Macrobius, Saturnalia 3. 9 and the Roman Cult of Iuno Caelestis
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St Petersburg State University
Abstract
The cult of Tanit, the patron goddess of Carthage, known to the Romans as Iuno Caelestis,
had long been thought to have been transferred to Rome during the rule of Septimius
Severus, as a number of inscriptions and coins mentioning or depicting the deity date back
to this period. More recently, an alternative hypothesis was proposed, disputing the importance
of this evidence and suggesting that the worship of Iuno Caelestis had been introduced
by Elagabalus, along with a Carthaginian statue of the goddess that had been wed to
his own divine patron. This article aims to defend the original dating by examining a ritualistic
formula preserved by Macrobius, according to which Iuno Caelestis was summoned to
Rome by Scipio Aemilianus at the end of the Third Punic War. The article argues that while
the formula itself is most likely apocryphal, the information it contains still constitutes an
etiological legend of the Roman cult’s foundation, and it would not exist if the cult did not.
Therefore, the reign of Septimius Severus, the time period when the formula was recorded
by Macrobius’ own source, Serenus Sammonicus, can be used as a terminus ante quem for
the purposes of dating the cult’s transfer.
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Roman A. Isaenko. Macrobius, Saturnalia 3. 9 and the Roman Cult of Iuno Caelestis. Philologia Classica 2019, 14 (2), 208–215.