Lectures on the Early History of the KingshipMacmillan, 1905 - 309 sider |
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Side xi
... Janus and mated with Diana - Janus or Dianus and Diana the equivalents of Jupiter and Juno - Reasons for putting the divine king to death - The King of Calicut an Indian parallel to the King of the Wood at Nemi INDEX . 265-297 299-309 ...
... Janus and mated with Diana - Janus or Dianus and Diana the equivalents of Jupiter and Juno - Reasons for putting the divine king to death - The King of Calicut an Indian parallel to the King of the Wood at Nemi INDEX . 265-297 299-309 ...
Side 214
... Janus . Some took her to be Diana herself . If she was indeed a form of that goddess , her union with Janus , that is , Dianus , would be appropriate ; and as she had a chapel on the Cælian hill , which is known to have been once ...
... Janus . Some took her to be Diana herself . If she was indeed a form of that goddess , her union with Janus , that is , Dianus , would be appropriate ; and as she had a chapel on the Cælian hill , which is known to have been once ...
Side 215
... Janus and Diana . It would be some confirmation of this view if we could be sure that , as Ovid seems to imply , the Romans were in the habit of placing branches of white thorn or buck- thorn in their windows on the first of June to ...
... Janus and Diana . It would be some confirmation of this view if we could be sure that , as Ovid seems to imply , the Romans were in the habit of placing branches of white thorn or buck- thorn in their windows on the first of June to ...
Side 265
... Janus and mated with Diana - Janus or Dianus and Diana the equivalents of Jupiter and Juno- Reasons for putting the divine king to death - The King of Calicut an Indian parallel to the King of the Wood at Nemi . In the last lecture I ...
... Janus and mated with Diana - Janus or Dianus and Diana the equivalents of Jupiter and Juno- Reasons for putting the divine king to death - The King of Calicut an Indian parallel to the King of the Wood at Nemi . In the last lecture I ...
Side 284
... Mr. A. B. Cook , " Zeus , Jupiter , and the Oak , ” Classical Review , xviii . ( 1904 ) , pp . 369 sq . 5 See above , pp . 22 , 195 , 217 . IX JUPITER AND JANUS 285 the divine consort of Jupiter 284 LECT . DIANA AND THE OAK.
... Mr. A. B. Cook , " Zeus , Jupiter , and the Oak , ” Classical Review , xviii . ( 1904 ) , pp . 369 sq . 5 See above , pp . 22 , 195 , 217 . IX JUPITER AND JANUS 285 the divine consort of Jupiter 284 LECT . DIANA AND THE OAK.
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Vanlige uttrykk og setninger
A. B. Cook Africa Alba Longa Alban ancient Ancus Marcius annually appears Aurelius Victor Australia believed bride C. O. Müller ceremony chief consort Contagious Magic crown custom daughter death deity descended Diana Dionysius Halicarn divine dragon Egeria Fasti father female kinship festival fire goddess gods Greek grove Herodotus Hist holy homoeopathic homœopathic magic human Indian Janus Jupiter King and Queen king of Rome king's kingdom kingship Latin Latin kings law of similarity lecture legend Livy London magician marriage married medicine-men natives natural Nemi observed Ovid Pausanias person Pliny Plutarch priest princess probably rain rain-maker regalia reign religion rites Roman kings Römische Romulus Rouen royal sacred marriage sacrifice Saturn Saturnalia savage Servius Tullius spirit stone supposed taboo Tarquin temple thunder tribe Vestal VIII Virbius Virgin W. H. Roscher women Wood worship Zeus
Populære avsnitt
Side 126 - Met my Lord with the Duke ; and after a little talk with him, I went to the Banquet-house, and there saw the king heale, the first time that ever I saw him do it ; which he did with great gravity, and it seemed to me to be an ugly office and a simple one.
Side 274 - And many fine ceremonies there was of the heralds leading up people before him, and bowing ; and my Lord of Albemarle's going to the kitchen and eating a bit of the first dish that was to go to the King's table. But, above all, was these three Lords, Northumberland and Suffolk, and the
Side 120 - the Malays firmly believe that the king possesses a personal influence over the works of nature, such as the growth of the crops and the bearing of fruit-trees. The same prolific virtue is supposed to reside, though in a lesser degree, in his delegates, and even in the persons of Europeans who chance to
Side 39 - a system of natural law, that is, as a statement of the rules which determine the sequence of events throughout the world, it may be called Theoretical Magic : regarded as a set of precepts which human beings observe in order to compass their ends, it may be called Practical Magic.
Side 93 - In the Mara tribe of Northern Australia the rain-maker goes to a pool and sings over it his magic song. Then he takes some of the water in his hands, drinks it, and spits it out in various directions. After that he throws water all over himself, scatters it about, and returns
Side 52 - But the system of sympathetic magic is not merely composed of positive precepts ; it comprises a very large number of negative precepts, that is, prohibitions. It tells you not merely what to do, but also what to leave undone. The positive precepts are charms : the negative precepts are taboos.
Side 140 - their miraculous powers, there is a saying everywhere current in India, " The whole universe is subject to the gods ; the gods are subject to the Mantras ; the Mantras to the Brahmans ; therefore the Brahmans are our gods.
Side 278 - too far, they are supreme in civil as well as religious matters : in a word, they are kings as well as gods. Thus the divinity which hedges a king has its roots deep down in human history, and long ages pass before these are sapped by a profounder view of nature and of man. In
Side 205 - sky by their enchantments whenever the parched earth cried out for the refreshing moisture. At Rome the sluices of heaven were opened by means of a sacred stone, and the ceremony appears to have formed part of the ritual of Jupiter Elicius, the god who elicits from the clouds the flashing lightning and the dripping rain. 1
Side 138 - gods dwell far away, Or have no ears, Or are not, or pay us no heed. But thee we present see, No god of wood or stone, but godhead true. Therefore to thee we pray. 1 The ancient Germans believed that there was something holy in women, and accordingly