Mars was the
Roman
god of war, the son of
Juno and
Jupiter, husband of
Bellona, and the lover of
Venus. He was the most prominent of the
military
gods that were
worshipped
by the
Roman legions. The martial Romans considered him second in importance only
to Jupiter (their main god). His
festivals were held in
March (named for
him) and October. As the word Mars has no
Indo-European derivation, it is most likely the
Latinised form of the agricultural
Etruscan god
Maris. Initially Mars was a Roman god of
fertility
and
vegetation and a protector of cattle, fields and boundaries and farmers. In
the second century BC, the conservative
Cato the Elder advised "For your cattle, for them to be healthy, make this
sacrifice to Mars Silvanus you must make this sacrifice each year".[1]
Mars later became associated with battle as the growing
Roman
Empire began to expand, and he came to be identified with the
Greek god Ares.
Unlike his Greek counterpart, Mars was generally revered and rivaled Jupiter as
the most honoured god. He was also the
tutelary god of the city of Rome. As he was regarded as the legendary father
of Rome's founder,
Romulus, it was believed that all Romans were descendants of Mars.