Quintilis (/kwɪnˈtɪlɪs/; Latin: Quintilis, meaning "fifth month") was the ancient Roman name for the month now known as July in the modern Gregorian calendar.[1] It consisted of 31 days and served as a key period in the Roman year, associated with summer festivals, legal proceedings, and agricultural activities.[2] The month retained its name until 44 BCE, when it was renamed Iulius (July) in honor of Julius Caesar, who was born during this period and had recently reformed the calendar.[3][4]In the earliest form of the Roman calendar, attributed to Romulus around the 8th century BCE, the year comprised ten months beginning with March, totaling approximately 304 days, with Quintilis positioned as the fifth month after Martius, Aprilis, Maius, and Iunius.[5] This structure reflected an agricultural cycle aligned with lunar phases but left winter unaccounted for, leading to intercalary adjustments.[6] Reforms traditionally credited to King Numa Pompilius in the 7th century BCE introduced two additional months, Ianuarius (January) and Februarius (February), at the year's start, extending the calendar to 355 days and shifting Quintilis to the seventh position, though its numerical name persisted due to conservative naming conventions.[7][6]By the late Republic, the pre-Juliancalendar suffered from misalignment with the solar year due to irregular intercalation by pontifices, causing seasonal drift of up to several months. Julius Caesar's comprehensive reform in 46 BCE, advised by the Alexandrian astronomer Sosigenes, standardized the year at 365.25 days, confirmed Quintilis's 31-day length among the longer months (Martius, Maius, Quintilis, and October), and eliminated the need for frequent intercalation through leap years.[2][8] The renaming to Iulius symbolized Caesar's enduring legacy, paralleling the later redesignation of Sextilis as Augustus in 8 BCE, and marked a pivotal moment in the evolution toward the Juliancalendar's widespread adoption.[1][9]
Etymology and Naming
Origin of the Name
The name Quintilis derives from the Latin adjective quintilis, the adjectival form of quintus, meaning "fifth," which denoted its position as the fifth month in the original Roman calendar attributed to the legendary founder Romulus.[10] This numerical designation reflected the calendar's structure, where months were sequentially numbered starting from the first month, Martius (March), dedicated to the god Mars.[6]In this early system, the Roman year comprised ten months beginning in spring with Martius (1st), followed by Aprilis (2nd), Maius (3rd), Iunius (4th), Quintilis (5th), Sextilis (6th), September (7th), October (8th), November (9th), and December (10th).[6] The first four months bore names possibly linked to deities or seasonal activities—Martius for war and agriculture, Aprilis potentially from aperire ("to open," referring to budding), Maius for the goddess Maia, and Iunius for Juno—while the latter six followed a strict ordinal pattern from Quintilis onward.[10] This naming convention underscored the calendar's agricultural focus, aligning the year with the growing season.[11]The original calendar totaled 304 days, with six months of 30 days and four of 31 days, leaving the winter period unassigned and uncounted as two nameless months when no farming occurred.[6] This omission of approximately 61 days from the solar year resulted in the calendar drifting relative to the seasons over time, a flaw later addressed by King Numa Pompilius through the addition of Ianuaris and Februarius.[11] Consequently, Quintilis shifted to the seventh position, though its name retained the vestige of its original ordinal significance.[10]
Renaming to Iulius
Following the assassination of Julius Caesar on the Ides of March (March 15) in 44 BC, the Roman Senate, seeking to honor the late dictator posthumously, approved a proposal by Mark Antony to rename the month of Quintilis as Iulius.[12] This change transformed Mensis Quintilis—the traditional Latin designation for the fifth month in Rome's archaic ten-month calendar—into Mensis Iulius, or the "Month of Julius," directly commemorating Caesar's birth in that period.[13] The renaming took effect immediately for the remainder of the 44 BCcalendar year, aligning with a broader wave of senatorial decrees that included deifying Caesar, establishing annual sacrifices on his birthday, and naming other institutions after him, such as a senate-house and a tribal division.[12]The decision underscored the political maneuvering in the chaotic aftermath of Caesar's death, with Antony leveraging his position as consul to solidify support among Caesar's adherents against the assassins. Despite the Roman calendar having evolved under King Numa Pompilius in the seventh century BC to a twelve-month structure—shifting Quintilis from the fifth to the seventh position—the name Iulius was retained without adjustment, preserving its numerical roots while elevating Caesar's legacy.[13] This posthumous honor not only perpetuated Caesar's influence on Roman timekeeping but also set a precedent for imperial nomenclature, as seen later with the renaming of Sextilis to Augustus in 8 BC.[12] The transition marked a symbolic bridge between the Republican era and the emerging principate, embedding Caesar's memory into the civic fabric of Rome.
Position in the Roman Calendar
Early Roman Calendar Structure
The early Roman calendar is traditionally attributed to Romulus, the legendary founder of Rome circa 753 BC, who instituted a 10-month lunisolar system totaling 304 days.[14] This framework began with Martius (March) to coincide with spring renewal and agricultural cycles, encompassing months such as Aprilis, Maius, Iunius, and Quintilis (the fifth month), followed by Sextilis, September, October, November, and December.[14] The structure alternated between months of 30 and 31 days—six of 30 days and four of 31—intentionally omitting winter, as that period fell outside the active farming and civic year.[14]Numa Pompilius, Rome's second king reigning approximately 713–673 BC, expanded this system by adding Ianuarius (January) and Februarius (February) at the end of the year, after December, increasing the annual total to 355 days and creating a 12-month lunisolar calendar.[6][15] This addition did not shift the start of the year from Martius, so Quintilis retained its position as the fifth month counting from March. To synchronize the lunar-based 355 days with the solar year's approximately 365.25 days, Numa introduced an intercalary month known as Mercedonius (or Intercalaris), inserted roughly every other year after Februarius, adding 27 or 28 days as required.[15]The pontifices, a college of priests, held responsibility for overseeing these adjustments, deciding when to add Mercedonius based on astronomical observations and seasonal needs.[14] However, their interventions proved inconsistent, often manipulated for political or religious purposes, resulting in progressive drifts that misaligned the calendar with the seasons over time. By the late Republic, these discrepancies had accumulated significantly, though Quintilis retained its name and core structure amid the evolving system. Around 153 BCE, the Roman new year was moved to 1 January to align with consular elections, repositioning Quintilis as the seventh month in the annual sequence while its numerical name persisted due to tradition.[11]
Monthly Position and Duration
In the earliest Roman calendar attributed to Romulus, Quintilis served as the fifth month, positioned immediately after Iunius and before Sextilis, within a sequence of ten months that began with Martius and totaled 304 days, leaving a winter period unaccounted for.[16] This calendar featured four "full" months of 31 days—Martius, Maius, Quintilis, and Octobris—while the remaining six had 30 days each, establishing Quintilis as one of the longer months alongside these peers.[16]Numa Pompilius, the second king of Rome, reformed the calendar around the 7th century BC by adding Ianuarius and Februarius at the end of the year, expanding the year to 12 months and approximately 355 days with periodic intercalation to align with the lunar cycle.[10] As a result, Quintilis retained its position as the fifth month from Martius and preceding Sextilis, while retaining its 31-day duration unchanged from the original structure.[10] This adjustment maintained the month's status as a longer period, consistent with the pre-intercalary framework. It became the seventh month in the calendar year following the shift of the new year to 1 January around 153 BCE.[11]The Julian calendar, introduced by Julius Caesar in 45 BC to synchronize with the solar year of 365.25 days, preserved Quintilis's 31 days and its sequential placement as the seventh month, now between Iunius (30 days) and Sextilis (later renamed Augustus, 31 days).[2] Unlike Februarius, which absorbed the occasional leap day, Quintilis experienced no direct modifications from intercalation, ensuring its fixed length and position through the reform.[2]
Festivals and Observances
Major Religious Festivals
The Poplifugia, observed on July 5, commemorated a mythical flight or panic among the Roman people, possibly recalling an ancient retreat from invading neighbors such as the Ficuleans and Fidenians following the Gallic sack of Rome in 390 BC.[17] This obscure festival involved rituals of sudden fleeing accompanied by screams, interpreted as sacrifices to appease the gods and avert further calamity, though its precise meaning was already unclear by the Late Republic, leading to various aetiological myths.[18][19] Ancient sources like Varro, Macrobius, and Plutarch linked it to historical defeats, emphasizing its role in ritual purification and communal catharsis.[18]On July 7, the Nonae Caprotinae honored Juno Caprotina, a fertility aspect of the goddess Juno associated with the wild fig tree (caprificus), and served as a festival for serving women (ancillae).[20] The rites included mock battles with stone-throwing and bawdy taunts among female slaves, who reenacted a legendary ruse against Latin enemies using fig tree signals, followed by feasts and sacrifices of the tree's milky sap at the Caprae Palus in the Campus Martius.[17] These rituals symbolized fertility, liberation, and protection from evil during the summer's unhealthy season, with branches possibly used as charms to enhance productivity.[20] Varro derived the name from the epithet Caprotina, connecting it to the goat and fig as sacred symbols.[20]The Lucaria, held on July 19 and 21, was a woodland festival dedicated to sacred groves (luci), aimed at honoring and pacifying the spirits of wooded areas to prevent harm from nature deities.[21] Celebrated in a grove between the Via Salaria and the Tiber River, it recalled the Romans' hiding in woods after defeat by the Gauls in 390 BC, with rituals possibly including purifications or mock battles to avert woodland perils.[21] The festival's alternate-day structure underscored its ties to agrarian cycles, potentially relating to practices like burn-beating stubble after harvest to renew the land.[22] As a nefastus day, it prohibited public business, focusing instead on offerings to ensure harmony with sylvan forces.[23]Neptunalia, on July 23, celebrated Neptune as the god of fresh waters and irrigation, invoking his protection against summer droughts and heat.[24] Participants built temporary bowers or huts from branches (known as umbrae Neptunales) for shade, followed by sacrifices, feasts, and games to propitiate the deity during the canicular period.[24] This two-day rite, rooted in archaic traditions, emphasized communal feasting and water-related invocations, reflecting Neptune's role in sustaining agriculture amid scarcity.[24]The Furrinalia, a public holiday on July 25, was dedicated to Furrina, an ancient minor deity of Etruscan origin possibly linked to springs, water sources, or chthonic elements.[25] Rituals centered on sacrifices at her temple and sacred grove on the Janiculum Hill, though details are scant due to the festival's obscurity by the late Republic.[25]Cicero noted etymological ties to furvus (dark), suggesting associations with hidden waters or the underworld, while the event served as a feriae publicae to honor her sacra.[18]
Civic and Commemorative Events
In Quintilis, the Roman month corresponding to July, several civic events emphasized public participation, military tradition, and historical remembrance through state-sponsored spectacles and observances. These activities, distinct from purely religious rituals, involved processions, games, and communal abstinences that fostered social cohesion and reinforced the authority of the Roman state and its orders.The Ludi Apollinares, spanning July 6 to 13, were annual public games instituted in 212 BC amid the Second Punic War following a Sibylline oracle urging propitiation of Apollo to counter Hannibal's threat after the disaster at Cannae.[26] Organized by the Senate and funded from the public treasury, these games included chariot races in the Circus Maximus, theatrical productions of Roman and Greek plays, and musical competitions, drawing large crowds and serving as a morale-boosting display of Roman resilience during wartime.[27] The event's scenic elements, such as temporary stages erected near the Temple of Apollo, highlighted the integration of entertainment with civic duty, with the games continuing annually thereafter under praetorian oversight.[28]On July 15, the Transvectio equitum marked a ceremonial procession of the equestrian order (equites), numbering up to 5,000 riders, who paraded on horseback from the Temple of Mars outside the Porta Capena, through the Forum past the Temple of Castor and Pollux, to the Capitoline Temple of Jupiter.[29] Instituted around 304 BC by censors Quintus Fabius Maximus Rullianus and Publius Decius Mus as part of a military census reform, the event commemorated the equites' legendary role in early Roman victories, such as the Battle of Lake Regillus in 496 BC, and allowed for a formal review of the order's ranks, equipment, and loyalty to the state.[30] Participants wore the trabea (equestrian cloak) and olive crowns, displaying ancestral battle honors, which underscored the equites' prestige as a bridge between senatorial elite and broader citizenry.[31]July 18 was observed as the dies ater, or "black day," commemorating Rome's catastrophic defeat at the Battle of the Allia in 390 BC, when a Gallic army under Brennus routed Roman forces and subsequently sacked the city.[32] Designated a dies nefastus (unlucky or prohibited day) in the Roman calendar, it prohibited public business, legal proceedings, and joyous activities, with citizens engaging in private fasting and mourning to honor the fallen and avert recurrence of such humiliation.[33] This observance, rooted in the trauma of the Gallic invasion, symbolized collective memory of vulnerability and the need for vigilant defense, influencing later avoidance of major undertakings on this date.[34]The Ludi Victoriae Caesaris, held from July 20 to 30, were games established by Julius Caesar in 46 BC to celebrate his victories in the Civil War, particularly after the Battle of Munda, and tied to the dedication of his Temple of Venus Genetrix. Vowed during the Pharsalian campaign in 48 BC, these annual spectacles featured gladiatorial combats, theatrical shows, and venationes (beast hunts) in the Circus Maximus and Forum, lavishly funded by Caesar's spoils to demonstrate his patronage of the populace and divine favor from Venus as his ancestress. The event's scale, including distributions of grain and oil, reinforced Caesar's image as imperator while providing public entertainment that outshone earlier games like the Ludi Apollinares.[35]
Historical and Cultural Significance
Association with Julius Caesar
Gaius Julius Caesar was born on the 13th of Quintilis in 100 BC in Rome's Subura district, a densely populated and modest neighborhood that shaped his early experiences amid the city's lower classes.[36][37] This birth in the fifth month of the Roman calendar later served as a key factor in posthumous honors, linking his personal origins to the temporal structure of Roman life.Caesar's most enduring connection to Quintilis came through his calendar reforms, enacted in 45 BC to address the inaccuracies of the Republican calendar, which had drifted significantly from the solar year due to irregular intercalations.[38] Advised by the Alexandrian astronomer Sosigenes, he established the Julian calendar with 365 days per year, adding a leap day every fourth year to approximate the solar year's 365.25 days, and standardized Quintilis at 31 days to better align the months with seasonal cycles.[38] This reform not only stabilized Roman timekeeping for centuries but also positioned Caesar as a divine-like reformer of cosmic order.After Caesar's assassination on March 15, 44 BC, the Roman Senate decreed the renaming of Quintilis to Iulius (July) in his honor, explicitly tying the month to his birth and legacy as a perpetual tribute. This act, proposed by Mark Antony, carried profound political symbolism, advancing Caesar's deification by integrating his name into the state's foundational calendar and blending individual veneration with institutional authority; it was complemented by the institution of the Ludi Victoriae Caesaris, annual games celebrating his victories.
Notable Historical Events
One of the most devastating events associated with Quintilis occurred on July 18, 390 BC, when Roman forces suffered a catastrophic defeat at the Battle of the Allia against a Gallic invasion led by Brennus. The Roman army, caught off guard near the Allia River about 11 miles north of Rome, was routed, leading to the near-total destruction of the legions and the subsequent sack and burning of the city by the Gauls, who occupied Rome for several months before being bought off with gold. This disaster prompted the temporary evacuation of Rome's population to nearby strongholds like Veii and Caere, marking a profound humiliation that reshaped Roman military and religious practices, including the designation of the date as dies Alliensis, an inauspicious "black day" avoided for public business.[39][40]In response to the dire threats posed by Hannibal during the Second Punic War, the annual Ludi Apollinares were established in 208 BC, following an earlier vow in 212 BC by the decemviri sacris faciundis on the advice of the Sibylline Books to seek Apollo's favor against Carthaginian incursions. These games, held from July 6 to 13 and featuring theatrical performances, chariot races, and musical contests, represented a strategic incorporation of Greek religious elements into Roman state cult to bolster morale and divine protection amid the war's crises, including the recent defeats at Trasimene and Cannae. The institution marked a pivotal adaptation in Roman piety, emphasizing public spectacle to invoke averting plagues and military victories, and continued as a fixed observance thereafter.[28][41]The Temple of Fortuna Muliebris was dedicated on July 6 around 488 BC, commemorating the matrons' intervention that dissuaded Gnaeus Marcius Coriolanus from leading a Volscian army against Rome during a grain shortage and plebeian unrest. According to tradition preserved in Livy, Roman women, led by Coriolanus's mother Veturia and wife Volumnia, marched to his camp and pleaded for mercy, prompting him to withdraw his forces and avert the invasion; in gratitude, the Senate authorized the temple's construction outside the Porta Capena on the Via Latina, honoring women's collective influence in preserving the state. This event underscored early republican themes of familial piety and female agency in crisis resolution, with the temple serving as a site for matronal vows and processions.[42]On July 22, 367 BC, Marcus Furius Camillus dedicated the Temple of Concordia on the Argiletum in the Roman Forum, vowed amid the resolution of bitter class conflicts between patricians and plebeians over land reforms and political access. The dedication celebrated the passage of the Licinian-Sextian laws, which allowed plebeians to hold the consulship for the first time and eased debt burdens, ending a prolonged standoff that had seen plebeian secessions and the creation of the office of tribune. Built with spoils from Camillus's Gallic campaigns, the temple symbolized restored harmony (concordia) in the res publica, hosting senatorial meetings and reinforcing ideals of social unity, though it was later rebuilt multiple times due to fires and political realignments.[43]