Tree-Worship, Sacred Groves and Roman Antiquities in the Aeneid (original) (raw)
Abstract
[NB this article is available online via the link provided.] Virgil's vision of Italy in the age of heroes places great emphasis on sacred groves (often the scene of encounters with gods), and individual sacred trees (like the stump of Faunus where Aeneas' spear lodges in the final duel). This reflects a more widespread belief among the Romans that their oldest and best cultural practices concerned intimacy with, and reverence for, ancient trees. This article surveys the historical and literary evidence to associate tree-reverence with the religious origins of Roman poetry and with the mysterious god Faunus. I also argue that Virgil falsely links the battlefield practice of suspended votives--the tropaeum--with tree-worship in order to make it a token of proto-Roman values.
Dunstan Lowe hasn't uploaded this document.
Let Dunstan know you want this document to be uploaded.
Ask for this document to be uploaded.