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Review article

https://doi.org/10.15291/archeo.3595

On the Cult and Veneration of the Roman Empresses and Princesses in the Province of Dalmatia

Ivana Jadrić-Kučan orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-8235-2311 ; University of Zadar, Department of Archaeology, Zadar, Croatia
Ivana Banovac orcid id orcid.org/0000-0002-5130-9097


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Full text: english pdf 8.414 Kb

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Abstract

The personality cult of the ruler, glorification of monarchical power and placing of
prominent individuals on a heroic and divine pedestal were social phenomena present
in developed civilisations from ancient times. The Roman imperial cult, a religious
and political institution based on identifying and worshipping the emperor as a deity
and promoting imperial power, served as an instrument for strengthening Roman
rule and romanising the newly conquered territories of the Roman Empire. While the focus of worship was primarily Roman emperors, important in propagating imperial ideology were also their wives, as well as other members of the ruling family. Despite not enjoying the same rights as their spouses, Roman empresses nevertheless actively, as well as indirectly, participated in public and political events and used the privileges of their social status to contribute to the shaping of imperial power and Roman society. Drawing on previous research of the social, political and religious characteristics of the imperial cult, this paper will briefly review the social and political power of the most influential Roman empresses and princesses, with an emphasis on the devotion to their
cult in the Province of Dalmatia from the Julio-Claudian dynasty to AD 315.

Keywords

Roman imperial cult; Roman empresses; Roman princesses; Livia Drusilla; Iulia Drusilla; Salonia Matidia; Diva Faustina; Faustina Augusta; Iulia Domna; Publia Fulvia Plautilla

Hrčak ID:

272414

URI

https://hrcak.srce.hr/272414

Publication date:

14.2.2022.

Article data in other languages: croatian

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