Rhenus Pater ("Father Rhine", German Vater Rhein) is the personification or river god of the Rhine, attested in epigraphy and associated with Neptunus,[1] called "father of nymphs and rivers" by Martial (10.7).
Because of his depiction with horns also called Rhenus bicornis, and as an allegory of the subjugated barbarian tribes called Rhenus cornibus fractis "Rhenus with broken horns" by Ovid.[2]
There are records of Celtic and Germanic human sacrifice to river gods, and of the Rhine specifically
records of a custom of submerging newly-born infants as a test of either their vitality, or as an oracle to determine if they had been conceived in wedlock.[3]
The allegory was taken up again as a motive in the German Baroque period, and again in 19th-century German Romanticism (Rheinromantik).[4]
^
e.g. CIL 13, 8811 (Vechten) IVNONI REGINAE ET MINERVAE SANCTAE GENIO HVIVSQUE LOCI NEPTVNO OCEANO ET RHENO DIS OMNIBVS DEABVSQUE ...; AE 1969/70, 434 (Strasbourg) RHENO PATRI
^Horst Johannes Tümmers: Der Rhein. Ein europäischer Fluss und seine Geschichte. Verlag C. H. Beck, München 1999, ISBN 3-406-44823-2, S. 24, 25 und Abb. 7
^e.g.Ortwin Reich: Vom Beatusberg zum Fort Konstantin: Kirche, Kloster, Festung, Koblenz 1997, p. 7.; Julianus, epist. 191; Libanios, orat. 12, 48; Claudius Claudianus, in Rufin. 2, 112; etc.
^Rheinromantik zwischen Köln und Bingen: Ein Mythos und Symbol Europas Archived 2014-10-18 at the Wayback Machine, nrw-stiftung.de 2002
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