Each May, American families celebrate their matriarchs with brunches, flowers, cards, and phone calls. Thousands of years before this modern Mother's Day tradition started, the ancient Romans had a similar observance, although it focused on marriage and childbirth at least as much as mothers themselves.

The ancient Romans celebrated a version of Mother's Day.

World History

E ach May, American families celebrate their matriarchs with brunches, flowers, cards, and phone calls. Thousands of years before this modern Mother's Day tradition started, the ancient Romans had a similar observance, although it focused on marriage and childbirth at least as much as mothers themselves. Celebrated each year on March 1, Matronalia commemorated the establishment of a temple to Juno Lucina, the Roman goddess of childbirth, on Rome's Esquiline Hill. 

As on our modern Mother's Day, husbands would give their wives gifts — but that's about where the similarity ends. Matronalia was a pretty pious affair; after a procession of married women to the temple to make offerings to Juno Lucina, families would return home and pray for marital happiness. Enslaved women were also given a feast by their female enslavers as part of the festivities.

Matronalia wasn't the only ancient Roman holiday relating to mothers, however. In fact, it was pretty tame in comparison to the annual celebration of the Great Mother of the Gods, also known as Magna Mater or Cybele, who entered the Roman pantheon around the third century BCE. Her festival, called Megalensia, took place over several days in March or April, and included games, theatrical performances, and other rituals.

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By the Numbers

Americans who planned to celebrate Mother's Day in 2023

84%

Year the temple to Juno Lucina was established 

375 BCE

Year the temple to Juno Lucina was established 

375 BCE

Americans' Mother's Day spending in 2023

$36 billion

Major gods and goddesses in the Roman pantheon

12

Major gods and goddesses in the Roman pantheon

12

Did you know?

The creator of Mother's Day later tried to abolish it.

Ann Reeves Jarvis, who brought mothers together through child care classes and social gatherings in the years surrounding the American Civil War, dreamed of a holiday celebrating mothers' work. After her death in 1905, her daughter Anna Jarvis decided to make that dream come true, leading to Mother's Day becoming a national holiday by 1914. Card companies, florists, candymakers, and other gift-giving industries seized the opportunity, and, much to Jarvis' dismay, Mother's Day became a heavily commercialized event. Jarvis spent the last years of her life trying to abolish the holiday, calling the profiteers "charlatans, bandits, pirates, racketeers, kidnappers, and termites that would undermine with their greed one of the finest, noblest, and truest movements and celebrations."

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