- Jupiter (mythology)
In
Roman mythology , Jupiter was the king of the gods, and the god ofsky andthunder . He is the equivalent ofZeus in the Greek pantheon. He was called Iuppiter Optimus Maximus (Jupiter Best, Greatest); as the patron deity of the Roman state, he ruled over laws and social order. He was the chief god of theCapitoline Triad , with Juno andMinerva . In Latin mythology Jupiter is the father of the god Mars. Therefore, Jupiter is the grandfather ofRomulus and Remus , the legendary founders of Rome. Jupiter was venerated inancient Roman religion , and is still venerated in Religio Romana Neopaganism.Etymology
"Iuppiter", originating in a vocative compound derived from archaic Latin "Iovis" and "pater" (Latin for "father"), was also used as the
nominative case . Jove [Most common in poetry, for its useful meter, and in the expression "By Jove!"] is a less common English formation based on "Iov-", the stem of oblique cases of the Latin name. Additionally, linguistic studies identify his name as deriving from the Indo-European compound *"dyēus- pəter-" [cite web |url=http://www.bartleby.com/61/8.html |title=Indo-European and the Indo-Europeans |accessdate=2008-09-27 |work=American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language |edition=4th ed. |date=2000 ] ("O Father God"), the Indo-European deity from which also derive the Germanic *Tiwaz (from whose name comes the wordTuesday ), the GreekZeus , and the Vedic equivalentDyaus Pita .The name of the god was also adopted as the name of the planet Jupiter, and was the original namesake of Latin forms of the weekday known in English as Thursday [English "Thursday" is named after
Thunor orThor , a similar deity from Germanic mythology.] but originally called "Iovis Dies" in Latin, giving rise to "jeudi" in French, "jueves" in Spanish, "joi" in Romanian, "giovedì" in Italian and "dijous" in Catalan.Epithets of Jupiter
Jupiter was given many different names.
#Jupiter Ammon (Jupiter was equated with the Egyptian deityAmun after the Roman conquest of Egypt)
#Jupiter Caelestis ("heavenly")
#Jupiter Fulgurator ("of the lightning")
#Jupiter Laterius ("God ofLatium ")
#Jupiter Lucetius ("of the light")
#Jupiter Pluvius ("sender of rain") See alsoPluvius
#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)
#JupiterSummanus (sender of nocturnal thunder)
#Jupiter Feretrius ("who carries away thespoils of war ")
#Jupiter Optimus Maximus (best and greatest)
#Jupiter Brixianus (Jupiter equated with the local god of the town ofBrescia inCisalpine Gaul (modern NorthItaly ))
#Jupiter Ladicus (Jupiter equated with a Celtiberian mountain-god and worshipped as the spirit ofMount Ladicus )
#Jupiter Parthinus or Partinus (Jupiter was worshiped under this name on the borders of north-eastDalmatia andUpper Moesia , perhaps being associated with the local tribe known as thePartheni )
#Jupiter Poeninus (Jupiter was worshiped in the Alps under this name, around the Great St Bernard Pass, where he had a sanctuary)
#Jupiter Solutorius (a local version of Jupiter worshipped inSpain ; he was syncretised with the local Iberian god Eacus)
#Jupiter Taranis (Jupiter equated with the Celtic godTaranis )
#Jupiter Uxellinus (Jupiter as a god of high mountains)Worship
Temple of Jupiter
The largest temple in
Rome was that of Jupiter Optimus Maximus on theCapitoline Hill . Here he was worshipped alongside Juno andMinerva , forming the Capitoline Triad. Jupiter was also worshipped at Capitoline Hill in the form of a stone, known asIuppiter Lapis or theJupiter Stone , which was sworn upon as an oath stone. Temples to Juppiter Optimus Maximus or the Capitoline Triad as a whole were commonly built by the Romans at the center of new cities in their colonies.The building was begun by
Tarquinius Priscus and completed by the last king of Rome,Tarquinius Superbus , although it was inaugurated, by a tradition recorded by the historians, on September 13, at the beginning of the Republican era, 509BCE.The temple building stood on a high podium with an entrance staircase to the front. On three of its sides it was probably surrounded by a colonnade, with another two rows of pillars drawn up in line with those on the façade of the deep "
pronaos " which precedes the threecella e, ranged side by side in the Etruscan manner, the central one being wider than the other two.The surviving remains of the foundations and of the podium, most of which lie underneath
Palazzo Caffarelli , are made up of enormous parallel sections of walling made in blocks of grey tufa-quadriga stone ("cappellaccio") and bear witness to the sheer size of the surface area of the temple's base (about 55 x 60 m).On the roof a terracotta auriga, made by the Etruscan artist Vulca of Veii in the 6th Century BCE, commissioned by
Tarquinius Superbus ; it was replaced in 296BCE, by a bronze one. Thecult image , by Vulca, was of terracotta; its face was painted red on festival days (Ovid , "Fasti ", 1.201f). Beneath the cella were the "favissae", or underground passages, in which were stored the old statues that had fallen from the roof, and various dedicatory gifts.The temple was rebuilt in marble after fires had worked total destruction in 83BCE, when the cult image was lost, and the
Sibylline Books kept in a stone chest. Fires followed in 69CE, when the Capitol was stormed by the supporters ofVitellius and in 80CE.In front of the steps was the altar of Jupiter ("ara Iovis"). The large square in front of the temple (the Area Capitolina) featured a number of temples dedicated to minor divinities, in addition to other religious buildings, statues and trophies.
Its dilapidation began in the fifth century, when
Stilicho carried off the gold-plated doors andNarses removed many of the statues, in 571CE.When Hadrian build
Aelia Capitolina on the site ofJerusalem , a temple to Jupiter Capitolinus was built in the place of the destroyedTemple in Jerusalem .Jupiter Tonans
Juppiter Tonans ("Thundering Jove") was the aspect ("numen") of Jupiter venerated in the Temple of Juppiter Tonans, which was vowed in 26BCE by
Augustus and dedicated in 22 on theCapitoline Hill ; the Emperor had narrowly escaped being struck by lightning during the campaign inCantabria . [Suetonius , "Vita Augusti" 29.91, etc. See Samuel Ball Platner and Thomas Ashby, "A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome," (London: Oxford University Press) 1929. [http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Places/Europe/Italy/Lazio/Roma/Rome/_Texts/PLATOP*/Aedes_Jovis_Tonantis.html On-line text] )] An old temple in theCampus Martius had long been dedicated to Juppiter Fulgens. The originalcult image installed in the sanctuary by its founder was byLeochares , [According toPliny's Natural History , 39.79] a Greek sculptor of the 4th Century BCE. The sculpture at thePrado ("illustration") is considered to be a late first century replacement commissioed byDomitian . The Baroque-era restoration of the arms gives Jupiter a baton-like scepter in his raised hand.In language
It was once believed that the Roman god Jupiter (
Zeus inGreece ) was in charge of cosmicJustice , and in ancient Rome, people swore to JoveFact|date=September 2007 in their courts of law, which lead to the common expression "By Jove!", still used as anarchaism today. In addition, "Jovial" is a somewhat common adjective still used to describe people who are jolly, optimistic, and buoyant intemperament .Legacy
The name of the god was also adopted as the name of the planet Jupiter, and was the original namesake of Latin forms of the weekday known in English as
Thursday [English "Thursday" is named afterThunor orThor , a similar deity from Germanic mythology.] but originally called "Iovis Dies" in Latin, giving rise to "jeudi" in French, "jueves" in Spanish, "joi" in Romanian, "giovedì" in Italian and "dijous" in Catalan.Notes
References
* [http://www.museicapitolini.org/en/museo/sezioni.asp?l1=5&l2=3 Musei Capitolini]
*Georges Dumézil , "Mitra-Varuna". ISBN 0-942299-13-2
*Georges Dumézil , "Archaic Roman Religion". ISBN 0-8018-5481-4
*Article "Jupiter" in "The Oxford Classical Dictionary". ISBN 0-19-860641-9
*Miranda J. Smith, 'Dictionary of Celtic Myth and Legend' ISBN 0-500-27976-6
*Favourite Greek Myths, Mary Pope Osbourne [http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Gazetteer/Places/Europe/Italy/Lazio/Roma/Rome/_Texts/PLATOP*/Aedes_Jovis_Capitolini.html "Aedes Iovis Optimi Maximi Capitolini"]
*Samuel Ball Platner and Thomas Ashby, "A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome," (London: Oxford University Press) 1929
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