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  2. Suovetaurilia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Suovetaurilia

    The suovetaurilia was an ancient Roman sacrifice where in which a pig, sheep, and a bull were sacrificed.. The suovetaurilia or suovitaurilia was one of the most sacred and traditional rites of Roman religion: the sacrifice of a pig (sus), a sheep (ovis) and a bull (taurus) to the deity Mars to bless and purify land ().

  3. Sacrifice - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacrifice

    The Roman Catholic response is that the sacrifice of the Mass in the New Covenant is that one sacrifice for sins on the cross which transcends time offered in an unbloody manner, as discussed above, and that Christ is the real priest at every Mass working through mere human beings to whom he has granted the grace of a share in his priesthood.

  4. Timeline of human sacrifices - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Timeline_of_human_sacrifices

    216 BC: Second known case of human sacrifice in Ancient Rome: a pair of Vestal Virgins, Gauls, and Greeks were buried alive at Forum Boarium following defeat at Cannae. [10] 114 BC: Last human sacrifice occurred in Roman Republic: pair of Gauls and Greeks were buried alive at Forum Boarium. [10] 97 BC: Roman senate outlawed human sacrifice. [10]

  5. Lustratio - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lustratio

    Lustratio was an ancient Greek and ancient Roman purification ritual. [1] [2] It included a procession and in some circumstances the sacrifice of a pig (sus), a ram (ovis), and a bull (taurus) (suovetaurilia). [3] The name is the source of English "lustration" (a purification).

  6. Rex Sacrorum - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rex_sacrorum

    In ancient Roman religion, the rex sacrorum ("king of the sacred things", also sometimes rex sacrificulus [1]) was a senatorial priesthood [2] reserved for patricians.Although in the historical era, the pontifex maximus was the head of Roman state religion, Festus says [3] that in the ranking of the highest Roman priests (ordo sacerdotum), the rex sacrorum was of highest prestige, followed by ...

  7. Taurobolium - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Taurobolium

    The best-known and most vivid description, though of the quite different taurobolium as it was revived in aristocratic pagan circles, is the notorious one that has coloured early scholarship, which was provided in an anti-pagan poem by the late 4th-century Christian Prudentius in Peristephanon: [9] the priest of the Great Mother, clad in a silk toga worn in the Gabinian cincture, with golden ...

  8. Sacra (ancient Rome) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sacra_(ancient_Rome)

    The sacra publica were undertaken pro populo, i.e., collectively, (1) by the curia, pagi, or vici, into which the community was divided, whence such sacrifices were called sacra popularia; or (2) by the individual gentes and societies, i.e., the sodalitas, to which the superintendence of a particular cult had been committed by the State; or (3) by the magistrates and priests of the Roman State.

  9. Robigalia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Robigalia

    Most animal sacrifice in the public religion of ancient Rome resulted in a communal meal and thus involved domestic animals whose flesh was a normal part of the Roman diet; [7] the dog occurs as a victim most often in magic and private rites for Hecate and other chthonic deities, [8] but was offered publicly at the Lupercalia [9] and two other ...