- weather. As with
certain other nature and
weather deities, the
plural form
Tempestates is common. Cicero, in
discussing whether natural phenomena such as rainbows...
-
belli et
proeliator insignis fuit. Sic
adquisito regno Sandrocottus ea
tempestate, qua
Seleucus ****urae
magnitudinis fundamenta iaciebat,
Indiam possidebat...
- His Contemporaries:
Comparative Studies,
BRILL 2001 p.185:'moverunt ea
tempestate et
Iudaei bellum, quod
vetabantur mutilare genitalia.'
Aharon Oppenheimer...
-
goddess of
storms or
sudden weather.
Commonly referred to in the plural,
Tempestates Tritopatores, wind gods Zeus, Gr****
weather and sky god and king of the...
- Tempestas, a
goddess of
storms or
sudden weather,
usually plural as the
Tempestates Terra Mater or Tellus,
goddess of the
earth and land. The Gr**** equivalent...
-
between 259 and 241 BC,
cults were
founded for Juturna, Fons, and the
Tempestates, all
having to do with
sources of water. As a god of pure water, Fons...
- street)
outside the
Porta Capena; and
possibly of the
Temple of the
Tempestates (storm goddesses); also a
festival of the
complex goddess Cardea or Carna...
-
temples of
Diana and Juno
Regina in the
Circus Flaminius, and for the
Tempestates; Sigillaria, the last day of the Saturnalia,
devoted to gift-giving 24...
- "catastasis est
vigor ac
status fabulae, in qua res
miscetur in ea
fortunae tempestate, in quam
subducta est."
Marvin T. Herrick,
Comic Theory in the Sixteenth...
- et promontorium, quod
praetereuntes nautae projecto munere pacant ne
tempestate obruantur. The rock and
promontory of Semes,
which the
seamen who double...