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Encyclopedia :
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VES :
Vestal Virgin |
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Vestal Virgin, ca 1890: Leighton's artistic sense has won over his passion for historical accuracy in showing the veil over the Vestal's head at sacrifices, the suffibulum, as translucent, instead of fine white wool. In Ancient Rome, the Vestal Virgins (sacerdotes vestales), were the virgin holy priestesses of Vesta, the goddess of the hearth. Their primary task was to maintain the sacred fire of Vesta. The Vestal duty brought great honor and afforded greater privileges to women who served in that role.The infamous Tarpeia, daughter of Spurius Tarpeius, was a traitorous Vestal Virgin. Rhea Sylvia, who was raped by Mars and conceived Romulus and Remus , and Tuccia, whose chastity was questioned, was sometimes accounted a prototype of vestal virgins. The discovery of a "House of the Vestals" in Pompeii made the Vestal Virgins a popular subject in the 1700s and 1800s. The objects of the cult were essentially the hearth fire and pure water drawn into a clay vase. Priestess CodeThere were six Vestal virgins. The high priest (Pontifex Maximus) chose, by lot, young girls between their sixth and tenth year with impeccable bodies, and two living parents to serve in the order. This high priest picked out the Vestal virgins from groups of twenty aristocratic girls, pointing to his choices with the words, “I seize you, beloved.” They left the house of their father, were inducted by the Pontifex Maximus and their hair was shorn. Now they were under the protection of the Goddess. Later, as it got harder to recruit Vestals, plebian girls were admitted, then daughters of freedmen (Young, Worsfold, 21-3.). , ca 1495-1506 The Vestal virgins were committed to the priesthood at a young age (before puberty) and were sworn to celibacy. The punishment for violating the oath of celibacy was to be buried alive in the Campus Sceleratus (an underground chamber near the gate) with a few days of food and water to prolong the punishment. Records show that during the course of 11 centuries, at least 22 vestals were accused of breaking the chastity vow. Rhea Sylvia was thrown into the Tiber by orders from her uncle Amulius after she gave birth to Romulus and Remus, another account indicates that she was whipped to death. The Vestal Tuccia was accused of fornication, but she carried water in a to prove her chastity. In his History of Rome, Livy writes of Postumia, a Vestal Virgin who was put on trial for a sexual offense. Even though she was innocent,
Obligations and RewardsThey served for thirty years, ten as students, ten in service, and ten as teachers, after which they could marry if they chose. Yet the long years had pleasing moments too, in the form of privileged seats at the theatre and frequent dinner parties where the menu featured such delacacies as pates, boiled ostrich, stuffed with nuts, and fricassee of roses in pastry shells [1]. Few took the opportunity to leave their respected role in luxurious surroundings to submit themselves to the authority of a man, with all the restrictions placed on women by Roman law. Their task was to maintain the fire sacred to Vesta, the goddess of the hearth and home. Letting the fire die out was a serious offence, and punished by execution. The fire was rekindled in this case by "the rays of the sun". The exact method is unclear. By maintaining Hestia's sacred fire, from which anyone could receive it for household use, they functioned as "surrogate housekeepers", in a religious sense, for all of Rome. Their sacred fire was treated, in Imperial times, as the Emperor's household fire. It burned until AD 391, when the Emperor Theodosius I's decreees forbade public pagan worship, had the fire extinguished, closed the Temple of Vesta and disbanded the Vestal Virgins. the Vestals are later on put in charge of keeping safe the wills and testaments of various people such as Caesar and Mark Antony among others. In additon, the Vestals also guarded some sacred objects, including the Palladium, and made a special kind of flour called mola which was sprinkled on all public offerings to a god. The dignities accorded to the Vestals were significant,
Spurious accusations were leveled at Vestals for a variety of reasons. Minucia fell under suspicion for her rich dress, and so did Postumia, who also got in trouble “for her wit” unbefitting a maiden, according to Livy. Postumia was sternly warned “to leave her sports, taunts and merry conceits,” but Minucia was buried alive. [Worsfold, 62, 66; Goodrich 283] Aemilia, Licinia, and Martia were executed after being denounced by the servant of a barbarian horseman. A few Vestals were acquitted. Some cleared themselves through ordeals [1].
Vesta FestivalsThe chief festivals of Vesta were the Vestalia celebrated June 7 until June 15. on June 7 only, her sanctuary (which normally no one except her priestesses, the Vestal Virgins, entered) was accessible to mothers of families who brought plates of food. The simple ceremonies were officiated by the Vestals and they gathered grain and fashioned salty cakes for the festival. House of the VestalsThe Vestals lived in the Atrium Vestae just behind the circular Temple of Vesta at the eastern edge of the Roman Forum, between the Regia and the Palatine Hill. The domus publicae where the Pontifex Maximus dwelled, was located near the Atrium until that role was taken up by the emperors. The Atrium Vestae was an 84-room palace in the ancient Roman Forum built around an elegant court with a double pool. Today, remains of the statues of the Vestals can be seen in the Atrium Vestae. The complex lay at the foot of the Palatine Hill, where a sacred grove that was slowly encroached upon lingered into Imperial times, when all was swept away by the Fire of Rome in 64 CE. The House of the Vestals was rebuilt several times in the course of the Empire. ReferencesExternal Links
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