In
Roman mythology, 'Orcus' was a god of the underworld, punisher of broken oaths, more equivalent to
Pluto than to the Greek
Hades, and later identified with
Dis Pater. He was portrayed in paintings in Etruscan tombs as a hairy, bearded giant. A temple to Orcus may have existed on the
Palatine Hill in
Rome.
The origins of Orcus may have lain in
Etruscan religion. Orcus was a name used by Roman writers to identify a
Gaulish god of the underworld. The so-called "Tomb of the Orcus", an Etruscan site at
Tarquinia, is a misnomer, resulting from its first discoverers mistaking as Orcus a hairy, bearded giant that was actually a figure of a
Cyclops.
'Orcus', in Roman mythology, was an alternative name for Pluto, Hades, or Dis Pater, god of the land of the dead. The name "Orcus" seems to have been given to his evil and punishing side, as the god who tormented evildoers in the afterlife. Like the name Hades (or the Norse
Hel, for that matter), "Orcus" could also mean the land of the dead.
From Orcus' association with death and the underworld, his name came to be used for demons and other underworld monsters, particularly in Italian where ''orco'' refers to a kind of monster found in fairy-tales that feeds on human flesh. The French word ''ogre'' (appearing first in
Charles Perrault's fairy-tales) may have come from variant forms of this word, ''orgo'' or ''ogro''; in any case, the French ''
ogre'' and the Italian ''orco'' are exactly the same sort of creature. An early example of an ''orco'' appears in
Ludovico Ariosto's ''
Orlando Furioso'', as a bestial, blind, tusk-faced monster inspired by the
Cyclops of the
Odyssey; this ''orco'' should not be confused with the ''
orca'', a sea-monster also appearing in Ariosto.
This ''orco'' probably inspired, at least in part,
J. R. R. Tolkien's ''
orcs'' in his ''
The Lord of the Rings''. From this use, countless other
fantasy games and works of fiction have borrowed the concept of the orc. Additionally, Orcus appears as the Lord of Demons in
Fred Saberhagen's ''Empire of the East'' series; in the
role-playing game ''
Dungeons & Dragons'',
Orcus is a
demon prince and lord of the
undead; through this latter use Orcus appears in the computer game
NetHack as a demon prince found in
Gehenna who holds a wand of death. As an enemy of Satan and a king of the underworld, he is leader of one of Hell's least evil demon factions in ''
Warrior Nun Areala''. He also appears as a character in
Christopher Moore's novel ''
A Dirty Job'', in which he is associated with the
Morrigan, although no such connection exists in classical mythology.
There is also a
trans-Neptunian object called
90482 Orcus after this deity.
See also
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Orc
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Demogorgon
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Ogre
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Pluto
References
★ Grimal, P. (1986). ''The Dictionary of Classical Mythology''. Oxford: Basil Blackwell. (p. 328)
★ Richardson, L. (1992). ''A New Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome''. Baltimore and London: The Johns Hopkins University Press. (p. 278)
External link
★
"Tomb of the Orcus," Tarquinia