Mors (mythology)

Mors
Personification of Death
ParentsNox and Scotus

In ancient Roman myth and literature, Mors is the personification of death equivalent to the Greek Thanatos.[citation needed] The Latin noun for "death," mors, genitive mortis, is of feminine gender, but surviving ancient Roman art is not known to depict death as a woman.[1] Latin poets, however, are bound by the grammatical gender of the word.[2] Horace writes of pallida Mors, "pale Death," who kicks her way into the hovels of the poor and the towers of kings equally.[3] Seneca, for whom Mors is also pale, describes her "eager teeth."[4] Tibullus pictures Mors as black or dark.[5]

Mors is often represented allegorically in later Western literature and art, particularly during the Middle Ages. Depictions of the Crucifixion of Christ sometimes show Mors standing at the foot of the cross.[6] Mors' antithesis is personified as Vita, "Life."[7]

  1. ^ Karl Siegfried Guthke, The Gender of Death: A Cultural History in Art and Literature (Cambridge University Press, 1999), p. 24 et passim.
  2. ^ Diana Burton, "The Gender of Death," in Personification in the Greek World (Ashgate, 2005), pp. 57–58.
  3. ^ Horace, Carmina 1.4.14–15.
  4. ^ Avidis ... dentibus: Seneca, Hercules Furens 555.
  5. ^ Tibullus 1.3.3.
  6. ^ Guthke, The Gender of Death, pp. 24, 41, et passim.
  7. ^ Guthke, The Gender of Death, pp. 45–46.