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Giove (in latino Iupiter o Iuppiter, accusativo Iovem o Diespiter) fu il Dio della religione romana e italica, i cui simboli sono il fulmine e il tuono.
Diespiter, "Father of Day," is thus her masculine counterpart; if his name is taken as a doublet for Jupiter, then Juno Lucina and Diespiter can be understood as a male-female complement. Diespiter, however, is also identified in Latin literature with the ruler of the underworld, Dis pater.
Jupiter ( Latin: Iūpiter or Iuppiter, [14] from Proto-Italic *djous "day, sky" + *patēr "father", thus "sky father" Greek: Δίας or Ζεύς ), [15] also known as Jove ( gen. Iovis [ˈjɔwɪs] ), is the god of the sky and thunder, and king of the gods in ancient Roman religion and mythology. Jupiter was the chief deity of Roman ...
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In the Apocolocyntosis, Vica Pota is the mother of Diespiter; although usually identified with Jupiter, Diespiter is here treated as a separate deity, and in the view of Arthur Bernard Cook should perhaps be regarded as the chthonic Dispater.
MOSTRA TUTTE LE DOMANDE. Giove ( in latino Iupiter o Iuppiter, accusativo Iovem o Diespiter) fu il Dio della religione romana e italica, i cui simboli sono il fulmine e il tuono.
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