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Tiresias: The Ancient Mediterranean Religions Source Database

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4 results for "pontifex"
1. Seneca The Younger, Apocolocyntosis, 11.3 (1st cent. CE - 1st cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •pontifex maximus, deification of Found in books: Shannon-Henderson (2019) 342
2. Seneca The Younger, De Clementia, 1.10.3 (1st cent. CE - 1st cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •pontifex maximus, deification of Found in books: Shannon-Henderson (2019) 342
3. Suetonius, Caligula, 24 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •pontifex maximus, deification of Found in books: Shannon-Henderson (2019) 343
4. Tacitus, Annals, 1.73, 4.37.3, 5.2.1, 11.11.1, 14.12.1-14.12.2, 14.15.5, 15.23.4, 16.7.1, 16.21.1-16.21.2, 16.22.1-16.22.3, 16.25.2 (1st cent. CE - 2nd cent. CE)  Tagged with subjects: •pontifex maximus, deification of Found in books: Shannon-Henderson (2019) 341, 342, 343, 344
1.73. Haud pigebit referre in Falanio et Rubrio, modicis equitibus Romanis, praetemptata crimina, ut quibus initiis, quanta Tiberii arte gravissimum exitium inrepserit, dein repressum sit, postremo arserit cunctaque corripuerit, noscatur. Falanio obiciebat accusator, quod inter cultores Augusti, qui per omnis domos in modum collegiorum habebantur, Cassium quendam mimum corpore infamem adscivisset, quodque venditis hortis statuam Augusti simul mancipasset. Rubrio crimini dabatur violatum periurio numen Augusti. quae ubi Tiberio notuere, scripsit consulibus non ideo decretum patri suo caelum, ut in perniciem civium is honor verteretur. Cassium histrionem solitum inter alios eiusdem artis interesse ludis, quos mater sua in memoriam Augusti sacrasset; nec contra religiones fieri quod effigies eius, ut alia numinum simulacra, venditionibus hortorum et domuum accedant. ius iurandum perinde aestimandum quam si Iovem fefellisset: deorum iniurias dis curae. 1.73.  It will not be unremunerative to recall the first, tentative charges brought in the case of Falanius and Rubrius, two Roman knights of modest position; if only to show from what beginnings, thanks to the art of Tiberius, the accursed thing crept in, and, after a temporary check, at last broke out, an all-devouring conflagration. Against Falanius the accuser alleged that he had admitted a certain Cassius, mime and catamite, among the "votaries of Augustus," who were maintained, after the fashion of fraternities, in all the great houses: also, that when selling his gardens, he had parted with a statue of Augustus as well. To Rubrius the crime imputed was violation of the deity of Augustus by perjury. When the facts came to the knowledge of Tiberius, he wrote to the consuls that place in heaven had not been decreed to his father in order that the honour might be turned to the destruction of his countrymen. Cassius, the actor, with others of his trade, had regularly taken part in the games which his own mother had consecrated to the memory of Augustus; nor was it an act of sacrilege, if the effigies of that sovereign, like other images of other gods, went with the property, whenever a house or garden was sold. As to the perjury, it was on the same footing as if the defendant had taken the name of Jupiter in vain: the gods must look to their own wrongs.