The Imperial Cult in Roman Religious Associations
Choose format
RIS BIB ENDNOTEThe Imperial Cult in Roman Religious Associations
Publication date: 03.03.2015
ELECTRUM, 2014, Volume 21, pp. 153-162
https://doi.org/10.4467/20800909EL.14.001.2786Authors
The Imperial Cult in Roman Religious Associations
The imperial cult was a local phenomenon. Religious colleges, like other social groups, included various forms of the emperor cult in the rituals they practised at their own discretion. Most frequently, the collegial imperial cult took the form of ceremonies organised to celebrate anniversaries connected with the emperor. They could be accompanied by foundations of statues or even temples dedicated to the emperor or members of his family. The imperial cult played a special role in the case of corporations, which embraced it as their axis of activity and the main element of their identity. Associations of cultores Larum et imaginum Augusti, regardless of their genesis, were an important element of the very complex phenomenon of imperial cult in the western part of the Roman Empire. Testimonies left behind by their members enable us, to a large extent, to verify the 19th-century vision of the imperial cult, which mainly interpreted it in the context of “religion of loyalty.”
Ausbüttel, F.M. (1982), Untersuchungen zu den Vereinen im Westen des Römischen Reiches, Kallmünz.
Bömer, F. (1981), Untersuchungen über die Religion der Sklaven in Griechenland und Rom, Bd. I: Die wichtigsten Kulte und Religion in Rom und lateinischen Westen, 2. durchgesehene und von Peter Herz in Verbindung mit dem Verfasser erweiterte Auflage, Wiesbaden.
Clauss, M. (1999), Kaiser und Gott. Herrscherkult im römischen Reich, Stuttgart–Leipzig.
Gradel, I. (2002), Emperor Worship and Roman Religion, Oxford.
Harland, Ph. (1996), Honours and Worship: Emperors, Imperial Cults, and Associations at Ephesus (First to Third Centuries C.E.), Studies in Religion, Sciences Religieuses 25/3: 319–334.
Harland, Ph. (2003), Imperial Cults within Local Cultural Life: Associations in Roman Asia, AHB 17: 47–69.
Herz, P. (1988), Der römischer Kaiser und der Kaiserkult. Gott oder primus inter pares?, in: D. Zeller (ed.), Menschenwerdung Gottes – Vergöttlichung von Menschen, Göttingen.
Liu, J. (2009), Collegia Centonariorum: The Guilds of Textile Dealers in the Roman West, Leiden–Boston.
Olszewski, L. (2010), “Religia” i “kult cesarski” w starożytnym Rzymie – z życia pojęć, in: S. Olszaniec, P. Wojciechowski (eds.), Społeczeństwo i religia w świecie antycznym. Materiały z ogólnopolskiej konferencji naukowej (Toruń, 20–22 września 2007 r.), Toruń: 361–377.
Price, S.R.F. (1984), Rituals and Power. The Roman Imperial Cult in Asia Minor, Cambridge.
Santero, J.M. (1983), The cultores Augusti and the private worship of the Roman Emperor, Athenaeum 61: 111–125.
Waltzing, J.-P. (1895–1900), Étude historique sur les corporations professionnelles chez les Romains depuis les origines jusqu’a la chute de l’Empire d’Occident, vol. I–IV, Louvain.
Wojciechowski, P. (2005), Czciciele Herkulesa w Rzymie. Studium epigraficzno-antroponomastyczne (I–IV w. n.e.), Toruń.
Wojciechowski, P. (2007), Epigrapische Quellen in den Untersuchungen über das religiöse Leben der römischen Städte, in: D. Musiał (ed.), Society and Religions. Studies in Greek and Roman History, vol. 2, Toruń: 85–97.
Information: ELECTRUM, 2014, Volume 21, pp. 153-162
Article type: Original article
Nicolaus Copernicus University in Toruń
Poland
Published at: 03.03.2015
Article status: Open
Licence: None
Percentage share of authors:
Article corrections:
-Publication languages:
English