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Tiresias: The Ancient Mediterranean Religions Source Database



9606
Plutarch, Roman Questions, 96


nanWhy do they inflict no other punishment on those of the Holy Maidens Plutarch elsewhere uses a similar expression ( παρθένος ἱέρεια ) for the vestal virgins, e.g. in his Life of Publicola, chap. viii. (101 b) or Moralia, 89 e. who have been seduced, but bury them alive? Cf. Life of Numa, chap. x. (67 a-c); Ovid, Fasti, vi. 457-460; Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Roman Antiquities, ii. 67. 4, viii. 89. 5; Pliny, Epistles, iv. 11. 6. Is it because they cremate their dead, and to use fire in the burial of a woman who had not guarded the holy fire in purity was not right? Or did they believe it to be against divine ordinance to annihilate a body that had been consecrated by the greatest of lustra! ceremonies, or to lay hands upon a holy woman? Accordingly they devised that she should die of herself; they conducted her underground into a chamber built there, in which had been placed a lighted lamp, a loaf of bread, and some milk and water. Thereafter they covered over the top of the chamber with earth. And yet not even by this manner of avoiding the guilt have they escaped their superstitious fear, but even to this day the priests proceed to this place and make offerings to the dead.


nanWhy do they inflict no other punishment on those of the Holy Maidens who have been seduced, but bury them alive? Is it because they cremate their dead, and to use fire in the burial of a woman who had not guarded the holy fire in purity was not right? Or did they believe it to be against divine ordinance to annihilate a body that had been consecrated by the greatest of lustral ceremonies, or to lay hands upon a holy woman? Accordingly they devised that she should die of herself; they conducted her underground into a chamber built there, in which had been placed a lighted lamp, a loaf of bread, and some milk and water. Thereafter they covered over the top of the chamber with earth. And yet not even by this manner of avoiding the guilt have they escaped their superstitious fear, but even to this day the priests proceed to this place and make offerings to the dead.


Intertexts (texts cited often on the same page as the searched text):

5 results
1. Cicero, Pro S. Roscio Amerino, 72, 71 (2nd cent. BCE - 1st cent. BCE)

2. Livy, History, 5.15.4, 8.15.7, 22.57.2-22.57.3, 28.11.6 (1st cent. BCE - missingth cent. CE)

3. Phlegon of Tralles, On Miraculous Things, 10 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)

4. Plutarch, Numa Pompilius, 10.6 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)

10.6. Then the culprit herself is placed on a litter, over which coverings are thrown and fastened down with cords so that not even a cry can be heard from within, and carried through the forum. All the people there silently make way for the litter, and follow it without uttering a sound, in a terrible depression of soul. No other spectacle is more appalling, nor does any other day bring more gloom to the city than this.
5. Plutarch, Roman Questions, 83 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)

83. When the Romans learned that the people called Bletonesii, of Bletisa in Spain, according to Cichorius, Römische Studien (Berlin, 1922). a barbarian tribe, had sacrificed a man to the gods, why did they send for the tribal rulers with intent to punish them, but, when it was made plain that they had done thus in accordance with a certain custom, why did the Romans set them at liberty, but forbid the practice for the future? Yet they themselves, not many years before, had buried alive two men and two women, two of them Greeks, two Gauls, in the place called the Forum Boarium. It certainly seems strange that they themselves should do this, and yet rebuke barbarians on the ground that they were acting with impiety. Did they think it impious to sacrifice men to the gods, but necessary to sacrifice them to the spirits? Or did they believe that men who did this by tradition and custom were sinning, whereas they themselves did it by command of the Sibylline books? For the tale is told that a certain maiden, Helvia, was struck by lightning while she was riding on horseback, and her horse was found lying stripped of its trappings: and she herself was naked, for her tunic had been pulled far up as if purposely: and her shoes, her rings, and her head-dress were scattered apart here and there, and her open mouth allowed the tongue to protrude. The soothsayers declared that it was a terrible disgrace for the Vestal Virgins, that it would be bruited far and wide, and that some wanton outrage would be found touching the knights also. Thereupon a barbarian slave of a certain knight gave information against three Vestal Virgins, Aemilia, Licinia, and Marcia, that they had all been corrupted at about the same time, and that they had long entertained lovers, one of whom was Vetutius Barrus, Cf. Cicero, Brutus, 46 (169); Horace, Satires, i. 6. 30, if the emendation is right. the informer’s master. The Vestals, accordingly, were convicted and punished: but, since the deed was plainly atrocious, it was resolved that the priests should consult the Sibylline books. They say that oracles were found foretelling that these events would come to pass for the bane of the Romans, and enjoining on them that, to avert the impending disaster, they should offer as a sacrifice to certain strange and alien spirits two Greeks and two Gauls, buried alive on the spot. Cf. Life of Marcellus, chap. iii. (299 d); Livy, xxii. 57. 83. When the Romans learned that the people called Bletonesii, a barbarian tribe, had sacrificed a man to the gods, why did they send for the tribal rulers with intent to punish them, but, when it was made plain that they had done thus in accordance with a certain custom, why did the Romans set them at liberty, but forbid the practice for the future? Yet they themselves, not many years before, had buried alive two men and two women, two of them Greeks, two Gauls, in the place called the Forum Boarium. It certainly seems strange that they themselves should do this, and yet rebuke barbarians on the ground that they were acting with impiety. Did they think it impious to sacrifice men to the gods, but necessary to sacrifice them to the spirits? Or did they believe that men who did this by tradition and custom were sinning, whereas they themselves did it by command of the Sibylline books? For the tale is told that a certain maiden, Helvia, was struck by lightning while she was riding on horseback, and her horse was found lying stripped of its trappings; and she herself was naked, for her tunic had been pulled far up as if purposely; and her shoes, her rings, and her head-dress were scattered apart here and there, and her open mouth allowed the tongue to protrude. The soothsayers declared that it was a terrible disgrace for the Vestal Virgins, that it would be bruited far and wide, and that some wanton outrage would be found touching the knights also. Thereupon a barbarian slave of a certain knight gave information against three Vestal Virgins, Aemilia, Licinia, and Marcia, that they had all been corrupted at about the same time, and that they had long entertained lovers, one of whom was Vetutius Barrus, the informer's master. The Vestals, accordingly, were convicted and punished; but, since the deed was plainly atrocious, it was resolved that the priests should consult the Sibylline books. They say that oracles were found foretelling that these events would come to pass for the bane of the Romans, and enjoining on them that, to avert the impending disaster, they should offer as a sacrifice to certain strange and alien spirits two Greeks and two Gauls, buried alive on the spot.


Subjects of this text:

subject book bibliographic info
atilius,marcus Mowat (2021) 103
authority,of ammianus,priestly Davies (2004) 66
ceres Mowat (2021) 103
fabia the vestal Mowat (2021) 103
flamen of augustus,disgraced Davies (2004) 66
flamines Davies (2004) 66
haruspices,not named Davies (2004) 66
intersexuality Mowat (2021) 103, 106
juno Mowat (2021) 103
minucia the vestal Mowat (2021) 103
pax deorum Mowat (2021) 103
pontifex maximus,and vestals Davies (2004) 66
pontifical college Mowat (2021) 103
priests,named at death Davies (2004) 66
prodigies,assessment Davies (2004) 66
prodigy Mowat (2021) 103, 106
proserpina Mowat (2021) 103
ritual,error' Davies (2004) 66
sacrifice Mowat (2021) 103
sibyl,sibylline books Mowat (2021) 103
tullius cicero,marcus Mowat (2021) 106
vesta,flame extinguished Davies (2004) 66
vesta Mowat (2021) 106
vestal virgins Mowat (2021) 103, 106
vestalia Mowat (2021) 106
vestals,and human error Davies (2004) 66
vestals,naming Davies (2004) 66
vestals Davies (2004) 66
virginity Mowat (2021) 103