SATURNALIA - Definition. Was ist SATURNALIA
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Was (wer) ist SATURNALIA - definition

ANCIENT ROMAN FESTIVAL IN DECEMBER
Saturnalia and christmas; Saturnalicius; Saturnale; Saturnalia Gifts; Saturnalian; Kalenda (festival); Saturna (festival)
  • 2nd-century AD Roman bas-relief depicting the god Saturn, in whose honor the Saturnalia was celebrated, holding a scythe
  • Filocalus]]) depicting the month of December, with Saturnalian dice on the table and a mask (''[[oscilla]]'') hanging above
  • Twelfth Night]] celebration with a "[[Lord of Misrule]]"
  • Roman disc in silver depicting Sol Invictus (from [[Pessinus]] in [[Phrygia]], 3rd century AD)
  • ''Saturnalia'' (1909) by [[Ernesto Biondi]], in the [[Buenos Aires Botanical Gardens]]
  • [[Ancient Greek painting]] signed by "Alexander of Athens", discovered in [[Herculaneum]], showing five women playing [[knucklebones]], a game which was played during the Attic holiday of [[Kronia]]<ref name="Hansen2002"/>
  • ''Ave, Caesar! Io, Saturnalia!'' (1880) by [[Lawrence Alma-Tadema]]. The painting's title draws a comparison between the spontaneous declaration of [[Claudius]] as the new emperor by the [[Praetorian Guard]] after the assassination of [[Caligula]] and the election of a ''Saturnalicius princeps''.<ref>The painting represents a scene recorded by [[Josephus]], ''Antiquitates Iudiacae'' 19; and [[Cassius Dio]] [https://penelope.uchicago.edu/Thayer/E/Roman/Texts/Cassius_Dio/60*.html#1 60.1.3.]</ref>
  • page=162}}
  • oscillum]]'', effigies of human heads, in place of real human heads.<ref name="Taylor"/><ref name="Chance"/>
  • Dice players in a wall painting from [[Pompeii]]
  • page=221}}

Saturnalia         
[?sat?'ne?l??]
¦ noun [treated as sing. or plural] the ancient Roman festival of Saturn in December, a period of unrestrained merrymaking.
?(saturnalia) an occasion of wild revelry.
Derivatives
saturnalian adjective
Origin
L., lit. 'matters relating to Saturn', neut. plural of Saturnalis.
saturnalia         
n. pl.
[L.] Revels, orgies, feasts.
Saturnalia         
·noun ·pl Hence: A period or occasion of general license, in which the passions or vices have riotous indulgence.
II. Saturnalia ·noun ·pl The festival of Saturn, celebrated in December, originally during one day, but afterward during seven days, as a period of unrestrained license and merriment for all classes, extending even to the slaves.

Wikipedia

Saturnalia

Saturnalia is an ancient Roman festival and holiday in honour of the god Saturn, held on 17 December of the Julian calendar and later expanded with festivities through to 23 December. The holiday was celebrated with a sacrifice at the Temple of Saturn, in the Roman Forum, and a public banquet, followed by private gift-giving, continual partying, and a carnival atmosphere that overturned Roman social norms: gambling was permitted, and masters provided table service for their slaves as it was seen as a time of liberty for both slaves and freedmen alike. A common custom was the election of a "King of the Saturnalia", who gave orders to people, which were followed and presided over the merrymaking. The gifts exchanged were usually gag gifts or small figurines made of wax or pottery known as sigillaria. The poet Catullus called it "the best of days".

Saturnalia was the Roman equivalent to the earlier Greek holiday of Kronia, which was celebrated during the Attic month of Hekatombaion in late midsummer. It held theological importance for some Romans, who saw it as a restoration of the ancient Golden Age, when the world was ruled by Saturn. The Neoplatonist philosopher Porphyry interpreted the freedom associated with Saturnalia as symbolizing the "freeing of souls into immortality". Saturnalia may have influenced some of the customs associated with later celebrations in western Europe occurring in midwinter, particularly traditions associated with Christmas, the Feast of the Holy Innocents, and Epiphany. In particular, the historical western European Christmas custom of electing a "Lord of Misrule" may have its roots in Saturnalia celebrations.

Beispiele aus Textkorpus für SATURNALIA
1. Their celebrations, the Saturnalia, which cheered up the bleak end of December, installed a prince of the Saturnalia, or Lord of Misrule – some plebeian permitted to reign for the day, and guaranteed to smile benignly on all sorts of misbehaviour.
2. They had a feast called Saturnalia when masters became servants and vice versa.
3. Moreover, the timing of Christmas to coincide with the Roman Saturnalia festival (a drunken celebration of the winter solstice) is well documented in scholarly accounts.
4. "Never have the scenic moving tableaux of our Carnival celebration been more beautiful, brilliant, poetically expressive and artistically rendered," The Daily Picayune newspaper reported in 1'06 on Ash Wednesday, the day that marks the end of the Carnival saturnalia and the beginning of the ascetic period of Lent.
5. As it turned out, it also was the last in the United States. Never have the scenic moving tableaux of our Carnival celebration been more beautiful, brilliant, poetically expressive and artistically rendered,‘‘ The Daily Picayune newspaper reported in 1'06 on Ash Wednesday, the day that marks the end of the Carnival saturnalia and the beginning of the ascetic period of Lent.