Portunus (mythology): Difference between revisions

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Content deleted Content added
Thijs!bot (talk | contribs)
m robot Adding: nl:Portunus
SmackBot (talk | contribs)
Standard headings &/or gen fixes.
Line 11: Line 11:
</div>
</div>


==Reference==
==References==
*[[Marcus Terentius Varro]], ''De Lingua Latina'' vii.19.
*[[Marcus Terentius Varro]], ''De Lingua Latina'' vii.19.


==External links==
==External links==
*[http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/secondary/SMIGRA*/Portumnalia.html William Smith, 1875. ''A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities''( John Murray, London,): "Portumnalia"]
*[http://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/secondary/SMIGRA*/Portumnalia.html William Smith, 1875. ''A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities''( John Murray, London,): "Portumnalia"]


[[Category:Roman gods]]
[[Category:Roman gods]]

Revision as of 16:29, 15 September 2007

Temple of Portunus in the Forum Boarium

In Roman mythology, Portunes (alternatively spelled Portumnes or Portunus) was a god of keys and doors and livestock. He protected the warehouses where grain was stored. Probably because of folk associations between porta "gate, door" and portus "harbor", the "gateway" to the sea, Portunus later became conflated with Palaemon and evolved into a god primarily of ports and harbors.[1] In the Latin adjective importunus his name was applied to untimely waves and weather and contrary winds, and the Latin echoes in English opportune and its old-fashioned antonym importune, meaning "well-timed' and "badly-timed". Hence Portunus is behind both an opportunity and importunate or badly-timed solicitations (OED).

His festival, celebrated on August 16, the seventeenth day before the Kalends of September, was the Portumnalia, a minor occasion in the Roman year. On this day, keys were thrown into a fire for good luck in a very solemn and lugubrious manner. His attribute was a key and his main temple in the city of Rome, the Temple of Portunus, was to be found in the Forum Boarium.

Notes

  1. ^ "Portunus gives to the sailor perfect safety in traversing the seas; but why has the raging sea cast up so many cruelly-shattered wrecks?" the Christian apologist Arnobius asks, ca 300 CE (Seven Books against the Heathen III.23 (on-line text).

References

External links