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Italian expert links
first Dec. 25 Christmas celebration to pagan wolf shrine of ancient Rome
Associated Press
Rome — The church where the tradition of celebrating Christmas on Dec.
25 may have begun was built near a pagan shrine as part of an effort to
spread Christianity, a leading Italian scholar says.
Italian archaeologists last month unveiled an underground grotto that
they believe ancient Romans revered as the place where a wolf nursed
Rome’s legendary founder Romulus and his twin brother Remus.
A few feet from the grotto, or “Lupercale,” the Emperor Constantine
built the Basilica of St. Anastasia, where some believe Christmas was
first celebrated on Dec. 25.
Constantine ended the frequent waves of anti-Christian persecutions in
the Roman empire by making Christianity a lawful religion in 313. He
played a key role in unifying the beliefs and practices of the early
followers of Jesus.
In 325, he convened the Council of Nicaea, which fixed the dates of
important Christian festivals. It opted to mark Christmas, then
celebrated at varying dates, on Dec. 25 to coincide with the Roman
festival celebrating the birth of the sun god, Andrea Carandini, a
professor of archaeology at Rome’s La Sapienza University, told
reporters Friday.
The Basilica of St. Anastasia was built as soon as a year after the
Nicaean Council. It probably was where Christmas was first marked on
Dec. 25, part of broader efforts to link pagan practices to Christian
celebrations in the early days of the new religion, Carandini said.
“The church was built to Christianize these pagan places of worship,” he
said. “It was normal to put a church near these places to try to ‘save’
them.”
Rome’s archaeological superintendent Angelo Bottini, who did not take
part in Carandini’s research, said that hypothesis was “evocative and
coherent” and “helps us understand the mechanisms of the passage from
paganism to Christianity.”
Bottini and Carandini both said future digs could bolster the link
between the shrine and the church if structures belonging to the
“Lupercale” are found directly below the basilica.
The Basilica St. Anastasia was the first church to rise not on the
ancient city’s outskirts, but on the Palatine Hill, the palatial center
of power and religion in imperial Rome, Carandini said. Though little
known today, at the time of Constantine it was one of the most important
basilicas for Christians in Rome, he said.
The “Lupercale” shrine — named after the “lupa,” Latin for she-wolf — is
52 feet below ground. So far, archaeologists have only been able to see
it by inserting probes and cameras that have revealed a vaulted ceiling
decorated with colored marble and a white imperial eagle.
Though some experts have expressed doubts that the grotto is in fact the
mythological nursery of Romulus and Remus, most archaeologists believe
the shrine fits the descriptions found in ancient texts, and plans are
being drawn up to excavate the structure further.
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