The Mother Goddess of Rome

And Her Controversial Religion

Dear Classical Wisdom Reader,

We’re a little early with this one…

Sometimes our schedule here at Classical Wisdom works out quite neatly, when big dates from the ancient or modern world line up just right with our regularly scheduled mailings.

Yet today, we’re a just little bit ahead of the curve.

This weekend sees Mother’s Day in the US and other parts of the world (although not in others, so don’t panic if you’re in the UK or Ireland!).

So to celebrate, we’re looking at the Magna Mater (or ‘great mother’) of ancient Rome. Discover her controversial religion, how it was embraced at a time of crisis in Rome, and how that embrace seemingly turned around Rome’s fortunes…

So maybe Magna Mater knows best, after all!

All the best,

Sean Kelly

Managing Editor

Classical Wisdom

Magna Mater: The Great Mother of Rome

by Ed Whelan

It’s no secret that religious festivals played a crucial role in life in ancient Rome. One of the most remarkable was the Megalesia, which was celebrated in the Republican and Imperial era. Dedicated to a goddess known as Magna Mater (literally ‘great mother’ in Latin), the event was a shocking affair for many Romans because of its strange ceremonies and eunuch priests. The festival honored the goddess, yet also served several other important functions which were key to Roman identity.

Who Was the Magna Mater?

The Magna Mater was an ancient Anatolian goddess believed to have originated in prehistoric fertility cults, and her worship may date back to the Neolithic period. In Phrygia (modern-day western Turkey) and elsewhere she was known as Cybele, but in Rome she became known as the Great Mother.

She can be understood to be an earth goddess, and her cult had aspects of a mystery religion. Like the famous Eleusinian Mysteries, devotees were initiated into her mysteries and granted secret knowledge.

The mother goddess was often depicted as traveling in a lion-drawn chariot. She was served by eunuch priests, and her worship was often controversial because of the wild behavior of her followers. For instance, self-castration was often practiced by her male followers. 

The Origin of the Megalesia

So, how did this religion become so prominent in Rome?

During the Second Punic War (218 to 201 BC), Hannibal ravaged Italy. In 205 BC, the Romans were terrified by portents indicating imminent defeat and famine. In desperation, they consulted the Sibylline Books, a set of oracular writings. The religious advisors interpreted the books as stating that Rome must worship the Cybele. Diplomatic negotiations began to bring the goddess from Phrygia to Rome. She arrived in the city in the form of a black meteoric stone from the ancient city of Pessinos. 

Yet Roman worship of the Magna Mater was controversial. Despite this, the majority of the population eventually embraced the cult in part because, once Cybele was brought to Rome, the tide of the war against Hannibal did indeed turn. The mother goddess cult soon became a state religion, and the religious authorities in Rome decided to hold a festival in her honor. Her worship eventually spread throughout much of the empire.

The Megalesia Festival

The Romans initiated an annual celebration of the mother goddess in 191/192 BC, which commenced after the construction of a temple in her honor by Marcus Junius Brutus. The festival, which was funded by the state, began on April 4th and lasted several days. The event included sacred plays and other entertainment likely staged in the Great Mother’s Temple. These sacred dramas were based on the story of Cybele and her eunuch consort Attis. 

During the Megalesia, the cult image of the Magna Mater was carried in a public procession. This process was decidedly unlike anything else in Roman religion, whose rituals were often austere and restrained. The procession was accompanied by eunuch priests and dancers dressed as warriors. A crowned image of the goddess was drawn in a replica of her lion-chariot, and on April 10, a cult image of the mother goddess was taken to the racetrack, where chariot races were staged in her honor.

During the festival, Roman nobles would spend lavishly on entertainment and banquets. The festival became infamous for riotous and outrageous behavior. The religious procession and the celebrations of the eunuch priests were never fully accepted by members of the Roman elite, particularly the conservatives. It was seen by many as primarily a festival of the plebeians, or common people.

The popularity of this festival, however, and the worship of the Magna Mater is evident in the establishment of a ‘Holy Week’ of sacrifices and celebrations. This were held in March in honor of the goddess, and is often regarded as an extension of the Megalesia festival. 

The Holy Week festival was based on the myths of the Magna Mater and her consort and involved ritual castration and whipping on the so-called ‘Day of Blood’.  It is possible that versions of the Megalesia were also celebrated in the provinces of the Roman Empire.

The Function Of the Festival

The festival was primarily a religious event. Many ancient commentators saw the festival as honoring the Sibylline Oracles. The Oracles were seen as correct to recommend the adoption of the cult, as it helped Rome survive the crisis of the Second Punic War. 

The festival also served other social functions. Many prominent Roman families claimed Trojan descent and because the goddess was associated with Phrygia—the homeland of the Trojans—they used the event to emphasize their claimed origins. In this way, they demonstrated their ancestry and social status, which in turn helped legitimize their rule. 

For the lower classes, the festival served to affirm their collective identity. At one point, the populist leader Clodius tried to control of the festival in a challenge to patrician control of the city. However, Cicero later successfully prosecuted Clodius for sacrilege.  

Conclusion

The arrival of the goddess in Rome and subsequent worship there was thought to have saved Rome at a time of crisis. Ultimately, the Megalesia festival not only served an important religious role in Roman life, but also played a political and social role. While the festival was popular among both the plebeians and the patricians, it was viewed with suspicion by some.

Yet the origin of the mother goddess at the center of it is thought to be far more ancient than even Rome itself.

References:

Beard, Mary, North, John and Price, Simon (1998). Religions of Rome. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.