Augury was integrated into the official religion of pagan Rome, and the "auspices" of augury were consulted at times of national crises and war. Remus saw six vultures, but Romulus saw 12 - so the city was built where Romulus wanted, around the Palatine Hill. Greek and Roman historian Plutarch tells that Romulus - the legendary founder of Rome - and his twin brother Remus resolved an argument over where to site the city by observing the flight of birds. Augury was performed by specialist priests called "augurs." The idea was that the behavior of birds reflected the will of the gods manifested in the natural world, so the will of the gods could therefore be determined by carefully watching the behavior of birds, according to Pliny.Ī myth written down by the second-century A.D. Roman natural philosopher Pliny the Elder attributed the invention of augury to a mythological Greek king, but historians note that the ancient Egyptians had a similar practice. Many Romans took augury very seriously, and it featured prominently in the affairs of the Roman state.
(Image credit: Ivy Close Images via Alamy Stock Photo)Īugury was the practice of divining the future by studying the behavior of birds, such as the direction they flew or how many there were. The Romans lost the battle and Claudius Pulcher was subsequently exiled from Rome.
Claudius Pulcher, not to be deterred from fighting and to allay the fears of his crews, threw the sacred chickens overboard, saying that if they did not wish to eat, they could drink. However, when given the grain before Drepana, they did not eat it (pictured here). The belief was that if the chickens ate the grain fed them, the result of the battle would be favorable. Before the naval Battle of Drepana (also called Drepanum) in 249 B.C., one of the consuls (highest elected position in the Republic), Publius Claudius Pulcher, consulted the sacred chickens. According to some ancient sources, one such incident occurred during the First Punic War between Rome and Carthage. In ancient Rome, augury or the consultation of omens was a common practice, especially before important events such as battles or setting out to war. the consul Tiberius Gracchus forgot to take the city auspices a second time after crossing the pomerium twice in the same day and that his failure led to the sudden death of an official who was collecting votes. The Roman politician and author Cicero relates that in 163 B.C. This was a small ceremony by a priest, supposedly foretelling good or bad luck, which according to the superstition could be fatal to neglect. In particular, magistrates of the city - the officers elected for a year for various tasks, including the consuls who held the highest posts in the Roman Republic - were required to consult what were called the city auspices ("auspicia urbana") whenever they crossed the pomerium. No weapons were allowed there, although priests gave dispensations for the bodyguards of magistrates and soldiers taking part in one of the many "triumphs" granted by the Roman senate - a name that meant "old men" and was a ruling assembly of hundreds of the wealthiest citizens - to military commander or emperor who'd won a victory. As the city grew, the pomerium was extended and new cippi were added to delineate it.īreaking conventions inside the pomerium was considered a serious offense to the gods. (Image credit: Archaeological Museums of Rome)Īncient Rome had formal city limits, bounded by a strip of land called the "pomerium." No one was allowed to build in this area, which was marked by sacred stones called "cippi ," Live Science previously reported. The stone marking the sacred limits of the ancient city was found near the historic center of Rome in June 2021.