登陆注册
5561700000358

第358章

Now, when we remember that the liberty allowed to slaves at this festive season was supposed to be an imitation of the state of society in Saturn's time, and that in general the Saturnalia passed for nothing more or less than a temporary revival or restoration of the reign of that merry monarch, we are tempted to surmise that the mock king who presided over the revels may have originally represented Saturn himself. The conjecture is strongly confirmed, if not established, by a very curious and interesting account of the way in which the Saturnalia was celebrated by the Roman soldiers stationed on the Danube in the reign of Maximian and Diocletian. The account is preserved in a narrative of the martyrdom of St. Dasius, which was unearthed from a Greek manuscript in the Paris library, and published by Professor Franz Cumont of Ghent. Two briefer descriptions of the event and of the custom are contained in manuscripts at Milan and Berlin; one of them had already seen the light in an obscure volume printed at Urbino in 1727, but its importance for the history of the Roman religion, both ancient and modern, appears to have been overlooked until Professor Cumont drew the attention of scholars to all three narratives by publishing them together some years ago. According to these narratives, which have all the appearance of being authentic, and of which the longest is probably based on official documents, the Roman soldiers at Durostorum in Lower Moesia celebrated the Saturnalia year by year in the following manner. Thirty days before the festival they chose by lot from amongst themselves a young and handsome man, who was then clothed in royal attire to resemble Saturn. Thus arrayed and attended by a multitude of soldiers he went about in public with full license to indulge his passions and to taste of every pleasure, however base and shameful. But if his reign was merry, it was short and ended tragically; for when the thirty days were up and the festival of Saturn had come, he cut his own throat on the altar of the god whom he personated. In the year A.D. 303 the lot fell upon the Christian soldier Dasius, but he refused to play the part of the heathen god and soil his last days by debauchery. The threats and arguments of his commanding officer Bassus failed to shake his constancy, and accordingly he was beheaded, as the Christian martyrologist records with minute accuracy, at Durostorum by the soldier John on Friday the twentieth day of November, being the twenty-fourth day of the moon, at the fourth hour.

Since this narrative was published by Professor Cumont, its historical character, which had been doubted or denied, has received strong confirmation from an interesting discovery. In the crypt of the cathedral which crowns the promontory of Ancona there is preserved, among other remarkable antiquities, a white marble sarcophagus bearing a Greek inscription, in characters of the age of Justinian, to the following effect: Here lies the holy martyr Dasius, brought from Durostorum. The sarcophagus was transferred to the crypt of the cathedral in 1848 from the church of San Pellegrino, under the high altar of which, as we learn from a Latin inscription let into the masonry, the martyr's bones still repose with those of two other saints. How long the sarcophagus was deposited in the church of San Pellegrino, we do not know; but it is recorded to have been there in the year 1650. We may suppose that the saint's relics were transferred for safety to Ancona at some time in the troubled centuries which followed his martyrdom, when Moesia was occupied and ravaged by successive hordes of barbarian invaders. At all events it appears certain from the independent and mutually confirmatory evidence of the martyrology and the monuments that Dasius was no mythical saint, but a real man, who suffered death for his faith at Durostorum in one of the early centuries of the Christian era. Finding the narrative of the nameless martyrologist thus established as to the principal fact recorded, namely, the martyrdom of St.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 电竞大神超Q的

    电竞大神超Q的

    #惊!季氏财团太子爷疑似曝光恋情!有图有真相!#面对来自自家岳父的深渊凝视,一向纨绔嚣张的季大少乖巧ing毕竟心怀不轨是真,拐跑人家闺女是实。在她面前则是展开一系列的强势攻略,一不小心就会被一口吞掉。当他的大神马甲曝光时,全民彻底沸腾了起来,当看到大神的菜鸡女友只会追在身后要人头时,纷纷鄙夷,酸味满天飞。某大神挑眉:我乐意宠,不行?柠檬树下你和我,一起来做柠檬精~当菜鸡小女友的马甲被扒时,众人望着依旧追在大神身后菜操作的某女,彻底陷入了沉默之中,原谅他们不懂大神的世界!【这是一个俩大佬互拆马甲的故事,甜宠为主!】
  • 缘来半生终淡忘

    缘来半生终淡忘

    “多谢公子救命之恩,小女子无以回报,不如以身相许?”第一回,他救下她,她逗趣的调侃,被他厉声斥回。“多谢公子救命之恩,小女子无以回报,不如……”第二回,两人重逢,日久生情下她再次侃言,却不料话还未说完,一记香吻就先堵住了她的唇。“多谢公子救命之恩,小女子无以回报,唯一…以命相抵。”第三回,新婚前夜他领命赴沙场。她苦等三年载,却只等回他迟来的死讯她换上三年前的嫁衣,奔赴他死守的沙场,三年的思念化作一滴相思泪,三年的痛楚,一言难道尽:“你愿为天下人而死,为何不愿为我而活?”
  • 纵宠将门毒妃

    纵宠将门毒妃

    前世算尽天下,却错信身边之人,最终落得剜腹取子,滚油烫喉,挖眼割舌的下场!再次睁眼,回到十二岁那一年,她冷笑:这一世,要你们百倍偿还!说她命犯孤煞?不好意思,姐只会是天生凤女!要封她为七皇子妃?擦,让那个劳什子七皇子走远点,姐不稀罕!不过,谁能告诉她,这位骚包世子是哪里来的?她不过是年幼无知之时救了他一次,他便紧跟着她,向她邀宠,美其名曰给她面子。话说,咱不要这面子行不行?
  • 隐歌雀

    隐歌雀

    《隐歌雀》收入短篇小说14篇。异人异事的悬疑故事:阴森的《石堂食经》,跨越阴阳两界的出差;虚构另类文学史:涵盖一切小说的检索表,富含奇思妙想的诗;匪夷所思的日常经验:参加诡异的婚礼,探寻稀奇的鸟类……“他们关于这个世界只能说出很少的一部分,可世界仍然一息不停地在他们身边运转、旋转,像是目不暇接的走马灯。”
  • 现代护理管理进展集萃

    现代护理管理进展集萃

    编者以我国护理管理实践为基础,注重理论联系实际,力求反映护理管理学科新知识和新进展,全面介绍了当今护理管理的新理论、新观念及热点问题,内容涵盖护理管理基础知识、管理理论与原理;管理职能方面讲述了人力资源、领导、控制等内容;在管理质量方面涉及了护理质量管理、护理业务技术管理、护理安全与风险和质量持续改进的控制方法和评价策略。
  • 资暇集

    资暇集

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 豪门虐恋:华尔街女王

    豪门虐恋:华尔街女王

    一夜的委屈与荒唐,让原本前程似锦的她,被推上风口浪尖。未婚妈妈的身份丢尽安家的脸面。于是她背负着驱逐、唾弃和放弃,逃离出这个城市。去到美国,她以为这是新的开始,却不料这是一次新的沦陷。当经历一切磨难,她放弃了所有,善意、爱情。六年时间,她把自己变成华尔街最具神话的银行家。
  • 追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    追妻无门:女boss不好惹

    青涩蜕变,如今她是能独当一面的女boss,爱了冷泽聿七年,也同样花了七年时间去忘记他。以为是陌路,他突然向他表白,扬言要娶她,她只当他是脑子抽风,他的殷勤她也全都无视。他帮她查她父母的死因,赶走身边情敌,解释当初拒绝她的告别,和故意对她冷漠都是无奈之举。突然爆出她父母的死居然和冷家有丝毫联系,还莫名跳出个公爵未婚夫,扬言要与她履行婚约。峰回路转,破镜还能重圆吗? PS:我又开新文了,每逢假期必书荒,新文《有你的世界遇到爱》,喜欢我的文的朋友可以来看看,这是重生类现言,对这个题材感兴趣的一定要收藏起来。
  • 王子和女巫

    王子和女巫

    王子阿拉里克多年来一直在寻找一名救过自己性命的女巫,当时他还是个孩子,正遭受怪物的攻击。旅途中的阿拉里克遇见了美丽的女巫,凯伦……
  • 日月再临

    日月再临

    三料博士朱海涛穿越到了1780年的南洋,面对着这个工业革命的前夜,他开启了第一次工业革命,吞并南洋,消灭满清,将华夏文明照耀于坤舆万国之间