Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

The cult of goddess Fortuna in the Roman Central Balkans

View through CrossRef
The cult of the goddess Fortuna has been attested on the territory of Roman provinces in the Central Balkans with numerous votive monuments, sculptures, votive reliefs, statuettes and on glyptics. The goddess was particularly popular among the army, but also venerated by administrative personnel, merchants, freedmen, slaves and women. The epithets of the goddess imply that she was honoured by her devotees as in other Roman provinces - mainly as the goddess of good luck and chance, but also as the protectress of transport, business, routes and perhaps in bathing facilities. Fortuna was usually worshipped alone, but her pairing with the Egyptian goddess Isis as the syncretistic deity Isis-Fortuna and her relationship with Genii, are confirmed in different Central Balkans localities. The goddess Fortuna?s sanctuaries can be presumed in the vicinity of Ulpiana, Nis, near Kumanovo and probably in Viminacium, while her cult lasted from the 2nd to the last decades of the 3rd century.
National Library of Serbia
Title: The cult of goddess Fortuna in the Roman Central Balkans
Description:
The cult of the goddess Fortuna has been attested on the territory of Roman provinces in the Central Balkans with numerous votive monuments, sculptures, votive reliefs, statuettes and on glyptics.
The goddess was particularly popular among the army, but also venerated by administrative personnel, merchants, freedmen, slaves and women.
The epithets of the goddess imply that she was honoured by her devotees as in other Roman provinces - mainly as the goddess of good luck and chance, but also as the protectress of transport, business, routes and perhaps in bathing facilities.
Fortuna was usually worshipped alone, but her pairing with the Egyptian goddess Isis as the syncretistic deity Isis-Fortuna and her relationship with Genii, are confirmed in different Central Balkans localities.
The goddess Fortuna?s sanctuaries can be presumed in the vicinity of Ulpiana, Nis, near Kumanovo and probably in Viminacium, while her cult lasted from the 2nd to the last decades of the 3rd century.

Related Results

Goddess Worship and Bhakti
Goddess Worship and Bhakti
The worship of goddesses has been a vital part of Hinduism for centuries. There are innumerable goddesses whose worship encompasses a wide range of perspectives and practices that ...
Goddess
Goddess
Goddess worship is one of the most important signposts of the cultural landscape of Hinduism. Goddesses are predominant both in pan-Indian classical discourses and in “local” verna...
Euthymos of Locri: a case study in heroization in the Classical period
Euthymos of Locri: a case study in heroization in the Classical period
AbstractEuthymos was a real person, an Olympic victor from Locri Epizephyrii in the first half of the fifth century BC. Various sources attribute to him extraordinary achievements:...
A Place at the Altar
A Place at the Altar
This book illuminates a previously underappreciated dimension of religion in ancient Rome: the role of priestesses in civic cult. Demonstrating that priestesses had a central place...
Vessels from Late Medieval cemeteries in the Central Balkans
Vessels from Late Medieval cemeteries in the Central Balkans
Although a rare occurrence in late medieval cemeteries, vessels have been found on almost all major sites of the period, such as Novo Brdo, Trgoviste, Reljina Gradina and the...
The Good Goddess in Popular Fiction
The Good Goddess in Popular Fiction
Popular fantasy or speculative fiction by women often embraces ideas of Goddess Culture and matriarchal prehistory in positive but essentialized ways. Jean Auel’s bestselling Earth...
Searching for late neolithic spinning bowls in the central Balkans
Searching for late neolithic spinning bowls in the central Balkans
Over the past twenty years, research on textile has received increasing attention in archaeology worldwide, providing new insights into one of the most important crafts in hu...
A “Black Cult” in Early Medieval China: Iranian-Zoroastrian Influence in the Northern Dynasties
A “Black Cult” in Early Medieval China: Iranian-Zoroastrian Influence in the Northern Dynasties
AbstractThrough an analysis of Chinese theophoric names - a genre that emerged in the early medieval period largely under heavy Iranian-Sogdian influence - we suggest that there wa...

Back to Top