Culture And Religions During The Roman Empire example essay topic
The following examines two works of fiction that deal with religion during the Roman Empire. The Golden Ass, by Apuleius, is a story of Lucius who talks his lover, the servant of a witch, into stealing him a potion that will temporarily turn him into an owl. Unfortunately it is the wrong potion and he is turned into a jack ass. The antidote for this dilemma is to simply eat roses, but he is dragged off by robbers before he can eat any. After a full year, and many trials and tribulations, he is finally saved by the Egyptian goddess Isis and immediately starts down the path to become initiated into the deepest mysteries of her religion.
The interesting part of this story is the description of the initiation ceremony:" Then the High Priest ordered all uninitiated persons to depart, invested me in a new linen garment and let me by the hand into the inner recesses of the sanctuary itself, I have no doubt, curious reader, that you are eager to know what happened when I entered. If I were allowed to tell you, and you were allowed to be told, you would soon hear everything; but, as it is, my tongue would suffer for its indiscretion and your ears for their inquisitiveness". Not being allowed to tell others what the initiation ceremony entailed is just one of the reasons these are called mystery religions. As Buckler, Hill, and McKay put it, "Once [those who joined] had successfully undergone initiation, they were forbidden to reveal the secrets of the cult. Consequently, modern scholars know comparatively little about their tenets". The story of Lucius underscores this point.
He describes briefly some of the tasks he must accomplish during the 'period of preparation', but does not go into detail as to the initiation ceremony or the tenets of the religion. Without sharing this information, the understanding of this and the majority of these mystery religions died with the last practitioner. The movie King Arthur also deals somewhat with Roman religion. The movie begins with this direct quote, "Historians agree that the classical 15th century tale of King Arthur and his Knights rose from a real hero who lived a thousand years earlier in the period often called the Dark Ages.
Recently discovered archaeological evidence sheds light on his true identity". The movie is trying to portray Lucius Artorius Cast us, leader of a band of Sarmatian Knights, as the actual historical King Arthur. As Higham notes, without better information, the candidacy of Lucius Artorius to be the historical Arthur remains in the realm of speculation. Many historians have tried to deduce the origins of the King Arthur stories, and so the authenticity of this claim will not be discussed here.
Additionally, the actual Pagan religion these Knights believed or participated in is not divulged in the movie. One can speculate that the Sarmatians may have been Zoroastrian in their beliefs, but the actual religion will not be reviewed here. Instead, the interaction between the Christian Arthur and the Pagan Sarmatian knights he leads will be discussed. The story line of the movie is that these Knights have just concluded their 15 years of service to the Roman Empire. At the direction of the Pope, Arthur must lead his Knights on one final task in which they must travel beyond Hadrian's Wall, into enemy territory, to rescue a prominent Roman family and return the son safely to Rome. Arthur agrees to the mission only because it has been requested by the Pope.
Although the Pagan Knights do not care for the papal order, they agree to the mission because they respect Arthur's leadership and they need their discharge papers to safely pass through the Roman territories to return home. Upon reaching the Roman family's farm they discover that the Patriarch of the family has sentenced local Pagans to be jailed, tortured, or left for dead for heresy. This angers both the Knights and Arthur as they cannot believe that any human being would be treated this way regardless of their religion. Although the Knights may have been motivated by a shared religion, Arthur is motivated by sheer humaneness. In both cases during the movie, religion played an important role. The interesting part is that Arthur and his Knights never argue over their respective religions.
They are both tolerant of each others beliefs and their respect has been forged through the battles they have faced during the past 15 years together. The Golden Ass and King Arthur are both fictional stories, which describe the culture and religions during the Roman Empire. The cultural tolerance of religions is part of what allowed the empire to flourish. The symbiotic relationship noted in the words of Marcus Aurelius as he is writing about the Gods may partially explain why this tolerance existed: "As physicians have always their instruments and knives ready for cases which suddenly require their skill, so do you have principles ready for the understanding of things divine and human, and for doing everything, even the smallest, while remembering the bond which unites the divine and human to one another.
For you will not do anything well affecting humans without at the same time referring to things divine; or the contrary". Historians will continue to work to understand the religions of the Roman Empire. The truth will continue to evolve as new archeological evidence is discovered, new translations are formed, and the human race as a whole continues to better understand this important time in history.