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Jupiter (god)
In Roman mythology, Jupiter (Jove) held the same role as Zeus in the Greek pantheon. He was called Jupiter Optimus Maximus as the patron deity of the Roman state, in charge of laws and social order. This article focuses on Jupiter in early Rome and in cultic practice. For information on mythological accounts of Jupiter, which are heavily influenced by Greek mythology, see Zeus.
Name and Titles
Latin Iuppiter, Diespiter or Iovis pater is cognate with Classical Greek Zeus pater and Sanskrit Dyaus pitar, all derived from Indo-European *Dyeus Phter "sky/god father". The first element (Di- or Iovi-) is also cognate with Germanic Tyr and Latin dies "day" and deus "god".
Other Latin gods, such as Dius Fidius and Dis or Dispiter also bore similarly cognate names. Dius Fidius was sometimes considered an aspect of Jupiter, while Dis was considered entirely separate.
Many other Italic tribes invoked their chief divinities under similar names: "Diu-" or "Iuve-"
Other Titles of Roman Jupiter:
- Jupiter Caelestis ("heavenly")
- Jupiter Fulgurator ("of the lightning")
- Jupiter Latarius ("God of Latium")
- Jupiter Lucetius ("of the light")
- Jupiter Pluvius ("sender of rain") See also Pluvius
- Jupiter Stator (from stare meaning "standing")
- Jupiter Terminus or Jupiter Terminalus (defends boundaries). See also Terminus
- Jupiter Tonans ("thunderer")
- Jupiter Victor (led Roman armies to victory)
- Jupiter Summanus (sender of nocturnal thunder)
- Jupiter Feretrius ("who carries away [the spoils of war]")
Jupiter and Roman Sovereignty
The several aspects of sovereignty implied by some of Jupiter's titles are made explicit in the legendary history of early Rome (as transmitted, for example, in the Plutarch's Roman Lives and the first few books of Livy). Thus the warlike Romulus invokes Jupiter Stator to halt and terrify Rome's enemies, while the peaceful legislator Numa Pompilius has a close relationship with Dius Fidius, who presides over oaths.
Jupiter also stands at the head of the Archaic Triad of Jupiter, Mars and Quirinus. This grouping has been seen as a religious representation of early Roman society, wherein:
- Jupiter stands in for the ritual and augural authority of the Flamen Dialis and the chief priestly colleges.
- Mars, with his warrior and agricultural functions, stands in for the power of the king and young nobles to bring prosperity and victory through sympathetic magic with rituals like the October Horse and the Lupercalia.
- Quirinus, from co-viri "men together", stands in for the combined strength of the Roman populus.
Later, during the Imperial period, the emperors Claudius and Domitian adopted traits of Jupiter in their portraiture, to emphasize their sovereignty over the whole world.
Capitoline Jupiter
The largest temple in Rome was that of Jupiter Optimus Maximus on the Capitoline Hill. Here he was worshipped alongside Juno and Minerva, forming the Capitoline Triad. Temples to Jupiter Optimus Maximus or the Capitoline Triad as a whole were commonly built by the Romans at the center of new cities in their colonies.
References
- Article "Jupiter" in The Oxford Classical Dictionary. ISBN 0198606419.
- Georges Dumézil, Archaic Roman Religion. ISBN 0801854814.
- Georges Dumézil, Mitra-Varuna. ISBN 0942299132.
This article is licensed under the GNU Free Documentation License at http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html You may copy and modify it as long as the entire work (including additions) remains under this license. You must provide a link to http://www.gnu.org/copyleft/fdl.html
To view or edit this article at Wikipedia go to http://www.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jupiter_(god)
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