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The Lusus Troiae, also as Ludus Troiae and ludicrum Troiae (" Troy Game" or " Game of Troy") was an equestrian event held in . It was among the ("games"), celebrated at funerals, temple foundings, or in honor of a military victory. The lusus was occasionally presented at the , but was not attached regularly to a particular .

Participation was a privilege for boys of the nobility ( ). and , The Craft of Zeus: Myths of Weaving and Fabric (Penn State Press, 1996), p. 41. It was a display of communal skill, not a contest.Francis Cairns, Virgil's Augustan Epic (Cambridge University Press, 1989, 1990), pp. 226 and 246 online.


Description
The fullest description of the exercise is given by , 5.545–603, as the final event in the games held to commemorate the anniversary of the death of 's father, . The drill features three troops () — each made up of twelve riders, a leader, and two armor-bearers — who perform intricate drills on horseback:

… The column split apart
As files in the three squadrons all in line
Turned away, cantering left and right; recalled
They wheeled and dipped their lances for a charge.
They entered then on parades and counter-parades,
The two detachments, matched in the arena,
Winding in and out of one another,
And whipped into sham cavalry skirmishes
By baring backs in flight, then whirling round
With leveled points, then patching up a truce
And riding side by side. So intricate
In ancient times on mountainous Crete they say
The Labyrinth, between walls in the dark,
Ran criss-cross a bewildering thousand ways
Devised by guile, a maze insoluble,
Breaking down every clue to the way out.
So intricate the drill of Trojan boys
Who wove the patterns of their prancing horses,
Figured, in sport, retreats and skirmishes …Translation by Robert Fitzgerald of , 5.580–593: olli discurrere pares atque agmina terni / diductis soluere choris, rursusque uocati / conuertere uias infestaque tela tulere. / inde alios ineunt cursus aliosque recursus / aduersi spatiis, alternosque orbibus orbis / impediunt pugnaeque cient simulacra sub armis; / et nunc terga fuga nudant, nunc spicula uertunt / infensi, facta pariter nunc pace feruntur. / ut quondam Creta fertur Labyrinthus in alta / parietibus textum caecis iter ancipitemque / mille uiis habuisse dolum, qua signa sequendi / frangeret indeprensus et inremeabilis error; / haud alio Teucrum nati uestigia cursu / impediunt texuntque fugas et proelia ludo.

Complex intertwining manoeuvres as a display of were characteristic of reviews on the parade ground. The Greek military writer describes these in his book The Art of Military Tactics ( Technē Taktikē), and says they originated among the non-Roman cavalry units provided by the allies ( ), particularly the (that is, the continental Celts) and .As described by , Technē Taktikē (Latin Ars tactica) 32–44; see description and diagram, Brian Campbell, Greek and Roman Military Writers: Selected Readings (Routledge, 2004), p. 44 online, and A.M. Devine, "Arrian’s Tactica", Aufstieg und Niedergang der römischen Welt II.34.1 (1993), p. 331 online. The Troy Game, however, was purely ceremonial and involved youths too young for military service.


History and origin
The lusus Troiae was "revived" by in 45 or 46 BC,, Divus Iulius 39; 43.23.6. perhaps in connection with his family claim to have descended from , the son of Aeneas who in the game of the Aeneid rides a horse that was a gift from the Carthaginian queen Dido.Vergil, Aeneid 5.570–572; Petrini, The Child and the Hero, p. 35. Given the mythological setting, the description of the lusus Troiae in the Aeneid is likely to have been the Augustan poet's fictional .Mark Petrini, The Child and the Hero: Coming of Age in Catullus and Vergil (University of Michigan Press, 1997), p. 93 online. Historically, the event cannot be shown to have been held before the time of ,The evidence for the game under Sulla is , Cato Minor 3. Unless otherwise noted, citations of sources from Atze J. Keulen, L. Annaeus Seneca: Troades (Brill, 2001), p. 403 online. and it has been doubted that the lusus presented under Sulla was the Troy Game. A similar-sounding event during the at the time of the Second Punic War is also uncertain as evidence for an earlier staging.Scheid and Svenbro, The Craft of Zeus, p. 40.

The claim that the event "extends back at least to the sixth century B.C." is based in part on a late 7th-century ( ) from (near ) which depicts mounted youths emerging from a with the legend TRUIA, one possible meaning of which is .Harmon, "The Religious Significance of Games in the Roman Age", p. 249 online. The Truia wine-server has been regarded as a key piece of evidence in tracing the spread of the Cretan Labyrinth design from Greece first into Etruscan Italy and from there into central and northern Europe, the British Isles, and Iberia; see John L. Heller and Stewart S. Cairns, "To Draw a Labyrinth", in Classical Studies Presented to Ben Edwin Perry by His Students and Colleagues at the University of Illinois, 1924–60 (University of Illinois Press, 1969), pp. 236–262, on the Truia labyrinth especially pp. 236, 238, 261–262, and Heller again, "A Labyrinth from Pylos?" American Journal of Archaeology 65 (1961) 57–62. Vergil explicitly compares the patterns of the drill to the , which was associated with the ("crane dance") taught by to the Athenian youth he rescued from the there. In myth and ritual, the labyrinth, and hence the lusus, has been interpreted as "a return from danger, a triumph of life over death",Harmon, "The Religious Significance of Games in the Roman Age", p. 250. or more specifically as an ritual.H.S. Versnel, "Apollo and Mars One Hundred Years after Roscher", in Visible Religion: Annual for Religious Iconography. Approaches to Iconology (Brill, 1985–86), p. 148 online. The geranos of Theseus serves as a "mythic prototype for the escape of initiates from the rigors of initiation"; the feet of the shield-bearers on the Truia wine-server may suggest dance steps.Thomas Habinek, The World of Roman Song: From Ritualized Speech to Social Order (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2005), pp. 18–19 online, where the Truia vessel is discussed at greater length, with more on the crane dance and the labyrinth pp. 1950–1951. Initiation iconography similar to that of the Etruscan oinochoë is found on a panel of the Gundestrup Cauldron, generally regarded as presenting Celtic subject matter with a Thracian influence in workmanship.Kim R. McCone, "Werewolves, Cyclopes, Díberga, and Fíanna: Juvenile Delinquency in Early Ireland", Cambridge Medieval Celtic Studies 12 (1986) 1–22; John T. Koch, Celtic Culture: A Historical Encyclopedia (ABC-Clio, 2006), pp. 908 online and 1489–1490. At least one of the Celtic polities of central Gaul, the , claimed like the Romans to be of Trojan descent and were formally recognized by the as the "brothers" as well as the allies of Rome long before they were incorporated into the empire. Aeduos fratres consanguineosque saepe numero a senatu appellatos: , Bellum Gallicum 1.332, see also 1.36.5, 43.6, 44.9. There is some possibility that the Aeduan "senate", as Caesar refers to their equivalent political body, is meant. The most explicit claim of Trojan origin for the Aedui is made by Ammianus Marcellinus 15.9.5. A similar claim is made for the by and Sidonius Apollinaris. For full discussion of the evidence, see D.C. Braund, "The Aedui, Troy, and the ", Classical Quarterly 30 (1980) 420–425.

The Etruscan designation of the game as "Truia", if that is what the vase depicts, may be a play on words, as truare means "to move", with a specialized sense in the vocabulary of weaving: it has been argued that the lusus Troiae is the "running thread game", intended to repair the "social fabric" of Rome after the recent civil wars.Scheid and Svenbro, The Craft of Zeus, pp. 45–48. The Troy Game was performed on a .Seneca, Troades 777f. Vergil uses two forms of the verb "to weave" to describe the equestrian movements, and in some versions of the Theseus myth, the hero's return from the labyrinth is made possible by following a thread provided by . Textum (5.589) and texunt (5.593). describes a similar event in his Panegyric on the Sixth Consulship of the Emperor Honorius, Bill Thayer's edition at , English translation and Latin line 615ff., where the "interwoven retreats" ( textas … fugas, 623) are also compared to the Cretan (as ) labyrinth and to the course of the Meander River (hence English "meander") near Troy. The game may have connections to Mars, who was associated with horses through his festivals and the ritual of the , as a patron of warrior youth. Mars' youthful armed priests the performed dance steps expressed by forms of the verb truare, here perhaps meaning "to perform a truia dance". The Troy Game was supervised by the Tribunes of the , who are connected to the Salii in the Fasti Praenestini.H.S. Versnel, "Apollo and Mars One Hundred Years after Roscher", in Visible Religion: Annual for Religious Iconography. Approaches to Iconology (Brill, 1985–86), p. 148, citing Festus 270 (Müller).

established the lusus Troiae as a regular event. Frequentissime: Suetonius, Augustus 43. Its performance was part of a general interest in Trojan origins reflected also in the creation of the or "Trojan Tablets", that illustrate scenes from the and often present text in the form of or , suggesting patterned movement or literary mazes.Thomas Habinek, "Situating Literacy at Rome", in Ancient Literacies: The Culture of Reading in Greece and Rome (Oxford University Press, 2009), pp. 127–129 online, including a diagram; Piotr Rypson, " Homo quadratus in labyrintho: The Cubus Visual Poem from Antiquity until Late Baroque", European Iconography East and West. Selected Papers of the Szeged International Conference June 9–12, 1993 (Brill, 1996), p. 10 online.

The young led a at the games celebrating the dedication of the Temple of the Divine Julius, 18 August 29 BC. 51.22; Geoffrey S. Sumi, Ceremony and Power: Performing Politics in Rome between Republic and Empire (University of Michigan Press, 2005), p. 23. The lusus was also performed at the dedication of the Theater of Marcellus in 13 BC,Cassius Dio 54.26.1; Suetonius, Augustus 43.5; Lawrence Richardson, A New Topographical Dictionary of Ancient Rome (Johns Hopkins University Press, 1992), p. 382. and of the Temple of Mars Ultor, 1 August 2 BC., "Euergetism in Its Place: Where Was the Amphitheatre in Augustan Rome?" in Bread and Circuses: Euergetism and Municipal Patronage in Roman Italy (Routledge, 2003), p. 76. The children in eastern dress on the have sometimes been interpreted as and in "Trojan" garb for the game in 13 BC.I.M. Le M. Du Quesnay, Horace, Odes 4.5: " Pro Reditu Imperatoris Caesaris Divi Filii Augusti", in Homage to Horace: A Bimillenary Celebration (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1995), p. 143; Mario Torelli, Typology and Structure of Roman Historical Reliefs (University of Michigan Press, 1992), pp. 48–49, 60 online. Charles Brian Rose, "The Parthians in Augustan Rome", in American Journal of Archaeology 109 (2005), pp. 36–44, argues at length against this identification, but discusses "the uneasy interaction of Trojan and Parthian iconography" that can conflate "the founders of the Romans or their fiercest opponents". The Troy Game continued to be staged under other emperors of the Julio-Claudian dynasty.Suetonius, Tiberius 6, Caligula 18, Claudius 21, Nero 7. Seneca mentions the event in his Troades (line 778). participated in 47 AD, at the age of nine, along with .Keulen, L. Annaeus Seneca: Troades, p. 9; Suetonius, Nero 7; , Annales 11.11.5 (where the event is called ludicrum Troiae). The semiotics of Nero's participation is analyzed at length by Ellen O'Gormon, Irony and Misreading in the Annals of Tacitus (Cambridge University Press, 2000), pp. 162–175.


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