Temple of Juno Caelestis, Carthage

Last updated
Tanit ibiza Tanit ibiza.jpg
Tanit ibiza

Temple of Juno Caelestis was a temple in Carthage, constructed in the 2nd century AD and closed in 399. [1] It was converted to a Christian church in 399 and was destroyed in 421. No remains of the temple has been found.

Contents

It was one of the biggest buildings of Roman Carthage as well as one of its biggest holy sites. The temple was dedicated to the indigenous goddess Tanit in her Roman shape of Juno, who was the protective city goddess of Carthage was well as one of the most worshipped deities in North Africa. [2] The temple was not just a dominant institution of Carthage, but one of the major holy sites of the Roman Empire, and a destination of pilgrims from the empire.

During the 4th-and 5th-centuries, the temple played a central role in the religious conflict between Pagans and Christians. It was a symbol of Paganism in Carthage and targeted by the Christians. In 399 it was converted to the cathedral of the newly Christian Carthage. It was destroyed by the Christians in 421 under big protests from the Pagans, an act viewed as the victory of Christianity over Paganism.

History

Foundation and function

Carthage was destroyed by Rome in 146 BC, but re-founded as the Roman Carthage in 49 BC.

The temple of Juno Caelestis was founded on the order of emperor Marcus Aurelius, which gives a date for its founded to between 161 and 180 AD. It was founded by the city forum, and became one of the main buildings of the city, dominating Carthage.

It was a massive building with several buildings in a holy tempel area. The temple building itself was constructed in a park with trees, which was referred to as the biggest open site within the city of Carthage. [1] The temple lay in the middle of the temple park and contained a monumental cult statue of the Goddess, who was sculptured with the sun and the moon above her head, holding a copucornia from which seeds of the pomegranate as well as other fruits flowed, symbolising the fertility of the earth and humanity. [1]

The temple was dedicated to the Goddess Juno Caelestis, which was the Roman name for the popular indigenous Goddess Tanit according to Interpretatio graeca. Tanit was the most popular deity among the indigenous population of the province; for the Roman colonists, Juno was a main deity and Queen of the Gods; and for the inhabitants of Carthage in general, the Goddess Juno Caelestis was the protective city goddess. [2] She was also referred to as Caelestis Afrorum Dea. [1]

All of the combined factors, and the importance of the Goddess of all major categories of people in the province, contributed to making the goddess and hertemple a major place of worship, and the temple became one of the most notable in Carthage and a center of the religious life of the city and province. [2] It also came to be one of the major places of worship in the Roman Empire, since belief in the Goddess expanded around the empire with Roman soldiers. [1] People were known to have worshipped to Goddess in all North Africa and Spain, making the temple a destination for pilgrimages, particularly during times of hardship. [1]

The temple had its own clergy, composed of both male priests, [3] priestesses, chorists and oracles. [1] Priests and chorists performed public holy rituals around the city, and the Oracle Priestesses of the Goddess were claimed to have been given the ability to make predictions by the Goddess. [1]

Religious conflict, closure and destruction

During the 4th-century, the temple, arguably the biggest Pagan place of worship in Carthage, became a target of criticism from the growing Christian minority. Augustine of Hippo is known as one of the major antagonists of the temple, and described it in his polemic writings.

During the 4th-century, the Roman Empire became Christian. However, the city of Carthage was known for its many pious Pagan adherents. During the persecution of pagans in the late Roman Empire, the Pagans of Carthage were persecuted by Christians. Carthage, being a stronghold of Pagans, became a scene of intense conflict between Christians and Pagans, and the Pagan holy sites of the city became targeted by Christian zealots. The temple of Juno Caelestis, being the biggest Pagan temple of Carthage, was particularly targeted by Christians, and defended by Pagans. It thus played a leading role in the religious conflicts of Carthage.

Eventually, all Pagan religious were banned in the Roman Empire, and the Pagan religious places of worship were closed. In 399, the temple of Juno Caelestis in Carthage was closed by force on order of the emperor. The temple was functioning as an active place of worship until its closure, and the closure was met with protests from the Pagan inhabitants of Carthage.

The temple was given to the Christians. The cult statue of the Goddess was destroyed. The temple was converted to a Christian church, and Bishop Aurelius of Carthage inaugurated it as the Christian cathedral of Carthage. The closure of the temple of Juno Caelestis, was followed by attacks and destruction of the other non-Christian holy sites of worship in Carthage. [3] In the 401 Church Council of Carthage, the church fathers of Carthage under the leadership Bishop Aurelius wrote to the emperor and recommended him to order the destruction of all Pagan statues, including those kept in parks and gardens. [3]

Twenty years after the closure of the temple, the city of Carthage still had Pagans protesting to the discrimination they were subjected to, and asked for the return of their temple. This was a fact that contributed to the final destruction of the temple. In 421, the Pagans of Carthage addressed the emperor and asked for the return of their temple, claiming that they had been given an oracle message from the Goddess to this effect. [3] The same year, not long after this request, the emperor ordered the former temple (then in use as Christian cathedral), to be dismantled. [3]

Under the direction of the Imperial tribune Ursus, who were sent to Carthage by the emperor to address the continuing religious tensions in the city and persecute Paganism and Manichaeism, [2] the temple and all buildings belonging to the temple area complex was deliberately dismantled and made in to a Christian cemetery. [3] This was a part of a campaign in which all remaining Pagan monuments in the city was destroyed as well. [2]

Aftermath and legacy

The templet is known from the polemic Christian writings targeted toward it in its role as a Pagan center during the 4th- and 5th-centuries, such as the writings of Augustine of Hippo.

The destruction of the temple was viewed as a triumph by Christianity over Paganism:

"No craftsman will ever again make the idols that Christ has smished ... so consider what power this Caelestis [sc. Goddess of the Skies] used to enjoy here at Carthage. What were the kingdoms of this earth?" [4]

Augustin wrote the well known reflection:

"The kingdoms of idols, the kingdoms of deamons are broken.... How great was the power of Caelestis which was in Carthage! Where is now the kingdom of Caelestis?" [1]

Quodvultdeus described the temple in detailed in his Liber promissionum et praedicatorum. [5]

Related Research Articles

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Julian (emperor)</span> Roman emperor from 361 to 363

Julian was the Caesar of the West from 355 to 360 and Roman emperor from 361 to 363, as well as a notable philosopher and author in Greek. His rejection of Christianity, and his promotion of Neoplatonic Hellenism in its place, caused him to be remembered as Julian the Apostate in Christian tradition. He is sometimes referred to as Julian the Philosopher.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Paganism</span> Polytheistic religious groups

Paganism is a term first used in the fourth century by early Christians for people in the Roman Empire who practiced polytheism, or ethnic religions other than Judaism. In the time of the Roman Empire, individuals fell into the pagan class either because they were increasingly rural and provincial relative to the Christian population, or because they were not milites Christi. Alternative terms used in Christian texts were hellene, gentile, and heathen. Ritual sacrifice was an integral part of ancient Greco-Roman religion and was regarded as an indication of whether a person was pagan or Christian. Paganism has broadly connoted the "religion of the peasantry".

The 390s decade ran from January 1, 390 to December 31, 399

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Juno (mythology)</span> Ancient Roman goddess of marriage and childbirth

Juno was an ancient Roman goddess, the protector and special counsellor of the state. She was equated to Hera, queen of the gods in Greek mythology and a goddess of love and marriage. A daughter of Saturn and Ops, she was the sister and wife of Jupiter and the mother of Mars, Vulcan, Bellona, Lucina and Juventas. Like Hera, her sacred animal was the peacock. Her Etruscan counterpart was Uni, and she was said to also watch over the women of Rome. As the patron goddess of Rome and the Roman Empire, Juno was called Regina ("Queen") and was a member of the Capitoline Triad, centered on the Capitoline Hill in Rome, and also including Jupiter, and Minerva, goddess of wisdom.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Astarte</span> Middle Eastern goddess, worshipped from the Bronze Age through classical antiquity

Astarte is the Hellenized form of the Ancient Near Eastern goddess ʿAṯtart. ʿAṯtart was the Northwest Semitic equivalent of the East Semitic goddess Ishtar.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Tanit</span> Goddess of Carthage

Tanit or Tinnit was a Carthaginian Punic goddess, and the chief deity of Ancient Carthage, alongside her consort Baal Hammon.

<i>Taurobolium</i> Practice of a ritual sacrifice of a bull

In the Roman Empire of the second to fourth centuries, taurobolium referred to practices involving the sacrifice of a bull, which after mid-second century became connected with the worship of the Great Mother of the Gods; though not previously limited to her cult, after AD 159 all private taurobolia inscriptions mention the Magna Mater.

Desecration is the act of depriving something of its sacred character, or the disrespectful, contemptuous, or destructive treatment of that which is held to be sacred or holy by a group or individual.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Roman Carthage</span> City of ancient Rome

Roman Carthage was an important city in ancient Rome, located in modern-day Tunisia.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Historiography of the Christianization of the Roman Empire</span>

The growth of Christianity from its obscure origin c. 40 AD, with fewer than 1,000 followers, to being the majority religion of the entire Roman Empire by AD 400, has been examined through a wide variety of historiographical approaches.

In historiography, the Later Roman Empire traditionally spans the period from 284 to 641 in the history of the Roman Empire.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Christianity and paganism</span>

Paganism is commonly used to refer to various religions that existed during Antiquity and the Middle Ages, such as the Greco-Roman religions of the Roman Empire, including the Roman imperial cult, the various mystery religions, religious philosophies such as Neoplatonism and Gnosticism, and more localized ethnic religions practiced both inside and outside the empire. During the Middle Ages, the term was also adapted to refer to religions practiced outside the former Roman Empire, such as Germanic paganism, Egyptian paganism and Baltic paganism.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Persecution of pagans in the late Roman Empire</span> Late Roman Empire persecution of pagans

Persecution of pagans in the late Roman Empire began during the reign of Constantine the Great in the military colony of Aelia Capitolina (Jerusalem), when he destroyed a pagan temple for the purpose of constructing a Christian church. Rome had periodically confiscated church properties, and Constantine was vigorous in reclaiming them whenever these issues were brought to his attention. Christian historians alleged that Hadrian had constructed a temple to Venus on the site of the crucifixion of Jesus on Golgotha hill in order to suppress Christian veneration there. Constantine used that to justify the temple's destruction, saying he was simply reclaiming the property. Using the vocabulary of reclamation, Constantine acquired several more sites of Christian significance in the Holy Land.

The persecution of pagans under Theodosius I began in 381, after the first couple of years of his reign as co-emperor in the eastern part of the Roman Empire. In the 380s, Theodosius I reiterated the ban of Constantine the Great on animal sacrifices, prohibited haruspicy on animal sacrifice, pioneered the criminalization of magistrates who did not enforce anti-pagan laws, broke up some pagan associations and destroyed pagan temples.

The restoration of paganism from Julian until Valens was a brief period, from 361 until 375, of relative tolerance towards pagans in the Roman Empire. In the late Roman Empire, it was preceded by a period of persecutions under Emperor Constantius II and was followed by those of Emperor Gratian. The attempt of Emperor Julian the Apostate to restore pagan worship in the empire, while ultimately a policy failure, restored security to pagans. His immediate successors, under the reigns of Jovian, Valens and Valentinian I, had a policy of relative religious toleration towards paganism.

The religious policies of Constantius II were a mixture of toleration for some pagan practices and repression for other pagan practices. He also sought to advance the Arian or Semi-Arianian heresy within Christianity. These policies may be contrasted with the religious policies of his father, Constantine the Great, whose Catholic orthodoxy was espoused in the Nicene Creed and who largely tolerated paganism in the Roman Empire. Constantius also sought to repress Judaism.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Anti-paganism policies of the early Byzantine Empire</span> Anti-paganism of the Byzantine Empire

The anti-paganism policies of the early Byzantine Empire ranged from 395 till 567. Anti-paganism laws were enacted by the Byzantine Emperors Arcadius, Honorius, Theodosius II, Marcian and Leo I the Thracian. They reiterated previous legal bans, especially on pagan religious rites and sacrifices and increased the penalties for their practice. The pagan religions had still many followers but they were increasingly obliged to keep under cover to formally comply with the edicts. Significant support for paganism was present among Roman nobles, senators, magistrates, imperial palace officers, and other officials.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Temple of Juno Caelestis (Dougga)</span>

The Temple of Juno Caelestis is an archaeological site in Dougga, Tunisia. The ruined temple was dedicated to the Roman goddess Juno, herself an evolution of the Punic goddess Tanit. The temple was built between AD 222 and 235, and is one of the best preserved temples dedicated to Juno in Africa.

<span class="mw-page-title-main">Sanctuary of Thinissut</span> Archaeological site in Tunisia

The Sanctuary of Thinissut is an archaeological site located in Tunisia, whose excavation started in the early 20th century. It is situated in the present-day locality of Bir Bouregba in the Cap Bon region, approximately five kilometers from the town of Hammamet and sixty kilometers southeast of the capital, Tunis.

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 McHugh, J. S. (2015). The Emperor Commodus: God and Gladiator. (n.p.): Pen & Sword Books.
  2. 1 2 3 4 5 Shaw, B. D. (2011). Sacred Violence: African Christians and Sectarian Hatred in the Age of Augustine. Storbritannien: Cambridge University Press.
  3. 1 2 3 4 5 6 Benko, S. (2004). The Virgin Goddess: Studies in the Pagan and Christian Roots of Mariology. Nederländerna: Brill. 40-41
  4. Shaw, B. D. (2011). Sacred Violence: African Christians and Sectarian Hatred in the Age of Augustine. Storbritannien: Cambridge University Press. 234
  5. Quodvultdeus of Carthage: The Creedal Homilies : Conversion in Fifth-century North Africa. (2004). USA: Newman Press. 15