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JANUS

Janus is a god in ancient Roman religion and myth, revered as the deity of beginnings, transitions, doors, gates, and openings. He is commonly depicted with two faces looking in opposite directions, one toward the past and one toward the future, symbolizing his role at thresholds and in moments of change.

The name Janus comes from the Latin Ianus and is the source of the month January, which

Iconography usually presents Janus as a two-faced figure, sometimes bearded, sometimes not, often shown holding a

Beyond ritual contexts, the image of Janus has influenced literature and rhetoric as a symbol of duality

Scholars view Janus as a central figure in Roman religion, illustrating how the Romans personified boundaries

signifies
the
start
of
the
year.
In
Roman
ritual,
Janus
was
invoked
at
the
outset
of
undertakings,
treaties,
prayers,
and
journeys,
reinforcing
his
association
with
beginnings
and
transitions
between
states
or
places.
staff
or
key,
and
sometimes
standing
at
a
doorway.
A
prominent
example
of
his
cultural
role
is
the
Temple
of
Janus
in
the
Roman
Forum,
whose
doors
were
kept
open
in
times
of
war
and
closed
during
peacetime,
reflecting
the
god’s
linkage
to
the
state
of
affairs.
and
change.
The
expression
Janus-faced
is
commonly
used
to
describe
things
with
two
contrasting
or
paradoxical
aspects,
while
the
broader
metaphor
of
Janus
appears
in
discussions
of
beginnings,
thresholds,
and
the
passage
of
time.
and
transitions
within
their
calendar,
politics,
and
daily
life,
using
a
deity
whose
two
faces
could
acknowledge
past
and
future
simultaneously.