165:(as it’s now called) so that he could cast into the river human effigies equal in number to the companions he had lost to mischance on his journey: that way, they could be carried along by the current to the sea and be restored, in a sense, to their ancestral homes in place of the bodies of the dead. That is why (according to Epicadus) the practice of fashioning such effigies has remained part of the rites."
109:
were sometimes made of clay, in which case their worth was but trifling, unless the workmanship possessed unusual merit; those made of marble, Corinthian bronze, silver or gold, were, however, frequently of considerable value."
141:
Or take the
Sigillaria he just mentioned: the holiday and its clay figurines are meant to amuse infants who haven’t yet learned to walk, but he tries to make it a matter of religious duty.
372:
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were substitutes for the sacrificial victims of the primitive religious rituals. Interpreted as such, they raise questions about
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137:). The speaker Evangelus, however, counters that the figures are nothing more than toys to amuse children.
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For the four-day fair, vendors of the figurines and other gifts set up temporary stalls in the
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was also the name for the last day of the
Saturnalia, December 23, and for a place where
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Shopping in
Ancient Rome: The Retail Trade in the Late Republic and the Principate
81:"These statuettes were frequently made in the likeness of some divinity, such as
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in Rome was a street dedicated to manufacturing and selling these gifts.
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The
Sorrows of the Ancient Romans: The Gladiator and the Monster
161:
and led his cattle victoriously through Italy, he built the
352:(Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992), p. 398; Holleran,
101:); failing this, of some purely fantastic type, such as a
93:, Victory or of some celebrated mythological character (
40:
or wax figurines given as traditional gifts during the
190:says the vendor stalls blocked the paintings of
350:A New Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome
226:, 2011), pp. 81 (note 110) and 110 (note 178).
8:
309:(Princeton University Press, 1993), p. 166.
242:(Cambridge University Press, 2007), p. 152.
121:, the interlocutor Praetextatus says that
263:
261:
255:(Oxford University Press, 2012), p. 192.
274:. G. P. Putnam's sons. pp. 132–136
211:
7:
240:Power and Eroticism in Imperial Rome
129:among the earliest Romans (see also
14:
19:For the extinct plant genus, see
220:Macrobius: Saturnalia Books 1–2
58:was a person who made and sold
1:
348:6.154; Lawrence Richardson,
271:Roman Life Under the Caesars
62:, perhaps as an offshoot of
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18:
354:Shopping in Ancient Rome,
373:Ancient Roman festivals
268:Thomas, Emile (1899).
224:Loeb Classical Library
167:
143:
147:
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28:ancient Roman culture
378:December observances
105:or hunchback. These
200:Porticus Agrippiana
178:, and later in the
113:In the dialogue of
64:pottery manufacture
305:Carlin A. Barton,
218:Robert A. Kaster,
153:reports that when
91:Apollo Sauroctunus
44:. Sigillaria as a
16:Ancient Roman gift
251:Claire Holleran,
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184:Baths of Trajan
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127:human sacrifice
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71:Via Sigillaria
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52:were sold. A
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356:pp. 191–192.
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276:. Retrieved
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318:Macrobius,
292:Macrobius,
77:The objects
55:sigillarius
46:proper noun
367:Categories
333:Saturnalia
331:Macrobius
320:Saturnalia
294:Saturnalia
206:References
157:had slain
145:But also:
123:sigillaria
119:Saturnalia
99:Hyacinthus
60:sigillaria
50:sigillaria
42:Saturnalia
33:sigillaria
21:Sigillaria
383:Figurines
196:Argonauts
115:Macrobius
278:June 15,
194:and the
170:The fair
155:Hercules
151:Epicadus
83:Hercules
346:Juvenal
335:1.11.47
322:1.11.1.
296:1.11.1.
198:in the
188:Juvenal
182:of the
180:portico
135:oscilla
107:sigilla
87:Minerva
38:pottery
159:Geryon
192:Jason
149:47. "
131:Argei
95:Danäe
36:were
280:2020
133:and
69:The
117:'s
97:or
26:In
369::
260:^
238:,
202:.
186:.
89:,
85:,
66:.
30:,
282:.
222:(
23:.
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