Lua (goddess)
In Roman religion, Lua (Latin: Lūa) was a minor goddess associated with the god Saturn and the burning of enemy weapons.[1][2][3] Little is known about the her— there are no surviving images depicting her, nor any archaeological evidence of temples, sacrifices, or cults.
Name
The origins of Lua's name are not known. It may be connected to the Greek verb luō "to release" or "atone;" the Latin verb luere, "to suffer, to make amends for;" or the Latin lues "plague."[4][5]
Functions
Roman historian Livy mentioned Lua twice in his Ab Urbe Condita. After the Romans defeated the Volscians in battle, they fled the area, leaving behind their dead and a large amount of weapons. The consul had his troops gather the Volscians' weapons, and offered them to Lua Mater ("Mother Lua").[6] Livy later mentioned that, after an enemy's weapons were collected, they had to be burned as an offering to Mars, Minerva, and Lua Mater.[7] The use of the epithet Mater for female deities was common, and does not necessarily mean that Lua was conceived of as a mother goddess.[8]
The goddess was also called Lua Saturni ("Lua of Saturn"). Both Varro and Gellius directly associated her with Saturn, with Gellius comparing their relationship to those of Salacia and Neptune and Maia and Vulcan.[9][10] In this context, Lua embodied a characteristic or function of Saturn.[11] Scholars are not in agreement over what Lua Saturni's functions were. Some believe that Lua may have embodied Saturn's ability to cause reproductive sterility,[4] his destructive capabilities,[12] or his association with seed germination. Using the potentially related Greek verb luō ("to release") Dutch classicist H.S. Versnel proposes that Lua Saturni "freed" the grain supply that Saturn had stowed under the earth, opening it for human use.[4][13]
References
- ^ Daly, Kathleen N.; Rengel, Marian (2009). Greek and Roman Mythology, A to Z. Infobase Publishing. p. 88. ISBN 978-1438128009. Retrieved 2014-07-05.
- ^ Lua, Latin Dictionary
- ^ Forisek, Péter. "An Extraordinary Military Sacrifice in Florus? A Note on Florus, Epitome II. 24." Acta Antiqua 43.1-2 (2003): 107-112.
- ^ a b c Holland, Lora L. "Lua." The Encyclopedia of Ancient History (2013).
- ^ Rose, Herbert J. "Lua Mater: Fire, Rust, and War in Early Roman Cult." The Classical Review 36.1-2 (1922): 15-18.
- ^ Livy, The History of Rome, 8.1
- ^ Livy, Ab Urbe Condita, 45.33 "Then the commander offered up prayers to Mars and Minerva and Lua Mater and the other deities to whom the spoils taken from the enemy must be solemnly dedicated."
- ^ Wilson, Harry Langford. "A New Italic Divinity." The American Journal of Philology 28.4 (1907): 450-455.
- ^ Gellius, Attic Nights XIII, 480-481
- ^ Varro, On the Latin Language VIII, 399-400
- ^ Demicheli, Dino. "Altar of the goddess Salacia from Trogir." Opvscvla archaeologica 31.1 (2007): 69-80.
- ^ Briquel, D. (1981). "Jupiter, Saturn et le Capitol. Essai de comparaison indoeuropéenne". Revue de l' histoire des religions. 198 (2): 131–162. doi:10.3406/rhr.1981.4889.
- ^ Versnel, Hendrik Simon. Inconsistencies in Greek and Roman Religion: Transition and Reversal in Myth and Ritual. Tome II. Vol. 2. Brill, 1990.