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Sacred chickens, witches and animal entrails: 7 unusual ancient Roman superstitions

Sacred chickens, witches and animal entrails: 7 unusual ancient Roman superstitions

To modern people, the ancient Romans seem deeply superstitious. Stories abound of their peculiar beliefs, and some have echoes in the traditions of today. Shakespeare’s famous warning by a soothsayer to Julius Caesar of his assassination — “Beware the ides of March” — is still quoted by people today, even if they only vaguely know what the ides were. (The “ides” were the middle day of a month — so that’s March 15, the date of Caesar’s murder in 44 B.C.) 

Caesar’s reported warning involves a superstition that seems characteristic of the place and time, but superstition in ancient Rome was more complicated than it might appear. Here are seven unusual ancient Roman superstitions and what they may have meant.

1. Carrying a bride over the threshold

A happy husband carrying his new wife over the threshold. (Image credit: Chris Dunham via Alamy Stock Photo)

Many Romans considered it bad luck not to observe the tradition of a groom carrying his new bride over the threshold of her new house, according to a folklore compilation at Dartmouth College (opens in new tab), and this is still practiced after many wedding ceremonies today. The idea was to prevent the bride from tripping on her first entry, which supposedly would have angered the spirits that protected that particular home, such as the domestic deities called “penates.” 

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