Orcus was a god of the underworld, punisher of broken oaths in Etruscan and Roman mythology. As with Hades, the name of the god was also used for the underworld itself. Eventually, he was conflated with Dis Pater and Pluto.
A temple to Orcus may once have existed on the Palatine Hill in Rome. It is likely that he was transliterated from the Greek daemon Horkos, the personification of oaths and a son of Eris.
The Romans sometimes conflated Orcus with other underworld gods such as Pluto, Hades, and Dis Pater. The name "Orcus" seems to have referred specifically to the malicious and punishing side of the ruler of the underworld, as the god who tormented evildoers in their afterlife. Like the name Hades, "Orcus" could refer both to the underworld itself, as well as its ruling deity. In the charitable interpretation for such a place, it was believed to be an abode for purification of the souls of the deceased.
In Roman literature one encounters phrases such as Orcum morari (lit. "to make Orcus wait", i.e. to postpone death) and cum Orco rationem habere (lit. "to go reason with Orcus", i.e. to approach death). Orcus
Orcus was chiefly worshipped in rural areas; he had no official cult in the cities. This remoteness allowed for him to survive in the countryside long after the more prevalent gods had ceased to be worshipped. He survived as a folk figure into the Middle Ages, and aspects of his worship may have been transmuted into the wild man festivals held in rural parts of Europe through the modern era. Indeed, much of what is known about the celebrations associated with Orcus come from medieval sources.
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.
In an unpublished letter sent to Gene Wolfe, Tolkien also made this comment:
From this use, countless other fantasy games and works of fiction have borrowed the concept of the orc.
Persistence and later usage
Ariosto
Tolkien
Other modern-era use
See also
Notes
Other sources not cited
External links
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