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- Serapia abstract "The Serapia or Sarapia was a Roman Imperial religious festival devoted to the Greco-Egyptian god Serapis. It is found as an official holiday on April 25 as late as the Calendar of Filocalus in 354 AD. In farmers' almanacs (menologia rustica) dating to the first half of the 1st century, the day was a sacrum or rite for Serapis along with Isis Pharia, \"Isis of the Lighthouse (Pharos) of Alexandria\".Serapis was incorporated into the Imperial cult of Rome because of his importance as a city god of Alexandria. Under the epithets Dominus (\"Master, Lord\"), Magnus (\"the Great\") and Invictus (\"Invincible\"), he was cultivated as a deity of success and victory in conjunction with Sol/Helios, Jupiter/Zeus, and Neptune.Papyri document the celebration of the Egyptian Serapia along the Nile as late as 315. One records payments to those performing in the ceremonies at Oxyrhynchus during the late 3rd century, including a comedian, two \"Homerists\", dancers, and athletes. A \"dog-headed one\" (kynopou) may be a priest wearing a mask of Anubis. Processions for Egyptian deities at Rome seem to have included masked participants. Among the Greeks and Romans, Serapis was sometimes identified with the underworld ruler Pluto, and Anubis with Cerberus. In addition to his payment from the festival organizers, the kynopou was to receive welcome gifts (xenia) from people along the processional route, perhaps to obtain reciprocal hospitality in the afterlife. For Egyptian observers, the presence of Anubis would have affirmed the connection of the Hellenistic Serapis to the traditional Egyptian god Osiris.".
- Serapia thumbnail Serapis_Met_1989.281.80.jpg?width=300.
- Serapia wikiPageID "38871825".
- Serapia wikiPageLength "3424".
- Serapia wikiPageOutDegree "34".
- Serapia wikiPageRevisionID "645935402".
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Alexandria.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Ancient_Egyptian_religion.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Anubis.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Category:Ancient_Roman_festivals.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Category:April_observances.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Cerberus.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Chronography_of_354.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink DOOR_Neptunus.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Epithet.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Glossary_of_ancient_Roman_religion.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Harpocrates.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Helios.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Hellenistic_religion.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Homer.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Imperial_cult_(ancient_Rome).
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Jupiter_(mythology).
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Lighthouse_of_Alexandria.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink List_of_Roman_deities.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Menologia_rustica.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Navigium_Isidis.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Nile.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Osiris.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Oxyrhynchus.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Papyrus.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Pelusia.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Pluto_(mythology).
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Roman_Empire.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Roman_festivals.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Serapis.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Sol_(mythology).
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Xenia_(Greek).
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink Zeus.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLink File:Serapis_Met_1989.281.80.jpg.
- Serapia wikiPageWikiLinkText "Serapia".
- Serapia wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Serapia wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Roman_religion_(festival).
- Serapia subject Category:Ancient_Roman_festivals.
- Serapia subject Category:April_observances.
- Serapia hypernym Festival.
- Serapia type SocietalEvent.
- Serapia type Observance.
- Serapia comment "The Serapia or Sarapia was a Roman Imperial religious festival devoted to the Greco-Egyptian god Serapis. It is found as an official holiday on April 25 as late as the Calendar of Filocalus in 354 AD.".
- Serapia label "Serapia".
- Serapia sameAs Q17052184.
- Serapia sameAs m.0ryvjsb.
- Serapia sameAs Q17052184.
- Serapia wasDerivedFrom Serapia?oldid=645935402.
- Serapia depiction Serapis_Met_1989.281.80.jpg.
- Serapia isPrimaryTopicOf Serapia.