Our website is made possible by displaying online advertisements to our visitors.
Please consider supporting us by disabling your ad blocker.

Responsive image


Summanus

In religione Romana Summanus fuit deus fulminis nocturni, cum Iuppiter esset deus fulminis diurni.[1] Natura Summani dei primo saeculo a.C.n. incerta fuit, ut ex Ovidio patet.[2]

Aedes Summani die 20 Iunii 278 a.C.n., cum bellum Pyrrhicum gestum est, dedicatum est.[3] A Circo Maximo in occidentem versus collocata erat, forsitan in declivitate Aventini montis. Templum dedicatum esse videtur, quod signum dei, quod in Aedis Capitoliniae fastigio steterat, fulmine ictum est.[4]

Sacra Summani 20 Iunii (a.d. XII Kal. Iul.) celebrabantur.

  1. Paulus Festi epitome p.188 L 2nd.
  2. "quisquis is est, Summano templa feruntur": Ovidius fasti 6,730.
  3. Ovidius fasti VI 731: "tum cum Romanis, Pyrrhe, timendus eras." - Plinius Nat. Hist. XXIX 14; Livius Periochae XIV. Quoad annum dedicationis vide: Orlin, Eric M.: "Foreign Cults in Republican Rome: Rethinking the Pomerial Rule", Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome, Vol. 47 (2002), p. 5.
  4. S. Ball Platner, T. Ashby: A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome. Baltimore 1928, p. 408, ubi citantur Cicero de Div. I 10; Livius Periochae XIV; Iordanes I 2, 14-15; 98-100

Previous Page Next Page






Summà Catalan Summanus German Summanus English Sumano Spanish سومانوس FA Summanus French סומאנוס HE Summano Italian スムマーヌス Japanese Sumanas LT

Responsive image

Responsive image