The Latin phrase sub rosa (Neo-Latin for "under the rose"), denotes secrecy or confidentiality and is used in English to denote secrecy or confidentiality; this is somewhat in contrast to the Chatham House Rule which is an enforcement of non-attribution rather than secrecy. The rose has a long, ancient history as a symbol of secrecy.

History

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Horus as a nude boy with his finger to his mouth, and a sidelock of hair, the symbols of childhood. Here he also has a uraeus above his forehead, symbolizing his entitlement to kingship.

The rose has held a deeply symbolic significance in many times and cultures as a symbol of maternal creativity and of the yoni or feminine generative power.[1][unreliable source?] The literal rose and its essence or attar has also played a role in religious and spiritual rites which ofttimes would have been held in secret.[2][unreliable source?]

The rose has sometimes been said to have been the emblem of the god Horus in ancient Egypt; however, the gods in Egypt were usually associated with the lotus. The idea of Horus being linked to the rose probably arises from Greek and Roman cultural cross-transmission of myths from Egypt. Firstly, the rose's connotation with secrecy dates back also to Greek mythology. In Hellenistic and later Roman mythology, Aphrodite/Venus gave a rose to her son, Eros/Cupid (the god of love), who, in turn, gave it to Harpocrates, the god of silence (and a Greek name for a form of Horus), to ensure that his mother's indiscretions (or those of the gods in general, in other accounts) were not disclosed.[3] Secondly, in Egypt, the rose was actually sacred to Isis, but this appears to have been during the Roman period of Egyptian history: "Probably due to assimilation with the goddess Aphrodite (Venus), during the Roman period, the rose was used in her worship."[citation needed]

Later, the Greeks and Romans translated the god's Egyptian name Heru-pa-khered as Harpocrates and regarded him as the god of silence. The association of Harpocrates with silence and secrecy originates from a misunderstanding of Egyptian depictions of the god. Heru-pa-khered was represented as a naked youth with a finger-to-mouth gesture—in Egyptian artwork this gesture imitates the hieroglyph for child and is used to represent youth, but was misunderstood by Greeks and Romans as a gesture for silence.[citation needed]

Paintings of roses on the ceilings of Roman banquet rooms were also a reminder that things said under the influence of wine (sub vino) should also remain sub rosa.[4]

In the Middle Ages a rose suspended from the ceiling of a council chamber similarly pledged all present (those under the rose) to secrecy.[5]

In Christian symbolism, inherited from older roots, the phrase "sub rosa" has a special place in confessions, where roses were carved on confessionals to signify that the conversations would remain secret.[3] Pictures of five-petalled roses were often carved on confessionals, indicating that the conversations would remain secret.[3] The phrase has also been understood to refer to the mysterious virginal conception of Christ.

The rose is also an esoteric symbol of Rosicrucianism which was often considered to be a secret society or brotherhood.

 
The Tudor rose

In the 16th century, the symbol of Henry VII of England was the stylised Tudor dynasty rose. A large image of the rose covered the ceiling of the private chamber where decisions of state were made in secret.[citation needed]

The phrase entered the German language (unter der Rose) and, later, the English language, both as a Latin loan phrase (at least as early as 1654) and in its English translation.[3]

In current times, the term is used by the Scottish Government for a specific series of "off the record" meetings.[5]

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Secret Teachings of All Ages: Flowers, Plants, Fruits, and Trees". sacred-texts.com.
  2. ^ "Isis, Rose of the World". freeyellow.com.
  3. ^ a b c d "sub rosa". Merriam-Webster Dictionary. Retrieved 12 December 2016.
  4. ^ "sub rosa - Word of the Day - Dictionary.com". Dictionary.com.
  5. ^ a b "Sub Rosa". subrosascotland.eu.