Lararium
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· Ancient Rome
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Lararium -
Acerra - Gutus - Patera
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Making a Lararium
Contents |
Variety of Forms
The forms of Lararium varied greatly. Rich homes might have a huge affair of carved marble which looked rather like a temple in miniature. In other homes the Lararium might only be a simple wooden cabinet or wall shelf. Big or small, the important thing about a Lararium is that it should be permanent rather than something to be put away when the rites are not being held.
A lararium, properly speaking, is a shrine for theLares. During the Republic there does not seem to have been any statues used to represent the Lares, since they were considered more as ancestors. The death masks of ancestors were stored in boxes, hung on a wall near the entrance of the house, and it might possibly be that lararium meant something like a foyer where these were kept. Today it would be comparable to having photographs of your ancestors at your lararium. Beginning in the fourth century BCE certain patrician families assumed divine heritages and thus may have begun to include images of a Lar familiaris such as Venus, but these would still have been regarded there as an ancestor.
Tools used at the lararium
- Acerra Container for incense.
- Salinum Container for salt.
- Gutus Container for milk or wine.
- Patera Offering dish.
- Incense An offering to the gods.
- Turibulum Incense burner.
- Lucerna Sacred lamp.
Examples
