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To: yelostar
More on the fasces symbol

Fasces (/ˈfæsiːz/ FASS-eez, Latin: [ˈfaskeːs]; a plurale tantum, from the Latin word fascis, meaning 'bundle'; Italian: fascio littorio) is a bound bundle of wooden rods, often but not always including an axe (occasionally two axes) with its blade emerging. The fasces is an Italian symbol that had its origin in the Etruscan civilization and was passed on to ancient Rome, where it symbolized a Roman king's power to punish his subjects, and later, a magistrate's power and jurisdiction.

The fasces, as a bundle of rods with an axe, was a grouping of all the equipment needed to inflict corporal or capital punishment. In ancient Rome, the bundle was a material symbol of a Roman magistrate's full civil and military power, known as imperium. They were carried in a procession with a magistrate by lictors, who carried the fasces and at times used the birch rods as punishment to enforce obedience with magisterial commands.

Plutarch, in his Life of Publicola, describes an incident in which Lucius Junius Brutus, the first consul, has lictors scourge with rods and decapitate with axes – components of the fasces – his own sons who were conspiring to restore the Tarquins to the throne. After Brutus' alleged death in battle, Publicola then passes reforms subordinating magisterial use of fasces for coercion to the people: consuls would lower the fasces before the people during speeches and there would be appeal to the people against a magistrate ordering capital or corporal punishment.

In the Oval Office, above the door leading to the exterior walkway, and above the corresponding door on the opposite wall, which leads to the president's private office; the fasces depicted have no axes, possibly because in the Roman Republic, the blade was always removed from the bundle whenever the fasces were carried inside the city, in order to symbolize the rights of citizens against arbitrary state power.

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The Apotheosis of Washington is the fresco painted by Greek-Italian artist Constantino Brumidi in 1865 and visible through the oculus of the dome in the rotunda of the United States Capitol Building in Washington, D.C.

George Washington is draped in purple, worn by generals of the ancient Roman Republic during their triumphs.... and the goddess of Liberty to his right....She holds a fasces in her right hand...

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A few other examples..

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All examples with axes. Yet...

The Apotheosis of Washington depicts George Washington sitting among the heavens in an exalted manner, or in literary terms, ascending and becoming a god (apotheosis). Washington, the first U.S. president and commander-in-chief of the Continental Army during the American Revolutionary War, is allegorically represented, surrounded by figures from classical mythology.

Extraordinary - as it relates to violence and subjugation - imagery for a constitutional Republic founded on the ideals of human liberty. Or was it...

72 posted on 06/11/2024 2:21:20 PM PDT by yelostar (TRUMP and only TRUMP 2024)
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To: yelostar

Lucius Junius Brutus overthrew the kings of Rome and was regarded as the founder of the Roman Republic and an example of republican virtue.

The Liberty Head dime had the fasces on the back with an olive branch. When the Roosevelt dime was introduced after the war, the fasces was replaced with a torch flanked by an olive and an oak branch.


74 posted on 06/11/2024 2:37:10 PM PDT by x
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To: yelostar

I suspect Washington himself would have been insulted by “Apotheosis”.

I also noticed that such imagery seems to have become popular about a decade after the publication of the Communist Manifesto.


76 posted on 06/11/2024 2:58:24 PM PDT by Olog-hai ("No Republican, no matter how liberal, is going to woo a Democratic vote." -- Ronald Reagan, 1960)
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