In Roman mythology, Sterquilinus — also called Stercutus and Sterculius[1] — was a god of odor.[2] He may have been equivalent to Picumnus. The Larousse Encyclopaedia of Mythology gives the name as Stercutius, a pseudonym of Saturn, under which the latter used to supervise the manuring of the fields.

The name Sterquilinus comes from the Latin stercus meaning "fertilizer" or "manure". His name was altered to avoid confusion.[3]

Early Romans were an agrarian civilization and, functionally, most of their original pantheon of gods — as against the later ones they adapted to Greek stereotypes — were of a rural nature with figures such as Pomona, Ceres, Flora, Dea Dia; so it was apt to have a god supervising the basics of organic fertilization. Sterquilinus essentially taught the use of manure in agricultural processes. He was not the sole deity of feces on its own; as in, sewage.

Modern writers later elaborated upon and exaggerated the significance of Sterquilinus/Sterculius and other "earthy" deities of antiquity, sometimes with moralistic disapproval. One editor of An Encyclopædia of Plants, published in 1836, related that

Sterculius was the god of the privy, from stercus, excrement. It has been well observed by a French author, that the Romans, in the madness of paganism, finished by deifying the most immodest objects and the most disgusting actions. They had the gods Sterculius, Crepitus, Priapus; and the goddesses Caca, Pertunda, &c, &c.[4]

Sterculius was featured in "Peace, Love and Understanding" (1992), the second pilot episode of Beavis and Butt-Head, where his spirit rose from a port-a-potty crushed by a monster truck; he is correctly identified by Butt-Head.

Namesakes

The following terms and names are derived from Sterculius:

References

  1. Entry, "Sterculius, Stercutius, or Sterquilinus", In: Smith, William (1858), A Classical Dictionary of Biography, Mythology and Geography, 4th revised edition; London: John Murray, pg 725.
  2. Carter, W. Hodding (2006), Flushed: How the Plumber Saved Civilization; Simon and Schuster, pg 143.
  3. "STERCULIUS - the Roman God of Manure (Roman mythology)".
  4. Loudon, John Claudius (1836), editor, An Encyclopædia of Plants; London: Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, and Longman, pg 815. This quote is from a section on the plant genus Sterculia.
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