indigetes (dii indigites) Roman Apparently, lesser gods of the many people who inhabited Central Italy in the seventh and early sixth centuries b.
Publié le 26/01/2014
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«
used the term dii indigites to distinguish the many
personal gods from the dii novensiles , or newcomer
gods, particularly those brought to the Italian peninsula
by Greek colonists.
Some argue more specifically
that the indigetes were the group of gods named
in one of the oldest recovered calendars of Roman
festivals, inscribed in a stucco wall sometime in the
sixth century b.c.
and discovered by archaeologists in
the early 20th century..
»
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Liens utiles
- Mephitis (Mefitis) Roman A goddess who protected the people of Rome and surrounding cities in Italy from the dangerous fumes of sulphur that spewed from the many volcanoes and the gaseous vents surrounding them.
- Latinus Roman A legendary, perhaps historical, king of the Latini or Latins, an original people of central Italy, and the hero from whom that people got their name.
- Latium Roman In ancient times, a region in west-central Italy, south and east of the Tiber River on the shores of the Tyrrhenian Sea.
- pantheon Greek and Roman In mythology, pantheon refers to all the gods of a people, particularly those considered to be the most prominent or most powerful.
- incubus Roman In folklore and very early religious beliefs, an evil spirit or devil that came out at night and sat on the chests of sleeping people.