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    By Robin Swope, Pittsburgh Paranormal Examiner

    February 9th, 2011 3:50 pm ET

    Hauntings in Ancient Greece and Rome

    These next few months I am finally finishing up my

    Masters Degree, something I left undone for almost 20

    year. I was hired at Port Crane Alliance Church in the

    spring of 1992 following a successful internship there

    and left two courses to complete for my Master of

    Divinity degree from Alliance Theological Seminary.

    Finally, after many failed attempts I am completing

    those last courses; a study of 1 & 2ndCorinthians and

    the Greek Bible in the Ancient Western Mediterranean

    World. While doing some essays for the second class

    which focused on ancient Greco-Roman religion I

    remembered an old article in the April 2001 issue of

    Fortean Times Magazine by Barry Baldwin, Fellow of

    the Royal Society of Canada and Emeritus Professor of Classics at the University of Calgary. I found it

    very fascinating and thought Id share it with you; it is the 12tharticle in his continuing column ClassicalCorner entitled Greco-Roman Ghosts. Here is his gleanings of the classics, with the actual texts

    inserted by yours truly:

    Ghosts

    The Romans feared them enough to hold an annual May festival of appeasement. Ovid (Fasti bk5

    vv19-92) describes this Lemuria: at midnight you tasted and spat nine beans to be consumed by the

    supposedly bean loving phantoms, intoning With these I ransom me and mine, after which you gonged

    out the ghosts with a clash of cooking utensils.

    The text actually says:

    "It will be the ancient sacred rites of the Lemuria,

    When we make offerings to the voiceless spirits.

    The year was once shorter, the pious rites of purification, februa,

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    Were unknown, nor were you, two-faced Janus, leader of the months:

    Yet they still brought gifts owed to the ashes of the dead,

    The grandson paid respects to his buried grandfathers tomb.

    It was May month, named for our ancestors (maiores),

    And a relic of the old custom still continues.

    When midnightcomes, lending silence to sleep,

    And all the dogs and hedgerow birds are quiet,

    He who remembers ancient rites, and fears the gods,

    Rises (no fetters binding his two feet)

    And makes the sign with thumb and closed fingers,

    Lest an insubstantial shade meets him in the silence.

    After cleansing his hands in spring water,

    He turns and first taking some black beans,

    Throws them with averted face: saying, while throwing:

    With these beans I throw I redeem me and mine.

    He says this nine times without looking back: the shade

    Is thought to gather the beans, and follow behind, unseen.

    Again he touches water, and sounds the Temesan bronze,

    And asks the spirit to leave his house.

    When nine times hes cried: Ancestral spirit, depart,

    He looks back, and believes the sacred rites fulfilled.

    Why the days so called, and the origin of the name,

    Escapes me: thats for some god to discover."

    (Poetryintranslation.com Ovid Fastibook 5 Translated by A. S. Kline 2004)

    Baldwincontinues:

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    Though classified as nocturnal by Horace (Epistles, bk2 n02 v209)-his fifth Epode features a revenant

    boy haunting the beldames(ugly old women)who had sacrificed him and in Persius (Satires, No5 v85),

    classical ghosts often appear in the empty hours of the Mediterranean siesta. Also, the prevalence of

    urban life did not encourage tales of remote haunted castles.

    Herodotus (Histories, bk6 ch9 para1, bk8 ch84 para2) serves up a nocturnal male phantom in a Spartan

    queens bed and a diurnal female appearing to the Greeks at Salamiswith strategic instructions.

    Baldwinalso relates that Suetonius Lives of the Ceasars contains three anecdotes of hauntings:

    1) The site of Caligulas murder and burial witnessed nightly fearsome apparitions until the corpse was

    moved and the house burned down;(Suetonius, Lives; Caligula, ch 59)

    The text reads:

    He lived twenty-nine years and ruled three years, ten months and eight days. His body was conveyed

    secretly to the gardens of the Lamian family, where it was partly consumed on a hastily erected pyre and

    buried beneath a light covering of turf; later his sisters on their return from exile dug it up, cremated it,and consigned it to the tomb. Before this was done, it is well known that the caretakers of the gardens

    were disturbed by ghosts, and that in the house where he was slain not a night passed without some

    fearsome apparition, until at last the house itself was destroyed by fire. With him died his wife Caesonia,

    stabbed with a sword by a centurion, while his daughter's brains were dashed out against a

    wall. (Nero,ch34 para1)

    2) his (Caligulas) mothers ghost haunted her matricide son Nero;

    Actually, this appears in paragraph 3 and 4; the text reads:

    On learning that everything had gone wrong and that she had escaped by swimming, driven to

    desperation he secretly had a dagger thrown down beside her freedman Lucius Agermus, when he

    joyfully brought word that she was safe and sound, and then ordered that the freedman be seized and

    bound, on the charge of being hired to kill the emperor; that his mother be put to death, and the pretence

    made that she had escaped the consequences of her detected guilt by suicide. 4 Trustworthy authorities

    add still more gruesome details: that he hurried off to view the corpse, handled her limbs, criticising some

    and commending others, and that becoming thirsty meanwhile, he took a drink. Yet he could not either

    then or ever afterwards endure the stings of conscience, though soldiers, senate and people tried to

    hearten him with their congratulations; for he often owned that he was hounded by his mother's ghost

    and by the whips and blazing torches of the Furies. He even had rites performed by the Magi, in the effort

    to summon her shade and entreat it for forgiveness. Moreover, in his journey through Greece he did not

    venture to take part in the Eleusinian mysteries, since at the beginning the godless and wicked are

    warned by the herald's proclamation to go hence.

    3) Otho was persecuted by the shade of Galba, whom he had usurped ( Otho, ch7 para2)

    I include paragraph 1 as well to give the piece a proper background,

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    1 Next, as the day was drawing to its close, he entered the senate and after giving a brief account of

    himself, alleging that he had been carried off in the streets and forced to undertake the rule, which he

    would exercise in accordance with the general will, he went to the Palace. When in the midst of the other

    adulations of those who congratulated and flattered him, he was hailed by the common herd as Nero, he

    made no sign of dissent; on the contrary, according to some writers, he even made use of that surname

    in his commissions and his first letters to some of the governors of the provinces. Certain it is that he

    suffered Neros busts and statues to be set up again, and reinstated his procurators and freedmen in their

    former posts, while the first grant that he signed as emperor was one of fifty million sesterces for finishing

    the Golden House.

    2 It is said that he had a fearful dream that night, uttered loud groans, and was found by those who ran to

    his aid lying on the ground beside his couch; that he tried by every kind of expiatory rite to propitiate the

    shade of Galba, by whom he dreamt that he was ousted and thrown out; and that next day, as he was

    taking the auspices, a great storm arose and he had a bad fall, whereat he muttered from time to time:

    With long pipes what concern have I?

    ( The Lives of the Twelve Caesars by C. Suetonius Tranquillus; translation by J. C. Rolfe, published inthe Loeb Classical Library, 1913)

    Baldwin continues:

    Tacitus (Annals, bk11 ch21 para1) unsceptically recounts how African governor Curtius Rufus was

    promised this future honour by a noontime female phantom when a low grade civil servant there.

    The text says:

    As to the origin of Curtius Rufus, whom some have described as the son of a gladiator, I would not

    promulgate a falsehood and I am ashamed to investigate the truth. On reaching maturity, he joined thetrain of a quaestor to whom Africa had been allotted, and, in the town of Adrumetum, was loitering by

    himself in an arcade deserted during the mid-day heat, when a female form of superhuman size rose

    before him, and a voice was heard to say: "Thou, Rufus, art he that shall come into this province as

    proconsul." With such an omen to raise his hopes, he left for the capital, and, thanks to the bounty of his

    friends backed by his own energy of character, attained the quaestorship, followed in spite of patrician

    competitors by a praetorship due to the imperial recommendation; for Tiberius had covered the

    disgrace of his birth by the remark: "Curtius Rufus I regard as the creation of himself." Afterwards, long of

    life and sullenly cringing to his betters, arrogant to his inferiors, unaccommodating among his equals, he

    held consular office, the insignia of triumph, and finally Africa; and by dying there fulfilled the destiny

    foreshadowed.

    Next Baldwin tells us of stories from Tacitus' friend Pliny:

    Pliny (Letters, bk7 no27) Retells this tale to justify his own belief in ghosts, adding another. A house in

    Athens was haunted by a ghastly old man, complete with clanking chains. The philosopher Athenodorus

    investigated, followed the thing to the garden, dug up the spot where it vanished, and found a fettered

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    skeleton. After he re-buried the bones, the phantom came no more.

    Pliny relates the story this way:

    There was at Athens a large and spacious, but illreputed and pestilential house. In the dead of the night

    a noise, resembling the clashing of iron, was frequently heard, which, if you listened more attentively,

    sounded like the rattling of fetters; at first it seemed at a distance, but approached nearer by degrees;

    immediately afterward a phantom appeared in the form of an old man, extremely meagre and squalid,

    with a long beard and bristling hair; rattling the gyves on his feet and hands. The poor inhabitants

    consequently passed sleepless nights under the most dismal terrors imaginable. This, as it broke their

    rest, threw them into distempers, which, as their horrors of mind increased, proved in the end fatal to their

    lives. For even in the day time, though the spectre did not appear, yet the remembrance of it made such

    a strong impression on their imaginations that it still seemed before their eyes, and their terror remained

    when the cause of it was gone. By this means the house was at last deserted, as being judged by

    everybody to be absolutely uninhabitable; so that it was now entirely abandoned to the ghost. However,

    in hopes that some tenant might be found who was ignorant of this great calamity which attended it, a bill

    was put up, giving notice that it was either to be let or sold.

    It happened that Athenodorus the philosopher came to Athens at this time, and reading the bill

    ascertained the price. The extraordinary cheapness raised his suspicion; nevertheless, when he heard

    tbe whole story, he was so far from being discouraged, that he was more strongly inclined to hire it, and,

    in short, actually did so. When it grew towards evening, he ordered a couch to be prepared for him in the

    forepart of the house, and after calling for a light, together with his pen and tablets, he directed all his

    people to retire within. But that his mind might not, for want of employment, be open to the vain terrors of

    imaginary noises and apparitions, he applied himself to writing with all his faculties. The first part of the

    night passed with usual silence, then began the clanking of iron fetters; however, he neither lifted up his

    eyes, nor laid down his pen, but closed his ears by concentrating his attention. The noise increased andadvanced nearer, till it seemed at the door, and at last in the chamber. He looked round and saw the

    apparition exactly as it had been described to him: it stood before him, beckoning with the finger.

    Athenodorus made a sign with his hand that it should wait a little, and bent again to his writing, but the

    ghost rattling its chains over his head as he wrote, he looked round and saw it beckoning as before.

    Upon this he immediately took up his lamp and followed it. The ghost slowly stalked along, as if

    encumbered with its chains; and having turned into the courtyard of the house, suddenly vanished.

    Athenodorus being thus deserted, marked the spot with a handful of grass and leaves. The next day he

    went to the magistrates, and advised them to order that spot to be dug up. There they found bones

    commingled and intertwined with chains; for the body had mouldered away by long Iying in the ground,

    leaving them bare, and corroded by the fetters. Thc bones were collected, and buried at the public

    expense; and after the ghost was thus duly laid the house was haunted no more. (http://www.vroma.org

    /~hwalker/Pliny/Pliny07-27-E.html)

    Baldwin concludes:

    Lucian burlesques bogey stories in his Lover of Lies. This must reflect contemporary beliefs, otherwise

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    Tags:

    has no point. Indeed, though switching its locale to Corinth, he rehearses Plinys haunted house tale.

    Other items include a giant middayfemale apparition, the ghost of a wife returning to nag her husband,

    and a poltergeist statue.

    Byzantine hagiographers are full of weird tales, for typical example John Moschus (Spiritual Meadow

    ch70) on an Egyptian tomb-robber blinded by the suddenly-resurrected victim whose corpse he had just

    despoiled.

    Ghost stories and investigations are not a new thing, they have been around for thousands of years.

    However the Greco-Roman world had a very different understanding of what a ghost was. But well take

    a look at that next time. I am sure it will be an eye opener.

    Barry Baldwin still writes for Fortean Times, it is a magazine I highly recommend for anyone interested in

    the paranormal and unexplained. It truly has no equal. If you want a fair and even handed exploration of

    all things unexplained by scholarly professionals, it is the magazine to read. Ask for it at a bookstore near

    you or visit them online at www.forteantimes.com.

    hauntings, ghosts, Ancient Greece, ancient Rome, Prof. Barry Baldwin

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