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APOTHEOSIS

Volume 1 · 269 words · 1778 Edition

in antiquity, a ceremony by which the ancient Romans complimented their emperors and great men, after their death, with a place among the gods. It is described as follows. After the body of the deceased had been burnt with the usual solemnities, an image of wax, exactly resembling him, was placed on an ivory couch, where it lay for seven days, attended by the senate and ladies of the highest quality in mourning; and then the young senators and knights bore the bed of state through the via sacra to the old forum, and from thence to the campus martius, where it was deposited upon an edifice built in form of a pyramid. The bed being thus placed amidst a quantity of spices and other combustibles, and the knights having made a solemn procession round the pile, the new emperor, with a torch in his hand, set fire to it; whilst an eagle, let fly from the top of the building, and mounting in the air with a firebrand, was supposed to convey the soul of the deceased to heaven; and thenceforward he was ranked among the gods.

We often meet with the consecration or Apotheosis of emperors represented on medals; where we see the pyramids of several florics, each growing less and less, we see also the eagles flying away with the souls of the deceased emperors. A gem in the museum of Brandenburg, represents the apotheosis of Julius Caesar, mounted upon the celestial globe, and holding an helm in his hand, as if he were now the governor of Heaven, as before of the earth. See Deification.