Feronia (Etruria)

Feronia (Etruria)

Feronia or Lucus Feroniae (polytonic|Φερωνία, Strabo; polytonic|Λοῦκος Φηρωνίας, Ptolemy) was an ancient town of southern Etruria, at the foot of Mount Soracte, within the territory of Capena, with a celebrated temple or shrine of the goddess from whom it derived its name, and a sacred grove, attached to it. Strabo, indeed, is the only author who mentions a town of the name, which he calls Feronia (v. p. 226); other writers speak of Lucus Feroniae and Feroniae fanum, but it is natural that in process of time a town should have grown up around a site of so much sanctity, and which was annually visited by a great concourse of persons. Feronia appears to have been a Sabine goddess (Varr. L. L. v. 74), and hence the festivals at her shrine seem to have been attended especially by the Sabines, though the sanctuary itself was in the Etruscan territory, and dependent upon the neighbouring city of Capena (Livy i. 30, xxvii. 4). The first mention of these annual festivals occurs as early as the reign of Tullus Hostilius, when we find them already frequented by great numbers of people, not only for religious objects, but as a kind of fair for the purposes of trade, a custom which seems to have prevailed at all similar meetings. (Liv. i. 30; Dionys. iii. 32.) Great wealth had, in the course of ages, been accumulated at the shrine of Feronia, and this tempted Hannibal to make a digression from his march during his retreat from Rome, in 211 BCE, for the purpose of plundering the temple. On this occasion he despoiled it of all its gold and silver, amounting to a large sum, besides which there was a large quantity of rude or uncoined brass, a sufficient proof of the antiquity of the sanctuary. (Liv. xxvi. 11; Sil. Ital. xiii. 83-90.) The only other notices of the spot which occur in history are some casual mentions of prodigies that occurred there ("Id." xxvii. 4, xxxiii. 26); but Strabo tells that it was still much frequented in his time, and that many persons came thither to see the miracle of the priests and votaries of the goddess passing unharmed through a fire and over burning cinders (Strab. v. p. 226). This superstition is ascribed by other writers to the temple of Apollo, on the summit of Mount Soracte (Plin. vii. 2; Virg. "Aen." xi. 785-790). It was probably transferred from thence to the more celebrated sanctuary at its foot.

The general position of the Lucus Feroniae is sufficiently fixed by the statements that it was "in agro Capenate", and at the foot of Mount Soracte. A fountain at the foot of the hill of San Oreste, near the southeast extremity of the mountain, is still called Felonica; and as such fountains were generally connected with sacred groves, there is every probability that this was the site of the grove and sanctuary of the goddess. The village of San Oreste, which stands on the hill above (a shoulder or off-shoot of Soracte), and bears some traces of having been an ancient site, is thought by Nibby and Dennis to occupy the position of the ancient town of Feronia. (Nibby, "Dintorni", vol. iii. p. 108; Dennis, "Etruria", vol. i. p. 180.)

Pliny mentions a Lucus Feroniae among the colonies of the interior of Etruria and from the order in which he describes the towns of that province, there can be little doubt that he means the celebrated locality of the name in southern Etruria. But it is singular that Ptolemy, who also notices a Lucus Feroniae, to which he gives the title of a colonia, places it in the northwest extremity of Etruria, between the Arnus (modern Arno) and the Macra. (Ptol. iii. 1. § 47; Plin. iii. 5. s. 8.) No other notice occurs of any such place in this part of Etruria; and the "Liber Coloniarum", though unusually copious in its description of the province of Tuscia, mentions no such colony at all. An inscription, on the other hand, in which we find the name of "Colonia Julia Felix Lucoferonensis" (Orell. 4099), refers probably to the southern Etruscan town, and on the whole it is more probable that the name should have been altogether misplaced by Ptolemy, than that there should have existed a second colony of the name, of which we know nothing. (Zumpt, "de Colon." p. 347.)

References

*SmithDGRG


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно сделать НИР?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Feronia — may mean:* Feronia (goddess), a goddess of fertility in Roman and Etruscan mythology * Feronia (genus), a genus of plants * Feronia (Sardinia), a mysterious ancient site in Sardinia, Italy * Feronia (Etruria), a city in ancient Etruria, Italy *… …   Wikipedia

  • Feronia (Étrurie) — Pour les articles homonymes, voir Feronia, (72) Feronia et Féronie. Feronia ou Lucus Feroniae, en grec Φερωνία, pour Strabon, et Λοῦκος Φηρωνίας pour Ptolémée, est une ville ancienne du sud de l Étrurie située au pied du Mont Soracte, dans le… …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Feronia (mythology) — Feronia was a marginal rural goddess in Roman religion, to whom woods and springs were sacred, and a more important goddess among the Latins.FunctionMany versions of Feronia’s cult have been supposed, and it is not quite clear that she was only… …   Wikipedia

  • Sabinos — Saltar a navegación, búsqueda Los Principales Pueblos Sabinos y Grupos Culturales de Italia Central (época preromana). Los sabinos, junto con los etruscos, los latinos, los ecuos, los ligures, los samnitas, los sabelios y los hérnicos, entre… …   Wikipedia Español

  • РУССКИЙ УКАЗАТЕЛЬ СТАТЕЙ — Абант Άβας Danaus Абанты Άβαντες Абарис Άβαρις Абдера Abdera Абдулонома Абдул Abdulonymus Абелла Abella Абеллинум Abellinum Абеона Abeona Абидос или Абид… …   Реальный словарь классических древностей

  • Largo Argentina — Largo di Torre Argentina 41°53′43″N 12°28′37″E / 41.89528, 12.47694 Le Largo di Torre Argentina est une vaste place re …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Largo di Torre Argentina — 41°53′43″N 12°28′37″E / 41.89528, 12.47694 Le Largo di Torre Argentina (dénomination courante: Largo Argentina) …   Wikipédia en Français

  • Umbri — Ethnic groups within the Italian peninsula, 9th to the 4th centuries BC. Subsequently the invasions of the Gauls and the defensive activities of the Roman Republic made large changes in the map.    …   Wikipedia

  • List of Etruscan mythological figures — This is a list of deities and legendary figures found in the Etruscan mythology. The names below were taken mainly from Etruscan picture bilinguals , which are Etruscan call outs on art depicting mythological scenes or motifs. Several different… …   Wikipedia

  • Soranus (Roman god) — Soranus was a Sabine god later adopted by the Roman Empire. He was worshipped on Mt. Soracte which is in Etruria.The worshippers of Apollo Soranus, after his cult had been subsumed by Apollo were called Hirpi Sorani ( wolves of Soranus ). They… …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”