taurobolium
Appearance
English
[edit]Alternative forms
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Borrowed from Latin taurobolium, from Ancient Greek ταυροβόλιον (taurobólion).[1]
Noun
[edit]taurobolium (plural taurobolia)
- (historical, ancient Rome) The ritual slaughter of a bull.
- 1927, George La Piana, Foreign Groups in Rome During the First Centuries of the Empire, Harvard University Press, page 300:
- The cult of the Magna Mater, borrowing the civic spirit proper to Roman religion, made of the official taurobolium a manifestation of loyalty to the institutions of the Roman Empire.
- 1968, Phoenix, Volume 22, Classical Association of Canada, University of Toronto Press, page 236,
- It is safe to conclude that the taurobolium at this stage in its development was a substitution rite33 at least in its original and most basic purpose, although it may soon have become an initiatory rite for women.
- 1990, Britt-Mari Näsström, O Mother of the Gods and Men, Plus Ultra, page 42,
- In addition to the gloomy figure of Attis, another spectacular element was connected to the cult of Magna Mater, the rite of the Taurobolium and the Criobolium.
Usage notes
[edit]- The rite was practised from the 2nd to the 4th centuries CE. From the mid-2nd century, it became associated almost exclusively with Roman worship of Cybele, an Anatolian mother goddess whom the Romans called Magna Mater ("Great Mother" [of the Gods]).
- Not to be confused with tauroctony, a modern term for ancient cult reliefs which depict Mithras killing a bull.
Derived terms
[edit]Related terms
[edit]- criobolium (ritual slaughter of a ram)
Translations
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "taurobolium", on Merriam-Webster online.