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The Festivals
Note: For alternate month names, please see Months.
The 1st of the month is celebrated as the Noumenia, the feast of
the Visible New Moon. This is also sometimes called the Enikainea,
the "Old and New."
The 15th of the month is celebrated as the Dikhomenia (from the
ancestor of the modern word dikhiazo "I bisect, I
divide"), which occurs on or very close to the full moon.
This day is sacred to Selene, the goddess of the full moon.
Certain other days are considered sacred to particular gods
and goddesses as well. Readers will not that these are almost
entirely confined to the first decade of the month, as moon is
waxing.
The 2nd is sacred to the Agathos Daimon, the
"Good Spirit" (roughly equivalent to a combination of
the Will and the guardian angel of each person), the 3rd to
Athena, the 4th to Aphrodite and to Hermes (and sometimes also to
Herakles), the 6th to Artemis, the 7th to Apollo, the 8th to
Poseidon and sometimes also to Theseus, particularly in Athens.
The last day of the month, whether the 29th or 30th, is sacred to
Hekate.
The following descriptions of the festivals are a slightly
edited version of Seasonal
Festivals of the Greeks and Romans, a series of
articles by Apollonius Sophistes, reprinted here with his very
kind permission. For the full text, which includes references and
a large number of Roman festivals not included here, along with
much other valuable information such as the article Neoclassical
Celebratory Sacrifice, please visit The Omphalos.
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- Many of the Greek and Roman festivals of this season
celebrate the end of the military campaigning season. At
the end of September and beginning of October, however,
the emphasis shifts to the Corn Mothers and other
agricultural deities. In many Greek states the month
beginning mid-September was called Demetrion
after Demeter (though it was called Boedromion
in Athens).
- Genesia
5th
This is the Athenian festival in honour of the dead. (Of
course, families honour their own dead on their
anniversaries.) There are lamentations and speeches of
praise. In ancient times, the autumn equinox
(approximately) marked the end of the summer campaigning
season, so several of these festivals (Genesia, Kharisteria, Boedromia)
relate to the cessation of fighting.
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- Kharisteria
6th
This day is a feast for Artemis Agrotera
(Huntress), for the 6th day is Her birthday. (After the
Athenian victory at Marathon this festival became known
as Kharisteria, "Thanksgiving.")
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- Boedromia
7th
This is a minor thanksgiving festival for Apollo (since
the 7th day is His birthday), in gratitude to Him as a
rescuer in war.
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- Great
Mysteries of Eleusis 15th-21st
In origin the Great (Eleusinian) Mysteries were a
festival for the autumn sowing. They are, of course,
mysteries, so some things about them remain concealed, in
particular, the contents of the Sacred Kistai
(boxes) and the actual initiation of the Mystai
(Initiates). Anyone can be initiated, regardless of age
or sex.
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- The festival is conducted by the Arkhon Basileus
and four assistants. Two of these, the Hierophantes
and Dadoukhos (Torch Bearer), wear the ependytes
(a long-sleeved tunic ornamented at the hem and
shoulders), headband and Thrakian knee-boots; they carry
one or two long torches. Further, there are Mystagogoi
(Initiate Guides), who guide individual postulants, often
their friends, through the initiation.
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- Preparation 13th-14th
Preparations begin two days before the Mysteries proper
(13th Boedromion): on the 13th two mounted Epheboi
(Youths) travel to Eleusis and and on the 14th they
accompany Ta Hiera (the Holy Things), contained
in round Kistai bound with purple ribbons, which
are brought by wagon to Athens, where they are received
at the shrine (Eleusinion). (Mylonas has guessed
that Ta Hiera are Mykenean goddess figures.) An
official, the Phaidryntes (Cleaner) of the Two
Goddesses, reports their arrival to Athena's priestess
(as at the Skira, Athena's priestess pays her
respects to Demeter's). (The Two Goddesses are, of
course, Demeter and Persephone, but Their names are
considered too sacred to be mentioned in the rites.)
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- 1st Day: Agyrmos (Gathering)
15th
The would-be Mystai, who must have already been
initiated in the Lesser Mysteries, gather in the Agora.
The Kerykes (Herald) calls for them to step
forward, and informs them that they must have "a
soul conscious of no evil" and that they "must
have lived well and justly." Those afflicted by
blood-guilt or other impurity are warned away. At this
time names may be taken, and it may be ensured that the
postulant is already initiated in the Lesser Mysteries.
The postulant spends the remainder of the day in
spiritual exercises recommended by his or her Mystagogos.
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- 2nd Day:
"Seaward, Initiates" 16th
The second day is for purification. The postulants travel
to the sea (or other place of ritual cleansing). On the
order "Seaward, Initiates!" they enter the
water with their offering so that both may be purified by
salt water.
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- In ancient times the offering was a piglet, which was
supplied to the postulant, for the pig is sacred to
Demeter. In the evening the piglet was sacrificed and the
postulant was sprinkled with its blood; later there might
be a feast on the pork. Nowadays we might use an ear of
corn as an offering and sprinkle the postulant with water
in which the corn has been boiled.
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- 3rd Day:
"Hither the Victims" 17th
The third day is for the main sacrifice to the Two
Goddesses. (See "NeoClassical Sacrifice" by
Apollonios Sophistes for more details.)
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- 4th Day: Epidauria
18th
On this day the postulant secludes him- or herself
indoors to prepare mentally for the initiation. There are
also celebrations for the god Asklepios, for on this day
in 420 BCE He came, with
his daughter Hygeia (Health) and His sacred snake, and
requested the Eleusinian initiation.
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- 5th Day: March to Eleusis
19th
The mounted Epheboi, the postulant Mystai,
their Mystagogoi, initiated Mystai, and
the officicals escort Ta Hiera back to Eleusis.
The procession begins at the shrine of Iakkhos, and his
priest, the Iakkhogogos (Iakkhos Guide), leads
the procession with the sacred image of Iakkhos, which
depicts Him as a torch-bearing youth. Iakkhos is the
Eleusinian name of Dionysos/Bakkhos; in the procession He
is the joyous attendant of the Two Goddesses, and
mediates between Them and the Mystai. The
marchers are accompanied by musicians (flute, harp,
voice); all join in the ecstatic cry, "Iakkhe!"
("Shout!")
The Mystai wear garlands of myrtle and may carry bakkhoi,
which are bundles of myrtle branches tied with wool; they
may also carry a sack of travel necessities on a pole.
Religious observances ar made a sacred sites along the
way. At one place the Krokidai tie a yellow
woolen thread (kroke) on the right hand and left
leg of each postulant. At another place disguised men
verbally abuse the postulants, which may drive away bad
luck. The final part of the procession is by torchlight,
because Demeter is traditionally depicted seeking Kore by
torchlight.
At night the postulant offers to Demeter the Kernos,
which is an earthenware dish with many small cups
attached; small offerings of the fruits of the earth
(grain, peas, beans, etc.) are placed in the cups. The
postulant shares these with the Goddess.
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- 6th Day: Initiation 20th
On the day of Initiation sacrifices of corn meal are made
to the Two Goddesses. In sympathy with Demeter when she
mourned the absent Kore, the postulants fast and prepare
themselves mentally for the sacred rite. Towards evening,
like Demeter when she accepted the drink from Metanaira,
the postulants drink the Kykeon (mixed drink),
comprising water, barley meal, and pennyroyal. (There is
debate about the ingredients of the Kykeon, but
this is the formula given in the "Homeric Hymn to
Demeter.")
The initiation, which lasts throughout the night, takes
place in a closed building caled the Telesterion
(Initiation Place); in its centre is the Anaktoron
(Place of the Anax King), the "Holy
of Holies" to which no-one but the Hierophantes
(Revealer) is admitted. The specifics of the initiation
are, of course, secret, and have not been revealed to
this day (though a great deal of conjecture has been
published). However, they involve Things Said, Things
Done, and Things Revealed. There is music, song, and
speech; there are ritual actions; there are revelations
by torchlight. Thereby the Mystai participate in
Demeter's joy at the restoration of Persephone. The
effect of the Mysteries on the initiate is profoundly
transfomative. Even the clothes worn during the
initiation are consecrated thereafter.
The Epoptai (Those Who Have Seen) are the
initiates of the highest level (who must have been Mystai
for at least one year), who have beheld the supreme
symbol of Demeter, as Triptolemos, the first Initiate,
beheld it, and they have witnessed the Hieros Gamos
(Sacred Marriage) of Demeter and Zeus.
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- 7th Day: Plemokhoai
21st
Each Mystes has two water-filled Plemokhoai
(Flowing Floodtides), which are earthenware vessels
shaped like a spinning-top. One is tipped out to the east
and the other to the west, while the Mystes
pronounces a spell known only to initiates.
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- Proerosia
5th
This is a festival for Demeter's blessings in preparation
for the ploughing and sowing at the beginning of the
agricultural season (proerosia = things before
the time of tillage); in ancient times it was held at
Eleusis. It immediately precedes the Pyanepsia
(see above), held in honor of Pythian Apollo, because His
oracle told the Athenians to initiate the Proerosia
in order to bring a worldwide famine to an end. Upon
command of the Hierophantes, the Sacred Herald
proclaims the Proerosia, recounts the myth of
its founding, and calls for the first-fruits offering
(mostly cereals, especially barley and wheat).
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- Pyanepsia
7th
The Pyanepsia is a festival of late autumn fruit
gathering that seeks divine blessings for the autumn
sowing. This very ancient festival is primarily in honor
of Phoebos Apollo as sun god, but also for Helios (Sun)
and the Horai (Hours); all are considered
vegetation deities, perhaps through Their connection with
the sun. Further, since Mykenaian times the earth-born
Athenians have considered themselves descendants of the
Sun (whom the Mykenaians may have called Pa-ya-wo
= Phoibos = Bright) and Ge (Earth). Thus the festival is
held on the seventh day, for on the seventh of each
(Greek) month (which is the first quarter of the moon)
Apollo's birthday is celebrated. The Pyanepsia
corresponds to the spring Thargelia (7 Thargelion).
In the procession each Pais Amphithales
(Child with Two Living Parents) carries an Eiresione.
Typically an Eiresione is an olive branch
carried by a supplicant and wrapped round with wool (eiros
= wool), but in this case it is a laurel branch (sacred
to Apollo), perhaps two to three feet long, decorated
with real fruit and models of harps, cups and
vine-branches made of pastry, all symbols of
fruitfulness. In a kind of Trick-or-Treat the children
bring these to each house and sing:
Th' Eiresione bears rich cakes and
figs and honey in a jar, and olive oil to
sanctify yourself, and cups of mellow wine that
you may drink and fall asleep.
If the occupant gives a gift to the children, he earns an Eiresione
and the yearlong blessing it conveys. Normally it is
fastened above the door of the house, as it is over the
door of the sanctuary of Apollo when the procession
reaches it. If no Pais Amphithales comes to your
home, you may bless it with your own Eiresione.
The festival derives its name from a stew of boiled beans
(pyanon epsein = to boil beans) and other
leguminous vegetables and cereals that is boiled in a pot
(khytros) and shared by the celebrants and the
God; it is a typical Greek Panspermia
(All-seeds). According to legend this was the votive
offering Theseus and his crew made to Apollo when they
returned to Greece on this day, for it was all that was
left of their provisions. On the other hand, it is
typical of a sowing ritual to combine all the edible
plants to be sown and to share them with the God, praying
that the next year may be bountiful.
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- Oskhophoria
7th
The Oskhophoria is a vintage and wine-pressing
festival, in thanks to Dionysos, held on the same day as
the Pyanepsia, when the Mysteries of Dionysos
were also held. Thus we find the two apparent polar
opposites, Dionysos and Apollo, honored on the same day,
but we must not forget that They also shared the
sanctuary at Delphi: Apollo honored there in the summer,
Dionysos in winter (when Apollo is in Hyperborea). An
ancient krater (mixing bowl) shows them shaking
hands over the Omphalos at Delphi.
There is a procession from the temple of Dionysos to the
temple of Athena Skira, for the grape harvest is
one aspect of Her concern for the well-being of the
community (cf. the Arrhephoria and Skirophoria,
both in mid-late June). This aspect of Athena may derive
from the vine goddess Skiras, worshipped in Salamis,
whence She came to Athens (see the Skirophoria discussion
for another idea of the meaning of skira).
The procession is headed by the two Oskhophoroi
(Vine-branch Bearers), young men who carry branches still
bearing grapes (oskhoi) and are dressed as
women, which recalls the androgyny of Dionysos, for they
wear the same Ionic khiton (ankle-length tunic)
as He sometimes does. Behind them comes a chorus singing
special hymns to the God.
They are accompanied by a herald, who has a garland
wrapped round his staff, rather than around his head, as
would be the normal custom. This was explained by the
Theseus myth: when his herald told the Athenians of
Theseus' return, in their joy they tried to crown him
with a wreath, but he refused it because he had learned
of the tragic death of Theseus' father. Therefore he
returned to Theseus with the wreath wrapped around his
staff.
The procession also includes Deipnophoroi
(Dinner Carriers), women who bring the food for the
sacred feast that follows the sacrifice. A portion of the
meat is burned for the God and some is eaten by the
celebrants; the rest is divided to be taken home. Stories
are told during the feast, especially the story of
Theseus and Ariadne, and how she was claimed by Dionysos.
The Deipnophoroi represent the Mothers of the
Twice-Seven, who brought meat, bread and heartening
stories to their children, the seven maids and seven lads
chosen to sail to Crete to be sacrificed to the Minotaur
(a ritual confrontation of 14 "Beauties" with
the Beast.).
The legend also explains the transvestite Oskhophoroi,
for Theseus chose two boys with girlish features, and
trained them to walk and act like girls so that they
might substitute for two of the condemned girls to
protect the others. In the festival they carry
vine-branches and lead the procession, as they did in
Theseus' triumph, in thanks to Dionysos and Ariadne. (Of
course, such transvestitism is not unusual in the rituals
of Greece or other cultures.) When the procession arrives
at the sanctuary, there are songs, both happy and sad,
and libations are poured to the God, followed by shouts
of:
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- Eleleu! Iou! Iou!
The yell is paradoxical in that "Eleleu!"
(pronounced "e-le-LOO!") is a cry of
encouragement (from elelizo, to rally), whereas
"Iou!" (pron. "yew!") is a
cry of woe (Latin Heu!). This was explained by
the mixed joy and grief of Theseus' return and his
father's death, but it also celebrates the death and
resurrection of Dionysos as Vegetation God.
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- Theseia
8th
The eighth of every month is sacred to Poseidon, so it is
appropriate that His son, Theseus is honored on this day
following the Pyanepsia and Oskophoria
(as well as on the eighths of other months). There is a
procession, sacrifices, athletic games (team torch-races
and track and field events), and a feast at which meat is
distributed to the people (celebrating Theseus as popular
benefactor and democratic hero). The feast includes Athare
(or Athera), a porridge of husked wheat and
milk.
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- Stenia
9th
The Thesmophoria proper is preceded by two days
(i.e. on 9 Pyanepsion) by the Stenia, a
nocturnal women's festival for Demeter and Persephone in
preparation for the Thesmophoria. The women
engage in Aiskhrologia (foul language, abuse),
hurling insults at one another to commemorate the way in
which Iambe made the grieving Demeter laugh (see the
Homeric Hymn to Demeter). This may also be when the Thesmoi
(Things Laid Down) are placed into the caverns at the
sanctuary of Demeter; they include dough models of snakes
and male genitalia and pork from sacrificed piglets, all
fertility symbols (pigs because of their fecundity); in
this way the womb of The Mother is fertilized; they will
be removed in the Thesmophoria proper. (Others
say that the Thesmoi are deposited in the Skirophoria.)
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- Thesmophoria
11th-13th
The Thesmophoria is a celebration of Sporetos
(Seed-time), the autumn sowing, dedicated to Demeter and
restricted to women. (This is unusual in the Greek world
for, although Gods often had Priests and Goddesses
Priestesses, the festivals were usually open to both men
and women. Although the ceremony is a women's mystery,
this much may be said.
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- 1st Day: Anodos (Ascent)
11th
During the Thesmophoria proper the women camp
for three days in the Thesmophorion, the
hillside sanctuary of Demeter Thesmophoros.
Under the direction of two Arkhousai
(Officials), the women set out in procession with the
necessary supplies for three days and two nights, and set
up their encampment, which takes the form of rows of
shelters or huts with walkways between them. The women
sleep on the ground, generally two to a hut.
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- 2nd Day: Nesteia (Fast)
12th
On the second day the women sit on the ground and abstain
from all solid food in humility and sympathy for
Demeter's mourning (when she also refused a chair), but
also to transfer their strength to the soil. As hunger
begins to gnaw their stomachs, they again engage in Aiskhrologia
(abusive language); some say, recalling Iambe and
Demeter, that their taunts are spoken in iambic verse,
the traditional meter of mockery. The women may also whip
each other with a scourge made of morotton
(woven bark). Aristophanes' Thesmophoriazysai
contains two beautiful hymns typical of those sung on the
day; they are too long to be reproduced here (ll.
969-1000 and 1136-1159; pp. 135-6 and 141-2 in the
Barrett translation, Penguin Books, 1964).
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- 3rd Day: Kalligeneia
(Fair Offspring) 13th
Nightfall brings the official beginning of the third day,
and there is a torch-light ceremony, for Demeter sought
Persephone by torch light. Some say that this is when the Thesmoi
are removed from the earth by Priestesses called Antletriai
(Bailers), of whom three day's ritual purity (including
sexual abstinence) is required. While women clap to scare
away the sacred snakes that guard the caverns, the
Antletriai go down into the caves, collect the Thesmoi
in buckets, and place the putrefying matter on the altars
of Demeter and Persephone. Later this "compost"
is removed from the altars and mixed with the grain to be
sown the following month (i.e., late Nov. to early Dec.).
In this rite we truly see the role of the cycle of life
and death in the fertilization of the Earth.
The fast is ended and the rest of the day is spent in
joyous celebration of the gift of beautiful children,
until the women break camp and return home.
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- Apatyria
3 or 4 consecutive days in Pyanepsion
Each Phratria (Clan) determines when its Apatyria
(perhaps "Feast of the Common Fatherhood") will
be held in the month of Pyanepsion.
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- 1st Day: Dorpia (Supper
Eve)
This is a day of reunion and feast for the Phratria's
members.
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- 2nd Day: Anarrhysis
(Sacrificing)
Sacrifices are made to Zeus Phratrios and Athena Phratria,
who oversee the Phratriai. Sometimes Dionysos is
also included, which is explained by the myth of the
fight between Melanthos, the Dark King, and Xanthos, the
Fair King. Dionysos, by appearing behind Melanthos in a
black goat's skin (Melainaigis), distracted him,
and allowed Xanthos to cut him down. Hephaistos may also
be honored.
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- 3rd Day: Koureotis
(Youths)
On this day there is much celebration as new members are
inducted into the Phratria; for many this will
be done in the first Apatyria after they are
born, though full induction takes place at puberty (when
they might offer their cut hair to the Gods). A spouse
can also be inducted after marrying a Phratria
member. Thus membership is by birth, adulthood or
marriage. In each case the parent or other sponsor is
supposed to finance the inductee's sacrifice.
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- 4th Day: Epibda (Day
Following)
Not a formal part of the festival, the "morning
after" for recovering from the preceding revelries.
(There is much drinking at the Apatyria.)
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- Khalkeia 29th
On this day the Ergastinai (Workers), comprising
the priestess and the Arrhephoroi (see Arrhephoria),
place wool on the loom for the woof of Athena's new peplos
(robe), which will be woven for nine months and will be
presented to Her in the Panathenaia. The
decoration, like that of a tapestry, represents in bright
colors, such as yellow and blue, the Gigantomachy, and
especially Athena's defeat of Enkeladus.
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- Maimakteria
sometime in Maimakterion
The winter comes with the beginning of the month Maimakterion,
so prayers are addressed to Zeus Maimaktes
(Blustering) that He may be kind to people, crops and
houses.
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- Pompaia sometime in Maimakterion
In a procession (pompaia) through the city,
priests carry the Dion Kodion (Sacred
Fleece), the skin of a sheep sacrificed to Zeus Meilikhios
(Open to Propitiation, Kindly), a chthonic aspect of Zeus
in which He appears as a snake and is especially
protective of children. In the Pompaia a priest
also carries the Kadykeus, the magic wand of
Hermes with its entwined snakes. By this rite storms and
other evil are driven out of the community, and the newly
sown grain is protected. A polluted individual may
likewise purify himself by standing with his left foot on
the Fleece, which absorbs the pollution. Or one may sit
barefoot on the fleece, with covered head, and be
purified by a priest applying the Likhnon
(Winnowing Fan). The Pompaia corresponds to the
springtime Diasia for Zeus Meilikhios,
such spring-fall pairing being common for Greek
agricultural festivals.
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- The winter solstice is 25 December in the ancient Roman
astronomical calendar, but 21 December in the modern
calendar. December is under the protection of Vesta, and
the Greek month Poseideon (mid-Dec.-mid-Jan.) is under
the protection of Poseidon.
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- This is a time of rest and celebration after the last
sowing, and so agricultural deities, such as Saturn, Ops
and Consus, are especially honored. Generally speaking,
Graeco-Roman festivals of this season are more concerned
with raising human spirits and reviving the crops than
with the return of the sun.
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- Poseidea 8th
The month of Poseideon was dedicated to Poseidon
and the eighth day was especially sacred to him (as was
the seventh to Apollo and the sixth to Artemis). (In
general the summer months are assigned to Apollo and the
winter months to other Gods, since that is when He is in
Hyperborea and Dionysos takes His place at Delphi.)
Poseidon's name seems to mean "Lord of the
Earth" or "Husband of Earth," which
reminds us of Saturn, husband of Rhea (Doric Poteidon
= Potei-Dan = Lord of Earth, as his sometime
wife Demeter = De-Meter = Ge-Meter =
Earth-Mother).
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- Country Dionysia
last half of Poseideon
This festival for Dionysos, which is called the Country
Dionysia (ta Kat' Agrous Dionysia) or Small
Dionysia (ta Mikra Dionysia), is not celebrated
on any fixed date, but at a time determined by each
village. Everyone participates (including, in ancient
times, slaves), and in this regard it is like the
Saturnalia.
According to Plutarch (3.527D), there is a procession
comprising the carriers of a jar of wine and a vine,
someone leading a he-goat, next the Kanephoros
(Basket-bearer) carrying a basket of raisins, then the
carriers of an erect, wooden phallus-pole, decorated with
ivy and fillets, and finally the singer of the Phallikon
(Phallic Song), which is addressed to "Phales"
(see Aristophanes' Acharnians, 247ff, for a comic
portrayal), although the procession may be more
elaborate.
On Askolia, the second day of the festival,
there is the Askoliasmos, a contest to see who
can balance longest on top of a greased, inflated
wine-skin (askos). Askoliazo may refer
to standing on one leg, because there are many other
one-legged contests at the festival (e.g., one-legged
races, one-legged tag with the raised leg, one-legged
hopping endurance). There may also be dramatic contests;
indeed Aristotle claimed (Poet. 1449a) that comedy was
born in the Country Dionysia.
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- Haloa 26th
Most likely the Haloa is a celebration of the
pruning of the vines and the tasting of the wine after
its first fermentation, or it may be to encourage the
growth of corn from the seed. It is named after the halos
(the circular threshing-floor) and is in honor of Demeter
and Dionysos.
In the earliest times the first part of the festival was
restricted to married women, but after the fourth century
BCE to hetairai (courtesans). The Eleusinian Arkhontes
(Magistrates) prepare a banquet comprising many foods,
including phallus- and pudenda-shaped cakes, but not
those foods forbidden in the Mysteries (pomegranates,
apples, eggs, fowls, some fish).
The Arkhontes then leave, permitting the women
to eat, to drink much wine, and to celebrate
licentiously. Carrying clay models of phalli and pudenda,
they dance on the halos around one or more giant phalli,
and engage in ritual obscenity. The women may carry on
their heads kernoi (offering dishes) containing
incense, grains or other offerings. Offerings may be
sprinkled on the phalli, around the bases of which are
corn leaves. Some women, including the Priestesses,
encourage the other women to take secret lovers.
Afterwards men are admitted and a joyful komos
(revel) begins, which develops into an all-night orgy. A
Priest and Priestess, with torches representing Demeter
and Persephone, sit on chests and preside over the
fertility celebration.
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- Lenaia 12th-15th
Though the festival is not well understood, it is
probably to bring the spring and fertility. There may be
a procession, during which the Daidykhos
(Torch-bearer) says, "Invoke the God!" and the
celebrants respond, "Son of Semele, Iakkhos, Giver
of Wealth!" There are also contests of drama, song
and poetry.
The Lenaia is most likely named for the Lenai,
who are Maenads. At midnight, clothed and bearing the thyrsos,
castanets, tambourines, flutes and torches, they begin an
all-night ecstatic dance before a garlanded image of
Dionysos. This idol is a simple post, dressed in a man's
tunic, with garlanded branches like upraised arms, and
with a bearded mask of Dionysos. Before it stands a table
with two stamnoi (jugs) of wine and a kantharos
(cup) between them; from the stamnoi the dancers
dip the intoxicating wine.
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- Gamelia 26th
Gamelion was called the "Month of Marriage,"
and was a popular time for weddings. The Gamelia,
at the end of the month, is a celebration of the Hieros Gamos
(Sacred Marriage) of Zeus and Hera; it is considered a
harbinger of spring and new beginnings. Few specifics are
known, so use your intuition.
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- Lesser Mysteries of
Eleusis early Anthesterion
Initiation in the Lesser Mysteries is a prerequisite to
initiation in the Greater (Eleusinian) Mysteries; they
accomplish the preliminary purification of the Mystos
(Initiate). These secret rites belong to Rhea, the Mother
of the Gods, and the oldest of the Rhea-Demeter-Kore
triad, but no more can be said about them.
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- Anthesteria
11th-13th
This is the "Festival of Flowers," when the
first shoots of blossom appear, and is one of the oldest
Greek festivals, dating back to the second millennium
BCE; it was also called the Older Dionysia. At this time
the vines are pruned again and the second fermentation of
the wine is complete; it is now ready for drinking, and
so this festival complements the Oskhophoria,
which celebrates the vintage.
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- 1st Day: Pithoigia
(Jar-opening) 11th
The first day celebrates the opening of the pithoi
(jars) in which the wine has fermented. A pompe
(procession) symbolizes the coming of Dionysos from the
sea in a ship-chariot to His sanctuary; the God may be
represented by an image or a masked man. The procession
includes musicians and bearers of the ritual instruments,
and other men, riding in the carts and perhaps masked as
Satyrs, merrily hurl insults at bystanders.
The pithoi are also brought, and after they are
broken open and the wine is mixed by the priestesses
(i.e. diluted with water, as Dionysos taught the Greeks
to drink it), a first-fruits offering is made to Him with
a prayer that the wine be beneficial. Then the wine is
tasted and there are songs and dances, in which He is
celebrated as the Fair-Flowering, the Reveller, the
Stormer, etc.
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- 2nd Day: Khoes (Pitcher
Feast) 12th
On this day all the temples of the gods are closed except
the Limnaion, the temple of "Dionysos in
the Marshes" (limnais, though there may be
no marshes present), which is only open during this
festival. Thus the underworld spirits are free to roam
and join the feasts of the living. For protection people
paint pitch on their doors and chew buckthorn in the
morning; business is suspended and no oaths are sworn.
Also on this day it is customary that everyone at least
three years old drinks wine. (Children are expected to
participate because of their connection to fertility.)
Everyone, including the children, has their own khoes
(pitchers, 2-liter for adults) and drinking cups for
wine, often purchased at the festival. The khous
has a round body, short neck and trefoil mouth.
This is a very child-oriented festival, and a child's
first Khoes is one of the major milestones of
life: Birth, Khoes, Puberty and Marriage. He or
she is crowned with flowers and might be given a khous,
as well as other gifts, such as toys and pets; teachers
often invite their pupils to a reception.
This is a day for drinking parties, both public and
private. Distinguished people are invited by the high
priest of Dionysos to a public drinking contest. A
trumpet signals the start of the contest, during which no
one may speak (for at this time people are cut off from
one another as from all other gods but Dionysos). The
victory goes to the first to empty his khous,
who is awarded a full wineskin. Private contests are
similar, but the prize is a cake.
Participants bring their own food, cups and khoes,
already filled with mixed wine (from the Pithoigia); the host
provides the garlands, perfume and dessert. After the
contests, they put their garlands around their khoes and
proceed to the Limnaion, where they give their
garlands to the priestess. There they all thank Dionysos
by pouring a libation for Dionysos of the last of the
wine from their khoes.
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- 3rd Day: Khytroi (Pot
Feasts) 13th
Since the Greeks and Romans reckoned the day from
sundown, the last day of the festival begins on the night
of the Day of Pitchers. This is the night of the Hieros Gamos
(Sacred Marriage) of Dionysos with the Basilenna
(Queen), the wife of the Arkhon Basileus
(Priest King); he must surrender his wife to Dionysos as
Theseus, his distant predecessor, surrendered Ariadne to
Him.
In the sacred precinct the Basilenna administers
an oath of purity to the fourteen women, the Gerarai
(Venerable Ones) of the Limnaion, who are
appointed by her:
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-
- "I sanctify myself and am both pure and
holy,
- from all things which are not purifying
- and especially from all intercourse with men,
- and I shall act as Gerara ... in the
ancestral fashion
- and at all appropriate times."
They then conduct secret rites, which include making
offerings at the fourteen altars and dancing before masks
of Dionysos as at the Lenaia.
Another pompe (procession) brings the Holy
Bride, who is identified with Ariadne, to her bridal
chamber in the Boukoleon (perhaps the ancient
house of the Arkhon Basileus). She is
proceeded by a guide bearing two torches, who embodies
Hermes Psychopompos (Spirit Guide); he wears the ependytes,
a decorative tunic. A Satyr (perhaps masked) carries the
tall dowry basket on his head or holds a sunshade over
the Basilenna; one of the Gerarai bears
a torch.
The actual rites of the Hieros Gamos are secret,
but this much can be said. The Holy Bride waits on her
bridal bed, while a Satyr acts as Thyroros (Doorkeeper)
at the bridal chamber. Then, in secret but for an
accompanying Satyr bearing His khous, Dionysos
comes drunk to His bride for the consummation of their
marriage, during which the revellers with their torches
celebrate outside the bridal chamber. (It has been
hypothesized that the Basilenna may sleep with a
herm of Dionysos or with a masked person, perhaps the Arkhon
Basileus or the high priest of Dionysos.)
After daybreak the Aiora (Swing) commemorates Erigone (Early-born),
who hanged herself in grief when her father, who brought
viticulture to Athens, was killed by drunken men. Girls
swing on swings and boys jump on sacks filled with wine.
By these actions and by hanging swaying masks and puppets
in trees, the children transform the memory of a sad
death into a symbol of joyous new life, purify the
vintage of this tragedy (swinging is a traditional means
of purification by Air) and banish the underworld spirits
(see below).
Also on this day the Hydrophoria (Water-bearing)
is celebrated: a procession of girls carrying hydriai (water
jugs) on their heads go to a place where the water can be
poured into a cubit-wide chasm in the earth; thus they
commemorate their ancestors who died in the flood of
Pyrrha and Deukalion, and celebrate the disappearance of
the flood waters into the earth.
Finally, a meal is prepared for the dead (and for Hermes Psychopompos,
their guide) by cooking various grains with honey in khytrai (earthen
pots, after which this day is named). According to
tradition, it was this meal, which is the most primitive
cereal dish, that was eaten after the flood. Everyone
shares this food except the priests (for the temples are
closed).
At the close of the festival the underworld spirits are
banished by saying:
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-
- Thyraze Keres, ouk eni Anthesteria!
- "Begone, Keres (Death Spirits), the Anthesteria
are finished!"
The ritual celebration of the flood, the swinging, and
the banishing of the dead mark a resurrection, like that
of Dionysos Himself.
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- Diasia 23rd
The Diasia (from Deus = Zeus) is the principal
festival for Zeus Meilikhios (The Kindly), who
is Zeus in chthonic aspect, manifesting as a giant snake.
On this day everyone makes bloodless offerings (thymata
epikhoria) to Him, typically cakes in the shape of
animals such as sheep or pigs, but also grain and fruit
because He is responsible for the fertility of the soil
and is often shown with a cornucopia. Since this is a
festival of propitiation, the entire offering is burnt
for the God. After that there is general feasting and
gifts may be given to children (who are especially dear
to chthonic deities).
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- Elaphebolia 6th
This festival (and month) is named for Artemis Elaphebolos
(Deer-shooting), that is, the Goddess as huntress; it is
on the sixth day, which is always Hers. Now, as in
ancient times, She is offered elaphoi (stags),
which are stag-shaped cakes made from dough, honey and
sesame-seeds.
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- City Dionysia
9th-13th
A principal characteristic of the City Dionysia,
as opposed perhaps to the Rural Dionysia,
is the presence of dramatic contests. On the first day,
costumed choruses of men and boys sing dithyrambs
(odes to Dionysos), on the second day there are comedies
(such as Aristophanes'), and on the third to fifth days
there are trilogies of tragedies (such as Aiskhylos's).
Crowns and other prizes are awarded. The priest of
Dionysos presides over the contests, and the image the
God attends them; the officials in charge of
administrative details are called khoregoi.
Other honors may also be announced and awarded.
The sacred image of the God is a wooden stylos,
or column, on which is affixed a terracotta mask of the
bearded Dionysos. A procession called "Bringing in
from the Sacrificial Hearth," which may include
mounted Epheboi (youths), brings the image to
His sanctuary and mimics the arrival of the God in the
city. (The image is removed from the sanctuary and taken
outside the city forthis purpose.)
On the following day is the main procession, the central
feature of which is the Sacred Phallus, made of wood and
carried on a tray (indeed, there may be several such
phalli in the procession). A maiden of good birth is
chosen as Kanephoros (Basket Carrier), and she
bears the Kaneon, a golden basket filled with
first-fruit offerings. Next come the Askophoroi
(Bottle Carriers), citizens of the city bearing on their
shoulders askoi (leather bottles) of wine to be
offered as first fruits to the God; they may wear
whatever they like. Others carry obeliai
(spit-like things), phallus-shaped loaves of bread, on
their shoulders. Likewise purple-robed Skaphephoroi
(Tray Carriers) bear skaphia (trays) of
offerings. In ancient times bulls were brought for
sacrifice. The day ends with a Komos (Revel), a
feast on beef and wine. At night, accompanied by flute
and harp music, the people sing and dance through the
streets.
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- Mounykhia 16th
This festival honors Artemis as Moon Goddess and Lady of
the Beasts. There is a procession in which the people
carry Amphiphontes (Shining-all-round), round
cakes in which dadia (little torches) are stuck,
much like the cakes offered to Hekate; later these are
offered to the Artemis with a prayer such as:
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- "Artemis, Dear Mistress, to Thee I carry,
Lady, this Amphiphon, and what shall serve as
drink offering."
Some say the reason the cake is called Amphiphon,
which can also mean "Shining by Double Light,"
is that it is offered when the sun and moon are both
visible.
In ancient times a she-goat was sacrificed to the Lady;
now we may use cakes of that shape, or offer palm leaves,
for the palm is sacred to Her.
This is also an appropriate time for the Arkteia
(Playing the She-Bear) in thanks for game animals (the
most important, for Neolithic tribes, being the bear).
The Arktoi (She-Bears) are young girls (about
ten years old) who dance naked or in short, saffron khitones
(tunics); they wear leaf-crowns in their hair and carry
torches or twigs.
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- Thargelia 7th
The Thargelia, which is probably identical to
the ancient Thalysia (First-fruit Offering), is
a harvest festival celebrated when the corn is threshed.
Although in many cases the time varies from farm to farm,
and coincides with the actual completion of the harvest
(May or June), since it is a festival for Apollo (as a
guardian of crops), it nominally occurs on the seventh
day, His birthday. It has two parts, purification and
offering.
The sixth day (the birthday of His sister, Artemis) is a
day of purification, and two (preferably unattractive)
men, the Pharmakoi (Scape-Goats), who have been
fed by the people, are led around the city, and then
driven away by fig-branches and (poisonous) squill-bulbs
(used for purification). One Pharmakos wears a necklace
of black figs, which represent the men of the city, and
the other wears one of white figs, representing the
women.
The following day is for a first-fruits offering to the
God; the Thargelos is made by boiling corn and
other vegetables in a pot. There are separate hymn
singing contests for men's and boys' choirs; the winners
receive a tripod, which they then dedicated to the God.
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- Kallynteria
22nd
This is a small festival, but an important one in Athens. Kallynteria
is the festival of "Sweeping Out," and it is on
this day that women sweep out the temple of Athena, and
Her eternal flame is refilled and relit by the priestess.
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- Plynteria 25th
This is the festival for washing (plynteria hiera)
the ancient statue of Athena Polias (Guardian of
the City); bathing sacred images was a common custom in
Greece and elsewhere. The day is considered unlucky (apophras)
because the Goddess is absent from the city; it begins a
rupture of the normal order, a void between the old year
(which ends in a month) and the new.
Women remove the peplos (robe) and jewelry from
the ancient image of Athena, which is then wrapped and
carried in a procession to the washing place. The
procession is led by a woman carrying a basket of fig
pastries, for the fig is an ancient fertility symbol and
was the first cultivated food; the sweetmeats may be
offered to the Goddess at the shore. Mounted Epheboi
(young men) may also accompany the (veiled) image. It is
brought to the shore (for it should be purified in
running water, especially salt water), where it is bathed
by two girls, the Loutrides (Bathers); the
peplos may be cleaned at the same time (perhaps by a
priest). That evening the Goddess is returned to the
temple in a torchlight procession and is clothed with the
clean peplos and adorned with Her jewels. Only
the Loutrides and the women who dress and undress the
Goddess are permitted to see Her naked.
The ancient statue was of human size or less, carved of
olive wood, and probably showed the Goddess seated
without weapons. She wore a tall, golden stephane
(crown) and She may have had a Gorgoneion
(Medusa head) on her breast.
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- Arrephoria 5th
Two young girls (perhaps seven years old), the Arrephoroi
(perhaps "Carriers of Unspoken Things") who are
the ritual daughters of the Arkhon Basileus
(Priest-King), have spent the preceding year living by
the temple of Athena Polias. Some say they have
been weaving a new peplos (robe) for Athena,
which they will bring to Her in the sacred procession
(see Panathenaia).
In a secret nocturnal rite, the Priestess gives the Arrephoroi a
package, the contents of which are hidden from all three.
They take the package by a secret path to the sanctuary
of Aphrodite in the Gardens, and bring back another
secret package. Thereafter the Arrephoroi are
replaced by two new girls. This rite recalls when Athena
gave the casket containing Erikhthonios to the daughters
of King Kekrops, who acted as nurses. Two of them
disobeyed Her order not to look in the casket, and when
they saw the serpent-man they jumped to their deaths from
the Acropolis. The name of the faithful nurse was Pandrosos (All-dew),
or, according to others, the two self-sacrificing
daughters were Pandrosos and Herse
(which also means Dew). (The festival's name might also
be spelled Ersephoria - Dew Carrying.) The olive
tree, which was Athena's special gift to Athens, bears
small olives if there is not sufficient dew at this time
of year. Aphrodite, as Goddess of the Morning and Evening
Star, was responsible for the dew, and so Her cooperation
was essential.
The Arrephoroi wear white robes and eat Anastatos (Made-to-rise),
a special light bread.
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- Skirophoria
12th
The Skirophoria (also known as the Skira)
occurs at the time of the cutting and threshing of the
grain. The Priestess of Athena, the Priest of Poseidon
and the Priest of Helios go to the Skiron, a
place sacred to Demeter, Kore, Athena Skiras and Poseidon
Pater, for here Athens and Eleusis were reconciled.
Athena and Poseidon represent city life, and Demeter and
Kore represent agriculture; Helios witnesses Their oaths
(as He witnessed the abduction of Kore). The Skiron
is where, according to tradition, the first sowing took
place. A large, white canopy (called the skiron)
is carried over the priests' and priestesses' heads
during the procession.
The Skirophoria is celebrated mainly by women
(as men dominate the City Dionysia).
To bring fertility, they abstain from intercourse on this
day, and to this end they eat garlic to keep the men
away. They also throw offerings into the megara
- sacred caves of Demeter: cakes shaped like snakes,
phalluses and sucking pigs. (These become the Thesmoi
- things laid down - that are removed in the Thesmophoria) This
ceremony recalls the swineherd Eubouleus who was
swallowed up with his pigs when Persephone was abducted
into the underworld by Hades.
The men have a race in which they carry vine-branches
from the sanctuary of Dionysos to the temple of Athena Skiras.
The winner is given the Pentaploa (Fivefold
Cup), containing wine, honey, cheese, some corn and olive
oil. He alone is allowed to share this drink with the
Goddess, to whom a libation is poured so that She will
bless these fruits of the season.
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- The heat of the summer is past its peak and the harvest
is nearing completion. This is the month of Hekatombaion
(nominally mid-July to mid-August), which began the
Athenian year. (Although other parts of Greece began
their year at different times - this calendar follows the
Lakonian practice of beginning at approximately the
Autumn Equinox with the month Boedromion.)
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- Aphrodisia 4th
This is the bathing festival of Aphrodite Pandemos
(Aphrodite of All Peoples) and Peitho
(Persuasion), Her helper, who have been considered
powerful goddesses since the archaic period; like Ishtar
They are goddesses of war and statecraft as well as love.
First the temple is purified (in ancient times with the
blood of a dove, Aphrodite's bird) and the altar is
anointed. Nowadays we might dedicate an unblemished rose
to Her and anoint the altar with pure rose oil. (Apples,
apple blossoms and myrtle sprays are also appropriate.)
Finally the sacred images are carried in a procession to
a place where they are washed (see the Plynteria for a discussion
of washing festivals). (Note that the fourth day of
every month is sacred to Aphrodite.)
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- Kronia 12th
The Kronia is a festival in honor of Kronos as a god of
the grain harvest, who is depicted with a reaping hook;
on this day a harvest supper celebrates the final end of
the harvest. More broadly it is (like the Saturnalia) a
celebration of the Golden Age ruled by Kronos and Rhea,
when there was no labor or oppression. Since this was
before Zeus brought order to the world, the Kronia is a
chaotic festival. In ancient times, slaves were allowed
to run riot in the streets, and were invited to sumptuous
banquets by their masters. During the Kronia we are
allowed a temporary return to the Golden Age, to
equality, luxury, ease and unconstrained freedom.
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- Panathenaia
28th
The Panathenaia is, in effect, the celebration
of Athena's birthday, for according to tradition 28
Hekatombion was the day She burst from Zeus's head
(depicted on the east pediment of the Parthenon). Though
it is Her day, all the Olympians attend the festivities
(as we see in the east frieze), for They were also all
present at Her birth. This is a sacred feast at which
gods and mortals celebrate Athena's birthday together.
The day before the Panathenaic procession is a festival
called Pannykhis (All-night Vigil - a common
feature of Greek festivals, since they begin at sunset,
like Roman festivals). At sunrise the sacred fire is
fetched from the altar of Eros in the Academy, where a
sacrifice was made to Eros and Athena. (An altar to
Prometheus, who brought fire to mortals, was also in the
Academy.) A torch race brings the fire to the altar of
Athena.
Every fourth year the Greater Panathenaia is
held, for which a new peplos (robe) is woven for
the Goddess (Her birthday present). Its middle stripe of
panels display the Gigantomachy, the battle of the Giants
and the Olympians (depicted in the east metopes
of the Parthenon), which symbolizes the triumph of
civilization over savagery. The procession brings the
peplos through the city, hung like a sail on the mast of
a wheeled ship, which is steered by priests and
priestesses adorned with colorful garlands; mounted Epheboi
(young men) may accompany the procession. The ship is
left at the entrance of the sacred precincts and the i is
carried the rest of the way by itself or on the mast
alone.
At the head of the Panathenaic procession are the Kanephoroi,
the gold-bedecked girls who carry the Kana, the
holy offering baskets, which they give to the marshals at
the altar. The Kana contain the barley that is
thrown over the sacrifice and covers the sacrificial
implements in the Kana. (See "Neoclassical
Celebratory Sacrifice" in The Lyre #3 for
more detail.) Next come the Ergastinai
(Workers), who wove the new peplos, and other
girls bring bowls, jugs, incense burners and additional
ritual implements.
In ancient times the procession split into two lines. The
north line brought a cow for Athena Polias, the
Bronze Age city guardian, and a ewe for Pandrosos (one of
the daughters of Kekrops). They were sacrificed at the
altar in the "Old Temple," which the Goddesses
shared, and the roasted meat was eaten by the priests and
officials. This indoor rite is older than the outdoor
sacrifice, which was the destination of the south line,
which brought cattle to Athena Parthenos, the
patron of democracy, at the "Big Altar" outside
the Parthenon, where the roasted meat was given to the
public.
In the more sacred northern procession the victor(s) of
the torch race (one victor in the Lesser Panathenaia,
all four in the Greater) may bring water to the sacrifice
in the hydria (water jugs) they won in the
races; they serve as Hydriaphoroi (Water
Bearers). They are followed by musicians, such as lyre
players (Kitharodoi) and flutists (Auletes),
since music usually accompanies sacrifices. The musicians
are elegantly dressed, for example, in a sleeved khiton (tunic),
a peplos (robe) and a himation (mantle),
as we see on the north frieze of the Parthenon (slabs VII
and VIII).
In both lines there are Skaphephoroi (Tray
Bearers), purple-gowned young men who carry bronze or
silver trays of cakes and honeycombs on their shoulders.
(They followed the torch victors in the northern
procession and the cattle in the southern procession.)
After the Tray Bearers in the procession come the Thallophoroi
(Sprig Bearers), good-looking Elders who carry sprigs of
the sacred olive trees, and the other celebrants.
Non-Hellenes carry oak branches. The number Four
organizes the procession: four Hydriaphoroi,
four Kitharodoi, four Auletes, four
ewes and four cows.
The peplos is dismounted from the mast, if
necessary, and folded by a young boy or girl and a priest
(the Arkhon Basileus), who will give it to the
priestess of Athena Polias. The girl may be one
of the Arrhephoroi (see the Arrephoria), who are the
ritual daughters of the Arkhon; the boy, who is
his ritual son, may be the lad charged with feeding the
Holy Snake. They correspond to the three daughters and
the son of Kekrops, the serpent-man who was the first
king of Athens and a great benefactor of the people.
Children assist in many other ways; some carry accerai (Lat.,
incense boxes) to fill the thymiateria (incense
burners). They also carry small, sacred tables and
chairs, which are set up to entertain the chthonic
goddesses allied with Athena: Pandrosos (All Bedewed) and
Ge Kourotrophos (Nursing Mother Earth, a patron
of nurses). Ge Kourotrophos has the bigger
chair, since She is more important than Pandrosos, for Ge
receives the prothyma (first offering) at all
Athenian sacrifices, perhaps barley from the Kanoun (holy
basket) or the honey cakes born by the Tray Carriers
(both typical offerings to chthonic deities). The city is
especially thankful to Her for beautiful children and
young women, who walk together in the procession. The
thirtieth Homeric Hymn thanks Mother Earth for
"well-ordered states with women fair," where
-
-
- their sons exult with youthful merriment;
- their daughters play in dances flower-strewn
- with happy heart, and skip through fields abloom.
- Such givest Thou, Holy Rich Divinity.
Notice that, like the sacrificial victims, which must be
blemish-free, good-looking and distinguished people (hoi
kaloi k'agathoi) are prominent in the procession -
the Goddess is honored with the best the city has to
offer.
The new peplos is placed on Athena's knees as a
gift, and is later stored in the treasury; She is not
rerobed at this time, which was done in the Plynteria. Sacrifices are
also made for Athena Hygieia (Goddess of Health)
and Nike (Victory).
In the Greater Panathenaia, the three or four
days following the procession are occupied by Agones
(contests) of sport (races, boxing and wrestling) and art
(music, poetry). Traditionally the prize for athletes is
a "Panathenaic amphora" containing olive oil
from the Goddess's sacred grove, and the prize for
artists is a gilded crown of wild olives and sometimes
money. There may be contests for children, for which they
are awarded plain crowns of olive.
Ten officials called Hieropoioi (Managers of the
Rites) organized the Lesser Panathenaia; the ten Agonothetai
(Contest Directors) managed the Greater.
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- Metageitnia 7th
This is a small festival in honour of Apollo in His
capacity as bringer of harmony. It is a celebration of
good relations with neighbours.
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Copyright © 1998 D.H. Killaly Barr
Last modified: September 28, 1998