ported as needed, sometimes from certain conquered peoples, such as the Juno of Veii or Juturna of Lavinium, sometimes to accommodate cultural or economic developments, such as the induction of Argentinus when silver money was issued or the association of Neptune with Poseidon as a protection for marine trade. More common was public disaster, which accounts for the importation of Cybele, the Great Mother, from Asia Minor during the Second Punic War.
7
|
The Second Triumvirate, yielding to the popularity of Egyptian cults at Rome, built a temple to Isis and Osiris. 8 After the Battle of Actium in 31 B.C. , Octavian sought to repress the Egyptian cults reminiscent of Cleopatra by banishing them from the precincts of the city. 9 Later they were restored and sometimes even given special honors.
|
The establishment of the empire at Rome brought about a new fusion between state and religion, centered in the divine personage of the emperor himself. 10 In the Hellenistic East, this was especially easy to accomplish. At Ephesus, for example, Caesar was considered a manifest god, savior of mankind, descendant of Ares and Aphrodite. 11 Augustus associated himself with Apollo, while Mark Antony was called the New Dionysus in the East, thus forging new fusions between monarchy and traditional religious nationalism. As Arnaldo Momigliano puts it, "If the god was king, would not a king become a god?" 12
|
Augustus set about repairing all the temples in the city of Romeeighty-two of them by his own, perhaps exaggerated, count. 13 He also demonstrated special pride in two deities by dedicating in 29 B.C. a new temple to the Divine Julius, which had been vowed by the triumvirs, and by building a large temple to Apollo on the Palatine as a new imperial cult center. His motives seem patently political in this building program, although Syme allows the possibility that there was more "authentic religious sentiment" in all of this than is sometimes believed. 14
|
Jews probably settled in Rome as early as the second century B.C. We know from 2 Maccabees that Jewish slaves came through Roman markets. As these slaves were manumitted, in accordance with established prac-
|
|