Orcus
was a god of the underworld, punisher of broken oaths in Italic and Roman mythology. He was more equivalent to the Roman Pluto than to the Greek Hades, and later identified with Dis Pater. He was portrayed in paintings in Etruscan tombs as a hairy, bearded giant. A temple to Orcus may have existed on the Palatine Hill in Rome. It is likely that he was transliterated from the Greek daemon Horkos, the personification of Oaths and a son of Eris.
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ORCUS TICKETS
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Origins
The origins of Orcus may have lain in
Etruscan religion. Orcus was a name used by Roman writers to identify a
Gaulish god of the underworld. The so-called
Tomb of Orcus, an Etruscan site at
Tarquinia, is a misnomer, resulting from its first discoverers mistaking as Orcus a hairy, bearded giant that was actually a figure of a
Cyclops.
The Romans sometimes conflated Orcus with other gods such as Pluto, Hades, and Dis Pater, god of the land of the dead. The name "Orcus" seems to have been given to his evil and punishing side, as the god who tormented evildoers in the afterlife. Like the name Hades (or the Norse
Hel, for that matter), "Orcus" could also mean the land of the dead.
Orcus was chiefly worshipped in rural areas; he had no official cult in the cities.
[1] This remoteness allowed for him to survive in the countryside long after the more prevalent gods had ceased to be worshipped. He survived as a folk figure into the
Middle Ages, and aspects of his worship were transmuted into the
wild man festivals held in rural parts of Europe through modern times.
Indeed, much of what is known about the celebrations associated with Orcus come from medieval sources.
Survival and later use
From Orcus' association with death and the underworld, his name came to be used for demons and other underworld monsters, particularly in Italian where
orco
refers to a kind of monster found in fairy-tales that feeds on human flesh. The French word
ogre
(appearing first in
Charles Perrault's fairy-tales) may have come from variant forms of this word,
orgo
or
ogro
; in any case, the French
ogre
and the Italian
orco
are exactly the same sort of creature. An early example of an
orco
appears in
Ludovico Ariosto's
Orlando Furioso
, as a bestial, blind, tusk-faced monster inspired by the
Cyclops of the
Odyssey; this
orco
should not be confused with the
orca
, a sea-monster also appearing in Ariosto.
This
orco
was the inspiration to
J. R. R. Tolkien's
orcs
in his
The Lord of the Rings
.
In a text published in
The War of the Jewels
, Tolkien stated:
''Note. The word used in translation of Q urko, S orch, is
Orc. But that is because of the similarity of the ancient English
word orc, 'evil spirit or bogey', to the Elvish words. There is
possibly no connexion between them. '''The English word is now
generally supposed to be derived from Latin Orcus. '''
''
Also, in an unpublished letter sent to
Gene Wolfe, Tolkien also made this comment:
[2]
Orc I derived from Anglo-Saxon, a word meaning demon, usually supposed to be derived from the Latin Orcus -- Hell. But I doubt this, though the matter is too involved to set out here.
From this use, countless other
fantasy games and works of fiction have borrowed the concept of the orc.
See also
Notes
- Bernheimer, p. 43.
- http://home.clara.net/andywrobertson/wolfemountains.html
References
- Bernheimer, p. 43.
- http://home.clara.net/andywrobertson/wolfemountains.html