- Ceres (Roman mythology)
:"For the
dwarf planet , seeCeres (dwarf planet) . For other uses, seeCeres ":"This article refers to the Roman goddess of agriculture. If you are looking for the Greek deity, seeDemeter .Infobox Greek deity
Caption = This statue depicting Ceres holding wheat is on display at the Louvre in Paris, France.
Name = Ceres
God_of = Goddess of growing plants and motherly love
Abode =
Symbol =
Consort =
Parents = Saturn andOps
Siblings=
Children=Proserpina
Mount =
Roman_equivalent = InRoman mythology , Ceres is thegoddess of growing plants (particularlycereal s) and of motherly love. Ceres was worshipped inAncient Roman religion , and is today still worshipped in Religio Romana Neopaganism. Ceres was usually equated with the Greek goddessDemeter .Etymology
Her name may derive from the hypothetical Proto-Indo-European root "ker", meaning "to grow", which is also the root for the words "create" and "increase".
Myth
Ceres was the daughter of Saturn and
Ops , wife-sister of Jupiter, mother ofProserpina by Jupiter and sister of Juno, Vesta, Neptune and Pluto. Works of art depicted Ceres conventionally with ascepter , a basket offlower s andfruit , and agarland made of corn ears (note that "corn" in this instance refers towheat ,barley , or some other old world food grain, not to the new world food grainmaize , which is called "corn" in the United States and some other areas of theWestern hemisphere ).Ceres was also patron of
Enna ,Sicily . According to legend, she begged Jupiter that Sicily be placed in the heavens. The result, because the island is triangular in shape, was the constellationTriangulum , an early name of which was "Sicilia". Ceres made up a trinity with Liber and Libera, who were two other agricultural gods. She also had twelve minor gods who assisted her, and were in charge of specific aspects of farming: "Vervactor who turns fallow land, Reparator who prepares fallow land, Imporcitor who plows with wide furrows" (whose name comes from the Latin "imporcare", to put into furrows), "Insitor who sowed, Obarator who plowed the surface, Occator who harrowed, Sarritor who weeded, Subruncinator who thinned out, Messor who harvested, Conuector who carted, Conditor who stored, and Promitor who distributed". [http://students.roanoke.edu/groups/relg211/ashby/Ceres.html]Worship
The Romans adopted Ceres in
496 BC during a devastating famine, when theSibylline books advised the adoption of her Greek equivalentDemeter , along with Kore (Persephone) andIacchus (possiblyDionysus ). Ceres was personified and celebrated by women in secret rituals at the festival ofAmbarvalia , held during May. There was atemple to Ceres on theAventine Hill inRome and her official priest was called a flamen. Her primary festival was theCerealia or "Ludi Ceriales" ("games of Ceres"), instituted in the3rd century BC and held annually onApril 12 toApril 19 . The worship of Ceres became particularly associated with theplebeian classes, who dominated the grain trade. Little is known about the rituals of Cerelean worship; one of the few customs which has been recorded was the peculiar practice of tying lighted brands to the tails of foxes which were then let loose in theCircus Maximus . There was also an October festival dedicated to her when women fasted and offered her the first grain of the harvest.Legacy
The word
cereal s derives from Ceres, commemorating her association with edible grains. Statues of Ceres top the domes of theMissouri State Capitol and theVermont State House serving as a reminder of the importance of agriculture in the states' economies and histories. There is also a statue of her on top of theChicago Board of Trade Building , which conducts trading in agricultural commodities.The
dwarf planet Ceres (discovered 1801), is named after this goddess. And in turn, the chemical elementcerium (discovered 1803) was named after the dwarf planet. A poem about Ceres and humanity features in Dmitri's confession to his brother Alexei in Dostoevsky's "The Brothers Karamazov ", Part 1, Book 3, Chapter 3.ee also
*
Consus
*Demeter External links
* [http://www.novaroma.org/religio_romana/deities.html Gods and Goddesses of Rome]
* [http://www.unrv.com/culture/major-roman-god-list.php Major Gods of the Roman Pantheon]Ancient sources
*Virgil, "Georgica iv.58"
*Eusebius, "Chronicon 49.19-26"
*Augustine, "De civitate dei vii.20"
*Lactantius Placidus, "Commentarii in Statii Thebaida ii.382"
*Ovid, "Fasti iv.401-404, vi.285-286" and "Metamorphoses v.341-343, 385"------
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