Quantcast

Ch. 2: Meteorites Celestial Stones Gems

Ch. 2: Meteorites Celestial Stones Gems Page of 485 Ch. 2: Meteorites Celestial Stones Gems Text size:minus plus Restore normal size   Mail page  Print this page
ON METEORITES, OR CELESTIAL STONES 75
with the form of a mouth, it was inserted in the face of an image of the goddess to figure that feature.
As the stone was valueless, modern explorers long hoped that it might not have been carried off from Rome by the spoilers, but the search for it has been in vain. In a rare volume describing excavations made in the Palatine hill in 1730, Professor Lanciani is stated to have found a stone that had been unearthed at that time in a chapel, lacking any inscription to indicate the divinity to whom it was dedicated. This stone was said to be " of a deep brown color, looking very much like a piece of lava, and ending in a sharp point." The similarity of this description to that of Arnobius indi­cates that the Cybele stone may really have been found in 1730, but it has since disappeared. It would have been extremely interesting for mineralogists if they could have been enabled to examine this supposed meteorite, perhaps the very earliest regarding which we have such definite information.
To throw it into greater relief it was surrounded by a silver rim. When first brought to land from the ship on which it had been transported to Rome, the sacred stone was confided to the care of a company of Roman matrons who passed it on from one to another as it was solemnly borne to the Temple of Victory.5
Whether this stone was really a meteorite, as tradition taught, or whether it was a fossil of the type later known as hysteriolithus, as was conjectured by M. Falconnet, in 1770,e remains doubtful. Its light weight, upon which qual­ity Arnobius lays stress, and its peculiar form seem to favor somewhat the latter supposition. A similar stone to which divine honors were paid was in a temple on Mount Ida.
•Prudentiua " Hymnus X," 11, 156, 157. This writer was born in 348 A.D. and died about 410.
* " Dissertation sur la pierre de la Mère des Dieux," in Mém. de l'Acad. de» Inscrip. et Belles Lettres, vol. xxsviii, p. 370; Paris, 1770.
Ch. 2: Meteorites Celestial Stones Gems Page of 485 Ch. 2: Meteorites Celestial Stones Gems
Suggested Illustrations
Other Chapters you may find useful
Other Books on this topic
bullet Tag
This Page