It was a public holiday
celebrated around December 25th in the family home. A time for feasting,
goodwill, generosity to the poor, the exchange of gifts and the decoration of
trees. But it wasn’t Christmas. This was Saturnalia, the pagan Roman winter
solstice festival. But was Christmas, Western Christianity’s most popular
festival, derived from the pagan Saturnalia?
The first-century AD
poet Gaius Valerius Catullus described Saturnalia as ‘the best of times’: dress
codes were relaxed, small gifts such as dolls, candles and caged birds were
exchanged.
Saturnalia saw the
inversion of social roles. The wealthy were expected to pay the month’s rent
for those who couldn’t afford it, masters and slaves to swap clothes. Family
households threw dice to determine who would become the temporary Saturnalian
monarch. The poet Lucian of Samosata (AD 120-180) has the god Cronos (Saturn)
say in his poem, Saturnalia:
‘During my week the
serious is barred: no business allowed. Drinking and being drunk, noise and
games of dice, appointing of kings and feasting of slaves, singing naked,
clapping … an occasional ducking of corked faces in icy water – such are the
functions over which I preside.’
Saturnalia originated
as a farmer’s festival to mark the end of the autumn planting season in honour
of Saturn (satus means sowing). Numerous archaeological sites from the Roman
coastal province of Constantine, now in Algeria, demonstrate that the cult of
Saturn survived there until the early third century AD.
Saturnalia grew in
duration and moved to progressively later dates under the Roman period. During
the reign of the Emperor Augustus (63 BC-AD 14), it was a two-day affair
starting on December 17th. By the time Lucian described the festivities, it was
a seven-day event. Changes to the Roman calendar moved the climax of Saturnalia
to December 25th, around the time of the date of the winter solstice.
From as early as 217 BC
there were public Saturnalia banquets. The Roman state cancelled executions and
refrained from declaring war during the festival. Pagan Roman authorities tried
to curtail Saturnalia; Emperor Caligula (AD 12-41) sought to restrict it to
five days, with little success.
Emperor Domitian (AD
51-96) may have changed Saturnalia’s date to December 25th in an attempt to
assert his authority. He curbed Saturnalia’s subversive tendencies by marking
it with public events under his control. The poet Statius (AD 45- 95), in his
poem Silvae, describes the lavish banquet and entertainments Domitian presided
over, including games which opened with sweets, fruit and nuts showered on the
crowd and featuring flights of flamingos released over Rome. Shows with
fighting dwarves and female gladiators were illuminated, for the first time,
into the night.
The conversion of
Emperor Constantine to Christianity in AD 312 ended Roman persecution of
Christians and began imperial patronage of the Christian churches. But
Christianity did not become the Roman Empire’s official religion overnight. Dr
David Gwynn, lecturer in ancient and late antique history at Royal Holloway,
University of London, says that, alongside Christian and other pagan festivals,
‘the Saturnalia continued to be celebrated in the century afterward’.
The poet Ambrosius
Theodosius Macrobius wrote another Saturnalia, describing a banquet of pagan
literary celebrities in Rome during the festival. Classicists date the work to
between AD 383 and 430, so it describes a Saturnalia alive and well under
Christian emperors. The Christian calendar of Polemius Silvus, written around
AD 449, mentions Saturnalia, recording that ‘it used to honour the god Saturn’.
This suggests it had by then become just another popular carnival.
Christmas apparently
started – like Saturnalia – in Rome, and spread to the eastern Mediterranean.
The earliest known reference to it commemorating the birth of Christ on
December 25th is in the Roman Philocalian calendar of AD 354. Provincial
schisms soon resulted in different Christian calendars. The Orthodox Church in
the Eastern (Byzantine) half of the Roman Empire fixed the date of Christmas at
January 6th, commemorating simultaneously Christ’s birth, baptism and first
miracle.
Saturnalia has a rival
contender as the forerunner of Christmas: the festival of dies natalis solis
invicti, ‘birthday of the unconquered sun’. The Philocalian calendar also
states that December 25th was a Roman civil holiday honouring the cult of sol
invicta. With its origins in Syria and the monotheistic cult of Mithras, sol
invicta certainly has similarities to the worship of Jesus. The cult was
introduced into the empire in AD 274 by Emperor Aurelian (214-275), who
effectively made it a state religion, putting its emblem on Roman coins.
Sol invicta succeeded
because of its ability to assimilate aspects of Jupiter and other deities into
its figure of the Sun King, reflecting the absolute power of ‘divine’emperors.
But despite efforts by later pagan emperors to control Saturnalia and absorb
the festival into the official cult, the sol invicta ended up looking very much
like the old Saturnalia. Constantine, the first Christian emperor, was brought
up in the sol invicta cult, in what was by then already a predominantly
monotheist empire: ‘It is therefore possible,’ says Dr Gwynn, ‘that Christmas
was intended to replace this festival rather than Saturnalia.’
Gwynn concludes: ‘The
majority of modern scholars would be reluctant to accept any close connection
between the Saturnalia and the emergence of the Christian Christmas.’
Devout Christians will
be reassured to learn that the date of Christmas may derive from concepts in
Judaism that link the time of the deaths of prophets being linked to their
conception or birth. From this, early ecclesiastical number-crunchers extrapolated
that the nine months of Mary’s pregnancy following the Annunciation on March
25th would produce a December 25th date for the birth of Christ.
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