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Razvoj kulta rimske boginje Kibele in upodobitev njenega triumfalnega sprevoda na »Pateri iz Parabiaga«
ID Napast, Aiša (Author), ID Weiss, Sonja (Mentor) More about this mentor... This link opens in a new window, ID Kokole, Stanko (Mentor) More about this mentor... This link opens in a new window

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Abstract
Kult Velike matere, ki se je v izrazito helenizirani različici kasneje razširil po celotnem Sredozemlju in se ponekod obdržal še vse do konca 5. stoletja po Kr., je s prvimi prepričljivimi materialnimi dokazi izpričan v Anatoliji že v prvi polovici 1. tisočletja pr. Kr. Kibelo so častili kot boginjo plodnosti in materinstva, po drugi strani pa tudi kot božanstvo divje neobrzdane narave in zavetnico mest. Njeno relativno dobro dokumentirano čaščenje v antičnem Rimu (v katerem so se nedvomno odrazile ideološke potrebe in odmevali politični smotri uradnega državnega kulta) se je nedvomno razlikovalo od izvornega frigijskega obredja. Naloga prinaša kritični pretres vprašljivih predpostavk, na podlagi katerih se je v starejši zgodovini raziskav utrdilo sporno prepričanje, da lahko nekatere Kibeline značilnosti, ki jih sicer poznamo izključno iz helenističnih in rimskodobnih pričevanj, povežemo že z izvornim anatolskim božanstvom. Razprava, ki temelji na izboru posebno zgovornih mest pri antičnih avtorjih, pritegne pa tudi najbolj relevantno ikonografsko gradivo in se še posebno pozorno posveča kompleksnemu imaginariju t. i. »Patere iz Parabiaga«, izpostavlja zlasti potencialno najbolj kontroverzne prvine Kibelinega kulta, na katerih so bile občasno celo še v novejšem času utemeljevane vprašljive hipoteze o dejanski naravi frigijske boginje matere (npr. Atis, svečeniki gali, običaj kastracije in ekstatični obredi).

Language:Slovenian
Keywords:kult Velike matere, Atis, gali, rimska recepcija, ikonografija
Work type:Master's thesis/paper
Organization:FF - Faculty of Arts
Year:2023
PID:20.500.12556/RUL-145882 This link opens in a new window
COBISS.SI-ID:152764675 This link opens in a new window
Publication date in RUL:17.05.2023
Views:440
Downloads:43
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Secondary language

Language:English
Title:The Cult of the Roman Goddess Cybele and the Representation of Her Triumph on the Parabiago Plate
Abstract:
The earliest material evidence of the cult of the great mother-goddess of Anatolia dates from the first half of the first millennium B.C., while her worship – which in its later, Hellenized, form spread across the entire Mediterranean basin – did not completely die out before the end of the fifth century A.D. Cybele was not only the goddess of fertility and motherhood but also a deity of mountains and uncontrolled nature as well as the protector of cities. The comparatively well-documented rites associated with her in ancient Rome (which were inevitably affected by the ideological premises and political aims underpinning the official state cult) must have differed significantly from the earlier cultic practices in Phrygia. Accordingly, this thesis seeks to critically re-examine the problematic premises of earlier scholarship that unwarrantedly tended to trace some of Cybele’s characteristic features, which are only attested by Hellenistic and Roman sources, back to the original Anatolian deity. By drawing upon the especially relevant passages from ancient authors and selectively adducing the pertinent iconographic evidence (including the complex imagery of the so-called Parabiago Plate), the present study pays particular attention to some of the potentially most controversial aspects of Cybele’s cult (e.g. Attis, Galli, ritual castration, and orgiastic rites), which have also in the more recent past occasionally led to unsubstantiated speculations about the true nature of the Phrygian Mother Goddess.

Keywords:Magna Mater cult, Attis, Galli, Roman reception, iconography

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