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Traditional Lupercal Cave
'A certain wild association of Lupercalian brothers, both plainly pastoral and savage, whose rustic alliance was formed before civilization and laws...' (Cael. 26)
Cicero describes the Luperci
The Lupercalia was celebrated on the fifteenth day before the kalends of March (February 15th). One unusual aspect of this festival was that it was not associated with a temple of a god. First of all, the Romans themselves were a bit confused about which god this holiday honored. Was it Lupercus, or Inuus, or Faunus? No one was absolutely certain, but that did not prevent this popular festival from being celebrated. The focal point of this festival was a site on the Palatine hill: the Lupercal, the cave in which, according to legend, the wolf suckled Romulus and Remus. The cave itself may have looked somethng like this... ![]() In general, the ancients viewed the Lupercalia as a purification and fertility rite. The ritual involved the sacrifice of goats and a dog in the Lupercal by priests called Luperci,1who smeared the foreheads of two noble young men with the blood of the sacrificed animals and then wiped it off. At this point, the youths were required to laugh. Then the luperci, clothed in loincloths, ran about the area, lashing everyone they met with strips of skin from the sacrificed goats. Young wives were particularly eager to receive these blows, because it was believed that the ritual promoted fertility and easy childbirth. These ceremonies were accompanied by much revelry and drinking. Enlarging this map of the ancient Palatine will show you via the legend on the right, just where the traditional Lupercal cave was located. ![]()
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