Neptune (mythology)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Neptune (Latin: Neptūnus) is the god of water and the sea in Roman mythology, a brother of Jupiter and Pluto.

Genoese admiral Andrea Doria as Neptune by Agnolo Bronzino
Genoese admiral
Andrea Doria as Neptune
by Agnolo Bronzino

He is analogous with but not identical to the god Poseidon of Greek mythology. The Roman conception of Neptune owed a great deal to the Etruscan god Nethuns.

Neptune statue Gdańsk
Neptune statue Gdańsk

Originally he was an Italic god paired with Salacia, possibly the goddess of the salt water. At an early date (399 BC) he was identified with Poseidon, when the Sibylline books ordered a lectisternium in his honour (Livy v. 13).

In earlier times it was the god Portunes or Fortunus who was thanked for naval victories, but Neptune supplanted him in this role by at least the first century BC, when Sextus Pompeius called himself "son of Neptune".

Neptune was associated as well with fresh water, as opposed to Oceanus, god of the world-ocean.

Like Poseidon, Neptune was also worshipped by the Romans as a god of horses, under the name Neptune Equester, patron of horse-racing.[1]

[edit] Festivals

His festival, Neptunalia, at which tents were made from the branches of bushes, took place on July 23. He had two temples in Rome. The first, built in 25 BC, stood near the Circus Flaminius, the Roman racetrack, and contained a famous sculpture of a marine group by Scopas. The second, the Basilica Neptuni, was built on the Campus Martius and dedicated by Agrippa in honour of the naval victory of Actium.[2]

[edit] 300 A.D. statue

The Department of Subaquatic Archaeological Research divers (headed by Michel L'Hour) discovered a first decade, 300 A.D., 5.9 foot marble statue of Neptune, in the Rhone River.[3] The statue is one of 100 artifacts that the team excavated between September and October 2007.[3][4]

[edit] References and notes