The Roman Festival of Saturnalia

Discover the Origins and Customs of a Roman Midwinter Festival

© Natasha Sheldon

An enigmatic Roman festival, Saturnalia was held at midwinter in honour of the god Saturn. Many of its elements survive in modern Christmas celebrations

Dedicated to the god Saturn, Saturnalia was one of a series of Roman festivals celebrated at midwinter. The festivities lasted for a week, normal life being suspended in favour of eating, drinking and giving gifts. Of uncertain origins, Saturnalia continued to be celebrated beyond the Christian era, finally bequeathing many of its elements to the Christmas celebrations of today.

The Celebrations

Saturnalia began on the 17th December. Traditionally, the celebrations lasted a week. According to Macrobius, only two days properly related to the rites of Saturn. However, the celebrations were lengthened by the absorption of the festival of the Sigillaires. Augustus attempted to reduce the festival to its proper length by limiting it to 3 days, but by the time of Claudius, it had been lengthened to five days again, with many people adhering to the ancient tradition of 7 days of festivities.

The opening festivities were marked by a public banquet at the temple of Saturn when the god’s statue was released from the ties which bound it to the temple for the rest of the year. From this point on, normal social rules were inverted. All business was suspended, criminals could not be convicted or wars started. Pleasure ruled. Each household would choose a King of the festival to preside over their own parties and celebrations, thrown for families and for clients by their patron. Slaves would be served by their own masters who would dress informally, even wearing the traditional slaves hat, the pilleus. The time was spent playing games, gambling, eating and drinking.

Gifts were also given. Traditionally, they were comprised of pottery figures called sigilla and wax candles, purchased at the fair that marked the closing days of saturnalia. However, as time passed, gifts became more ostentatious, so much so that legislation was required to prevent the less wealthy from beggaring themselves giving gifts they could ill afford.

The Origins of Saturnalia

Saturnalia was an Italic-Hellenic hybrid, celebrating the bounty of the harvest and the good things in life, whilst propitiating the dark and threatening forces of winter

According to legend, the Saturnalia was ancient and predated the foundation of Rome. It was instigated by Janus in gratitude for Saturn’s legendary introduction of agriculture to Italy. Many features of the festival do agree this origin. The name Saturn is believed to derive from the Latin for sowing, satus. Furthermore, the saturnalia was only one festival in December celebrating the harvest safely gathered in against the coming of winter. The Consualia was celebrated on the 15th and the Opalia on the 19th.

However, the ancient sources also reveal legends that link Saturn not with agricultures introduction but the days before it; a mythical golden age when food was available without the associated toil and mankind was carefree, that finds its echo in the festival’s emphasis on leisure and pleasure.

Elements of the festival support primitive Italic origins. The pottery figures of the sigillares are transmuted sacrifices to Saturn, pottery representations of the human heads once placed on the god’s altar. Likewise, the candles represent torches to light against the darkness of Saturn’s chaos. Darkness represents the time before civilisation, the time of chaos which fits with the idea of misrule. But it also epitomises winter.

However, the development of Saturnalia was closely influenced by Greek ideas. The format of the festival, with its feasts and social inversion, bear a direct resemblance to those of the Cronia, a Greek harvest festival held in honour of the god Cronos, Saturn’s Greek counterpart.

Survival of Saturnalia

Saturnalia continued to be celebrated into the Christian era. The Chronicle of 354AD, a commentary on life in Rome at that time used a figure celebrating Saturnalia as the emblem for December.

Yet even when it had ceased to be explicitly celebrated, traces of saturnalia’s festivities still remained. At the Feast of Fools, held on the 1st January in medieval France it was common for high and low officials to exchanging places during festivities. And today, we find the traditions of gift giving, candle lighting and merry making still survive in the celebrations of Christmas.

Sources

The Oxford Dictionary of Classical Myth and Religion- ed. by Simon Price and Emily Kearns. (2003 Oxford University Press.)

Lucian, Saturnalia

Macrobius , Saturnalia

Encyclopaedia Britannica - 2007


The copyright of the article The Roman Festival of Saturnalia in Roman History is owned by Natasha Sheldon. Permission to republish The Roman Festival of Saturnalia must be granted by the author in writing.




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