ON March 7th we observe the Junonalia feast of the Roman goddess Juno, with whom Hadrian's wife and consort Empress Sabina is identified ritually. (Art by ANTONIUS SUBIA).
On this day, Ancient Romans observed the Junonalia to honor their Queen of Heaven. This festival was celebrated by the matrons of Rome in which a procession of 27 girls accompanied a statue of Juno carved out of a cypress tree.
There were processions in which statues of Juno were carried through the streets and ending at the Temple of Juno. Prayers and generous offerings of flowers and flowering plants were brought to Juno.
There was dancing, merriment, and wonderful feasting (for the Romans were known for their feasts). From how it sounded, it would be very similar to a modern "girls night out."
The Junonalia was also attested in a fragmentary poem De Iunonalibus, attributed to Claudian. In it, Juno is addressed as mistress of the celestial pole, and the spouse and sister of the king of heaven.
Her function as a goddess of marital bonds is also noted. Although the text is conjectural at this point, she may be asked to grant a return.
The Junonalia may have concluded a three-day festival begun March 5th with the Isidis Navigium (Sailing of Isis). In the Metamorphoses of the Metamorphoses of Apuleius, Isis is addressed as Queen of Heaven, and by the 2nd Century a number of goddesses, including Juno, shared the epithet Caelestis.
As the patron goddess of Rome and the Roman Empire, Juno was called Regina (Queen) and, together with Jupiter and Minerva, was worshipped as a the Juno Capitolina (Capitoline Triad) in Rome. Juno was a daughter of Saturn and sister (but also the wife) of the chief god Jupiter, as well as being the mother of Mars and Vulcan.
Juno's theology is one of the most complex and disputed issues in Roman religion. Even more than other major Roman deities, Juno held a large number of significant and diverse epithets, names and titles representing various aspects and roles of the goddess. In accordance with her central role as a goddess of marriage, these included Pronuba and Cinxia (she who loses the bride's girdle).
Juno looked after the women of Rome, with her Greek equivalent as Hera and her Etruscan counterpart was Uni. Hera was the Greek goddess for love and marriage, so Juno was Rome's goddess of love and marriage.
Juno's own warlike aspect among the Romans was apparent in her attire, as she often appeared sitting with a peacock armed and wearing a goatskin cloak. The traditional depiction of this warlike aspect was assimilated from the Greek goddess Athena, whose goatskin was called the aegis.
Ancient etymologies associated Juno’s name with iuvare (to aid, benefit) and iuvenescendo (rejuvenate), sometimes connecting it to the renewal of the new and waxing moon. This perhaps implied the idea of a moon goddess.
Sunday, March 7, 2021
WE JOYFULLY CELEBRATE THE JUNONALIA
FEAST OF JUNO QUEEN OF HEAVEN
FEAST OF JUNO QUEEN OF HEAVEN
Saturday, March 6, 2021
THE ASCENSION OF MARCUS AURELIUS
AND LUCIUS VERUS AS CO-EMPERORS
AND LUCIUS VERUS AS CO-EMPERORS
UPON the occasion of the Death and Apotheosis of Antoninus Pius on 7th March 161 AD, Marcus Aurelius and Lucius Verus became co-Emperors, both surnamed Antoninus, a name which the ancient Romans equate with inestimable glory.
Marcus being the elder and wiser, was given the title Augustus, while Lucius took the name Caesar.
They remained cordial to one another though their vastly different characters were always a cause of discord, though never of rivalry or outright animosity.
They were a harmonious and cooperative pair of rulers, the only example of effective imperial brotherhood in the long history of Rome.
Friday, March 5, 2021
ANTONIUS SUBIA CELEBRATES THE FEAST
OF THE SHIP OF ISIS AT PHILAE ISLAND
OF THE SHIP OF ISIS AT PHILAE ISLAND
MARCH 5th is the Navigum Isidis, or Ploiaphesia, the feast of the Ship of Isis. This celebrates Isis both as Moon Goddess and Queen of the Sea ... the Moon being the source of the tides.
At this time a great procession would go down to the sea and carry with them a boat full of offerings to the Goddess, milk would be poured on the waters, then the boat loaded with gifts would be sent out to sea.
Apuleius (1st CenturyAD) has described the ceremony in great detail and concludes: "When the ship was loaded with generous gifts and prayers for good fortune, they cut the anchor cables and she slipped across the bay of Alexandria with a serene breeze behind her that seemed to have sprung up for her sake alone. When she stood so far out to sea that we could no longer keep her in view, the priests took up the holy emblems and started happily back towards the temple."
Our spiritual leader ANTONIUS SUBIA, during his sacred pilgrimage to Egypt, visited the last Temple of Isis where these ceremonies were celebrated.
Thursday, March 4, 2021
ANTINOUS SAILS THE SOLAR BOAT BY NIGHT
THANKS TO THE MYSTERIES OF HELIOPOLIS
THANKS TO THE MYSTERIES OF HELIOPOLIS
MARCH 4th is the festival of Re at Heliopolis ... a city which Antinous visited during his fateful trip up the Nile ... and a city which our spiritual leader ANTONIUS SUBIA visited during his 2020 sacred pilgrimage to Egypt.
After leaving Alexandria, the first important stop for Antinous on the Nile journey in late 130 AD was at Heliopolis, the ancient center of the worship of Re, the sun god.

The Obelisk of Antinous speaks of Antinous being full of the "Semen of the First God" which is the creative force of the universe.
That means Antinous can assume "any form his heart desires" since he (like Osiris) is one with the First God ... and one with the Bennu Bird.
Antinous IS the Phoenix.
As sacred synchronicity would have it, "Bennu Phoenix" birds (Egyptian storks) flew over Antonius Subia's head during his 2020 pilgrimage ... most notably when three Bennu bird storks flew overhead during the ABU SIMBEL SUNRISE cosmic event on September 22nd.
So it was imperative for Antonius to visit Heliopolis ... which he died on the final day of his pilgrimage ... despite hindrances and setbacks.
Antonius says:
From the day we arrived I was trying to get there but it kept getting pushed back for another day. Finally the last day came and I was not going to be dissuaded from seeing Heliopolis.
It turned out to be an arduous ordeal across the worst parts of Cairo ... In the Rain and at rush hour ... all of which turned what I thought would be a short solo excursion ... into a four-hour journey.
I decided just to take a taxi ... made arrangements to meet everyone later at the Dervish dancers at 6:30 (actually I was supposed to go back to the hotel first then we would all go together).
The taxi driver didn't speak a word of English but when I showed him where I wanted to go he said okay ... as we left I realized that he thought I wanted to go to a Hotel called Heliopolis ... and he had no idea where to go.
Eventually he called a guy from the sidewalk who spoke a little English to translate ... and then he said he knew and off we went.

The taxi driver and I eventually could chat using the "translate conversation" function on my phone ... even he said that it was in a Bad Neighborhood.
Suddenly in the distance I see it ... The Giant Obelisk! ... one of the only Obelisks still standing in its original location.
There was a lovely little park surrounding it with what little remains of the once glorious city of Ra, where the Great Temple once stood, which is said to have been larger, older and more spectacular than Karnak.

The city where Orpheus, Pythagoras, Homer and Plato all came to study with the priests of The Temple of Ra-Atum.
It is also where Antinous and Hadrian came during their visit a few months before Antinous drowned, the place where the event in which Antinous said he would be willing to give his life for Hadrian occurred.
I needed to see Heliopolis
I needed to stand where Antinous once stood,
Where he willingly dedicated his life to Hadrian
So many obstacles tried to prevent me from getting there.
I went all by myself into the wild worst parts of Cairo, and paid a heavy fare to get there and back.
I spent as long as I could, absorbing the presence and power beneath what could be seen around me ... and thanked Antinous for making it possible for me to have this magical moment.
My last adventure in Egypt.
The way back was worse than getting there, I barely made it on-time to see the dervish dancers ... which was surreal in its self.
Then back to the Hotel to pack and head to the airport where I am now.
Heliopolis was wonderful ... and heart-breaking.
Egypt was wonderful and heart-breaking.
It has been the most powerful experience of my life so far and it will take a while to go through all that I have experienced.
The Obelisk of Heliopolis will stand as my final pilgrimage station in Egypt. Although so many obstacles endeavored to prevent me from getting there ... I overcame all that came before me and stood in the footsteps of Antinous.
~ANTONIUS SUBIA
Wednesday, March 3, 2021
MEXICO'S FIRST SAINT OF ANTINOUS
IS VICTIM OF HOMOPHOBIC VIOLENCE
IS VICTIM OF HOMOPHOBIC VIOLENCE
WORSHIPERS of Antinous in Mexico City today solemnly commemorate the anniversary of the horrific murder of the first martyr saint of Antinous in Mexico: Jorge Fernandez MartĆnez, a victim of homophobic violence.
He was brutally murdered by unknown assailants near his home in the Mexico City suburb of TultitlƔn on 3 March 2016.
Forensic tests showed he had been tortured, raped and asphyxiated. His broken body lay undiscovered for days.
Grieving neighbors who had known and loved him for nearly 20 years held a wake and asked for dignified funeral services conducted under the auspices of Epithimia Antinous with Pride TultitlƔn Committee and Estamos Contigo.
The rites were held at the famous Shrine of Santa Muerte (Our Lady of Sacred Death) in TultĆtlan led by Enriqueta Vargas.
Our sister group Epithimia Antinous at the TEMPLO DE ANTĆNOO MĆXĆCO holds an annual vigil for him during ceremonies at the sanctuary of Santa Muerte in TultitlĆ”n near Mexico City.
Carlos Oseguera Loraca, head of the Templo, says:Today we commemorate the anniversary of the death of our brother in AntĆnoo Jorge FernĆ”ndez MartĆnez, First Saint of AntĆnoo in Mexico, victim of homophobic violence in the Municipality of TultitlĆ”n, State of Mexico.
We also thank the Eclesiae Antinoi for having remember him on this date through the International Blog of Antinous the Gay God.
And we thank our brothers throughout the world who have raised their prayers for their eternal rest at the side of Antinous the God Gay.
Praised be the gods because there will be justice in this life or in the other, for the crimes of hatred against our community! And let's say together with FLAMEN ANTONIUS SUBIA:"When Antinous died, he passed into the realm of the dead where he met with our Lord Osiris and they became one God. A single God to rule the Underworld, travel through the chambers of darkness, cross the rivers of blood, cross the lakes of fire, where the light of his beautiful heart shines like a beacon. All the souls of gays, lesbians and trans will be reunited to give them a safe exit from the kingdom of shadows. He will welcome you all in his Million Year Barque. Not a single soul will be left behind forgotten and without love. Everyone will find a place of love and peace by their side. Let us raise our voices of praise, always in this way, from now on, until the end of time ... "!
Ave Antinoo!
Tuesday, March 2, 2021
DANIEL ZAMUDIO
SAINT OF ANTINOUS
SAINT OF ANTINOUS
WE honor Daniel Zamudio as a blessed and beloved Saint of Antinous.
Through his horrific death in Santiago de Chile at the hands of Nazi thugs, Daniel Zamudio spawned outrage throughout the Spanish-speaking world which forced politicians in Chile to enact anti-discrimation laws.
On the morning of March 3, 2012, 24-year-old Daniel Zamudio was admitted to Santiago's Posta Central Hospital with severe cranio-cerebral trauma, cranial haemorrhage, multiple cuts and contusions on the face, thorax and limbs, aspiration pneumonia and a compound fracture of tibia and fibula of his right leg.
Daniel Zamudio had been tortured for nearly six hours by four youths allegedly belonging to neo-Nazi groups, who assaulted him simply because he is gay.
In his statement, one of the suspects, Raúl López, said they "kicked and punched (Zamudio) in the head, on the face, in the testicles, on his legs, all over his body." Then they carved three swastikas on him with the jagged glass of a pisco bottle that, minutes earlier, they had broken on his head.
Zamudio, a clothing store salesman, was attacked in a park in Santiago by thugs who singled him out because he was gay.
The second of four brothers, he had hoped to study theater, his brother Diego said. "He was very loving, an excellent person and that's why it's so hard to believe that they attacked him with such hate," he said.
Antinous is the God of ALL people who have suffered and been martyred for being gay. Daniel Zamudio is in the embrace of Antinous the Gay God.
Monday, March 1, 2021
THE LEAPING PRIESTS OF MARS
DANCED THROUGH THE STREETS IN MARCH
DANCED THROUGH THE STREETS IN MARCH
They carried the 12 bronze ancilia (shields).
These shields resembled a figure-of-eight, like Mycenaean shields.
One of the shields was said to have fallen from heaven in the reign of King Numa, and eleven copies were made to protect the identity of the sacred shield, on the advice of the nymph Egeria, 'consort' of Numa, who prophesied that wherever that shield was preserved the people would be the dominant people of the earth.
On March 1 they would lead a procession through the city, singing, dancing and leaping high in the air as they clashed their swords or spears against their shields.
At night the Salii would congregate in the temple and feast in honour of Mars. Emperor Claudius is said to have left his own banquet and gone to join them as their food and wine was better than his own.