1. Supreme or High Being(s)

Italic religion began with the idea of a remote sky-father, whose presence gave legitimacy to law and cosmic order but who was not the focus of daily worship.


2. Major Deities (Civic and Agricultural Core)

The heart of Italic worship centered on a small set of powerful gods tied to the state, the seasons, and the protection of fields and armies.


3. Secondary and Local Deities

Beyond the civic core, Italic religion flourished through local gods of rivers, boundaries, and fertility, reflecting how landscape and daily life shaped devotion.


4. Spirits & Demigods

Every household and landscape was alive with spirits who guarded families, inspired poetry, and filled the spaces between great gods and humans.


5. Ancestors & the Dead

Ancestor veneration anchored Italic religion, linking the living to the dead through ritual, memory, and domestic shrines.


6. Opposing Forces

Religion also managed dangers—restless spirits, night creatures, and plagues—which were seen not as absolute evil but as disorder needing ritual correction.


7. Hierarchies & Relations

The pantheon was imagined as a structured court, with major triads at the top, a senate of gods, and a network of native and adopted powers.


8. Function in Practice

What mattered most was how people interacted with the gods in daily life, from family shrines to state sacrifices, weaving religion into every act of farming, war, and law.