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Conservatism and Change in Roman Religion*
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 09 August 2013
Extract
The conservatism of the Romans in matters of religion is a generally accepted truth and it is in many ways a very obvious truth. I have no intention of denying it. They set a very high value on their religious tradition; they sought to preserve and reproduce the ceremonies and customs inherited from their ancestors; they thought it wrong and even dangerous to abandon or neglect the many gods, goddesses and sacred places of which the city was full; they had no ideological framework which would have enabled them to think in terms of reforming and improving the national cult, as opposed to reviving and restoring it.
I say that this is an obvious truth, because some degree of conservatism in this sense seems to be an inevitable feature of the type of Graeco-Roman paganism of which the Roman State cult is one example. A system in which the emphasis falls primarily on the performance of ritual acts—not on the worshippers' belief, or religious emotions and experiences, or on theology or ethics—such a system inescapably makes it a primary value, though not necessarily the only value, that the known ritual should be successfully repeated. This in turn must imply some implicit respect for the past and for the tradition from which the ritual emerged. For the Romans of any generation, the real validation of their religion lay in the fact that it had worked: that their ancestors had won battles, survived crises, eaten dinners, begotten children and expanded their power by the practice of the self-same rites and ceremonies as they practised themselves. For the Romans of the last generation of the Republic, it was a fact that their ancestors had won more battles and eaten better dinners than anybody else.
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References
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14 Livy, xxii. 10: ‘Velitis iubeatisne haec sic fieri? Si res publica populi Romani Quiritium ad quinquennium proximum, sicut uelim (uou)camque, salua seruata erit hisce duellis, quod duellum populo Romano cum Carthaginiensi est quaeque duella cum Gallis sunt qui cis Alpes sunt, turn donum duit populus Romanus Quiritium quod uer attulerit ex suillo ouillo caprino bouillo grege quaeque profana erunt Ioui fieri, ex qua die senatus populusque iusserit. Qui faciet, quando uolet quaque lege uolet facito; quo modo faxit probe factum esto. Si id moritur quod fieri oportebit, profanum esto, neque scelus esto. Si quis rumpet occidetue insciens, ne fraus esto. Si quis clepsit, ne populo scelus esto neue cui cleptum erit. Si atro die faxit insciens, probe factum esto. Si nocte siue luce, si seruus siue liber faxit, probe factum esto. Si antidea senatus populusque iusserit fieri ac faxitur, eo populus solutus liber esto.’ For full discussion of the incident and its implications, cf. Heurgon, J., Trois Etudes sue le ‘Ver Sacrum’ (Collection Latomus XXVI, 1957), 36 ff.Google Scholar
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17 ‘Posse rectiusque etiam esse pontifices decreverunt.’ For an admirable discussion of the textual and other problems of the passage and for earlier bibliography, cf. John Briscoe's Commentary, ad loc. He, however, accepts the view that both sides in the dispute are acting from political motives; I find this entirely implausible, but, in any case, my present point is not affected, since it is the possibility of changing the rules in which I am interested, not the reasons for doing so. See further Piganiol, A., Recherches sur les jeux romains (Strasbourg, 1923), 81 ff.Google Scholar; Scullard, H. H., Roman Politics 2 (Oxford, 1973), 87 f.Google Scholar; Cassola, F., I Gruppi politici (Trieste, 1962), 410Google Scholar; Schlag, U., Regnum in senatu (Stuttgart, 1968), 149 f.Google Scholar
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19 Livy xxvii. 25. 7; Plut., Marcellus 28Google Scholar. Cf. Latte, , RRG, 200; 235 f.Google Scholar; de Sanctis, op. cit., 302.
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25 The underlying hostile assumptions can be clearly seen in two of the most influential accounts of the development of republican religion this century—W. Warde Fowler's The Religious Experience of the Roman People (cf. especially, Chapters XII–XIV) and Kurt Latte's Römische Religionsgeschichte (especially, Chapters VIII–X). Both these books are, of course, deeply influential on the account of Toynbee mentioned above. G. Dumézil, op. cit., here as elsewhere, offers a valuable corrective to generally accepted views; cf. especially, 102 ff.
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27 Varro, , de L.L. vi. 19Google Scholar: ‘nunc vix nomen notum paucis’. Cf. Latte, , RRG, 137Google Scholar.
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