Hostname: page-component-848d4c4894-nr4z6 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-06-08T11:27:10.991Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Date of Dedication of the Temple of Mars Ultor*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  24 September 2012

C. J. Simpson
Affiliation:
Nipissing University College, Ontario

Extract

For many years now scholars have considered the date of dedication of the temple of Mars Ultor in the Forum of Augustus as a matter beyond dispute. This date, 1 August 2 B.C., is based principally on the evidence supplied by Augustus, Velleius Paterculus and Dio, and has been accepted as an established historical fact at least from the time of Th.Mommsen's discussion in 1893. Nevertheless, certain problems arise from an acceptance of this date; problems, that is, which have a direct bearing on the use of the Res Gestae of Augustus and the Fasti of Ovid as valid historical sources.

The year in which the temple was dedicated in the Forum of Augustus has been established beyond all doubt. Velleius Paterculus (11, 100, 2) states that the temple was dedicated during the consulship of Augustus and L. Caninius Gallus, who, as we know from other sources, was suffect consul in 2 B.C. Also Augustus assigns to this year—his thirteenth consulship—the first celebration of Ludi Martiales at Rome. Furthermore, it may be accepted that Ludi Martiales were produced in subsequent years on the anniversary of the dedication of this temple.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © C. J. Simpson 1977. Exclusive Licence to Publish: The Society for the Promotion of Roman Studies

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 CIL I2 p. 318.

2 See PIR 2 C 390; cf. Degrassi, A., I Fasti Consolari dell'Impero Romano (1952), p. 5Google Scholar, where the date of the consulship of L. Caninius Gallus is evidently based on the accepted date for the dedication of die temple of Mars Ultor in 2 B.C.

3 Res Gestae 22, 2 (see below p. 92.).

4 cf. Dio LV, 10; LX, 5, 3. Also Regner, RE Supp. VII, 1643 f. and above n. 3.

5 Dio LX, 5, 3: ἐν γὰρ δὴ τῇ τοῦ Αὐγούστου νουμηνίᾳ, ἠγωνίζοντο μὲν ἵπποι, … ὁ τοῦ Ἄρεως ναὸς ἐν ταύτῃ καθιέρωτο καὶ διὰ τοῦτο ἐτησίοις ἀγῶσιν ἐτετίμητο.

6 Fer. Cum.: CIL I2, p. 229; F. Maff.: CIL I2, p. 224; Philocalus: CIL I2, p. 263. These sources are collected, conveniently enough, in Ehrenberg, V. and Jones, A. H. M., Documents illustrating the Reigns of Augustus and Tiberius2 (1955), 48Google Scholar: Cum. ‘[eo die aedes Martis dedicatast. supplica]tio Molibus Martis’. Mqf. ‘lud. Mart, in circ. Phil. Martialici’. For the Feriale Duranum, see Fink, R. O., Hoey, A. S. and Snyder, W. F., ‘The Feriale Duranum’, YCS VII (1940), 120 f.Google Scholar: ‘iiii idus maias ob circenses ma[rtiales] marti pạ [tri ult]ori ṭạ[u]ṛuṃ’; also The Excavations at Dura-Europos, Final Report V, Part I: The Parchments and Papyri (1959), 199Google Scholar.

7 See especially Fasti v, 550–2, (below p. 92).

8 Dio LIV, 8, 3: ἀμέλει καὶ θυαίας ἐπ᾿ αὐτοῖς καὶ νεὼν Ἄρεως Τιμωροῦ ἐν τῷ Καπιτωλίῳ, κατὰ τὸ τοῦ Διὸς τοῦ Φερετρίου ζήλωμα, πρὸς τὴν τῶν σημείων ἀνάθεσιν καὶ ψηφισθῆναι ἐκέλευσε καὶ ἐποίησε … See Mommsen, loc. cit. (n. 1).

9 See, for example, Mattingly, H., BMC I, Augustus to Vitellius (1923), p. 58, 65 f., 114Google Scholar.

10 cf., for example, Marbach, RE XIV, 1924 f.

11 cf., for example, A. Degrassi, Inscr. Ital. XIII. 2, 456 f., 490; Marbach, loc. cit. (n. 10); Heinen, H., Klio XI (1911), 139, 169Google Scholar, n. 1; Platner, S. B. and Ashby, T., A Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome (1927), 329 f.Google Scholar; Fink, et al., loc. cit. (n. 6); Scholz, U. W., Studien zum altitalischen und altrömischen Marskult und Marsmythos (1970), 23Google Scholar; Zanker, P., Forum Augustum. Das Bildprogramm (1968), 22 fGoogle Scholar. Gardthausen, V., Augustus und seine Zeit II. 2 (1896), 476 f.Google Scholar, suggested that the games produced on 12 May commemorated the actual return to Rome of the lost signa; cf., most recently, Barnes, T. D., JRS LXIV (1974), 21Google Scholar.

12 Ehrenberg and Jones, op. cit. (n. 6), 20.

13 Having accepted Mommsen's suggestion, two of the most authoritative writers on Roman religion have decided that Ovid was confused. See Wissowa, G., Religion und Kultus der Römer2 (1912), 146Google Scholar, n. 8 and Latte, K., Römische Religionsgeschichte (1960) 302 f., n. 7Google Scholar. Cf. also Frazer, J. G., Ovid's Fasti, (Loeb, 1931), 300Google Scholar; Pighi, G. B., ‘Le “dee invitte” del tempio Marte Ultore,’ Att. Acad. Sc. Ist. Bologna LIX (19701971), 39 f.Google Scholar, especially 45, n. 10.

14 cf. Degrassi, Inscr. Ital. XIII. 2, 490: ‘Miramur nec dedicationem templi nec ludos in ullis fastis adnotata esse.’

15 cf., for example, Mattingly, H. and Sydenham, E. A., RIC I, Augustus to Vitellius (1923), 46Google Scholar; Platner and Ashby, loc. cit. (n. 11).

16 For the date of this poem see Franke, C., Fasti Horatiani (1839), 223 f.Google Scholar, cited by Fraenkel, E., Horace (1957), 449Google Scholar, n. I. Cf. also Horace, Car. III, 5 and Propertius III, 4, 6: ‘assuescunt Latio Partha tropaea Iovi.’

17 For example, Mattingly, op. cit. (n. 9), cxi.

18 The dedication took place at a later date, Dio LIV, 8, 4. The words used by Dio (LIV, 8, 3) suggest the formal decision to build a temple; cf., for example, Mon. Ancyr. XII, 2.

19 Crawford, M. H., Roman Republican Coinage (1974), I, P. 495Google Scholar; II, Pl LVII, 13.

20 Weinstock, S., Divus Julius (1971), 241 f.Google Scholar, cf. JRS LI (1961), 215.

21 Crawford, op. cit. (n. 18), 11, 744 and Pl. LXIV, 8.

22 Ehrenberg and Jones, op. cit. (n. 6), 50.

23 cf., for example, the case of the Ara Fortunae Reducis whose constitution is recorded in the Fasti Amiternini: CIL I2, p. 245. See Hanell, K., ‘Das Opfer des Augustus an der Ara Pads‘, Opuscula Romana II (1960), 65 f.Google Scholar, where it is argued that the date of constitution was the more significant anniversary; cf. Fishwick, D., Britannia III (1972), 176 fGoogle Scholar.

24 Kraus, Th., Festschrift Eugen v. Mercklin (1964), 66 f.Google Scholar, showed that the figure of Mars represented on the coins of c. 19 B.C. should not be understood ‘als Abbild einer wirklichen Statue’ but ‘nur als Marsdarstellung’ (71), and tha t there is no numismatic evidence for a cult statue of Mars Ultor associated with any temple prior to the dedication of the temple in the Forum of Augustus. Also there is the slight possibility that Dio's statement (LIV, 8, 3) reflects the formal constitution of that temple dedicated in 2 B.C. See n. 18, above, and Fishwick, op. cit. (n. 23), 177, n. 81.

25 At least one other attempt has been made to remove the aedicula of Mars Ultor from the Capitol. Smith, H. R. W., Univ. Col. Publ. Class. Arch. 11. 4, (1951), 194 f.Google Scholar, suggested that Dio misunderstood the evidence supplied by the calendars and by the coinage. This suggestion, although favoured by Volkmann, , Gnomon XXIV (1952), 361Google Scholar, was not thought to be convincing by Grant, CR N.S. 5 (1955), 187, or by Weinstock, , JRS LI (1961), 215Google Scholar. There is, on the other hand, no evidence to show that Dio himself believed that there was a temple of Mars Ultor in the Forum of Augustus. Dio LV, 10 is taken from the index to LV, 1, 7 and may well represent the knowledge of the compiler of the index. Perhaps the temple of Jupiter which Dio confused with Mars Ultor was that erected a short while earlier to Jupiter Tonans.

26 Dio LX, 5, 4: ἕν τε οὖν τούτοις ἐμετρίαζε.

27 cf. Mommsen, CIL I, p. 302 f.; Fink, et al., op. cit. (n. 6), 124; Weinstock, , Divus Julius, 210 fGoogle Scholar.

28 cf. Suet., , Claud, 11, 2Google Scholar. For Gaius's celebration of the birthdays of Tiberius and Drusilla see Dio LIX, 24, 7.

29 See Henzen, AFA (1874), 57.

30 Dio LX, 5, 1.

31 If the suggestion made in this paper is accepted, namely that the temple of Mars Ultor was dedicated in the Forum of Augustus on 12 May, we are surely presented with a much clearer context for the dedication of the column in the Forum Traiani—perhaps to this same deity—on 12 May (cf. Fink, et al., op. cit. (n. 6), 123, nn. 508–12).