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- Tempestas abstract "In ancient Roman religion, Tempestas (Latin tempestas: "season, weather; bad weather; storm, tempest") is a goddess of storms or sudden weather. As with certain other nature and weather deities, the plural form Tempestates is common. Cicero, in discussing whether natural phenomena such as rainbows and clouds should be regarded as divine, notes that the Tempestates had been consecrated as deities by the Roman people.A temple (aedes or delubrum) was dedicated to the Tempestates (given in the singular by Ovid) by L. Cornelius Scipio in 259 BC, as recorded by his epitaph. Scipio had been caught in a storm with his fleet off Corsica, and the building of the temple was in fulfillment of a vow made in asking for deliverance. Ovid gives the dedication day as June 1, but it appears as December 23 in the Fasti Antiates Maiores; this latter date may mark a renovation, or there may have been more than one temple to the Tempestates. The temple vowed in 259 was located in Regio I, perhaps near the Tomb of the Scipios, and was connected with the temples of Mars and Minerva there. William Warde Fowler saw a pattern of temple dedications during this period that acknowledged water as a divine force, including the Temple of Juturna vowed in 241 by Lutatius Catulus, and the Temple of Fons during the Corsican war of 231.".
- Tempestas wikiPageID "85656".
- Tempestas wikiPageLength "2892".
- Tempestas wikiPageOutDegree "21".
- Tempestas wikiPageRevisionID "580983335".
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLink 14_regions_of_Augustan_Rome.
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLink Category:Roman_goddesses.
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLink Category:Sky_and_weather_goddesses.
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLink Cicero.
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLink Corsica.
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLink Delubrum.
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLink Epitaph.
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLink Fasti_Antiates.
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLink Fontus.
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLink Glossary_of_ancient_Roman_religion.
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLink List_of_ancient_Roman_fasti.
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLink Lucius_Cornelius_Scipio_(consul_259_BC).
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLink Lutatius_Catulus.
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLink Mars_(mythology).
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLink Minerva.
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLink Ovid.
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLink Religion_in_ancient_Rome.
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLink Roman_temple.
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLink Tomb_of_the_Scipios.
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLink Votum.
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLink Wiktionary:tempestas.
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLink William_Warde_Fowler.
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLinkText "Storms".
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLinkText "Tempestas".
- Tempestas wikiPageWikiLinkText "Tempestates".
- Tempestas hasPhotoCollection Tempestas.
- Tempestas wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:AncientRome-myth-stub.
- Tempestas wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Tempestas subject Category:Roman_goddesses.
- Tempestas subject Category:Sky_and_weather_goddesses.
- Tempestas hypernym Goddess.
- Tempestas type MythologicalFigure.
- Tempestas comment "In ancient Roman religion, Tempestas (Latin tempestas: "season, weather; bad weather; storm, tempest") is a goddess of storms or sudden weather. As with certain other nature and weather deities, the plural form Tempestates is common.".
- Tempestas label "Tempestas".
- Tempestas sameAs m.0lq_n.
- Tempestas sameAs Q7698375.
- Tempestas sameAs Q7698375.
- Tempestas sameAs 特姆派斯塔特斯.
- Tempestas wasDerivedFrom Tempestas?oldid=580983335.
- Tempestas isPrimaryTopicOf Tempestas.