Sacrifice Flashcards
When did sacrifice take place?
Festivals
Rites of passage
Principal behind sacrifices
Giving up something valuable to you to the gods in exchange for help, or to thank for a be benefit received, or even just to celebrate and honour a god
People believed offerings bound them closer to the gods
Describe food offerings
Grain, cheese, fruits, cakes
Left on altars or by cult statues
Describe drink offerings
Libations
Wine, milk and honey poured to the gods
Describe votive offerings
Left in temples
Men retiring from their trade might leave their tools, a soldier might dedicate his arms, a fisherman his net, a shepherd his flute, a poet his lyre
Way of thanking the gods for their support during their working lives
How to organise a blood sacrifice
- arrange a date with the temple officials
- book a popa and cultrarius
- go to market an buy a domestic animal free of blemishes on the day
Describe the rules for choosing which animal to sacrifice to which god
- Male animals sacrificed to gods
- female animals sacrificed to goddesses
- white animals to Jupiter and Juno
- black animals to gods or sounds of the Underworld
- goats and dog required for Lupercalia
- horse of winning team at chariot races at the October House in honour of Mars
Immediately before sacrifice
- the ribbons to the animal’s tail (maybe gild?)
- procession where animal is led to the altar - good omen if they went willingly- if they struggles or tried to get away, the process would have to start the process again with another animal
- good be overseen by pontifices or the citizen himself
- friends invited, women forbidden from Hercules and Mars, slaves and foreigners banned from all but a few blood offerings
- all participants had to be clean, wearing their best togas- washed hands in holy water before ceremony began
Sacrifice proper p
- call for silence, flute frowned out in unwanted noises (bad omens)
- the present covered his head with the folds of his toga, poured wine on citims’s head, sprinkled mola sansa on its back, passed the sacrificial knife over its spine
- prayer uttered - transferred the animal from human to divine ownership
- popa stunned the victim with a blow to the back of the heat, cultrarius cut its throat as it fell to the good
What is done after the sacrifice?
- animal dismembered and entrails examines by haruspex
- if omen’s were acceptable, ceremony continued with cooking of the entrails- offered to deity by being burnt in a fire on the altar
- animal cooked and shared amongst the participants as a sacrificial banquet