Temple of Flora

The Temple of Flora was an ancient sanctuary on the Circus Maximus in Ancient Rome, erected in 238 BCE and dedicated to the goddess Flora.[1]

History

In 240 B.C.E, the festival Floralia was introduced in Rome on the advice of the Sibylline books, and two years later a temple was erected, also with the support of the Sibylline books. Because of their sexual connotations, the festival and the cult centered in the temple of Flora were abhorred by the Christians, who attempted to have the popular worship discredited by claiming that it had been founded in honor of a prostitute. The cult was likely suppressed in the 4th-century during the persecution of pagans in the late Roman Empire, when the sanctuary would have been closed.

gollark: We still have neuroscience and psychology, though.
gollark: Not as well, obviously.
gollark: You can study it as a black box by measuring inputs and outputs.
gollark: Even if, somehow (not that I believe this) our mind is computed on "souls" or something instead of the matter in our brains, you can still study it.
gollark: Wait, how is that even related? Please define materialism.

See also

References

  1. Filippo Coarelli, Guida archeologica di Roma, Verona, Arnoldo Mondadori Editore, 1984.

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