Augustus and the Cult of the Emperor

<p>Faced with the worship of the ruler in the Greek east, Augustus could do little more that regulate a practice that had already existed over three centuries. His problem in Rome, in contrast, was to adapt the cult of the ruler required by contemporary practice to the usage of the Republic in...

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Main Author: Duncan FISHWICK
Format: Article
Language:Spanish
Published: Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca 2015-03-01
Series:Studia Historica: Historia Antigua
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revistas.usal.es/index.php/0213-2052/article/view/12611
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spelling doaj-852071cf2307437fb23eb099c322d22a2020-11-25T03:58:28ZspaEdiciones Universidad de SalamancaStudia Historica: Historia Antigua0213-20522015-03-01320476011734Augustus and the Cult of the EmperorDuncan FISHWICK0University of Alberta<p>Faced with the worship of the ruler in the Greek east, Augustus could do little more that regulate a practice that had already existed over three centuries. His problem in Rome, in contrast, was to adapt the cult of the ruler required by contemporary practice to the usage of the Republic in such as way as to distance himself from Caesar, whose indiscretion had produced his untimely death. The system he hit upon was to emphasize Republican forms, key abstractions, and the worship of state gods closely connected with his rule: in other words to establish the cult of the emperor by other then direct means. In the Latin west in contrast he was free to shape the ruler cult as he chose. His principal contribution here was to establish regional centres at Lugdunum and elsewhere for the worship of Roma and Augustus, a prescription originally laid down for nonRomans in the Greek east. Sharply to be distinguished from this is the altar of Augustus at Tarraco reported by Quintilian. This can only be municipal, not the foundation monument of the provincial cult of Hispania citerior, which began only after the emperor’s death and dei?cation.</p>https://revistas.usal.es/index.php/0213-2052/article/view/12611culto imperialadoración al emperadoraugustoromaoccidente latinooriente griegotarraco
collection DOAJ
language Spanish
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Duncan FISHWICK
spellingShingle Duncan FISHWICK
Augustus and the Cult of the Emperor
Studia Historica: Historia Antigua
culto imperial
adoración al emperador
augusto
roma
occidente latino
oriente griego
tarraco
author_facet Duncan FISHWICK
author_sort Duncan FISHWICK
title Augustus and the Cult of the Emperor
title_short Augustus and the Cult of the Emperor
title_full Augustus and the Cult of the Emperor
title_fullStr Augustus and the Cult of the Emperor
title_full_unstemmed Augustus and the Cult of the Emperor
title_sort augustus and the cult of the emperor
publisher Ediciones Universidad de Salamanca
series Studia Historica: Historia Antigua
issn 0213-2052
publishDate 2015-03-01
description <p>Faced with the worship of the ruler in the Greek east, Augustus could do little more that regulate a practice that had already existed over three centuries. His problem in Rome, in contrast, was to adapt the cult of the ruler required by contemporary practice to the usage of the Republic in such as way as to distance himself from Caesar, whose indiscretion had produced his untimely death. The system he hit upon was to emphasize Republican forms, key abstractions, and the worship of state gods closely connected with his rule: in other words to establish the cult of the emperor by other then direct means. In the Latin west in contrast he was free to shape the ruler cult as he chose. His principal contribution here was to establish regional centres at Lugdunum and elsewhere for the worship of Roma and Augustus, a prescription originally laid down for nonRomans in the Greek east. Sharply to be distinguished from this is the altar of Augustus at Tarraco reported by Quintilian. This can only be municipal, not the foundation monument of the provincial cult of Hispania citerior, which began only after the emperor’s death and dei?cation.</p>
topic culto imperial
adoración al emperador
augusto
roma
occidente latino
oriente griego
tarraco
url https://revistas.usal.es/index.php/0213-2052/article/view/12611
work_keys_str_mv AT duncanfishwick augustusandthecultoftheemperor
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