(Essay 2) Private Religion in Pompeii: An examination of two lararia from Pompeii by Francesca Tronetti, Ph.D.

Two Lararia from Pompeii

            The intermingling of deities, both insiders and outsiders,

is most evident in private contexts, where no formal stricture

limited personal religious expression, most notably in the

household shrines that formed the locus of cult in Roman

 domestic worship[1].

            Boyce wrote that the lararium of the shop[2] (Corpus, no. 499) was decorated with pained images, “the Genius and, below him, a single serpent; to the left of the door is Mercury between a cock and an omphalos[3] around which a serpent is coiled.”  In this lararium, we find an image of the genius of the household; the serpent found in most lararia coiled around an omphalos, a stone representing the navel of the world; and Mercury, the god of wealth and luck.   Since this lararium is located within a shop, the worship of the god Mercury would be used to draw his blessing to the shop and to bring about good trade and wealth.  The genius, an inherited god, may indicate that ownership of this shop is passed on from father to son.  Therefore, the genius is there to watch over the family’s holding and protect it for another generation.

Picture of lararium from the Case dei Vetti. Image taken from http://cti.itc.virginia.edu/~jjd5t/region-vi/vettii/vettii-table1.html

            According to Boyce, the lararium found in the Casa dei Vetti (Corpus no. 211) is, “one of the largest, and at the same time finest lararia in Pompeii, consisting of a lararium painting within an aedicule.” Situated on the western wall of the smaller atrium, the aedicule, small shrine is flanked by two Corinthian half-columns and is surrounded on three sides by three bands of elaborate stucco ornamentation in red, blue and yellow. The lararium painting found on the back wall of the aedicule is done on a white background. 

            In the center of the painting is the genius, a young man wearing toga with purple border drawn over his head.  Flanking the genius are wreathed Lares, each wearing a white tunic with a purple sash.  Underneath this image is that of a bearded serpent with a brown back and a yellow belly that “glides through plants towards a square alter,” painted at the right edge of the image.  From the elaborate decoration and display on lararium we can assume that the worship of deities was influenced by how much a family could afford to spend on the lararium.  That while there were commonly depicted figures, those who could afford to pay artists to decorate their lararium, possibly to bring great fortune from the gods they worshipped.

Conclusion

            We cannot say with certainty that in the ancient Roman world, the worship of specific deities was restricted to those of different classes or occupations.  Some conclusions can be drawn, however, as to why various gods were represented in a lararium, what they meant, and why a lararium might contain them.  If the shop was owned by the individual who worked in it, then the deities in the lararium have specific meanings attached to them besides merely the bringing of wealth.  The genius would have represented the head of the household who might have worked there and his desire to pass the shop onto his heirs after his death.  The depiction of Mercury is part of this desire to continue the family work as Mercury would bring wealth and new trading opportunities to the owner.

            The lararium from the Casa dei Vetti, a large household, shows elaborate images of the Lares and the genius, along with the more familiar depiction of the serpent.  It does not show, however, pictures of personal deities.  We can draw some conclusions about this lararium by examining others and from the statuettes contained in them, as well as those statuettes that were taken by people as they fled the city.  We can make the argument that in these lararium members of the household most likely had statuettes of personal deities displayed on the shelf of the shrine.  That these statuettes could change when a son succeeded his father, or if the family took on a new personal protector.  Also, the individual deities could change while the essential household deities, the Lares and genius, would remain constant, always watching over and protecting the family.

            In examining a lararium, the researcher must remember several essential facts to grasp the complexities of religion and worship in the ancient Roman world.  First, that there were several levels of religious practice; public, cult and private.  Second, that as the Roman Empire expanded, the people incorporated new gods into the pantheon of deities for cultic and private worship.  And third, that the secret religion that took place in the home was individual to the pater of the house. 

            The main lararium, if there were two, contained the Lares and the genius of the head of the household and not that of the servants or slaves.  Within this lararium would probably have been statuettes which may or may not be present.  The statuettes of deities, if they are found, may have replaced the previous gods of the pater’s father.  Or even have been replaced at some point by the pater.  So, unless one is examining a recently uncovered lararium or one in which all statuettes and objects were still present, we cannot say for sure what statues were housed in the lararium.  While there were common elements to most lararia; the Lares, Penates and genius, there did not exist a standard way of worship within the home.  The private worship of deities was a personal matter for the individual based upon their needs and beliefs.

            Again, the creation and use of altars from Pompeii are very similar to home altars kept by worshippers today. Images of saints, statues of deities, offerings, and candles, the items of reverence on an altar will change as the needs of the person change or as their situation changes. A pregnant woman might make offerings to a deity or saint to keep her safe and healthy; a person moving for a job may ask for protection during their trip. Household religious practice has never been an unchanging, stagnant, daily ritual. It is a living religion that grows or diminishes, depending on the practitioner.

(End of the essay)

(Meet Mago Contributor Francesca Tronetti)


[1] Ibid. 255

[2] While I could find no pictures of this lararium, the website www.pompeiinpictures.com does have two pictures of the shop that one may view in order to picture where the lararium was built in relation to the rest of the shop.  .

[3] An omphalos is a stone religious artifact often used to depict a navel/the navel of the world.


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