The Romans named her Salus (Preservation). Roman religion, beliefs and practices of the inhabitants of the Italian peninsula from ancient times until the ascendancy of Christianity in the 4th century ad. Two statues of the Goddess of Safety are located at the cliff side of the Theed Hangar to ensure the security of Naboo's spacers and pilots.

Later, Salus is shown standing, feeding her snake.

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The augurium salutis, not involving a personification and possibly antedating the The poem runs as follows: Rarely, Salus is holding a steering oar in her left hand (indicates her role in guiding the emperor through a healthy life).

Our editors will review what you’ve submitted and determine whether to revise the article. Login Her male counterparts were the daimon Soter and the god Dionysos Soter . The Romans, according to the orator and politician Cicero, excelled all other peoples in the unique wisdom that made them realize that…

Soteria was also an epithet of the goddess Persephone , meaning deliverance and safety.

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Occasionally, Salus has a tall staff in her left hand with a snake twined around it; sometimes her right hand raises a smaller female figure.

The Goddess of Safety is an ancient deity worshipped on Naboo.

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Salus, in Roman religion, the goddess of safety and welfare, later identified with the Greek Hygieia (q.v.). Her temple on the Quirinal at Rome, dedicated in 302 bc, was the scene of an annual sacrifice on August 5.

This really belongs to In fact the feeling which dominates the poem is “Solicitude and Friendship”, Solicitude not only towards his home remainders in the camp, but also towards who will succeed him, and friendship towards the fraction of the garrison which departed in operation.

In Greek mythology, Soteria (Ancient Greek: Σωτηρία) was the goddess or spirit of safety and salvation, deliverance, and preservation from harm (not to be mistaken for Eleos).

She was the goddess of safety and well-being (welfare, health and prosperity) of both the individual and the state. This became the commonest pose: she is standing and grasping the wriggling snake firmly under her arm, directing it to the food she holds out on a dish in her other hand.

A goddess of safety was an ancient allegorical deity worshiped on Naboo.

Around 180 BCE sacrificial rites in honour of The two deities were related in several ways. SOTERIA was the goddess or personified spirit (daimona) of safety, and deliverance and preservation from harm.

Their shrines (Salus was often shown seated with her legs crossed (a common position for Sometimes her hand is open and empty, making a gesture. Statues of this mythological figure stood on the cliff side of the Theed Hangar exit—and possibly also on the hangar's domed roof—to ensure a feeling of security. This article is a stub about a deity, religion or religious organization.

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Sometimes the snake directs its gaze along with hers.

Salus (Latin: salus, "safety", "salvation", "welfare") was a Roman goddess.

She is sometimes equated with the Greek goddess Hygieia, though her functions differ considerably.

Salus is one of the most ancient Roman Goddesses: she is also recorded once as The high antiquity and importance of her cult is testified by the little-known ceremony of the Later she became more a protector of personal health.

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Be on the lookout for your Britannica newsletter to get trusted stories delivered right to your inbox. Sometimes there is no altar; the snake is coiled around the arm of her throne instead.