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Vesta was the virgin goddess of home and hearth in Roman mythology, analogous to Hestia in Greek mythology.
Deity
Vesta was introduced in Rome by King Numa Pompilius. She was a native Roman deity (some authors suggest
received from the Sabin cults), presumably the daughter of Saturn and Opi (or Rea).
However, the similarity with the cult of Greek Hestia is notable. Vesta too protected the familiar harmony and, extensively, the
State. Apollo and Neptune had asked for her in marriage, but she refused both,
preferring to preserve her virginity, whose symbol was the perpetually lit
"fire" in her temple.
Vestales
The fire was guarded by her priestesses, the Vestales. Every March 1 the fire was renewed. It burned until AD
394, when the Emperor Theodosius I forbade public pagan
worship. One of the Vestales was Rea
Silvia, who with Mars conceived Romulus and Remus (see founding
of Rome).
The Vestales were one of the few full time clergy positions in Roman religion. They had to observe absolute chastity for 30 years (they were also called the Vestal virgins). They could not show excessive care of their
person, and they must not let the fire go out. If a Vestal broke her vow of chastity before the 30 years were up, she was
condemned to be buried alive in the Campus Sceleris (camp of damned people); this is what probably happened to Rea
Silvia.
The Vestales wore a tunica, a simple dress that they used for both the temple
and everyday life (people in Rome usually dressed one way at home and another for the outdoors). In Italian, the
vestaglia (dressing-gown) is named after the clothes worn by the Vestales.
Celebrated
Vesta was celebrated at the Vestalia,
June 7 to 15. On the first day of the
festivities the penus Vestae (the sanctum sanctorum of her temple) was opened, for the only time during the year, for women to offer
sacrifices in.
See also
- Roman religion: Roman festivals, Roman mythology,
Founding of Rome, Hestia,
Caca, Juturna, Vestal Virgin, Sacred fire of
Vesta, Similarities between Roman, Greek, and Etruscan mythologies,
Religious prostitution
- Other: Rhea Silvia, Romanian mythology, Pontifex
Maximus, List of deities, Amulius
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