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2 Emperors in the Religious life of the Roman World

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Let us start, however, with what was clearly the most recognizable universal aspect of this religious field: the emperor. Deciusʼ edict was the first of a series of attempts by emperors to extend their fiat over ritual practice. During the decades that followed there would be imperially instigated persecutions of Christians and Manicheans, imperial constitutions prohibiting Jews from converting Christians, bans on public funding for sacrifices to the gods, and attempts to impose particular varieties of Christian dogma and discipline. In parallel to this process the emperors began to claim a special relationship to the divine and a divine mandate. This had been a strand in imperial ideology from the very start but became more explicit during the military crisis of the third century AD. Deciusʼ predecessor Philip celebrated Rome’s Thousand Year Birthday, and the rhetoric of the tetrarchs allocated the ruling emperors to Jovian and Herculean dynasties. Constantine’s decision to proclaim himself a follower of Christ was just the latest version of this. An unintended consequence was that from the early fourth century Christian bishops began to press emperors to assist them against those they regarded as pagans, schismatics or heretics. Some resisted but by the end of the fourth century a new explicitly Christian Roman Empire had emerged.

The increased involvement of imperial authorities in religious affairs was not unique to Rome. Around the same time Christians in the Persian Empire found their loyalty suspect, and Sasanian Emperors began to persecute Manichaeans and to develop a closer connection to the Zoroastrian priesthood.11 These changes in the religious conduct of emperors respond to the emergence of the precursors of modern religions, in the sense of organized and disciplined entities that demanded exclusive adherence and made claims to uniquely authoritative accounts of the cosmos.12 This includes the spread of monotheisms, the precursors of modern religions such as Zoroastrianism, Judaism, Christianity and Islam, and the appearance of priesthoods that asserted an authority independent of that of early propertied classes, political elites and monarchs.

Earlier emperors had tried to centre themselves in religious practice in different ways. From Julius Caesar on emperors had claimed the senior priesthood in Rome, as pontifex maximus, been members of the more important priestly colleges, had their names inserted into public vows, performed sacrifices and dedicated temples and had had themselves portrayed in the likeness of gods.13 Formally all this was in relation to the local cults of the city of Rome and the community of the Romans: neither the emperor nor the Roman priestly colleges had jurisdiction in the territory of subject populations. In practice echoes of these titles and powers can be found in the cults of Roman colonies and municipia in the west, while in other regions emperors were assimilated to local traditions of divine monarchy, such as the Pharaohs of Egypt.

There was never an official pantheon for the empire as a whole: hundreds of gods received cult even if some were much more widely worshipped than others. The municipal charters issued to new Latin communities in the west provide some direction. Oaths were to be sworn by Jupiter, by each of the Divi (deified emperors) by name, by the genius of the living emperor and by the Penates. But each community determined for themselves which other gods would receive collective worship.14 The Treveri chose Lenus Mars, the Arverni Mercury, the Athenians continued their cults of Athena and other deities, the inhabitants of Crocodilopolus Sobek and so on. Most communities had major temples to a number of deities, some often given Greek or Roman names, some more transparently alien. The Baalim of Syrian cities had mostly become Zeuses under the rule of Alexander’s Macedonian successors: now they were assimilated to Jupiter so we read inscriptions to Jupiter Optimus Maximus Hierapolitanus or Jupiter Optimus Maximus Dolichenus. There is no sign of any process of formal approval of these choices outside the community itself. Even within the community there was no sense that only the deities mentioned in official inscriptions or whose cults were public funded could be worshipped. Civic cults included the most spectacular rituals performed in most cities, but as far as individuals were concerned no gods had to be worshipped and the worship of none was prohibited.

Even ruler cult was not centrally co-ordinated. Images exist on Egyptian temple walls of Roman Pharaohs worshipping the Apis bull even though Octavian apparently declined to do so.15 Jews and even some Christians prayed for the emperor, even if not to him. Where there were traditions of paying cult to kings and generals, carrying their images in processions, or inserting their names into hymns and prayers this continued with Roman generals and then emperors supplanting their predecessors. A detailed account of civic ritual at Ephesos provides an excellent example of how the names, images and birthdays of emperors were fitted into larger ceremonies and religious spaces.16 Emperors sometimes had their own temples, like those set up in Asian cities which had won the privilege of being neokoroi (temple wardens) for their provincial cult, but often were found cohabiting with more famous and older gods, as theoi sunnaioi.17 Emperors, imperial princes and governors were certainly involved in making some of these arrangements: both in Asia/Bithynia and in the Gallic provinces separate arrangements were made for resident Romans and for the provincial associations (koina or concilia) of local communities, and in both cases members of the imperial family were on hand for the inauguration of the new cults. Military units also payed annual cult to the emperors, led by their commanders, and we have one calendar from Dura Europus on the eastern frontier which preserves what is probably a military transformation of a Roman civic model and includes many imperial anniversaries. Yet none of this was systematic or Empire wide. As late as the middle of the first century AD there were still some places where ruler cult did not take place at the provincial level.18 The diversity of titles—sacerdotes, flamines, Asiarchs, augustales, seviri and the like—and the regional distribution of most of these titles, strongly suggests that local initiatives lay behind the creation of new priesthoods and the rituals they conducted.19 Roman religion came into being through all kinds of bottom-up initiatives and their consequences rather than as a top-down construction from the imperial centre.

There was, in short, no Imperial Religion, no Reichsreligion and no Religionspolitik.20 Nor was there any religious description of the person of the emperor that was widely disseminated or recognised. The nearest thing to an empire-wide object of cult was Jupiter Optimus Maximus, one of the chief deities of the Roman community, the central figure of the triad of deities worshipped since before the Republic was founded on the Capitol.21 The touchstone of oaths in Roman Spain, he became Zeus Kapitolios in Egypt, was associated with endless male chief deities in eastern cities who came to be known as IOM Heliopolitanus, Dolichenus, Hierapolitanus and so on. Jupiter was seated on the top of columns in the Rhineland with Juno Regina, or else was depicted there fighting serpent footed giants. In school rooms across the empire the children of the better off heard Jupiter give Aeneas his mission statement for Rome, and those who had already learned their Greek from Homer recognised in him the cosmic deity of the Iliad. Most Roman gods did not travel far from Italy, but he—along with Mars, Hercules, Mercury, Fortuna, Venus and a few others—got everywhere.22 That unity of focus did not reflect an empire-wide organization of cult, nor any widely held dogma or widely practiced ritual. Simply the chief god of an imperial power became a model everywhere for divine authority.23 But custom (nomos) remained king, as it had been in the time of Herodotus, and nomos was always local, and the Jupiter of Heliopolis was always the chief god of Heliopolis as well as Jupiter.

Religion in the Roman Empire

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