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Acta Arvalia information


The Acta Arvalia were the recorded protocols of the Arval Brothers (Arvales fratres), a priestly brotherhood (sodalitas) of ancient Roman religion.

The acta were inscribed in marble tablets fastened to the walls of the Temple of Dea Dia, goddess of the grove, near the present borough of the Magliana Vecchia, between the right bank of the Tiber and the hill Monte delle Piche. The oldest of the protocols are evidence of early Latin. They are mentioned by Varro.[1] "The transcription of the records of this priesthood onto stone provided possibly the biggest coherent complex of inscriptions of the Roman ancient world," Jörg Rüpke has observed.[2]

The acta document routine rituals and special occasions, the vota of participating members, the name of the place where sacrifices occurred, and specific dates. They are an important source for ancient Roman prosopography[3] and a useful one for the study of Rome's distinctive archaic religious traditions. Actual liturgies are lacking: the first instance of a Latin hymn text, the famous and incomprehensibly archaic Carmen Arvale, was not entrusted to publication in a stone inscription until the beginning of the third century CE, when few could have deciphered it.[4]

Fragments of the inscriptions were first recovered by Wilhelm Henzen, 1866-69.[5] Further fragments subsequently came to light.

Though their rituals were conducted outside the pomerium that demarcated the official confines of the city in earliest times,[6] the Arvales emerged from obscurity toward the end of the Roman Republic as an elite group, to judge from the status of their known members in the Augustan period.[7]

  1. ^ Varro, De lingua Latina 5.85.
  2. ^ Jörg Rüpke, in Alessandro Barchiesi, Jörg Rüpke and Susan A. Stephens, Rituals in Ink: A Conference on Religion and Literary Production in Ancient Rome (Steiner Verlag) 2004:35.
  3. ^ Though "the richness of details and the abundance of the epigraphical corpus remain unexplained" (Rüpke 2004:36).
  4. ^ Palmer, L. R., 1954. The Latin Language. London: Faber & Faber. pp.62–3
  5. ^ Wilhelm Henzen, ed. Acta Fratrum Arvalium quae supersunt (Berlin, 1874)
  6. ^ Rüpke 2004:35.
  7. ^ Rüpke 2004:34-37

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