- The
supplicia canum ("punishment of the dogs") was an
annual sacrifice of
ancient Roman religion in
which live dogs were
suspended from a
furca ("fork")...
-
month | Britannica". www.britannica.com.
Retrieved December 16, 2023.
Supplicia canum was held on
August 3,
Lychnapsia on
August 12,
Nemoralia was held...
- whom the
geese were
considered sacred.
Geese were also
revered in the
supplicia canum annual sacrifice.
These are a
light weight smaller breed of geese...
-
invaded (see
Battle of the Allia).
Geese were
subsequently revered in the
supplicia canum annual sacrifice, and the
Romans later founded a
temple to Juno...
-
indication that
Juventas was
still felt to have potency. A
procession (
supplicia canum) in
which Romans carried crucified dogs p****ed
between the Temple...
- diem IV
Nonas Augustas F 3 a.d. III Non. ****t. a.d. III Non. Aug. C •
supplicia canum, the
punishment of the dogs 4
pridie Nonas ****tilis (abbrev. prid...
- More,
Thomas (1978).
Decernuntur enim
furanti gravia atque horrenda supplicia, ****
potius multo fuerit providendum, uti
aliquis esset proventus vitae...
- with
commemorations also for the "two Victories" on the
Palatine 3:
Supplicia canum ("punishment of the dogs") an
unusual dog
sacrifice and procession...
-
philosophic Judaism to
believe in the
annihilation of the
wicked 'post
exacta supplicia'. 19th-century
author Eliphas Levi
esteemed Bodin as a
student of Jewish...
-
Roman people (August 5); the
augurium canarium, a dog
sacrifice (see also
supplicia canum) to
promote the
maturation of
grain crops, held in the presence...