pontifex maximus

Roman religious official

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Assorted References

  • office held by Augustus
    • Augustus
      In Augustus: Expansion of the empire of Augustus

      …religion, the chief priest (pontifex maximus). In the same year, Agrippa, too, died. Augustus compelled his widow, Julia, to marry Tiberius against both their wishes. During the next three years, however, Tiberius was away in the field, reducing Pannonia up to the middle Danube, while his brother Drusus crossed…

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    • Roman Forum
      In ancient Rome: The establishment of the principate under Augustus

      …when Lepidus died, he became pontifex maximus (he had long since been elected into all of the priestly colleges); in 8 bc the 8th month of the year was named after him; in 2 bc he was designated pater patriae (“father of his country”), a distinction that he particularly esteemed…

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  • rejection by Gratian
    • In Gratian

      …church, he omitted the words pontifex maximus (“supreme priest”) from his title—the first Roman ruler to do so—and ordered the removal of the pagan statue of Victory from the Senate in Rome. An embassy of the senators, led by Quintus Aurelius Symmachus, failed to persuade him to rescind his instructions…

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role in

    • Christianity
      • mosaic: Christianity
        In Christianity: The views of Eusebius of Caesarea

        …played the role of the pontifex maximus (high priest) in the state cult—took the central position within the church as well. He summoned the synods of bishops, “as though he had been appointed bishop by God,” presided over the synods, and granted judicial power for the empire to their decisions.…

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      • St. Peter's Basilica
        In Roman Catholicism: Internal factors

        …the title “supreme priest” (pontifex maximus), which had been the prerogative of the emperor, now devolved upon the pope. The transfer of the capital also occasioned a dispute between Rome (“Old Rome”) and Constantinople (“New Rome”) over whether the new capital should be entitled to a commensurate ecclesiastical preeminence…

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    • Roman priesthood
      • Temple of Diana
        In Roman religion: Priests

        The chief priest, the pontifex maximus (the head of the state clergy), was an elected official and not chosen from the existing pontifices. The augures, whose name may have been derived from the practice of magic in fertility rites and perhaps meant “increasers,” had the task of discovering whether…

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    • Roman religion and politics
      • In flamen

        …class and supervised by the pontifex maximus, or chief priest, the flamines had a distinctive dress, its outstanding feature being the apex, a conical cap. They offered daily sacrifices, and their lives were regulated by strict rules and taboos. The priests’ wives, the flaminicae, served as their assistants and were…

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      • In pontifex

        …emerge into prominence under a pontifex maximus, or supreme priest, who took over the king’s duties as chief administrator of religious law. During the republican period the number of pontifices increased until by the time of Julius Caesar there were 16. Included in the collegium were also the rex sacrorum,

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      • mass
        In priesthood: Ancient Greece and Rome

        …life, subordinate only to the pontifex maximus, who was the head of the college of pontifices (“advisors on the sacred law”) and flamines (“priests devoted to a particular god”), 3 of whom were assigned to the gods Jupiter, Mars, and Quirinus, the remaining 12 to other deities. The flamen Dialis,…

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    • Vestal Virgin selection
      • A Vestal Virgin, marble; in the Museo Nazionale Romano, Rome.
        In Vestal Virgins

        …6 and 10 by the pontifex maximus (“chief priest”), Vestal Virgins served for 30 years, during which time they had to remain virgins. Afterward they could marry, but few did. Those chosen as Vestal Virgins had to be of the required age, be freeborn of freeborn and respectable parents (though…

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