />

483<br />

Beazley 1947, 54-5.<br />

484 Winter, 2006, 349-55.<br />

99


efers to the bull-headed man as Dionysos the bull, who has been “assimilated to a prototype of<br />

the Minotaur” and suggests that this “hybrid type derives from Greece, probably through<br />

Cumae.” 485 She then interprets the panthers as animals that typically accompany Dionysos or<br />

animals that he sometimes rides. E.R. Young, on the other hand, suggests that Dionysos, when<br />

depicted in therianthropic form is represented as a bull with a man’s head and that this bull-man<br />

may be an attendant to a god “like” Dionysos or Zagreus. 486 Woodford suggests that this bull-<br />

man may be an “anonymous creature serving either decorative or apotropaic purposes.” 487 That<br />

there was no cult of Dionysos honored in the Regia need not deter us from linking the revetment<br />

plaque to the god, as the scenes represented in pediments or sculptural friezes are not often<br />

directly linked to the honoree of a temple. 488 Still, the argument that panthers are a creature of<br />

Dionysos is not strong enough to identify the Regia bull-man as the god of the vine. This may be<br />

nothing more than a monster placed in a decorative frieze, such as the many sirens and sphinges<br />

that appear on Corinthian pottery, 489 and thus the panther may have no bearing on the identity of<br />

the bull-man.<br />

Thus, there is no scholarly consensus as to the identity of the bull therianthrope on either<br />

the Settecamini Painter’s cup or the Regia plaque. Neither of these pieces bears an inscription or<br />

sufficient iconographical or narrative details to secure the identity of the bull-man beyond a<br />

shadow of a doubt. Perhaps there was a conceptual link between the Minotaur and Dionysos, for<br />

Dionysos does play a role in the narrative of Theseus’ saga. 490 It is the abandonment of Ariadne,<br />

the Minotaur’s half-sister and the princess who facilitated Theseus’ victory of the monster, that<br />

allows Dionysos to take a wife. It is surely not coincidence that the Minotaur’s sister is the bride<br />

of a bull-god. 491 A. Evans takes this hypothetical connection one step further and boldly states<br />

that the Minotaur is one incarnation of Dionysos and that the stories of the Minotaur are<br />

485 Iacopi 1976, 35.<br />

486 Young 1972, 92.<br />

487 Woodford 1992, 579.<br />

488 Brown and Scott (1985, 186) list the deities with cults in the Regia as Mars and Ops Consiva. The possibility of<br />

a cult of Mars in the Regia may return us to Altheim’s suggestion that Mars could be conceived as a bull god, but<br />

there is no evidence to suggest that the bull-man on this plaque is Mars.<br />

489 Winter 2006, 349-55.<br />

490 From the outset, the chain of myths which leads to the birth of the Minotaur is full of bull, so to speak.<br />

491 For the identification of the bull-man on the Regia plaque, Altheim (1938, 70-4) presupposes an Etruscan original<br />

covered over by a Greek conception and follows the general trend of Kerényi, Evans, and Bevan when suggesting<br />

that bull gods find their ultimate origin in Minoan religion.<br />

100


epresentative of a Minoan precursor to Dionysos, the horned-god. 492 In addition to the possible<br />

links found in the mythic narrative, a few factors that may argue in favor of this possibility relate<br />

to the presence of a Cretan version of Dionysos. These are the common tie in mythical traditions<br />

involving the consumption of raw flesh, and the presence of Dionysos’ name amongst Linear B<br />

tablets. One suggestion of Bevan may explain the prominence of so many bull-headed items<br />

from Bronze Age Crete. Bevan states that “… it is also possible to interpret some episodes in the<br />

story of Theseus as allegorical versions of the defeat of this old religion.” 493 Perhaps we may<br />

speculate that the myth of the Minotaur is a reflection of priests participating in an animal<br />

masquerade linked to a sacrifice; after all, it was the Minotaur who devoured the seven youths<br />

and seven maidens sent to Crete by the Athenians. The relationship between Dionysos<br />

(especially a bull-formed Dionysos or Dionysos Tauromorphos), the Minotaur, and Crete bears<br />

further investigation.<br />

The relationship between the Greek Dionysos and his Italian counterparts Liber and<br />

Fufluns is neither simple nor straightforward. The god of the vine and fertility could be found in<br />

Italy under the Latin name Liber Pater and the Etruscan names Pacha 494 and Fufluns. The name<br />

Fufluns is possibly related to the Etruscan and Umbrian words for bud or sprout, 495 and he was<br />

likely a local vegetation god of the city Populonia, although the exact nature of the connection<br />

between Fufluns and Populonia is not entirely clear. 496 It is difficult to determine when the<br />

Italian and Greek identities of the god of the vine merged, but it is possible that Liber was not<br />

immediately subsumed by the identity of Dionysos. 497 Altheim demonstrates that Greek<br />

equivalents for this god’s Roman and Etruscan names further cloud the matter of this identity;<br />

the cult title /% & ( corresponds to Liber, B B& ( to Fufluns, and B4 ? ( to Pacha. 498 A<br />

492<br />

Evans (1988, 46, 57). Evan’s text has not met with favorable reviews. See Seaford 1989, 145 for a rather<br />

scathing appraisal of this work.<br />

493<br />

Bevan 1986, 85.<br />

494<br />

Jannot (2005, 160) suggests that Fufluns was a name drawn from mythic narrative and that Pacha was a distinct<br />

cult name. Cristofani and Martelli (1978, 130) note that the syncretism of Fufluns and Bacchus is attested in the<br />

fifth C BCE.<br />

495<br />

Bonfante 1993, 222; De Grummond 2006a, 113.<br />

496<br />

Bonfante 1993, 222. Altheim (1938, 151-3) notes that there is a connection between Dionysos and Hephaistos on<br />

Naxos and a connection between Fufluns and Sethlans at Populonia. Jannot (2005, 161) notes that the exact<br />

relationship between Fufluns and Populonia is not clear.<br />

497<br />

Bruhl 1953, 19.<br />

498<br />

Altheim 1938, 150-1. Cristofani and Martelli (1978, 127-8) also point to a similar formulation of Pa?a to<br />

B4 ? (, and indicate that Dionysos B ? D ( was a particular aspect of this god associated with Corinth and<br />

Sikyon. This would link Fufluns Pa? e to the orgiastic component of the cult of Bacchus.<br />

101


ecent discussion of the perception of this god of the vine and fertility appears in a treatment of<br />

the well-known megalographic frieze in Room 5 of the Villa of the Mysteries. D. Wilburn notes<br />

the difficulty in choosing a name for the reclining god on the east wall of this room. This god<br />

might have been recognized as Dionysos, Liber, Fufluns, or perhaps Loufir depending on the<br />

chronology and culture of the viewer. 499 On the other hand, Etruscan mirrors dating to the 4 th C<br />

BCE indicate that Fufluns became associated with traditional tales of Dionysos, such as being<br />

born from the thigh of Zeus (Etruscan Tinia) and journeying to the underworld to rescue his<br />

mother Semele (Etruscan Semla). 500<br />

In any case, Fufluns/Liber was likely one of the most prominent gods in Etruria and his<br />

presence was known in central Italy by the 7 th C BCE. 501 Altheim further notes there were<br />

country Liberalia/Dionysia in Italy in the 6 th C BCE. 502 Another indicator of Fufluns/Liber’s<br />

popularity is his presence among the Eleusinian gods, Demeter, Iacchos, and Persephone, who<br />

are found on Italian soil under the names Ceres, Liber, and Libera, the Aventine Triad,<br />

introduced to Rome in 496 BCE. 503 Iacchos remains a puzzling figure, who could have either<br />

originated as an incarnation of Bacchus or became syncretized with him over time; in any case,<br />

Bacchus was firmly associated with the Underworld in Italy. 504 The Locri plaques serve as<br />

visual evidence for this connection, 505 and Fufluns also appears on a portion of the Piacenza liver<br />

that suggests his nature as a chthonic deity. 506 One might expect to find evidence of Dionysos’<br />

taurine nature in these associations due to his close connection to the earth, yet it does not appear<br />

here.<br />

499<br />

Wilburn 2000, 14-15; Wilburn 2000, 50-8. Loufir, mentioned here for the first time, was a Samnite god that may<br />

be the same as Latin Liber.<br />

500<br />

De Grummond 2006a, 116.<br />

501<br />

Bonfante 1993, 222; De Grummond 2006a, 113.<br />

502<br />

Altheim 1938, 159-60. Altheim (1938, 125) also sums up his position on the nature of Dionysos as follows: “All<br />

those details, in which hitherto his [Liber] special character as an Italian deity has been seen, are revealed on closer<br />

scrutiny as allusions to Dionysos.”<br />

503<br />

Bruhl (1953, 13,15) mentions the adoption of the cult of the Aventine Triad in 496 BC by the order of the<br />

Sibylline Books and states that the festival of the Liberalia was more ancient than the Cerealia indicating an<br />

indigenous cult dedicated to Liber. Nilsson (175, 12) further notes the popularity of the Eleusinian gods in Magna<br />

Graecia, and that representations of Orpheus and the underworld appear on Apulian vases from the beginning of the<br />

third century BCE and the plays of Plautus reference Bacchants and the Bacchanalia in the 2 nd C BCE. In<br />

conjunction with this other evidence, Nilsson cites an inscription (Nilsson 1975, Fig. 1) from Cumae, “forbidding<br />

those who have not been initiated to Bacchus to be buried in a certain place.” This inscription dates to the first half<br />

of the fifth C BCE.<br />

504<br />

Nilsson 1975, 118.<br />

505<br />

Nilsson 1975, 120.<br />

506<br />

De Grummond (2006a, 44) notes that Fufluns is present in houses 9 and 24 on the liver. House 9 is in a region of<br />

the liver associated with infernal gods.<br />

102


The Bacchic god offered man the gift of the vine, a source of solace to ease daily woes,<br />

but he was also unpredictable, a wild and savage god whose horrific vengeance was capable of<br />

terrifying even his most devout followers. 507 This dual nature of the god is reflected in the<br />

choice of animals used to represent him. While the bull may be peaceful, he is also a fearsome<br />

beast.<br />

Poseidon is scarcely a fertility-god like Dionysos: so perhaps it was the strength<br />

and anger of the animal whose tread shakes the ground, that made it a symbol for<br />

the god of earthquakes (whom Hesiod called “bull-like earth-shaker”). Poseidon<br />

could send an earthquake to terrify human-beings; and for the same purpose he<br />

sent a bull to ravage Crete, in punishment for Minos’ lack of respect. 508<br />

We must ask ourselves, though, if this unpredictable and savage nature is reflected in the Italian<br />

counterparts of Dionysos, and if Fufluns or Liber were conceived of in a taurine incarnation. As<br />

noted earlier, there are no secure representations of Fufluns or Liber in the form of a bull. It may<br />

be that the Etruscans and Romans conceived of their gods Fufluns and Liber as distinct from this<br />

facet of Dionysos’ nature. Even so, Fufluns and Liber were gods of fertility and vegetation, the<br />

underworld, and regeneration, 509 aspects appropriate to theriomorphic and therianthropic deities,<br />

and perhaps the character of Bacchic religion may point to an aspect of the god of the vine not<br />

revealed by his iconography in Italy.<br />

That Dionysiac cult in Italy took forms similar to the Greek cult practiced in Asia Minor<br />

is indicated by epigraphic evidence that preserves Greek cult titles and names. 510 All of this<br />

indicates that a conception of Dionysos known to us from Euripides’ Bacchae was likely<br />

connected to the native Fufluns and Liver, and as M.P. Nilsson notes, “The numerous<br />

representations of Dionysiac subjects and sometimes of Bacchic mysteries prove how popular<br />

the Bacchic religion was in Italy and the western provinces.” 511 Determining at what point<br />

Dionysos “ends,” and Fufluns or Liber “begins” is no easy matter.<br />

507<br />

Eur. Bacch. 1153-1215. The interaction between the Chorus and Agave, after she returns bearing the head of her<br />

son, demonstrates that, even though the chorus was triumphant, they cringe at the result of their god’s anger.<br />

508<br />

Bevan 1986, 84.<br />

509<br />

Wilburn 2000, 53,55,<br />

510<br />

Nilsson 1975, 54. Some of the cult titles reference bulls, i.e. the dancers who were named B & # Three<br />

inscriptions which reference Greek cult names were found in Rome (ILS 3369), Cora (ILS3367), and Puteoli (ILS<br />

4061).<br />

511<br />

Nilsson 1975, 78. Wiseman (2005, 73) states, in relation to Dionysos, that “Perhaps the free god of Rome<br />

imitated the free god of Athens right from the start.” Altheim (1938, 294) further points out that when the Romans<br />

discussed the Bacchic Conspiracy, that the cult, in its Greek from, migrated from South Italy to Etruria and then to<br />

Rome.<br />

103


The rites of Bacchic cult practice reflect the character of a liminal deity who transgressed<br />

social norms. R.P. Winnington-Ingram, commenting on the Greek cult of Dionysos, states the<br />

following, “His worship included wild rites, devoted to the production of ecstasy by music and<br />

dancing, by bloody sacrifice, by the sheer intoxication of being one of a band of worshippers, a<br />

thiasos.” 512 In this context, Dionysos represents an elemental force, a wildness sometimes<br />

repressed by civilization. The mountain dances and the wild cries of “euhoi!” were outside the<br />

daily experience of the Romans and Etruscans. Perhaps Dionysiac worship is a way for man to<br />

come to terms with his animal, primal nature, and this may be the message of Euripides’<br />

Bacchae. 513 E.R. Dodds states, “To resist Dionysos is to repress the elemental in one’s own<br />

nature…” 514 Taurine imagery used to represent Dionysos, i.e. a man with bestial anatomy, could<br />

have been chosen as a way of representing his fundamentally savage nature. 515 This animalistic<br />

nature is reflected in Dionysos’ character in the Bacchae and also, most vividly, in the rites of<br />

the ( and the t M , . 516 It is difficult for us to imagine a group of crazed<br />

worshippers actually tearing apart a wild animal and consuming its flesh raw; on the other hand,<br />

a symbolic representation of this act may serve the same function of blurring the boundary of<br />

nature and culture and embracing man’s primal character. Due to its character as a mystery<br />

religion, it is not clear what happened during the Bacchic rites. We do know that this cult was<br />

popular in Etruria, and Livy states that the cult of Bacchus spread from Etruria to Rome where it<br />

met with opposition from the ruling class. 517 Livy’s account is as follows:<br />

The following year [i.e., 186 BCE] diverted the consuls, Spurius Postumius<br />

Albinus and Quintus Marcius Phillipus from the army and the supervision of wars<br />

and their provinces to the punishment of an internal conspiracy… The<br />

investigation of secret plots was voted to both consuls. An unknown Greek priest<br />

and soothsayer had first come into Etruria with none of those arts, many of which<br />

512<br />

Winnington-Ingram 1997, 1. De Grummond (2006a, 119-21) describes a scene on an Etruscan mirror in which<br />

Fufluns is accompanied by Vesuna who is “perhaps meant to be understood as a maenad in ecstasy, since she is<br />

dressed in an animal skin and seems to hold a thyrsus in her proper right hand…” Vesuna is thus dressed in the<br />

traditional garb of the Bacchae.<br />

513<br />

Dodds 1960, xx.<br />

514<br />

Dodds 1960, xvi.<br />

515<br />

In reference to Jung’s interpretation of bull myths, Rice (1998, 262) dismisses the idea that “myths of the bull<br />

represented attempts to recognize and by recognition to overcome man’s animal nature.” He does so by stating,<br />

“This explanation hardly seems adequate.” I do not agree.<br />

516<br />

Dodds (1960, xviii) notes that the most common animal victim of the ( and the t M , was the<br />

bull, and in this animal, we meet one of the animal incarnations of the god. He states, “We may regard the<br />

t M , , then, as a rite in which the gods was in some sense present in his beast-vehicle and was in that shape<br />

torn and eaten by his people.”<br />

517<br />

Livy. 39.8-9.1.<br />

104


the most learned people of all brought to us for the tending of our minds and<br />

bodies. He was not one who, by revealing his worship nor by declaring openly<br />

his business and teaching trained our minds in error but was a high priest of<br />

hidden and nocturnal rites. There were initiations, which were passed down to a<br />

few at first, then they began to be spread commonly through both men and<br />

women. The desires of wine and feasts were added to the ceremonies, so that the<br />

minds of many more might be lured to the rites. When wine, night, and the<br />

mingling of both men and women, and also tender youth with an older age,<br />

inflamed their minds and destroyed every bit of modesty, sexual perversions of all<br />

types first began to occur, since each one had the ready pleasure to which the<br />

nature of their lust was rather disposed. The was not only one form of vice, the<br />

indiscriminate sex of free-born women, but also false witnesses, counterfeit seals<br />

and wills and evidence from those offices emerged: from the same place there<br />

were poisonings and secret murders such that sometimes bodies were not always<br />

visible for burial. Many things were dared by deceit, more things dared by<br />

violence. Violence was hidden because no voice of public outcry was able to be<br />

heard through the shouting and the crashing of the drums and cymbals. The<br />

debacle of this evil spread form Etruria to Rome just as the contagion of a<br />

disease. 518<br />

The exact reasons for the Roman Senate’s suppression of the Bacchic cult in Italy in the second<br />

century BCE are not known, but Wilburn suggests that the Senate may have sought to remove<br />

the orgiastic elements just described from the worship of Bacchus/Liber in order to preserve<br />

proper forms of state religion. 519 In a similar fashion, L. Bonfante notes that epigraphic and<br />

iconographic evidence concerning Fufluns indicates a “barbarian’s-eye view” of Dionysos. 520 It<br />

518 Livy. 39.8-9.1. Latin Text taken from Livy in Fourteen Volumes, Loeb Classical Library, Vol. 12, edited by E.T.<br />

Sage, Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 1936, pp. 241, 243. (Translation by Author.)<br />

Insequens annus Sp. Postumium Albinum et Q. Marcium Philippum consules ab exercitu bellorumque et<br />

provinciarum cura ad intestinae conjurationis vindictam avertit… Consulibus ambobus quaestio de clandestinis<br />

conjurationibus decreta est. Graecus ignobilis in Etruriam primum venit nulla cum arte earum, quas multas ad<br />

animorum corporumque cultum nobis eruditissima omnium gens invexit, sacrificulus et vates; nec is qui aperta<br />

religione, propalam et quaestum et disciplinam profitendo, animos errore imbueret, sed occultorum et nocturnorum<br />

antistes sacrorum. Initia erant, quae primo paucis tradita sunt, deinde uulgari coepta sunt per viros mulieresque.<br />

Additae uoluptates religioni vini et epularum, quo plurium animi illicerentur. cum vinum animos [incendissent], et<br />

nox et mixti feminis mares, aetatis tenerae majoribus, discrimen omne pudoris exstinxissent, corruptelae primum<br />

omnis generis fieri coeptae, cum ad id quisque, quo natura pronioris libidinis esset, paratam voluptatem haberet. Nec<br />

unum genus noxae, stupra promiscua ingenuorum feminarumque erant, sed falsi testes, falsa signa testamentaque et<br />

indicia ex eadem officina exibant: venena indidem intestinaeque caedes, ita ut ne corpora quidem interdum ad<br />

sepulturam exstarent. Multa dolo, pleraque per vim audebantur. occulebat vim quod prae ululatibus tympanorumque<br />

et cymbalorum strepitu nulla vox quiritantium inter stupra et caedes exaudiri poterat. Huius mali labes ex Etruria<br />

Romam veluti contagione morbi penetrauit.<br />

519 Wilburn 2000, 55. For a further discussion of the Bacchic Conspiracy, see Nilsson 1975, 14-21. Livy suggests<br />

that the Bacchants participated in many kinds of base behavior, and the Senate may have believed this.<br />

520 Bonfante 1993, 222.<br />

105


was likely difficult even for the ancients to separate the identities of Dionysos, Liber, and<br />

Fufluns.<br />

This examination of the bull therianthrope has thus far focused on a hybrid composed of<br />

the body of a man and the head of a bull, but the mingling of human and bull form is not<br />

confined to one iconographic type. 521 Classical art preserves numerous examples of bulls with<br />

the head of a man, the most well-known Etruscan example of which appears in the Tomb of the<br />

Bulls (Fig. V.6). 522 The Tomb of the Bulls draws its name from the presence of a bull reclining<br />

and a charging bull with a man’s head in the upper register of decoration on the back wall of the<br />

tomb. Two erotic scenes are present in the same register of decoration as the bulls, but there is a<br />

great deal more painted decoration on the walls of this tomb, among which is a representation of<br />

Achilles’ murder of the Trojan prince Troilos. It is a fair question to ask whether or not the<br />

artist, or artists, who painted these frescoes meant for there to be a unified theme present in the<br />

decoration. Is the man-bull related to the scene of the death of Troilos? There is no indication<br />

that this is the case. Nevertheless, scholars, such as J. Oleson have argued that tomb is unified<br />

by references to Apollo, in the presence of an object he identifies as a sun, and Dionysos, in the<br />

form of ivy leaves. 523 If one accepts this proposal, then associating this bull with Dionysos<br />

might be attractive. However, as stated earlier, it seems more likely that this is meant to be an<br />

image of either Achelous or an unidentified river god. One last detail deserves further thought.<br />

There is a direct contrast between the more normal, reclining bull and the bull with a man’s head.<br />

One peacefully sits amongst the grass while the other, in an ithyphallic state, charges forward<br />

with his head lowered and horns poised to gore the amorous couple before him. The viewer is<br />

thus faced with a visual reminder of the unpredictable nature of the bull that could be both<br />

benign and peaceful but also stirred to violent action.<br />

Unfortunately, the identity of the man-bull in the Tomb of the Bulls, like the identities of<br />

the therianthropes on the terracotta plaque from the Regia and the red-figure vase by the<br />

Settecamini Painter, is not secure. He is depicted with his head down, moving forward as if<br />

charging a pair of men engaged in homosexual activity. The significance of this component of<br />

the scene is difficult to interpret and will likely continue to elude proper interpretation, but the<br />

521 Gais (1978, 356) states that the man-headed bull derives from an Oriental prototype. This iconography may have<br />

reached Etruria through Greeks living in South Italy.<br />

522<br />

523 Oleson 1975, 195.<br />

106


appearance of a bull-headed man in the Tomb of the Bulls is far from the only example of this<br />

iconographic type in funerary art. Altheim states that this figure “appears in direct connexion<br />

with the demons of the Etruscan underworld.” 524 J.-R. Jannot also notes images of the horned<br />

god used as funerary masks in different media. 525 To my knowledge, no existing mythological<br />

narrative can be associated with the painted scene in the Tomb of the Bulls, but the iconographic<br />

type of a man-headed bull is commonly associated with river gods, in particular the god<br />

Achelous.<br />

The Achelous river held a special place in Greek myth as king of all rivers in Greece, the<br />

father of the Sirens, the most revered of the three thousand offspring of Okeanos and Tethys. 526<br />

Whereas the other deities addressed in this dissertation all possess characteristics that relate them<br />

to the natural world, Achelous is an actual personification of a geographic feature and thus<br />

cannot be separated from the natural world in any way. The most widely known narrative<br />

containing this deity is the tale of his pursuit of Herakles’ wife Deianeira, of which the two most<br />

important literary versions appear in Sophocles’ Trachiniae and Ovid’s Metamorphoses. 527<br />

Achelous appears in Greek, Etruscan, and Roman contexts and takes on numerous forms. River-<br />

gods could take on the shape of a youth with bull’s horns, a bull with a man’s head, a horned<br />

merman, or an older man bearing a horn of plenty. According to R.M. Gais, Achelous does not<br />

appear as a youth in Greek art, 528 but in Etruria on a bronze mirror depicting the conflict between<br />

Hercle and Achlae (the Etruscan form of the name Achelous), Achlae’s face is un-bearded (Fig.<br />

V.7). 529 This mirror depicts the conventional scene, of Herakles and Achelous’ combat over the<br />

maiden Deianeira, which Ovid records in Metamorphoses IX:1-88. 530 Achelous tells his tale to<br />

Theseus and describes taking on bull form to combat Herakles as follows:<br />

Thus, after he [Herakles] conquered my second form, only my third<br />

Shape of a savage bull remained. I fought back, my limbs<br />

Changed to a bull’s. From the left, he wrapped his arms<br />

Around my neck, and dragging me as I galloped off,<br />

My horns, bent down, pierced the hard ground, and he<br />

524<br />

Altheim 1938, 70.<br />

525<br />

Jannot 1974, 778-82.<br />

526<br />

Brewster 1997, 9.<br />

527<br />

Soph. Trach. 9ff; Ov. Met. IX.1ff. Luce (1923, 429) remarks that the shortest and most complete account of this<br />

myth, which appears in Apollodorus’ Library, also possesses the least literary value.<br />

528<br />

Gais 1978, 358.<br />

529<br />

Rix 1991, Vc S.23. De Grummond (2006a, 183) notes that this mirror also happens to bear the only inscribed<br />

image of Achelous in Etruscan art.<br />

530<br />

Jannot (1974, 767-9) cites numerous examples of this combat in Etruscan art.<br />

107


Layed me out in the deep sand.<br />

That was not enough: While he held on tight to my tough<br />

Right horn, he broke it, and tore it away from my mangled forehead.<br />

The Naiads took it, and filling it with fruits and scented flowers,<br />

Made it sacred; Blessed Abundance is wealthy on account of my horn. 531<br />

As a result of this battle, Herakles won the cornucopia, a horn of plenty that was<br />

identified with either the horn Herakles tore from Achelous’ head or a horn taken from<br />

Amalthea, the goat who nursed the infant Zeus. It could be that the conflict between Herakles<br />

and Achelous is meant to represent the dangers of river navigation and to demonstrate Herakles’<br />

role as a bearer of civilization and association with water and fertility. 532 The fierce and<br />

powerful bull deity must be overcome or tamed in order for man to prosper; we may again be<br />

facing a myth representing the tension between nature and culture. In any case, the presence of a<br />

therianthrope on the mirror in Fig. V.7 bearing the name Achlae proves that the Etruscans were<br />

aware of his struggle with Hercle and may support the identification of other unidentified man-<br />

bulls as Achelous.<br />

The power of the bull and its prominent horns may also explain why Achelous’ head was<br />

used as an apotropaic device 533 on antefixes 534 (Fig. V.8) and amulets 535 (Fig. V.9) or perhaps<br />

even on furniture bosses 536 (Fig. V.10). The bull therianthrope, like other figures already<br />

discussed in this study, is often used as a charm to ward off evil. Like the figure of Juno Sospita<br />

addressed in Chapter Four, Achelous is commonly used on antefixes as architectural decoration.<br />

531<br />

Ov. Met. IX.80-8. Latin Text taken from Ovid Metamorphoses Books IX-XV, Vol. 4, edited by G.P. Goold, Loeb<br />

Classical Library, Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 1994, p. 8. (Translation by Author.)<br />

sic quoque devicto restabat tertia tauri / forma trucis. tauro mutatus membra rebello. / induit ille toris a laeva parte<br />

lacertos, / admissumque trahens sequitur, depressaque dura / cornua figit humo, meque alta sternit harena. / nec satis<br />

hoc fuerat: rigidum fera dextera cornu / dum tenet, infregit, truncaque a fronte revellit. / naides hoc, pomis et odoro<br />

flore repletum, / sacrarunt; divesque meo Bona Copia cornu est.<br />

532<br />

Neilson 2006, 8-10.<br />

533<br />

Holloway 1986, 449.<br />

534<br />

Altheim (1938, 69) notes the ubiquity of such antefixes by stating, “We know from Etruscan art those very<br />

common representations of the ‘river-god’ or ‘Achelous.’ They show the mask of an elderly, bearded man, with wet<br />

dripping beard, and with the ears and horns of a bull. He appears on gear and ornament of various kinds, but above<br />

all on roof-terracottas of Etruscan or Etruscanizing style. They extend from Veii, Falerii and Satricum to Campania,<br />

and thus cover the whole of middle Italy.” See Isler 1981, 12-36 in LIMC for a demonstration of the popularity of<br />

Achelous.<br />

535<br />

The Etruscans were master jewelers, as is shown by this piece decorated with the filigree and granulation<br />

techniques. This amulet was likely a personal apotropaic device and may have possessed a “magical” function in<br />

addition to being a luxury object. Higgins (1961, 152) indicates that this object was meant to bring good luck to its<br />

wearer is confirmed by another necklace that possesses not only an Achelous head but also two different types of<br />

bullae, round and heart-shaped.<br />

536<br />

Buranelli (1992, 56) notes the problem of determining the exact function of the bronze bosses which may either<br />

be used to decorate furniture or are meant as tomb decoration.<br />

108


In an architectural context, both Juno Sospita and Achelous are interpreted as functioning in the<br />

same way as a Gorgoneion, another common type of antefix in Etruria and Latium.<br />

Unfortunately, the identity of the apotropaic horned-god on the antefix is called into question by<br />

both Brendel and Luce, who propose that these horned gods are actually images of Dionysos due<br />

to the presence of Satyrs and Maenads on similar shields and antefixes. 537 The similarity of<br />

these antefixes to theatrical masks may also argue for a Dionysiac presence on these objects.<br />

Brendel states the following:<br />

In Greek art this was the traditional image of the river-god Achelous, and therefore the<br />

Tarquinian masks, also have often been so named. Yet it is doubtful if a mythology so<br />

exclusively Greek applies here. More likely one might describe this demonic face as the<br />

bull-horned Dionysos, since other masks belonging to the same class often represent<br />

Bacchic company, such as satyrs. 538<br />

This is a similar sentiment to Luce’s argument discussed earlier in this study, 539 but it is<br />

not clear how reinterpreting the identity of the horned god as Dionysos frees the viewer from a<br />

Greek interpretation of this Etruscan object. If we wish to overcome a Greek bias, we must<br />

instead consider the Etruscan context and appropriation of the Greek model. Both Brendel and<br />

Jannot note that these decorative, bronze shields are found in Archaic tombs, and suggest a<br />

function similar to antefixes such as Fig. V.8, i.e. warding away evil spirits. 540 Shields bearing<br />

images of fearsome gods such as Achelous may also have had an apotropaic function during the<br />

life of their owner, and there are countless representations of shields bearing gorgoneia. Another<br />

factor to consider is that Achelous’ liminal nature and therianthropic form fit in quite well with<br />

the Bacchic thiasos composed of Satyrs, Silens, and Pans, who are hybrids of humans and<br />

animals, as well as the Maenads who engage in activities that blur the boundaries of civilization<br />

and wild nature. Rice suggests that the mask that functions in dramatic performance is, by<br />

nature, both otherworldly and liminal. 541 W.F. Otto also sees Dionysos’ connection to the mask<br />

as an indicator of his primal and chthonic nature. 542 It is not possible to refute either Rice or Otto<br />

in relation to the general nature of Dionysos, but neither scholar’s interpretation of the<br />

significance of the mask rules out the possibility of antefixes representing the god Achelous.<br />

537 Brendel 1995, 213; Luce 1923, 430. Buranelli (1992, 56) notes that Fig. V.10 was found with similar bosses<br />

bearing the heads of rams and lions as opposed to Satyrs and Maenads.<br />

538 Brendel 1995, 213-4.<br />

539 Luce 1923, 430.<br />

540 Brendel 1995, 214; Jannot 1974, 780.<br />

541 Rice 1998, 225.<br />

542 Otto 1965, 88<br />

109


Perhaps we are meant to interpret the antefix (Fig. V.8) and the boss (Fig. V.10) as masks of the<br />

river deity, who is also primal, liminal, and otherworldly. Since we know that the Etruscans<br />

could conceive of Achelous as a man-headed bull due to his presence on the mirror (Fig V.7), we<br />

are perhaps better off identifying unlabeled bull-headed men as the great river deity than as the<br />

god of wine.<br />

One last piece that relates to the bull-gods of Etruria is a bucchero oinochoe decorated<br />

with the head of what may be an anthropomorphized bull’s or calf’s head (Fig. V.11). This<br />

rather fantastic vessel makes use of the mouth of the bull/calf as its spout. The elaborate design<br />

hints at something beyond usage as a daily item. If we are meant to associate the contents of the<br />

vessel with the bull as a representative of a god, then we are again faced with a question of<br />

ambiguous identity. If we choose to associate this vessel with Achelous, the connection is quite<br />

obvious. Achelous is the personification of a river, and pouring water from this pitcher mimics<br />

the flowing water. Bacchus/Liber’s connection to wine also fits this interpretation, and we must<br />

remember that his association with liquids does not end there. Bacchus can be found in the<br />

power of all rushing fluids. 543 In relation to the cult of Dionysos, Dodds writes:<br />

His [Dionysos’] domain is, in Plutarch’s words, the whole of the E M ( -<br />

not only the liquid fire in the grape, but the sap thrusting in a young tree, the<br />

blood pounding in the veins of a young animal, all the mysterious and<br />

uncontrollable tides that ebb and flow in the life of nature. 544<br />

Thus, if this is a ritual vessel, association with either god is possible. If this oinochoe was used<br />

for pouring libations of wine, this vessel may be tied to a bull-formed Bacchus.<br />

Altheim has linked the relief decoration, which consists of youths engaging in a bull<br />

game or hunt, on the body of this pitcher to an Umbrian rite in honor of the goddess Tursa Jovia.<br />

He suggests that this scene of youths grasping bulls by the horns and legs is the Etruscan<br />

equivalent of the Umbrian ritual in which cows were released, hunted, and then sacrificed.<br />

Furthermore, he traces the origins of this rite to a hypothetical, native, Italian bull cult. 545 The<br />

suggestion that this vessel may represent Umbrian religious practice is appealing, but the action<br />

on the vessel does not seem violent enough to be construed as a hunt. M. Sprenger and G.<br />

Bartoloni instead suggest that this is the myth of Hercle’s contest with the Cretan Bull, which<br />

543 Bruhl 1953, 17<br />

544 Dodds 1960, xii.<br />

545 Altheim 1938, 73-9.<br />

110


would then be repeated six times around the vessel. 546 I again object to this interpretation, not<br />

only because the scene is repeated, in identical fashion six times, but also because there is little<br />

conflict between the man and bull. Brendel offers one last interpretation that may be closer to<br />

the mark; he sees neither a religious rite nor a myth but instead a series of “bull tamers”<br />

represented on the vessel. 547<br />

As we can see from the literary and archaeological evidence presented here, bull imagery<br />

was quite prominent in ancient classical religion. The bull denoted an elemental power<br />

associated with both land and sea in addition to the underworld and could also be used as a<br />

symbol of strength and savagery. The fearsome nature of the bull hybrid is clear when we<br />

examine gods such as Dionysos and Achelous who could manifest themselves in bull form.<br />

Even though we cannot be certain that Liber and Fufluns partook of the bullish persona of<br />

Dionysos Tauromorphos, certain qualities of these Italian deities indicate many affinities with<br />

the liminal and transgressive nature of this aspect of Dionysos. In addition, the Minotaur known<br />

for his cruelty and the consumption of human flesh also appears in Italy and, at least in one<br />

example, seems to possess a function similar to the figure of Achelous commonly represented in<br />

architectural decoration. While the general meaning of the animal iconography of bull<br />

therianthropes is thus easily grasped, it is not always clear which god is being represented. As<br />

we have seen, scholars differ as to whether the horned god represented on antefixes, such as Fig.<br />

V.8, is Achelous or Dionysos. This ambiguity may be intentional and both figures would have<br />

shared the power to ward off evil spirits. One important point that we may take away from this<br />

is that from an early time, as shown by the Regia Plaque (Fig. V.5), therianthropic deities<br />

appeared in Roman and Etruscan art. The power of hybrid imagery was great and lasted for<br />

quite some time beyond these early phases as well.<br />

546 Sprenger and Bartoloni 1983, 87.<br />

547 Brendel 1995, 140.<br />

111


CHAPTER 6: AVIANS<br />

Gods and birds shared a mastery of the skies not possessed by humans or other<br />

animals; and it was not surprising that some birds, in their strength or beauty,<br />

should have been regarded as divine. 548<br />

In so far as the power of flight may seem both magical and entrancing, birds have always<br />

inspired awe in ground dwellers. In many mythologies, the sky is held to be the dwelling place<br />

of the gods, and through flight birds seem able to communicate and mingle with divinities. Sky<br />

gods such as the Greek Zeus, Egyptian Ra, Norse Odin, Roman Jupiter, and many more reigned<br />

supreme over their respective pantheons. Given the importance of the sky in ancient<br />

cosmologies, it is not surprising that birds held a special place in Etruscan and Roman religion;<br />

one need only recall that the founding of the city of Rome included an augury contest between<br />

Romulus and Remus. 549<br />

Agreeing to arbitrate their quarrel by [observing] birds of good omen, they took up<br />

positions by themselves. They say six vultures were seen by Remus, and double<br />

that number by Romulus. On the other hand, there are those who say that Remus<br />

truly saw his six, but Romulus lied about his twelve, but when Remus came to<br />

him, Romulus then saw twelve. 550<br />

This is far from the only example of avian omens that appear in Roman history. One prodigy<br />

from Roman “mythical history” can be found in the story of Lucumo’s journey to Rome in which<br />

an eagle snatched and returned his cap while he was on the Janiculum hill. 551 Historians also<br />

record portents during the reign of Augustus, such as the episode of the galinas albas. 552 Thus,<br />

augury was important not only because birds could reveal the will of the gods, but also since the<br />

Romans believed that the practice of augury was used from the earliest days of their history.<br />

548 Bevan 1986, 39.<br />

549 Jannot (2005, 29) notes that the Romans may have borrowed their practice of augury from the Etruscans.<br />

550 Plut. Vit. Rom. IX.5 Greek Text taken from Plutarch Lives: Theseus and Romulus, Lycurgus and Numa, Solon<br />

and Publicola, Loeb Classical Library, Vol. 1, edited by G.P. Goold, Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press,<br />

1998, p. 114. (Translation by Author.)<br />

" ) 3 * X , ( B B b " ?" ,(7 s M 1 vw K 7<br />

& , ( ) 1 ;w" &K M 5 (# - ) . ) ;w A &' ( D 7 T ) . ;<br />

w" & 9 C& ( ) ;w 7 >( 1 ;w" &K M 5 ###<br />

551 Liv. I.XXXIV.8-9. De Grummond (2006c, 42) briefly explores the implications and significance of this episode<br />

in relation to Etruscan prophets.<br />

552 Plin. HN. 15.136-37.<br />

112


This means of prophecy 553 was one of the Romans’ oldest customs, and the position of augur<br />

held high status. 554<br />

The notion that birds served as a connection between the gods and man can perhaps be<br />

seen in the Etruscan convention of placing wings on prophetic figures. The Chalchas mirror is<br />

one such example (Fig. VI.1). 555 Prophets cross boundaries between the worlds of gods and men<br />

by revealing the intentions of the gods or making predictions of the future. Thus, the presence of<br />

wings may be a metaphorical way of showing a prophet’s ability to open channels between the<br />

mortal and immortal realms. Wings indicate a super-human, perhaps even divine, nature, 556 and<br />

the sprouting of wings from the back of a prophet situates him/her amongst the ranks of<br />

divinities such as Lasas, Vanths, and other spirits who bear such a mark. To further demonstrate<br />

the possibility of associating wings with prophecy and fate, one might consider the figure of<br />

Athrpa, who also appears on an engraved Etruscan mirror (Fig. VI.2). Athrpa has been<br />

interpreted as the Etruscan equivalent of the Greek Atropos, the Fate who cuts the cord of life<br />

and determines that it is a mortal’s time to die. 557 Wings, serving as visual signifiers to indicate a<br />

figure who has transcended the normal boundaries of nature, 558 are appropriate on this mirror<br />

which demonstrates the fruition of divine will and the bearing out of future events through the<br />

fated deaths of Atunis and Meleacr.<br />

In addition to winged prophets who might interpret or pronounce omens, Italy also<br />

possessed at least one oracular shrine in which an actual bird, in this case a woodpecker, gave<br />

oracles. The woodpecker, often identified as the Picus martius, 559 was a highly auspicious bird<br />

553 For a distinction between the terms prophecy and divination, see De Grummondb 2006, 27.<br />

554 De Grummond (2006c, 41-2) notes both the evident importance of augury in Etruscan religion and the need for<br />

more research in this area.<br />

555 This mirror serves as yet another example of how the Etruscans adopted and also modified Greek myth.<br />

Chalchas was the seer who assigned Agamemnon the task of sacrificing Iphigenia to the goddess Artemis in order<br />

that the winds might blow and allow the Greek fleet to sail against Troy. (For the prophecy of Chalchas see Hom. Il.<br />

2.308-29, for the death of Iphigenia as a result of his oracles see Aesch. Ag. 156-9, 248-9, 1521-30.) In this<br />

instance, he uses a technique of divination that was prominent in Etruria and the Near East, hepatoscopy, and is also<br />

winged, possibly an indicator of divine nature. De Grummond (2006, 54-5) also notes that this is not how Chalchas<br />

is presented in the Iliad in which he consults the will of the gods by studying the actions of snakes and birds. The<br />

wings may also be an indicator that he is a mediator between the mortal and divine realms as birds may fly among<br />

the clouds as well as walk on the ground. A winged creature belongs to two different spheres.<br />

556 De Grummond 2006a, 31. A further example of a winged divinity is discussed by de Grummond (2006a, 6), who<br />

notes the presence of a “Master of Birds” depicted as a winged male with bird perched on his outstretched wings.<br />

557 De Grummond 2006a, 20; von Vacano 1960, 9-13.<br />

558 Kerényi 1976, 81.<br />

559 Plin. HN. X.40; Mackay (1975, 272) discusses the problem of identifying the exact species of woodpecker<br />

described by the literary sources.<br />

113


for the Romans, and it may be that it held similar meaning for the Etruscans and other Italian<br />

tribes. Jannot and P.G. Goidanich theorize, due to the presences of woodpeckers, that the<br />

famous image of Vel Saties from the François Tomb in Vulci represents the taking of the<br />

auspices in relation to military action. 560 The importance of military conquest in the early<br />

history of Italy, and the association of the woodpecker with the god of war may be the reason<br />

that this bird was important amongst tribes such as the Aequi, Picentines, Umbrians, and<br />

Sabines. 561 Dionysius of Halicarnassus records the presence of a woodpecker oracle of the god<br />

Mars at the site of Tiora Matiene.<br />

Again, from Reate by the road toward the Listine district, is Batia, at a distance of<br />

thirty stades; then Tiora also called Matiene, at a distance of three hundred stades.<br />

They say that there was an exceedingly ancient oracle of Mars in this city, the<br />

character of which was similar to the oracle which legend says was once at<br />

Dodona; except that there, sitting on a sacred oak, a pigeon was said to prophesy,<br />

but among the Aborigines a bird sent from the heavens, which they call picus and<br />

the Greeks dryokolaptês, appearing on a wooden column, did the same. 562<br />

Dionysius’s mention of the woodpecker oracle at Tiora Matiene reminds us of the close<br />

association of the woodpecker and god of war, and we must not forget that the woodpecker,<br />

along with the wolf, cared for the twin sons of Mars, Romulus and Remus after their<br />

abandonment on the banks of the Tiber River.<br />

The woodpecker was also associated with a hero/divinity. The mythological figure Picus<br />

played a role in both the religion and early history of the Romans. This Latin god had originally<br />

been a mortal son of Saturn. However, Picus attracted the attentions of the goddess Circe, 563<br />

and, after spurning her affections, she turned him into a bird. 564<br />

560 Goidanich 1935, 111-5. See also Jannot 2005, 27-8.<br />

561 Jannot (2005, 27-8) notes the importance of the bird to these peoples, but the suggestion of its importance based<br />

on the prospect of military conquest is my own.<br />

562 Dion. Hal. 1.14.5. Greek Text taken from Dionysos of Halicarnassus Roman Antiquities Books I-II, Loeb<br />

Classical Library, Vol. 1, edited by G.P. Goold, Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 1990, p. 46, 48.<br />

(Translation by Author.)<br />

/ . ) ;w 4 4 & D( 3 C , ' W . x , ) A . 4 ," 7 )<br />

A . ," 7 S & ' y @ '# C = & ? ' @ z ( 4<br />

A ? D # W ) ( &@ ( Q R ( M 1 o " " , ( & K )<br />

9 &3 P C D ) .( - 6 ( & b ' K D C& 7 ) D(<br />

/ B D ( X (7 { ) D 7 $% &&' ( ) &4 ' & 7 C , (<br />

| &, M ( . . * #<br />

563 Circe’s exact relation to Picus is not clear. Moorton (1988, 254) notes that in addition to Ovid’s account in which<br />

Picus is married to Canens, he was also married to Pomona (Servius Ad. Aen. 7.190) or possibly even Circe herself,<br />

a conclusion drawn from Picus’ association with horses at Aen. 7.189. In any case, Circe’s role in the mythical past<br />

114


He fled, but he marveled that he ran faster<br />

Than he was accustomed: he saw wings on his body,<br />

And outraged at the sudden arrival of a new bird<br />

In his Latian woods, he struck the tough oak with his hard beak<br />

And angrily gave wounds to the long branches;<br />

His wings took the color of his reddish cloak;<br />

What had been a gold fibula and had pinned his cloak,<br />

Became feathers, and his neck was ringed with tawny gold,<br />

And not anything of his old self remained for Picus except his name. 565<br />

Picus’ nature, like that of his son Faunus, is confusing in that Picus is at once part of the<br />

genealogy of early Latin kings, a figure transformed into a woodpecker by Circe, and a<br />

woodpecker god. 566<br />

Scholars have generally thought that Picus was of special importance to the Picentes, a<br />

Sabine people who inhabited the region of Picenum. 567 According to our ancient sources, the<br />

Picentes had gained their name after following a woodpecker during the observance of a ver<br />

sacrum. 568 Much has been made of this ancient testimony, and Frazer has used it to create a<br />

theory of ancient Italian totemism. He outlines several key components of totemistic practice in<br />

his commentary on Ovid’s Fasti. These include a people taking the name of their totem animal,<br />

a prohibition against the slaying or injuring of the animal, and lastly the conferral of a past<br />

benefit by the animal to its people. 569 Unfortunately, the very concept of totemism is<br />

problematic, and scholars have not come to a consensus for a single definition of this term as can<br />

be seen in Lévi-Strauss’ assessment of totemic theories. 570 Lévi-Strauss astutely isolates the<br />

most basic concepts of totemism as follows:<br />

of Italy is significant, for according to Hesiod Theog. 1011-3, Circe and Odysseus were the parents of Latinus and<br />

Agrios, who were rulers of the Etruscans.<br />

564<br />

Frazer (1929, 10) proposes that the transformation of Picus was invented as a way for “civilized” Romans to<br />

rationalize the poorly-understood, “primitive” worship of a bird. This theory seems somewhat extreme.<br />

565<br />

Ov. Met. XIV.387-96. Latin Text taken from Ovid Metamorphoses Books IX-XV, Vol. 4, edited by G.P. Goold,<br />

Loeb Classical Library, Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 1994, p. 326, 328. (Translation by Author.)<br />

ille fugit, sed se solito velocius ipse / currere miratur: pennas in corpore vidit, / seque novam subito Latiis accedere<br />

silvis / indignatus avem duro fera robora rostro / figit et iratus longis dat vulnera ramis; / purpureum chlamydis<br />

pennae traxere colorem; / fibula quod fuerat vestemque momorderat aurum, / pluma fit, et fulvo cervix praecingitur<br />

auro, / nec quicquam antiquum Pico nisi nomina restat.<br />

566<br />

Rosivach (1980, 142) separates these figures and claims that they have nothing to do with one another. Ovid<br />

notes the divinity of Picus at Fast. 3.291.<br />

567<br />

Goidanich 1935, 118. Thompson (1895, 51-2) notes that a Greek tribe known as the Dryopes were likely<br />

associated with the woodpecker but, even so, the woodpecker was not an important bird of myth in ancient Greece.<br />

568<br />

Strabo 5.4.2, Valerius Flaccus 7.232<br />

569 Frazer 1929, 11.<br />

570 Lévi-Strauss 1962, 10-1.<br />

115


When we speak of totemism we actually confuse two problems. The first<br />

problem is that posed by the frequent identification of human beings with plants<br />

or animals, and which has to do with very general views of the relations between<br />

man and nature, relations which concern art and magic as much as society and<br />

religion. The second problem is that of the designation of groups based on<br />

kinship, which may be done with the aid of animal or vegetable terms but also in<br />

many other ways. The term “totemism” covers only cases in which there is a<br />

coincidence of the two orders. 571<br />

Lévi-Strauss thus indicates that totemism mediates between nature and culture, i.e. he views it<br />

through a structuralist lens. 572 He also suggests that totemism is one way in which man attempts<br />

to define “the organization of the universe” by analyzing nature’s affinity with man. 573 We may<br />

compare scholarly attempts to define and apply totemism to the seeking of a universal<br />

explanation of the significance of myth. In any case, Frazer’s application of his theory of<br />

totemism bears some examination in the case of Picus.<br />

In relation to Picus, Frazer’s categories seem sound given that the ancients certainly<br />

believed that the Picentes had derived their name from the god Picus. Similar instances of an<br />

Italic tribe naming themselves after an animal, such as the Hirpi and Hirpini, do exist. 574 On the<br />

other hand, O. Szemerényi goes to great length to prove that the derivation of the name<br />

“Picentes” from the god Picus is a linguistic impossibility and that the name merely denotes a<br />

group of people who lived in the territory of Picenum. 575 What then should we make of the<br />

ancient testimony? Should we simply dismiss the verbal link as a false folk etymology? I do not<br />

believe that we should sever the link between Picus and the Picentes simply because of linguistic<br />

rules. If the ancients believed that there was a connection between Picus and the Picentines, then<br />

a link had been established.<br />

Frazer’s last two points are clearer. It is not likely that a member of this Italic tribe<br />

would have killed a bird sacred to Mars, whose preeminence in Italy has already been<br />

mentioned, and the tale of the Picentes following a woodpecker, in the practice of a ver sacrum,<br />

to their new home certainly qualifies as the conferral of a past benefit. Thus, as far as Frazer’s<br />

definition is concerned, perhaps we should consider the Picentes as practitioners of totemism.<br />

We may not extend this idea to all of the theriomorphic and therianthropic deities covered in this<br />

571 Lévi-Strauss 1962, 10-1<br />

572 Lévi-Strauss 1962, 16.<br />

573 Lévi-Strauss 1966, 37, 129.<br />

574 See earlier discussion of the Hirpi in Chapter Three, p. 55-6.<br />

575 Szemerényi 1971, 531-44; Salmon 1967, 169.<br />

116


study, for not enough evidence survives to support even these three basic ideas for each god or<br />

goddess. The use of animal iconography in the representation of a deity is not enough to label an<br />

animal a totem for a particular people or tribe; in the context of ancient Italy, the iconographic<br />

choice to represent a deity in full or hybrid animal form does not appear to be based on ethnicity.<br />

This forms the sum total of information concerning the appearance of Picus in worship<br />

and cult; our knowledge of this god is scanty at best. 576 He also does not often appear in mythic<br />

narrative beyond his initial metamorphosis from man to bird. We have already mentioned this<br />

god in connection to an episode in Ovid’s Fasti in which Numa captures Picus and Faunus in an<br />

attempt to learn how to expiate a thunderbolt. 577 In addition to a lack of mythic narrative, visual<br />

representations of this god are also quite rare. 578 One possible representation of Picus takes the<br />

form of a small, black gloss amphora (Fig. VI.3). 579 This vessel in the shape of a bird most<br />

closely resembles the green woodpecker (Picus viridis) due to its small, conical beak and<br />

protruding eyes, but also exhibits some human features. 580 Ears jut from the sides of the bird’s<br />

head, arms reach out from beneath the bird’s wings to wrap around the belly of the vessel, and<br />

legs are bent between the bottom of the wings and the base of the amphora. This piece may be<br />

intended to represent a stage of the metamorphosis of Picus from man into bird. If so, the artist<br />

has chosen a dramatic moment in the adventures of this man turned god.<br />

Picus is not the only theriomorphic or therianthropic bird divinity found in Etruscan and<br />

Roman myth, but he is the only one we can identify with any degree of certainty. Furthermore,<br />

bird-man hybrids are so poorly understood that it is not always clear from which species of bird<br />

the hybrids are formed. Three other examples of bird-man hybrids appear in Etruscan and<br />

Roman art, and the context in which these figures are found varies. Another problem that<br />

plagues our understanding of the following bird-men is that surviving examples of these hybrids<br />

are quite limited and thus there is little material on which to base conclusions.<br />

576<br />

Rosivach 1980, 145. Halliday (1922, 111) also notes that Picus belongs more to the realm of myth and folklore<br />

than cult.<br />

577<br />

Ov. Fast. 3.291-326.<br />

578<br />

There is no LIMC entry for the god Picus.<br />

579<br />

Capanna (2000,225) this piece, acquired by the Metropolitan Museum of Art from a private collection in<br />

Lugnano, may be meant to represent the climax in the story of Picus, the moment of his transformation from man to<br />

woodpecker. Given the unknown provenance of this piece, and its presence in a private collection, it is difficult to<br />

determine whether it is of Roman or Etruscan make. The Etruscans seem to have been interested in Circe’s<br />

handiwork, and scenes depicting the transformation of Odysseus’ men into animals appear on Etruscan cinerary urns<br />

as well as other objects. If we are able to identify this figure as the transformed Roman king Picus, then this is the<br />

only visual representation of the narrative of Picus of which I am aware.<br />

580<br />

Capanna 2000, 225.<br />

117


One curious example of an avian therianthrope is the figure identified as a winged youth<br />

with what appears to be a rooster’s head, represented on an antefix that would have decorated the<br />

roof of a series of small rooms that may have housed sacred prostitutes, hierodoulai, near<br />

Temple B at Pyrgi (Fig. VI.4). 581 It is difficult to determine the exact identity of this figure, or<br />

even if it should be classified as deity or demon. The most common interpretation of this figure<br />

is that it is a representation of Phosphorus or Lucifer, the morning star, who is here represented<br />

as a man with a rooster’s head crowing to announce the rising sun. 582 A different interpretation<br />

is offered by M. Verzár who identifies this figure as a dancer wearing a bird mask instead of<br />

having the head of a rooster. She indicates that human hair runs down his chest from his head<br />

and ears poke through the sides of the mask and further proposes that the masked dancer is a<br />

participant in the ancient ritual of the crane dance, the geranos, a practice that finds its origins in<br />

Minoan Crete and the worship of a mother goddess assimilated to a Cypriote form of<br />

Aphrodite. 583 The other figures represented on the antefixes (Fig. VI.5) which decorated the<br />

rooms near Temple B also seem to be moving in a dance, or are associated with the celestial<br />

sphere, lending plausibility to Verzár’s interpretation.<br />

Of course, the major difference between these two interpretations is the species of bird<br />

combined with human form to create the bird-headed figure. To identify the bird component of<br />

this figure’s iconography as that of a crane, Verzár states that its beak could not belong to a<br />

rooster, for it is too long and is better suited to the crane. 584 On the other hand, the bird hybrid<br />

seems to possess a crest and wattle, which make this figure resemble a rooster. One must<br />

wonder to what degree the artist responsible for this antefix strived for naturalism, but this is a<br />

question that must remain unanswered. Thus, it will remain difficult to determine the exact<br />

identity of the bird-man by using such criteria. While it is not possible to rule out either O. von<br />

Vacano’s or Verzár’s interpretations, a third possibility exists.<br />

581 Colonna 1970, 311-32, 402-4; Haynes 2000, 177; Serra Ridgway 1990, 523-4; Von Vacano 1980, 463-75.<br />

582 Most scholars follow the interpretation offered by von Vacano (1980, 465-7). See Haynes 2000, 178; Serra<br />

Ridgway 1990, 523 for scholars in agreement with von Vacano. Two competing identifications of this figure<br />

follow.<br />

583 While noting the erotic aspect of the geranos, Verzár (1980, 39) clearly lays out the connection between the<br />

dance of Ariadne and the Cypriote Aphrodite. It is possible that rooster-headed figure would not be out of context<br />

here since, as Mayo (1967, 6) points out, the cock is the “conventional symbol of erotic intentions,” typically for<br />

same sex relations. Erotic connotations are also appropriate due to the possible presence of sacred prostitutes in this<br />

sanctuary.<br />

584 Verzár 1980, 42.<br />

118


I. Krauskopf interprets this figure as a demon of the morning dew, and points to the Near<br />

East as a possible source of the iconography of the antefix. 585 Given that the sanctuary at Pyrgi<br />

has strong connections to the east and provides “the most conclusive evidence for a direct<br />

Phoenician influence in Central Italy,” a Near Eastern parallel seems likely. 586 This is due to the<br />

aforementioned dedication of Temple B to the goddess Uni, here syncretized with Astarte. 587 I<br />

have already noted that several other theriomorphic and therianthropic deities find parallels in<br />

Eastern art, and this bird demon appears to be yet another. An Assyrian “griffin demon” from<br />

Kalhu (Fig. VI.6) resembles the bird-man from Pyrgi in several ways. 588 Both have a tie to<br />

liquids; the “griffin demon” holds a small bucket while the Pyrgi hybrid is shown amongst what<br />

may be stylized rain or dew drops. Both possess long archaic or archaizing locks of hair, and<br />

each has a crest and an open beak revealing the creatures’ tongues. These similarities are<br />

magnified by the fact that the antefix identified by Krauskopf as Usils the sun god (Fig. VI.5,<br />

Antefix A) corresponds to another Near Eastern iconographic type used to represent the sun god<br />

Shamash. 589 The only difficulty, which may not invalidate this connection, is that the Assyrian<br />

figure has the head of a bird of prey as opposed to that of a crane or domesticated animal such as<br />

a rooster. As mentioned earlier, it is difficult to determine the degree of naturalism intended by<br />

the artist who crafted this antefix, but given the connection between Uni and Astarte, Near<br />

Eastern influence may be present in both this shrine’s decoration and the syncretization of the<br />

mother goddesses.<br />

Another species of bird used to create a therianthropic figure is the swan. This type<br />

seems rare, but there are examples of the so-called “Swan Hero” 590 or “Swan Demon” 591 from<br />

both the Archaic and Hellenistic periods. This figure takes the form of a youth, often winged,<br />

who wears a cap that transitions into the neck and head of a swan. This figure is found in both a<br />

585<br />

Krauskopf 1997, 31.<br />

586<br />

Andersen 1992-3, 87<br />

587<br />

Serra Ridgway (1990, 521) states that the temple was dedicated to the eastern goddess Astarte, “who is only<br />

secondarily assimilated to the local queen-goddess Uni.”<br />

588<br />

This type of figure seems to find its roots in the Old Babylonian period with similar images in Mitannian art. The<br />

familiar form of this “demon” (a winged, human figure with the head of a bird of prey holding a bucket and pine<br />

cone) first appears on Middle Assyrian seals and was quite popular in Neo-Assyrian art, in particular in the 9 th C<br />

BCE. Griffin demons are rare after the 7 th C BCE but do continue to appear on Seleucid Period seals. Black and<br />

Green (1997, 101) note that this type of figure has been explained as a representation of the Seven Sages, and<br />

figurines were deposited in groups of seven in foundations of houses and palaces to protect the building.<br />

589<br />

Krauskopf 1997, 29.<br />

590<br />

Richardson (1983, 362-3).<br />

591<br />

Herbig 1965, 49. In keeping with my rationale outlined in Chapter One, I shall use the designation of “Swan<br />

Demon” for this figure from this point on.<br />

119


votive 592 (Fig. VI.7) and decorative context (Fig. VI.8). The identity of the “Swan Demon”<br />

remains uncertain, but several possibilities have been suggested. F. Gerke proposes that the<br />

“Swan Demon” is meant to be Apollo 593 but does so without offering any supporting evidence.<br />

One might assume that the youth of this “demon” and the connection to the swan, sometimes<br />

associated with Apollo, 594 forms the basis of this identification. 595 Other suggestions for<br />

identifying the “Swan Demon” include Cupid/Eros, a rain-bringing wind god, 596 a Lar, 597<br />

Cygnus, 598 or Ganymede. 599 These possibilities possess varying degrees of merit.<br />

The swan was not only sacred to the god Apollo and but also associated with the Roman<br />

goddess of love and sexuality Venus (Etruscan Turan), and her son Amor or Cupid (Etruscan<br />

Turnu). 600 As is demonstrated in the LIMC entry for “Amor, Cupido” surviving images of Cupid<br />

and Amor are quite varied, and there do not seem to be standard attributes for these figures. 601<br />

Amores are associated with a plethora of animals including the dolphin, swan, dove, and many<br />

more. Amores may carry any number of different implements and objects, including objects<br />

such as the pitcher and patera held by the Swan Demon in Fig. VI.8. Thus, while there is<br />

nothing that indicates an erotic context for this figure, this does not rule out the possibility that it<br />

is a representation of an Amor. However, there appear to be no examples in which Amor wears<br />

an animal-skin cap of any kind. The “Swan Demon” may not be Amor but still belong to the<br />

592<br />

Richardson (1983, 362-3) indicates that this bronze votive statuette is the only known representation of the<br />

“Swan Demon” from the archaic period; the “Swan Demon” was apparently more popular in the Hellenistic period<br />

during which it typically appears in a decorative context.<br />

593<br />

Gerke 1938, 231.<br />

594<br />

Ahl 1982, 374-85; Thompson 1895, 105.<br />

595<br />

Krappe (1942, 70) comes to the conclusion that the swan is critical to the identity of Apollo in the following<br />

statement, “… let us say that to the “Mouse Apollon” and to the Anatolian sun-god [whom he associates with<br />

Apollo Soranus] must now be added a third component of the classical Apollon, fully as important as the other two:<br />

the ‘Swan Apollon,” the god of the whooper swan…” As part of his argument, Krappe (1942, 362) suggests that<br />

Cygnus may be a heroic form of the god Apollo. He is not, however, entirely convinced of this possibility. Given<br />

the rarity of the iconographic type of the “Swan Demon” and that it is an Italian creation, it is not clear that the<br />

Etruscans would have conceived of Apollo in this way.<br />

596<br />

Bailey and Craddock 1978, 78.<br />

597<br />

Messerschmidt 1942, 14. Palmer (1974, 116) also records the possibility of the Lares being winged but does not<br />

mention an association with the swan.<br />

598<br />

Richardson (1983, 362) states, “The hero with the swan’s crest seems to be purely Etruscan; he has no connection<br />

with Cygnus.” I am not convinced that we must rule out Cygnus as a possibility, and perhaps what we instead have<br />

is an Etruscan adaptation of a Greek mythological figure.<br />

599<br />

Bailey and Craddock 1978, 78.<br />

600<br />

For the association of the swan with Turan see De Grummond (2006a, 85), with Venus see Ahl 1982, 374 n.1.<br />

For the identification of Turnu as the son of Turan see De Grummond 2006a, 94.<br />

601<br />

Blanc and Gury 1986, 952-1049.<br />

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“Circle of Turan” 602 as a spirit somehow associated with the goddess of love. If we possessed<br />

more examples of the “Swan Demon” or an image besides a bronze statuette in Florence (Fig.<br />

VI.9) 603 in which he appeared with other mythological figures, we might be able to place his<br />

actions (offering a pine cone or pouring a pitcher) with the great many “spirits of love and<br />

adornment” who appear to anoint someone with perfume or to aid in a bride’s preparation for<br />

marriage. 604 A male figure would not be out of place amongst these spirits considering the<br />

confusion of genders present in Etruscan iconography and the appearance of satyrs and figures<br />

such as the one named male Lasa, Lasa Sitmica. 605<br />

R. Herbig and Simon’s suggestion that this figure is a wind god is not satisfying. 606 Wind<br />

gods such as the Boreadai 607 are often shown rushing to and fro or abducting the object of their<br />

affections, and neither of these characterizations are appropriate to the known representations of<br />

the “Swan Demon.” In addition to differences in action, neither Boreas nor his sons the Boreadai<br />

are shown in conjunction with swans. Even if he is not a wind, the “Swan Demon” might be a<br />

representative of a meteorological phenomenon such as the season winter, or perhaps an astral<br />

association with the constellation Cygnus exists. In an article dealing with the identification of<br />

the figures on the Ara Pacis, de Grummond identifies the two female figures that accompany Pax<br />

as the Horae, or Seasons. One of these is seated on a swan, an animal associated with the season<br />

of winter. While the “Swan Demon” is male and the Hora is female, the association of the swan<br />

with winter and the constellation Cygnus may still hold. The youths in Fig. VI.8 and VI.9 both<br />

hold pitchers, which are associated with the constellation Aquarius, also connected to winter. 608<br />

Could this figure be a Lar? The surviving artistic evidence of the Lares, which has been<br />

briefly addressed in Chapters Two and Three does not preserve any certain association with the<br />

swan. 609 Literary evidence also does not reflect any link between the Lares and this bird and<br />

instead suggests that the Lares may be represented wearing the skins of dogs. 610 The Lares are<br />

also generally depicted as one or more dancing, youthful figures wearing chitons and holding<br />

602 De Grummond 2006a, 151.<br />

603 I shall return to Fig. VI.9 as a possible clue to identifying the “Swan Demon” below.<br />

604 De Grummond (2006a, 155-68) discusses a number of the minor spirits who appear on numerous mirrors of the<br />

fourth C BCE and seem to be personifications of abstract ideas.<br />

605 De Grummond 2006a, 166; Lambrechts 1992, 217.<br />

606 Herbig and Simon 1965, 31, 49.<br />

607 For Boreas see Kaempf-Dimitriadou 1986, 133-42; for the Boreadai see Schefold 1986, 126-33.<br />

608 De Grummond 1990, 669.<br />

609 Tinh (1992, 208-9) does not include any examples of the “Swan Demon” in his LIMC article on the Lares.<br />

610 Plut. Quaes. Rom. 51; Waites 1920, 250-1.<br />

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hyta. 611 On the other hand, the swan could be linked to the underworld and dying mortals due to<br />

its funeral song, 612 and the swan cap and wings may perhaps be meant to denote its connection to<br />

the underworld and its transitional nature. In this case, perhaps we should read the object held<br />

by the youth in Fig. VI.7 as a pine cone, a symbol of fertility often used as a grave stele. The<br />

pouring out of the pitcher and the presence of a patera could then be interpreted as an offering<br />

made for the deceased.<br />

The last two possibilities, Cygnus and Ganymede, may be the most likely identifications<br />

of the “Swan Demon.” As Picus was transformed into a woodpecker, Cygnus was a mortal who<br />

was transformed into a swan, and the cap worn by this figure may be a shorthand way of<br />

representing this metamorphosis. For reasons which she does not state, Richardson proposes that<br />

this figure has nothing to do with the Cygnus myth, 613 but this denial necessitates examination.<br />

A.L. Brown notes the presence of ten or more characters named Cygnus in the repertoire of<br />

classical myth, 614 but the tale of a man taking on the form of a swan appears in Vergil’s<br />

Aeneid 615 and Ovid’s Metamorphoses. Ovid records the story of the Ligurian Cygnus, cousin of<br />

Phaethon, in Metamorphoses Book II.<br />

Stheneleian Cygnus was present at this portentous event,<br />

who, although related by the blood of your mother,<br />

was nevertheless more like Phaethon in mind. Having<br />

left behind his empire (for he ruled the Ligurians and their great cities),<br />

he filled the green banks and the water of the Eridanus<br />

and the wood augmented by his sisters with mourning.<br />

When his voice grew thin, and feathers<br />

hid his white hair, and his neck was extended by a long breast<br />

and a web joined his rosy fingers,<br />

feathers covered his side, and his mouth held a dull beak.<br />

Cygnus had become a new bird… 616<br />

611<br />

Brown 1971, 334.<br />

612<br />

Arnott 1977, 149-53.<br />

613<br />

Richardson 1983, 362.<br />

614<br />

Brown 1996, 417-8. Ahl (1982, 387) identifies seven distinct mythical figures named Cygnus.<br />

615<br />

Verg. Aen. X.189-92.<br />

616<br />

Ov. Met. II.367-77. Latin Text taken from Ovid Metamorphoses Books I-VIII, Vol. 3, edited by G.P. Goold, Loeb<br />

Classical Library, Cambridge, MA: Harvard <strong>University</strong> Press, 1999, p. 84, 86. (Translation by Author.)<br />

Adfuit huic monstro proles Stheneleia Cygnus, / qui tibi materno quamvis a sanguine iunctus, / mente tamen,<br />

Phaethon, propior fuit. Ille relicto / (nam Ligurum populos et magnas rexerat urbes) / imperio ripas virides<br />

amnemque querellis / Eridanum implerat silvamque sororibus auctam, / cum vox est tenuata viro, canaeque capillos<br />

/ dissimulant plumae, collumque a pectore longe / porrigitur, digitosque ligat iunctura rubentes, / penna latus velat,<br />

tenet os sine acumine rostrum. / Fit nova Cygnus avis…<br />

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This Cygnus becomes a swan after Phaethon’s hubristic death, an event that may indicate the<br />

solar nature of the swan. 617 This study contains several examples in which therianthropic deities<br />

may be represented by various degrees of hybridism; they may be represented as a true blend of<br />

human anatomy or as a man wearing an animal skin. Thus, the “Swan Demon” might be one<br />

way of conceiving of Cygnus and his dual nature. There are no narrative elements to which the<br />

lone votive or decorative statuettes may be linked and thus this interpretation must remain a<br />

hypothetical possibility.<br />

The last possibility proposed by previous scholars for the identification of this figure is<br />

Ganymede, and the small statue group (Fig. VI.9) featuring the “Swan Demon” may support this<br />

identification. 618 In this group the “Swan Demon,” holding aloft a pitcher with his right hand,<br />

alights on the shoulders of a male wearing an animal skin (ram or goat?). The pitcher is poised<br />

to pour its liquid into the mouth of the animal skin-wearing male. In this particular instance, the<br />

“Swan Demon” is portrayed as being quite young, and the swan’s head seems to have a life of its<br />

own as it turns to look down at the figure below. The “Swan Demon’s” wing span is also quite<br />

large and spreads dramatically from his back. It is difficult to say whether or not the pouring of<br />

the pitcher is significant for the identification of the “Swan Demon,” but the ram or goat skin<br />

worn by the male, on whose shoulders the demon alights, may indicate that both of these figures<br />

are divinities of some kind. Nudity of the kind displayed in this piece is typically reserved for<br />

divine beings. That fact that the “Swan Demon” is shown in the act of “refreshing” 619 what may<br />

be another divinity lends some credence to the possibility that this could be Ganymede, the cup-<br />

bearer of Zeus. The curving neck of the swan and the base of the cap are even slightly<br />

reminiscent of a Phrygian cap, which would be appropriate garb for a Trojan prince.<br />

The first objection to interpreting the “Swan Demon” as Ganymede is that in most<br />

representations of Ganymede’s abduction, he is seized by an eagle. However, in vase painting<br />

(Fig. VI.10) 620 and in fragmentary passages of Greek comedy, 621 there is evidence of a tradition<br />

of a swan replacing the more common eagle of Zeus. 622 Fig. VI.10 is a line drawing of the tondo<br />

617 Ahl 1982, 389-94.<br />

618 Haynes (1985, 322) suggests that it likely sat atop a lamp as did Fig VI.8.<br />

619 Haynes 1985, 322.<br />

620 Krauskopf 1980, 243-8. Trendrall and Cambitoglou (1978-1982, I, 422-3; II, 795-6) note several examples of a<br />

swan chasing the Trojan Prince.<br />

621 Krauskopf 1980, 246.<br />

622 Mayo (1967, 19, no. 36) refers to the substitution of a swan for the eagle of Zeus as “executed by apparently<br />

confused artists.” This mythical variation is certainly no more shocking than the substitution of Hercle for These in<br />

123


of a lost Apulian drinking cup formerly in the Fenicia collection in Ruvo. This scene has been<br />

linked to the rape of the young Trojan prince. That the scene in this tondo represents Ganymede<br />

is confirmed by at least two other images of Ganymede being chased and/or abducted by a swan<br />

on Apulian vases as well as a lost fragment which was decorated with the head of a swan,<br />

surrounded by a nimbus and an inscription reading J r } y ~ o ~ q # A.J. Trendall also notes<br />

that several images of Ganymede, before he is kidnapped by Zeus, include a swan, and states that<br />

there must have been a local variant of this myth in which a swan replaced the eagle of Zeus. 623<br />

Even so, S. Reinach identifies the bird in Fig VI.10 as an eagle even though it has quite a long<br />

neck. 624<br />

Given that Zeus was smitten by the young Trojan prince’s beauty, the substitution of<br />

Aphrodite’s bird for the lordly eagle seems appropriate. A second, and more important objection<br />

to the identification of the “Swan Demon” as Ganymede may be that Ganymede is abducted by a<br />

swan; he does not metamorphose into a swan. 625 On the other hand, association with a swan may<br />

not be out of the question due to Ganymede’s transcendence of mortality. 626 As mentioned<br />

earlier, the swan can have funereal connotations because it sings a dirge. In his own way,<br />

Ganymede, too, is a liminal figure who has actually conquered death by obtaining immortality as<br />

Zeus’ cup-bearer. Ganymede will remain forever young and has transcended the boundaries of<br />

life and death. Unfortunately, this interpretation must remain in the realm of speculation until<br />

further evidence for the assimilation of kidnapper and victim can be provided.<br />

Birds were associated not only with the heavens. Two Etruscan mythological figures link<br />

the bird to the infernal realm. The first of these is an unidentified bird demon on a fragment of<br />

Fig V.1, and we must remember not to say that an ancient artist, or in this case, a group of ancient artists, made a<br />

mistake simply because we do not have a complete literary account. Sichtermann (1959) collects several examples<br />

of Ganymede’s abduction by the swan in his text. Schauenburg (1969, Pl. 21,1.) illustrates one such Apulian volute<br />

krater from a private collection in Berlin.<br />

623<br />

Trendall 1987, 144-5.<br />

624<br />

Reinach 1899, 335.<br />

625<br />

While no mythological traditions indicate that Ganymede could metamorphose into a swan, the same cannot be<br />

said for Zeus, who took the form of a swan in order to court the Spartan queen Leda. Perhaps, the presence of a<br />

swan in the myth of Ganymede is a conflation of myths concerning two of Zeus’ love interests.<br />

626<br />

Mayo (1967, 56) sums up the uses of the Ganymede myth in Classical art and literature as follows, “With far<br />

more of an open mind than those of the succeeding centuries, the Greek or Roman viewed the Trojan youth as either<br />

a symbol of sexual passion, a social phenomenon, a prototype of physical perfection, or the insurance of the soul’s<br />

immortality.” Mayo demonstrates the validity of this last meaning with many examples throughout her discussion<br />

of Ganymede in Greek and Roman myth and art.<br />

124


an Etruscan black figure vase from the Orvieto Group (Fig. VI.11). 627 Krauskopf suggests that<br />

this figure is an underworld demon, and its manner is certainly appropriate for a fierce denizen of<br />

the lower world. This figure possesses the head of a bird of prey, which is clear because it has a<br />

hooked beak and reaches out to attack or harry another figure on the sherd. Not enough of this<br />

vessel remains to reconstruct the narrative scene of which this demon is a part, although one<br />

might envision the punishment of Prometheus or Tityos as a likely candidates for violence<br />

committed by an avian antagonist. 628<br />

Etruscan tomb painting contains a second example of a chthonic, therianthropic bird<br />

demon. The Tomb of Orcus II preserves the only labeled example of the demon, Tuchulcha, 629<br />

and here depicted with wings, ass’ ears, a beak instead of a mouth, and two snakes rising from its<br />

head as it brandishes a third snake to menace the hero Theseus (Fig. VI.12). 630 Tuchulcha’s<br />

wings bear the same markings as the viper it 631 holds, and there can be no doubt that demon and<br />

serpent are inextricably linked; 632 nevertheless, due to the presence of a beak and wings, I have<br />

included Tuchulcha in this chapter on avians. Like the bird demon on the black figure sherd<br />

(Fig. VI.11), Tuchulcha is depicted in an offensive stance. In this case, his victim is clearly<br />

627 Not enough of this vessel is preserved to say much that is conclusive about the bird-headed figure which seems to<br />

be attacking a man. The hooked beak of this figure has led Krauskopf to identify it as an underworld demon, and<br />

this is indeed plausible. This “demon” may be a precursor to the slightly more anthropoid Tuchulcha (Fig. VI.12).<br />

A bird of prey is suitable as an underworld figure, as any predator possesses much the same characteristics related to<br />

scavenging, killing, and the consumption of other animals’ flesh. This figure also is important because it presents<br />

the possibility of a bird being more than celestial, i.e. birds can be chthonic too.<br />

628 If the bird demon attacks a figure such as Prometheus, the narrative of which he is part would not take place in<br />

the underworld. I would nevertheless argue for the chthonic character of this hybrid as most figures who serve to<br />

punish the wicked are infernal in nature, e.g., the Erinyes or Furies.<br />

629 A winged figure with two snakes sprouting from his hair that appears on an Etruscan Red Figure skyphos housed<br />

in Boston has been identified as the demon Tuchulcha by Jannot (1997, 143). Two other figures appear on this vase<br />

with the demon and have been identified as Admetus and Alcestis. The presence of an Etruscan death demon with<br />

this couple is fitting for either the parting of Alcestis or the reunion of the couple; however, the demon depicted on<br />

this skyphos neither bears a label nor possesses a bird’s beak in place of a nose. Thus it is difficult to accept this<br />

figure as Tuchulcha as it may be a representation of Charu(n), who could fulfill much the same function as his more<br />

monstrous counterpart.<br />

630 The fact that this is the only example of a demon labeled Tuchulcha leads to several problems. The first regards<br />

the gender of this figure. De Grummond (2006a, 218 ) expresses doubt as to the gender of Tuchulcha but refers to<br />

him as a he for simplicity’s sake. The color of the skin and the costume of the figure are the basis for this problem.<br />

De Ruyt (1934, 11) determines that due to a total lack of humanity, speculation in relation to Tuchulcha’s gender is<br />

ultimately moot. I shall refer to Tuchulcha as “it” to indicate its distinctly inhuman character. Jannot (1997, 144)<br />

addresses a second problem, the identity of this demon as separate from Charu(n). He suggests that Tuchulcha may<br />

be equivalent to an epithet similar to those found in the Tomba dei Caronti. I disagree with this conclusion as the<br />

features of Charu(n) and Tuchulcha are distinct enough to merit separate identities.<br />

631 De Grummond (2006, 217) indicates that the gender we should ascribe to this demon is not clear due to its skin<br />

tone, garments, and possible representation of breasts. Tuchulcha is commonly referred to as “he” in scholarly<br />

literature, but I choose to refer to this demon as an “it” due to its otherworldly nature.<br />

632 Hostetler 2003, 52.<br />

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labeled, These, the Etruscan Theseus. A third figure in this scene sits across from These, and it<br />

is likely that this is meant to be Pirithous, the companion who urged Theseus to aid in the capture<br />

of Persephone so that Pirithous might wed her. Pirithous and Theseus were unsuccessful in their<br />

attempt and were forced to remain in the underworld until Herakles rescued Theseus. Pirithous<br />

remained behind. 633 Thus, in this painting, the Etruscan artist seems to have elaborated on the<br />

Greek myth, and, in a typical Etruscan fashion, has inserted a death demon into the scene. Here,<br />

Tuchulcha seems more menacing than Charu(n), who may act as a guide, or Vanth, who<br />

sometimes offers shelter to deceased souls. Tuchulcha may embody the punishment of these<br />

mortals who have hubristically over-stepped their bounds much in the same way as a Fury.<br />

All along, we have seen that theriomorphic and therianthropic deities and demons are<br />

difficult for us to identify. The avian examples are no exception and, in fact, may even be more<br />

difficult to identify due to the relative silence of literary sources and lack of recognizable<br />

iconographic conventions. These figures would surely have been recognized by their ancient<br />

audiences. The Swan Demon exemplifies this point, as modern scholars are bedeviled in their<br />

attempts to assign a name to a figure that does not perfectly fit any one possibility. Yet, the<br />

presence of this figure in the Archaic and Hellenistic examples indicates that none of the<br />

statuettes are unique occurrences of this iconography which held meaning only to the objects’<br />

owners. This fact alone makes a case for the necessity of more study of theriomorphs and<br />

therianthropes. Perhaps with the discovery of new texts and objects, we shall be able to solve the<br />

puzzle of their identity.<br />

633 Plut. Vit. Thes. 35.1-2.<br />

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CHAPTER 7: CONCLUSIONS<br />

In Beast and Man: The Roots of Human Nature, Midgley explores the concept of human<br />

nature and in doing so addresses the idea that animal species are used as foils to help us further<br />

understand ourselves. 634 She draws examples from many time periods, including an excerpt<br />

from Plato’s Republic. 635 She proves the notion that animals are indeed “good to think,” 636 and<br />

that oftentimes we use an imaginary benchmark of animal behavior instead of actual observed<br />

behavior. 637 No doubt this is one of the reasons for the appearance of therianthropic deities.<br />

Man associates certain aspects of human behavior with animals, who are in turn associated with<br />

particular deities or types of deities. We can see such a trend in the literary and archaeological<br />

evidence gathered in this study.<br />

The first and most important conclusion we may draw from both the archaeological and<br />

literary evidence gathered here is that we should not assume that the Greeks, Romans, and<br />

Etruscans were completely adverse to animal worship. The literary sources that have been used<br />

to support this notion are not as clearly against animal worship as they have been taken to be, nor<br />

should we assume that these sources represent a majority opinion or an opinion that can be<br />

applied to any time period other than that of the author. The proliferation of theriomorphic and<br />

therianthropic imagery in the art and texts of ancient Italy indicates that the Etruscans and<br />

Romans were willing to accept the appearance of certain gods or supernatural figures (demons)<br />

in animal and/or hybrid form. A god of healing, such as Aesculapius, could appear in the form<br />

of a snake, and the lararium, the very center of Roman domestic religion, was commonly<br />

decorated with serpents that received offerings from a home’s inhabitants. Monumental<br />

buildings, such as Roman and Etruscan temples, meant to demonstrate the power and wealth of<br />

the dedicator, were often decorated with images of Juno Sospita and Achelous. Juno Sospita’s<br />

634<br />

Midgley 1995, 15.<br />

635<br />

Midgley (1995, 37) draws from the Republic Book IX as a way to demonstrate man’s tendency to demonize wild<br />

beasts who act without morality.<br />

636<br />

Lévi-Strauss 1969, 89.<br />

637<br />

Midgley 1995, 27. One of the only ancient examples of an attempt to scientifically describe animal behavior and<br />

personalities is Pliny the Elder’s Natural History, particularly books VIII-X. Pliny’s descriptions of animal behavior<br />

are not all based on first, or even second hand, observation, and instead consist of a collection of stories from other<br />

witnesses and folk-tales which Pliny has gathered together. Thus Pliny conforms to Midgley’s assessment of human<br />

opinions of animals.<br />

127


image was also used as an indicator of the birth place of the emperor Antoninus Pius. In addition<br />

to these other examples, the funerary art of the Etruscans regularly features theriomorphic or<br />

therianthropic gods. We must take a different approach to categorizing theriomorphic and<br />

therianthropic divinities. Major deities, who could be conceived of in animal form, did receive<br />

cult. Animal imagery, similar to that used by the Egyptians, could be used to represent Etruscan<br />

and Roman gods. The vocal minority of literary sources presented in Chapter One, which may<br />

or may not argue clearly for an anti-animal worship sentiment, cannot drown out the silent<br />

majority and the archaeological evidence.<br />

A second important point that we may draw from the data collected in this study is that<br />

we can not categorize these deities strictly as survivals of archaic religion. The use of<br />

theriomorphic and therianthropic imagery may be quite ancient, and it is true that certain deities,<br />

such as Pan, can be traced back to early time periods and places such as Arcadia, the storehouse<br />

of archaic cults. On the other hand, figures such as Charu(n) do not appear in Etruscan art until<br />

the classical period, and Aesculapius, who is brought to Rome relatively late, continues to appear<br />

in theriomorphic form well into the second century CE. Instead of considering the creation of<br />

human-animal hybrids a throwback to earlier ideas, we should view it as an iconographic system,<br />

that is not specific to a particular time period, used for specific reasons. Some symbols, such as<br />

the serpent as a symbol of the earth, may have remained the same, but the serpent could be<br />

imbued with new meaning, such as in its new association with Charu. Faunus also demonstrates<br />

the possibility of multiple or changing animal associations and embodiments. His association<br />

with both the wolf and the goat demonstrates the fluid nature of polytheistic religion in the<br />

ancient world.<br />

Investing already existing symbols with new meaning can also be seen in the Etruscan<br />

and Roman adoption of foreign gods along with their myths, cult, and imagery. In some cases<br />

gods such as Aesculapius (and potentially Dionysos) are adopted with little changes to their<br />

myths and cults, but in others changes can be drastic. The appropriation of Pan’s caprid imagery<br />

for the native Italian god Faunus shows a shift in the way this god was conceived. The Etruscans<br />

and Romans also borrow traditional tales such as that of Theseus and the Minotaur but change<br />

them to suit their own taste. These two examples of change in imagery and mythology are a<br />

reminder that the neat classifications and descriptions of gods found in mythology textbooks are<br />

constructs of modern scholars. Etruscan and Roman deities and demons could not only be<br />

128


syncretized with deities in their own pantheon but also those worshipped by other peoples. For<br />

example, it is often difficult to distinguish the character and features of Faunus, Silvanus, Inuus,<br />

and Pan, who are all woodland deities of the Greco-Roman world, and at the Etruscan sanctuary<br />

of Pyrgi, one witnesses the syncretization of the Etruscan goddess Uni and the Phoenician<br />

Astarte. Pagan gods could possess a wide variety of attributes and their spheres of influence<br />

could change and grow with their introduction to a new culture.<br />

Hybrid imagery is particularly suited to chthonic deities or chthonic aspects of otherwise<br />

celestial divinities. Aesculapius is a heroized healer who both transcends the boundary between<br />

life and death 638 and works through and becomes his sacred animal, the serpent. Juno Sospita is<br />

an excellent example of a celestial goddess who is given a chthonic nature. Aita, the ruler of the<br />

underworld, and Calu, the Etruscan god of death, are represented with a wolf cap or as wolf.<br />

Juno, often thought of as the queen of heaven and a sky or moon goddess, takes on the aspect of<br />

the goat and becomes a warrior/protector of the state who remains tied to the earth through her<br />

connection to a serpent oracle. Artistic representations of Dionysos as a bull god may not be<br />

entirely secure, yet this god’s connection to the earth as both a fertility god and a god of<br />

vegetation are clear. Numerous literary sources present him in taurine fashion. Even though<br />

little is known of him, Picus is always spoken of as a sylvan god of the earth, even though he is a<br />

woodpecker and capable of flight. Each of these deities mentioned here is in some way linked to<br />

the earth or the underworld, thus underscoring the chthonic nature of theriomorphic and<br />

therianthropic deities.<br />

These deities who are represented as a hybrid of man and animal shape or fully take on<br />

animal shape are often associated with oracles and prophecy. I have already mentioned the<br />

serpent oracle linked to Juno Sospita, and she is far from alone in having oracular powers or an<br />

oracular site. Aesculapius and Faunus were both associated with the practice of incubation and<br />

appeared to their worshippers in dreams. Faunus, or Silvanus, was also known for speaking out<br />

from the woods and pronouncing oracles, and Picus, or in the guise of a woodpecker, could be<br />

the mouthpiece of the god Mars but also possessed his own powers of prophecy. The link<br />

between birds and the gods as demonstrated in the practice of augury as well as in the imagery of<br />

prophets such as Chalchas also indicates the prophetic nature of these gods.<br />

638 As noted on p. 38, Aesculapius’ iconography indicated that he is the “other” in relation to both man, because of<br />

his ability to heal and his divine parentage, and also to the gods, because of his mortal mother, death, and even his<br />

clothing.<br />

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The imagery used to represent hybrid deities is indicative of gods who cross boundaries<br />

and blur categories. While addressing the topic of liminality, V. and E. Turner remark that<br />

“incongruous forms may be created” as one way of denoting the liminal nature of initiatory<br />

rituals. 639 “These might include ‘monsters,’ compounded of elements from human or animal<br />

forms; for example, animal-headed gods, or human-headed animals.” 640 Such devices serve as<br />

the impetus for initiates to think about “persons, objects, relationships, social roles, and features<br />

of their environment hitherto taken for granted.” 641 Animals and animal imagery thus function<br />

as metaphors and are used to explain human experience. 642<br />

Many of these gods are associated with the transition between life and death. 643<br />

Narratives associated with Aesculapius’ and Dionysos’ birth, the transition between night and<br />

day possibly associated with the bird-man from Pyrgi, Faunus’ embodiment of the protector and<br />

ravager of the flock, lines between sanity and madness associated with Pan and Dionysos, and<br />

the transition between mortality and immortality represented by figures such as Picus and<br />

Ganymede are represented by the blending of human and animal form. One god that marks an<br />

actual boundary is Achelous, who is a personification of a geographical feature. Thus,<br />

boundaries are not only broken but can also be reinforced by these gods. The use of heads of<br />

Juno Sospita and Achelous as antefixes to simultaneously decorate temples and ward away evil<br />

denotes the use of these liminal figures to reinforce the barrier between the sacred and the<br />

profane. In this way, these gods may conform to structural theories in that the gods mediate<br />

between two poles.<br />

In addition to these other aspects of liminality, theriomorphic and therianthropic gods are<br />

appropriate to ward away evil because of the fear they inspire. It is interesting to note how many<br />

therianthropic deities are represented as a human with an animal head or as a human wearing a<br />

cap or mask. The head may be the most fearsome part of the body, be it animal or human form.<br />

Mundkur suggests that the fear of human-animal hybrids is the result of “primitive” belief. 644 I<br />

639<br />

V. and E. Turner 1982, 205.<br />

640<br />

V. and E. Turner 1982, 205.<br />

641<br />

V. and E. Turner 1982, 205.<br />

642<br />

Morris (1998, 169) demonstrates a similar trend in the use of animals as cultural metaphors amongst the Malawi<br />

people of Africa.<br />

643<br />

A parallel between Greco-Roman culture and the Malawi people in the use of animal imagery deals with the<br />

wearing of animal skins. Morris (1998, 176) points to a motif of detachable animal skins which is comparable to the<br />

use of masks. In the context of Italian therianthropic and theriomorphic deities, we find the use of both devices<br />

(skins and masks) in the representations and cult practices of these gods.<br />

644<br />

Mundkur 1988, 153.<br />

130


would again suggest that we not think of these figures as only representing a “primitive<br />

substratum” of ancient religion due to the continued usage and invention of theriomorphic and<br />

therianthropic images. It is difficult to determine how much the Etruscans and Romans actually<br />

believed in the gods described in their myths and represented in their art, but it is likely that<br />

many people believed that these divinities were active in their life and the world around them.<br />

Last of all, I hope I have demonstrated that theriomorphic and therianthropic deities and<br />

demons require further attention in future scholarship, and that this dissertation might serve as a<br />

starting point for future research. There remain a number of issues which I believe would prove<br />

fruitful for the study of the figures I have dealt with in this dissertation as well as human-animal<br />

hybrids in general. Recently, the scholarly community has become interested in theories of<br />

shamanism and how these might be applied to the ancient world. For example, a recent exhibit<br />

at the Kelsey Museum in Ann Arbor, Michigan, focused on the role of the shaman in ancient Iran<br />

and Iraq. 645 It may prove profitable to apply some of these new theories to the archaeological<br />

and literary evidence of Greece, Rome, and Etruria. As of yet, there is still much work that<br />

needs to be done, however, in identifying the gods and goddesses represented by human-animal<br />

hybrids. I believe this is a necessary step that must precede an application of shamanistic theory.<br />

The debates as to the identity of figures such as the anguiped demon in the Tomb of Reliefs, the<br />

man-bull in the Tomb of the Bulls, or the “Swan Demon” and bird-man of Pyrgi remain<br />

unsettled. Figures such as the “Swan Demon” may remain unidentified until new artistic or<br />

literary evidence comes to light or further testimony from the ancients points scholars in the<br />

proper direction.<br />

In this dissertation, I took a broad look at theriomorphic and therianthropic deities over a<br />

vast geographic area as well as a large chronological span. It may prove fruitful to isolate one<br />

particular region or time period to determine if there is any variation in the way that<br />

theriomorphic and therianthropic deities are used or represented by the Etruscans or Romans.<br />

The individuality of the Etruscan and Latin city-states (as evidenced by variation in burial<br />

practice, writing, and other cultural features) makes this an attractive proposal. Of course, this<br />

would not be possible for each of the deities or demons presented here, but figures such as Juno<br />

Sospita and Achelous may be promising subjects of such a study due to the wealth of evidence<br />

for these figures. One might be able to isolate particular ways of fashioning the iconography of a<br />

645 Root 2005.<br />

131


god or goddess or the popularity of a particular narrative or scene by undertaking such an<br />

approach.<br />

A further possibility for the study of theriomorphic and therianthropic deities would be to<br />

examine the extent to which Egyptian deities appear in hybrid forms in Rome. As mentioned<br />

earlier in this dissertation, the Romans were familiar with the Egyptian pantheon, and, despite<br />

literary sources which have been taken to indicate disapproval, there is evidence for the<br />

appropriation of some Egyptian divinities. A study of the Egyptian material would serve to<br />

compliment the study of the native Italian evidence.<br />

Ultimately, the use of animal-hybrid imagery functioned as a way for the ancients to<br />

express their religious concerns. Just as with any other deity, a therianthropic or theriomorphic<br />

god, goddess, or demon could protect mortals from malevolent forces, ease their transition to or<br />

embody their concern with the afterlife, offer a cure for sickness and disease, foretell the future<br />

and serve as an intermediary between man and the gods. What is interesting about these deities<br />

and demons is the marked distinction which separates them from humanity by the visual cue of<br />

blending human and animal anatomy. By gathering the archaeological and literary evidence<br />

presented in this study, I hope that I have demonstrated that these divinities formed an important<br />

and influential part of ancient Etruscan and Roman religion. The corpus of material and texts<br />

gathered here is representative of one fascinating aspect of the culture of ancient Italy. By<br />

examining these deities and demons, who have until now only received marginal attention in<br />

mainstream scholarship, one is able to gain a broader perspective on the ability of the Etruscans<br />

and Romans to use metaphors to make sense of their world and thus to become closer to men and<br />

women who, like us, sought ways to define and understand the workings of the universe.<br />

132


Fig. I.1. Prehistoric Carved Ivory Figurine of a Man with a Lion’s Head from Hohlenstein-<br />

Stadel, Germany, ca. 30,000 BCE, Ulm, Museum Der Stadt. After Putnam 1988, 467.<br />

133


Fig. I.2. Roman Fresco Depicting a Priest of Isis, from the House of Loreius Tiburtinus,<br />

Pompeii, ca. 1 st C CE. After De Vos 1990, No. 53.<br />

134


Fig. II.1. Early Corinthian Alabastron Decorated with the Figure of Typhon, Unknown Provenance,<br />

ca. 610-600 BCE, New Haven, Yale <strong>University</strong> Art Gallery. After Matheson 2004, No. 98.<br />

135


Fig. II.2. Sculpture of the so-called Bluebeard Anguiped from the “Hekatompedon” on the Athenian<br />

Acropolis, ca. 560 BCE, Acropolis Museum. After Hurwitt 2001, Pl. III.<br />

136


Fig. II.3. Hellenistic Relief of Zeus Battling the Giants, from the Eastern Frieze of the Great Altar of<br />

Pergamon, begun ca. 180 BCE, Berlin, Pergamon Museum. After Schmidt 1962, Ill. 7.<br />

137


Fig. II.4. Etruscan Black Figure Hydria with Scene of Two Youths Attacking a Giant, Vulci, ca.<br />

525-500 BCE, British Museum, London. After Spivey 1987, Fig. 14b.<br />

138


Fig. II.5. Detail of an Etruscan Fresco of a Giant from The Tomb of the Typhon, in the Monterozzi<br />

Necropolis, Tarquinia, 3 rd quarter of the 3 rd C BCE. After Pallottino 1952, p. 127.<br />

139


Fig. II.6. Detail of an Etruscan Fresco of Charu(n) from the Entrance Wall of the Tomb of the<br />

Anina Family, in the Scataglini Necropolis, Tarquinia, 3 rd to 2 nd C BCE. After Steingraber 1985,<br />

Pl. 11.<br />

140


Fig. II.7. Etruscan Fresco of Two Charu(n)s Flanking a False Door on the Right Wall of the<br />

Tomb of the Charu(n)s in the Monterozzi Necropolis, Tarquinia, end of the 3 rd C BCE. After<br />

Steingraber 1985, No. 55.<br />

141


Fig. II.8. Rear Wall of the Tomb of the Reliefs with Anguiped and Kerberos, Banditaccia<br />

Necropolis, Cerveteri, 3 rd quarter of the 4 th C BCE. After Brendel 1995, Fig. 309.<br />

142


Fig. II.9. Roman Black Marble Statue of Aesculapius, Antium, ca. 150 CE, Capitoline Museum,<br />

Rome. After Kerényi 1959, Ill. 7.<br />

143


Fig. II.10. Roman Marble Statue of Aesculapius along with Salus Feeding the Sacred Serpent,<br />

Found in the Forum of Praeneste, Hellenistic Period, Museo Vaticano, Rome. After Schouten<br />

1967, Ill. 7.<br />

144


Fig. II.11. Roman Bronze Medallion from the Reign of Antoninus Pius Depicting the Entry of<br />

Aesculapius into Rome, Unknown Provenance, ca. 138-61 CE, Cabinet des Medaillés, Paris.<br />

After Mambella 1997, Fig. 23.<br />

145


Fig. II.12. Detail of a Roman Marble Statue (possibly a copy of a 4 th C BCE Greek original)<br />

Depicting Aesculapius as a Prophetic Deity, ca. 130 CE, Pitti Palace, Florence. After Kerényi<br />

1959, Ill. 44.<br />

146


Fig. II.13. Lararium from the House of the Vettii (VI.15.1) with Fresco Depicting the Genius,<br />

Lares, and Genius Loci, Pompeii, ca. 1 st C CE. After Pavlick 2006, Fig. 15.<br />

147


Fig. II.14. Drawing of a Roman Fresco Depicting the God Harpocrates and the Genius Loci of<br />

Mt. Vesuvius, from Herculaneum, 1 st C CE, Museo Nazionale, Naples. After Boyce 1942, Fig.<br />

5.<br />

148


Fig. III.1. Water Color Copy of an Etruscan Fresco Depicting Aita, Phersipnai, and Cerun in the<br />

Tomb of Orcus II, in the Monterozzi Necropolis, Tarquinia, 2 nd half of 4 th C BCE. After Wellard<br />

1973, p. 141.<br />

149


Fig. III.2. Reconstruction of an Etruscan Fresco Depicting Aita and Phersipnai at a Funerary<br />

Banquet in the Golini Tomb I, from Settecamini, 3 rd quarter of the 4 th C BCE, Orvieto, Museo<br />

Archeologico Nazionale di Orvieto. After de Grummond 2006, Fig. X.27.<br />

150


Fig. III.3. Etruscan Red-figured Oinochoe Depicting Phersipnai and Aita from the Torcop<br />

Group, Produced at Caere, 2 nd half of the 4 th C BCE, Paris, Musée du Louvre. After Del Chiaro<br />

1970, Fig. 1.<br />

151


Fig. III.4. Detail of an Etruscan Polychrome Sarcophagus Depicting the Sacrifice of Trojan<br />

Prisoners by Achilles, from Torre San Severo, late 4 th to early 3 rd C BCE, Orvieto, Museo<br />

Claudio Faina. After Del Chiaro 1970, Fig. 4.<br />

152


Fig. III.5. Etruscan Bronze Statuette of a Wolf-Hound Bearing a Dedicatory Inscription Related<br />

to Calu, from Cortona, Date Unknown, Florence, Museo Archeologico. After Elliott 1995, Fig.<br />

10.<br />

153


Fig. III.6. Etruscan Bucchero Oinochoe with Anubis-like figure, from Chiusi, ca. 550 BCE,<br />

Museo Nazionale Collezione Cassucini, Palermo. After Tusa 1956, Pl. XXXVIII, 2.<br />

154


Fig. III.7. Roman White Marble Statue of Hermanubis, from Anzio, 1 st -2 nd C CE, Rome, Museo<br />

Gregoriano Egizio del Vaticano. After Malaise 1972, Pl. 1.<br />

155


Fig. III.8. Etruscan Painted Terracotta Cinerary Urn Depicting a Family Framed by Underworld<br />

Demons, from Chiusi, 150-100 BCE, Berlin, Staatliche Museen. After Haynes 2000, Fig. 269.<br />

156


Fig. III.9. Roman Bronze Statuette of Silvanus/Sucellus, from Vienne, ca. 14 CE, Baltimore,<br />

Walters Art Gallery. After MacMullen 2000, Fig. 12.<br />

157


Fig. III.10. Line Drawing of an Etruscan Alabaster Cinerary Urn Depicting Combat with a<br />

Wolf-Demon, from Chiusi, 2 nd C BCE, Florence, Museo Archeologico. After Brunn and Körte<br />

1872, Pl. III.9.4.<br />

158


Fig. III.11. Etruscan Travertine Cinerary Urn Depicting Combat with a Wolf-Demon, San Sisto,<br />

2 nd C BCE, Perugia, Museo Archeologico. After Defosse 1972, Pl. IV.<br />

159


Fig. III.12. Etruscan Terracotta Cinerary Urn Depicting Combat with a Wolf-Demon, from<br />

Perugia, 2 nd C BCE, Perugia, Museo Archeologico. After Defosse 1972, Pl. V.<br />

160


Fig. III.13. Etruscan Bronze Ash Urn Depicting Warriors Encircling a Wild Beast, from<br />

Bisenzio, 8 th C BCE, Rome, Museo Etrusco di Villa Giulia. After Briguet 1986, Fig. IV.8.<br />

161


Fig. III.14. Pontic Plate by the Tityos Painter, from Vulci, ca. 520 BCE, Rome, Museo Etrusco<br />

di Villa Giulia. After Heurgon 1991, Fig. 1.<br />

162


Fig. III.15. Etruscan Terracotta Statuette of a God Wearing Wolf Skin, from Perugia, ca. 3 rd -2 nd<br />

C BCE, Perugia, Museo Archeologico. After Elliott 1995, Fig. 14.<br />

163


Fig. III.16. Etruscan Bronze Statuette of a God Wearing a Wolf Skin, from Città di Castello<br />

(Perugia), 3 rd -2 nd C BCE, Current Location Unknown. After Minto 1927, Pl. LXXIIa.<br />

164


Fig. IV.1. Greek Red Figure Bell Crater Depicting Pan Chasing a Young Shepherd by the Pan<br />

Painter, from Cumae, 470 BCE, Boston, Museum of Fine Arts. After Beazley 1974, Pl. 2.<br />

165


Fig. IV.2. Roman Bronze Statuette of Faunus Bearing a Branch, Unknown Date, Unknown<br />

Provenance, Paris, Cabinet des Médailles de la Bibliothéque Nationale. After Babelon et<br />

Blanchet 1895, Fig. 90.<br />

166


Fig. IV.3. Roman Fresco Depicting Pan Amongst the Nymphs from the House of Jason<br />

(IX.5.18) in Pompeii, 1 st quarter of the 1 st C CE, Naples, Museo Archeologico. After Ling 1991,<br />

Fig. 123.<br />

167


Fig. IV.4. Latin Painted Terracotta Antefix Depicting Juno Sospita, from Antemnae, Beginning<br />

of the 5 th C BCE, Rome, Museo Etrusco Nazionale Romano. After Cristofani 1990, Pl. XVI,<br />

7.1.1.<br />

168


Fig. IV.5. Etruscan “Pontic” Amphora Depicting Hercle and Menerva in Combat with Uni and<br />

Tinia, from Cerveteri, late 6 th C BCE, London, British Museum. After Ducati 1968, Pl. 13.<br />

169


Fig. IV.6. Etruscan Bronze Mirror Cover Depicting the Head of Juno Sospita, Odysseus, and<br />

Penelope, from Tarquinia, 3 rd C BCE, Rome, Museo Nazionale Etrusco di Villa Giulia. After<br />

Richardson 1982, Pl. 9.1.<br />

170


Fig. IV.7 Republican Roman Denarius Minted by L. Roscius Fabatus, Unknown Provenance,<br />

ca. 57 BCE, London, British Museum. After Mattingly 1960, Pl XIII, 14.<br />

171


Fig. IV.8. Imperial Roman Bronze Coin of Antoninus Pius Depicting Juno Sospita on its<br />

Reverse, London, British Museum. After Mattingly 1940, Pl. 28.4.<br />

172


Fig. IV.9. Colossal Marble Statue of Juno Sospita, Unknown Provenance, Antonine Period,<br />

Rome, Vatican Museum. After Chiarucci 1983, Fig. 18.<br />

173


Fig. IV.10. Etruscan Bronze Statuette of Menerva, Unknown Provenance, Late Archaic Period,<br />

Modena, Galleria Estense. After Richardson 1983, Fig. 822.<br />

174


Fig. IV.11. Etruscan Bronze Statuette Identified as Juno Sospita Wearing a Wolf-skin,<br />

Unknown Provenance, 5 th C BCE, Florence, Archaeological Museum. After Richardson 1976,<br />

Fig. 12.<br />

175


Fig. V.1. Etruscan Engraved Bronze Mirror with the Death of the Minotaur at the Hands of<br />

Hercle, Civita Castellana, Present Location Unknown, ca. 300 BCE. After Jurgeit 1986, P. 1071.<br />

176


Fig. V.2. Etruscan Black-Figure Amphora Depicting Combat Between Hercle and the Minotaur,<br />

Unknown Provenance, Paris, Louvre. After Torelli 2000, Fig. 215.<br />

177


Fig. V.3. Etruscan Red-Figure Plate by the Settecamini Painter Depicting a Female Cradling an<br />

Infant Bull-Man, Early 4 th C BCE, Paris, Bibliothéque Nationale, Cabinet des Médailles. After<br />

Brendel 1995, Ill. 268.<br />

178


Fig. V.4. Etruscan Cinerary Urn Depicting the a Scene with the Minotaur as an Infant, Unknown<br />

Provenance, 2 nd C BCE, Volterra, Museo Archeologico. After Brunn and Körte 1872, Pl<br />

XXIXa.<br />

179


Fig. V.5. Roman Terracotta Revetment Plaque, from the Regia in the Roman Forum, ca. 610-<br />

600 BCE, Rome, Antiquarium Forense. After Iacopi 1976, Fig. 27.<br />

180


Fig. V.6. Detail of an Etruscan Fresco Depicting an Ithyphallic Man-bull from the Tomb of the<br />

Bulls, located in the Monterozzi Necropolis, Tarquinia, ca. 540 BCE. After Leisinger 1953, Fig.<br />

16.<br />

181


Fig. V.7. Etruscan Bronze Mirror Depicting Hercle and Achlae Wrestling, ca. 350 BCE,<br />

Unknown Provenance, Berlin, formerly Antiquarium. After Gerhard 1867, Pl. CCCXL.<br />

182


Fig. V.8. Etruscan Terracotta Shell Antefix Decorated with the Head of a Horned God (Likely<br />

Achelous), from the Portanaccio Sanctuary at Veii, end of the 6 th C BCE, Rome, Museo<br />

Nazionale Etrusco di Villa Giulia. After Proietti 1980, Fig. 132.<br />

183


Fig. V.9. Etruscan Gold Pendant Representing the Head of Achelous, Unknown Provenance, 6 th<br />

C BCE, Paris, Louvre. After Briguet 1986, Fig. IV.10.<br />

184


Fig. V.10. Etruscan Bronze Boss with Mask of Achelous, from Tarquinia, beginning of 5 th C<br />

BCE, Rome, Museo Gregorio Etrusco. After Buranelli 1992, Cat. 24.<br />

185


Fig. V.11. Etruscan Bucchero Oinochoe with the Head of a Calf or Bull, from Chiusi, 550-500<br />

BCE, Florence, Museo Archeologico. After Cristofani 2000, p. 90.<br />

186


Fig. VI.1. Line Drawing of an Etruscan Engraved Bronze Mirror Depicting the Greek Seer<br />

Chalchas Performing the Etruscan Rite of Hepatoscopy, from Vulci, ca. 400 BCE, Rome, Museo<br />

Gregoriano Etrusco. After De Grummond 2006, Fig. II.10.<br />

187


Fig. VI.2. Line Drawing of an Engraved Etruscan Bronze Mirror Depicting Athrpa amongst the<br />

Divine Couples Turan and Atunis and Atlenta and Meliacr, Perugia, ca. 320 BCE, Berlin,<br />

Antiquarium. After Zimmer 1987, Fig. 19.<br />

188


Fig. VI.3. Black Gloss Amphora in the Shape of a Woodpecker, Unknown Provenance, 420-400<br />

BCE, New York, Metropolitan Museum of Art. After Capanna 2000, p. 225.<br />

189


Fig. VI.4. Terracotta Antefix from Pyrgi Depicting a Man with the Head of a Bird, Late 6 th C<br />

BCE, Rome, Museo Etrusco di Villa Giulia. After Proietti 1986, Fig. 89.<br />

190


Fig. VI.5. Reconstruction of Four of Six Antefixes from a Group Which Decorated the Row of<br />

Cells Built in Conjunction with Temple B, from Pyrgi, Late 6 th C BCE, Rome, Museo Etrusco di<br />

Villa Giulia. After Haynes 2000, Fig. 153.<br />

191


Fig. VI.6. Monumental Stone Relief of an Assyrian Griffin Demon from the Royal Palace of<br />

King Assurnasirpal II at Kalhu, ca 883-859 BCE, located at Kalhu (modern Nimrud). After<br />

Black and Green 1997, Fig. 78.<br />

192


Fig. VI.7. Etruscan Bronze Statuette of the “Swan Demon,” Unknown Provenance, Late Archaic<br />

Period, Paris, Louvre. After Richardson 1983, Fig. 868.<br />

193


Fig. VI.8. Etruscan Bronze Statuette of the “Swan Demon” Which Decorated a Lamp, Possibly<br />

from the Area of Naples, ca. 300-200 BCE, London, British Museum. After Haynes 1985, Fig.<br />

198.<br />

194


Fig. VI.9. Etruscan Bronze Statuette of a “Swan Demon” Supported by a Youth Wearing a<br />

Beast’s Skin, Unknown Provenance, ca. 3 rd C BCE, Florence, Museo Archeologico. After<br />

Herbig 1965, Pl. 50.<br />

195


Fig. VI.10. Line Drawing of the Tondo in an Apulian Drinking Cup Depicting Ganymede Being<br />

Abducted by a Swan, Unknown Date, Unknown Provenance, Formerly Ruvo, Fenicia Collection<br />

(Now Lost). After Krauskopf 1980, Fig. 1.<br />

196


Fig. VI.11. Fragment of an Etruscan Black Figure Vase from the Orvieto Group Depicting an<br />

Underworld Demon with the Head of a Bird of Prey, Unknown Provenance, beginning of the 5 th<br />

C BCE, Göttingen, Archäologisches Institut. After Krauskopf 1987, Pl. II.d.<br />

197


Fig. VI.12. Water Color Rendition of a Fresco Depicting the Demon Tuchulcha Menacing the<br />

Hero These (Greek Theseus) with a Serpent from Tomb of Orcus II, in the Monterozzi<br />

Necropolis, Tarquinia, 2 nd quarter of 4 th C BCE. After Krauskopf 2006, Fig. V.6.<br />

198


ANCIENT WORKS CITED<br />

Apollod. Bibl. 1.6.3. 29<br />

Ar. Plut. 687-90. 38-9<br />

Ar. Plut. 727-38. 39<br />

Cic. De Rep. III.14 6<br />

Cic. Nat. D. I.29.82. 84-5<br />

Cic. Nat. D. III.19, 47-8. 7<br />

Dion. Hal. 1.14.5. 113<br />

Hdt. IV.105.2 58<br />

Hor. Car. 1.17.1-10. 78<br />

Hor. Epist. II.1.156-7. 22<br />

IG IV.1. nos. 122.XXXII. 42<br />

Juv. Sat. XV.1-8. 11<br />

Liv. Per. XI. 41<br />

Ov. Fas. 2.335-50, 357-8. 79<br />

Ov. Fas. 3.291-311. 69<br />

Ov. Met. I.230-9. 57<br />

Ov. Met. II.367-77. 121<br />

Ov. Met. IX.80-8. 106<br />

Ov. Met. XIV.387-96. 114<br />

Ov. Met. XV.653-62. 41<br />

Pausanias 8.2.6. 57<br />

Petron. Sat. 62. 58<br />

Plin. HN, 2.54.140. 67<br />

Plin. HN 8.81. 58<br />

Plut. De Is. et Os. 71. 9<br />

Plut. Vit. Rom. IX.5 111<br />

Prop. IV.8.3-14. 88<br />

Pseudo-Aurelius Victor Origo Gentis Romanae III.6 64<br />

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Serv. Ad. Aen. VII, 761. 37<br />

Val. Max. VII.3.8. 3<br />

Verg. Aen. V.84-96. 44<br />

Verg. Aen. VIII.670-3. 8<br />

Verg. Aen. XI.783-8. 55<br />

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BIOGRAPHICAL SKETCH<br />

Wayne L. Rupp, Jr was born in New Orleans, LA on Nov. 25, 1974. He obtained his BA<br />

in Classical Civilizations and English Literature from Loyola <strong>University</strong> of New Orleans and an<br />

MA in Classical Archaeology from <strong>University</strong> of Arizona in Tucson as well as an MA in Latin<br />

from <strong>Florida</strong> <strong>State</strong> <strong>University</strong>. In addition to teaching experience obtained at <strong>Florida</strong> <strong>State</strong>, he<br />

has also taught at the Intercollegiate Center for Classical Studies in Rome and Oberlin College in<br />

Oberlin, Ohio. His publications include an article entitle “The Vegetal Goddess in the Tomb of<br />

the Typhon” based on a paper delivered at the Etruscans Now conference held in London in 2002<br />

at the British Museum. His fieldwork includes one season of excavation at Chianciano Terme<br />

with <strong>University</strong> of Arizona in 1998 and four seasons of excavation at Poggio delle Civitelle with<br />

<strong>Florida</strong> <strong>State</strong> <strong>University</strong> from 1999-2003.<br />

225

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