Fasti Antiates Maiores

Fasti Antiates maijores,
Palazzo Massimo alle Terme, Rome.
Fasti Antiates maiores, reconstruction

The Fasti Antiates maiores are a painted wall-calendar from the Late Roman Republic, the oldest archaeologically attested local Roman calendar and the only such calendar known from before the Julian calendar reforms. It was created between 67 and 55 BC and discovered in 1915 at Anzio, the ancient Antium, in a crypt next to the coast and is now located in the Palazzo Massimo alle Terme in Rome, part of the Museo Nazionale Romano.


Background

Central Italy around 500 BC

Anzio lies about 58 km south of Rome in the region of Latium. In the sixth century, at the latest, the Latins inhabited the region of Latium, remaining independent of Rome until 338 BC. Rome first took control of the region in the Latin War after the Battle of Trifanum and incorporated it into the incipient Roman empire.

Description

The Fasti Antiates maiores consist of two fragments of the thirteen month calendar and the List of Roman Consuls. The 1.16 m high and 2.5 m wide calendar contains the leap month Mensis Intercalaris in addition to the twelve months.

The list of consuls was the same height as the calendar, but 1.36 m wide. The names of the consuls span the period from 164 BC to 84 BC. According to the restoration of the lacunae at both ends, the list originally extended from 173 BC to 67 BC.

Contents

The calendar takes the form of a table with thirteen columns, each of which is a month labelled with an abbreviation of its name. Still legible are the following: IAN for Ianuarius (January), FEB for Februarius (February), APR for Aprilis (April), IVN for Iunius (June), and SEP for September.

Each column consists of several rows containing the days as well as supplementary row indicating the total number of days in the month: Still visible are XXIIX (28) for February, XXIX (29) for April, June and partly for August, XXXI (31) (partly) for May and October.

Each day is marked with a letter from A-H, indicated the position of the day in the Roman Nundinal cycle.

The first day of each month is marked by the letter K, short for Kalendae. The fifth day of January, February, April, June, August, September, November and December is marked with the letters NON, short for Nonae. It is placed in the seventh day for the months of March, May, July, and October. The eighth day after the Nones of each month is labelled EIDVS (Ides).

Some days are marked with the letters F, N or C. F is short for fastus dies ("allowed days", when it was legal to initiate action in the courts of civil law), N for Nefastus dies (banned days, when it was not), and C for comitialis dies (Assembly days, when political assemblies were permitted).

The calendar also lists the foundation dates (dies natales) of the temples in the city of Rome. The fact that the foundation of the Temple of Venus connected to the Theatre of Pompey is missing indicates that the calendar was created before 55 BC. The calendar also includes important events, like the Ludi Megalense, one of the festivals of the cult of Magna Mater. The inauguration of her temple on the Palatine occurred in 191 BC on 11 April. The relevant festival took place from 4–11 April. A confirmation of the date of the Ludi Megalense is found in the Fasti Quirinales, which additionally classify 11 April as Endoitio Exitio Nefas. Later Fasti contain a transmission error, which is why they provide the incorrect dates of 4–10 April.[1]

References

  1. Jörg Rüpke, "Fehler und Fehlinterpretationen in der Datierung des "dies natalis" des stadtrömischen Mater Magna-Tempels," Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik, No. 102. 1994, pp. 237–240.

Bibliography

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