ante diem vii kalendas martias

This is interesting, from RogueClassicism.  I wrote about the Roman god Terminus the other day:

ante diem vii kalendas martias

  • Traditional end of the Roman year (followed by a period of intercalation)
  • Terminalia — a festival in honour of Terminus, the divinity who presided over boundaries. In Rome itself, Terminus had a shrine within the Temple of Jupiter beneath an opening in the roof because, it is said, when they were building the Temple of Jupiter, Terminus refused to move. What happened in the city is unclear, but the rustic version of the festival involved the following: at boundary stones, farmer families would gather and build a turf altar; a fire would be built and one of the younger members of the family would throw grain in the fire three times. Others offered other things like honeycombs and wine, then a sheep or pig would be sacrificed and a feast would follow.
  • 155 A.D. — martyrdom of Polycarp at Smyrna
  • 303 A.D. — “Great Persecution” of Diocletian begins in Nicomedia
  • 303 A.D. — martyrdom of Serenus the Gardener at Sirmium

About Fr. John Zuhlsdorf

Fr. Z is the guy who runs this blog. o{]:¬)
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3 Comments

  1. pelerin says:

    Fr Z Did you realise you have almost hit the 10,000,000?

  2. pelerin: Yes! I saw that. Nice!

  3. Tom in NY says:

    Religione graecorum, Hermes terminorum et negotiarum deus fuit. Dissimilitudo cultus Hermetis, Termini, Mercurii mihi quaerenda est.

    Salutationes RP Moderatori frequentandum sitium!

    Salutationes omnibus.

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