Template:Short description Template:Ancient Greek religion The Thesmophoria (Template:Langx) was an ancient Greek religious festival, held in honor of the goddess Demeter and her daughter Persephone. It was held annually, mostly around the time that seeds were sown in late autumn – though in some places it was associated with the harvest instead – and celebrated human and agricultural fertility. The festival was one of the most widely celebrated in the Greek world. It was restricted to adult women, and the rites practiced during the festival were kept secret. The most extensive sources on the festival are a comment in a scholion on Lucian, explaining the festival, and Aristophanes' play Thesmophoriazusae, which parodies the festival.
FestivalEdit
The Thesmophoria was one of the most widespread ancient Greek festivals.Template:Sfn The fact that it was celebrated across the Greek world suggests that it dates back to before the Greek settlement in Ionia in the eleventh century BCE.Template:Sfn The best evidence for the Thesmophoria concern its practice in Athens, but there is also information from elsewhere in the Greek world, including Arcadia,<ref>Herodotus, 2.171</ref> Sicily and Eretria.Template:Sfn
The festival was dedicated to Demeter and her daughter PersephoneTemplate:Sfn and was celebrated in order to promote fertility, both human and agricultural.Template:Sfn It was celebrated only by women, and men were forbidden to see or hear about the rites.Template:Sfn It is not certain whether all free women celebrated the Thesmophoria, or whether this was restricted to aristocratic women;Template:Sfn whichever was the case, non-citizen and unmarried women appear not to have celebrated the festival.Template:Sfn In fact, participation was expected of all Attic wives, and could serve as a form of proof of marriage.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
In Athens, the Thesmophoria took place over three days, from the eleventh to the thirteenth of Pyanepsion.Template:Sfn This corresponds to late October in the Gregorian calendar, and was the time of the Greek year when seeds were sown.Template:Sfn The Thesmophoria may have taken place in this month in other cities,Template:Sfn though in some places – for instance Delos and Thebes – the festival seems to have taken place in the summer, and been associated with the harvest, instead.Template:Sfn In other places the festival lasted for longer – in Syracuse, Sicily, the Thesmophoria was a ten-day long event.Template:Sfn
The main source about the rituals of the Thesmophoria comes from a scholion on Lucian's Dialogues of the Courtesans.Template:Sfn A second major source is Aristophanes' play Thesmophoriazusae;Template:Sfn however, Aristophanes' portrayal of the festival mixes authentically Thesmophoric elements with elements from other Greek religious practice, especially the worship of Dionysus.
Herodotus mentions the Thesmophoria in the second book of 'the Histories' and compares it to a similar Egyptian mystery ritual. He is vague about the practice and refuses to go into detail. However, he claims that the rite was introduced to the Pelasgian women in Greece by the daughters of Danaus, a mythical king of Libya. Herodotus further claims that knowledge of the Thesmophoria was nearly lost following ethnic cleansing of the Pelasgians by the Dorians in the Peloponnese. He credits the Arcadians for the survival of the practice because of their survival of the cleansing.<ref>Herodotus, the Histories. Edited by Paul Cartledge. Translated by Tom Holland, Penguin Books, 2015. Page 182.</ref>
RitualsEdit
According to the scholiast on Lucian, during the Thesmophoria pigs were sacrificed, and their remains were put into pits called megara.Template:Sfn An inscription from Delos shows that part of the cost of the Thesmophoria there went towards paying for a ritual butcher to perform the sacrifices for the festival;Template:Sfn literary evidence suggests that in other places, however, the sacrifices may have been made by the women themselves.Template:Sfn Some time later, the rotten remains of these sacrifices were retrieved from the pits by "bailers" – women who were required to spend three days in a state of ritual purity before descending into the megara. These were placed on altars to Persephone and Demeter, along with cakes baked in the shape of snakes and phalluses.Template:Sfn These remains were then scattered on fields when seeds were sown, in the belief that this would ensure a good harvest.Template:Sfn According to Walter Burkert, this practice was "the clearest example in Greek religion of agrarian magic".Template:Sfn
It is not certain how long the remains of the pigs were left in the megara. The fact that they had decomposed by the time that they were retrieved shows that they had been left in the pits for some time. Possibly they were thrown in during one festival and retrieved the next year. However, if they were thrown in during the Thesmophoria and retrieved in time for the sowing of seeds that year, then they may have only been left for a few weeks before being taken out again.Template:Sfn
AnodosEdit
The first day of the Thesmophoria at Athens was known as anodos ("ascent"). This is usually thought to be because on this day the women celebrating the festival ascended to the shrine called the Thesmophorion.Template:Sfn Preparations for the rest of the festival were made on this day: two women were elected to oversee the celebrations. Women also set up tents on this day; they would spend the rest of the festival staying in these rather than at home.Template:Sfn
Matthew Dillon argues that the name anodos is more likely to relate to the ascent of Persephone from the underworld, which was celebrated at the festival. Dillon suggests that a sacrifice to celebrate this ascent was performed on the first day of the festival.Template:Sfn
NesteiaEdit
The second day of the festival was called the nesteia. This was a day of fasting,Template:Sfn imitating Demeter's mourning for the loss of her daughter.Template:Sfn On this day, the women at the festival sat on the ground on seats made of plants which were believed to be anaphrodisiac.Template:Sfn Angeliki Tzanetou says that ritual obscenity (Template:Langx) was a feature of the second day of the festival;Template:Sfn however, Dillon says that the ritual obscenity would have taken place on another day, rather than the subdued second day,Template:Sfn and Radek Chlup argues that it took place on the third day of the festival.Template:Sfn
KalligeneiaEdit
The third day of the Thesmophoria was kalligeneia, or "beautiful birth". On this day, women called upon the goddess Kalligeneia, praying for their own fertility. Plutarch notes that in Eretria the women did not call upon Kalligeneia during the Thesmophoria.Template:Sfn
See alsoEdit
ReferencesEdit
Works citedEdit
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- Herodotus, Histories, Book 2.
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- Pritchard, David M. “The Position of Attic Women in Democratic Athens.” Greece and Rome, vol. 61, no. 2, 2014, pp. 174–193., {{#invoke:doi|main}}.
Further readingEdit
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- Håland, Evy Johanne (2017). Greek Festivals, Modern and Ancient: A Comparison of Female and Male Values, 2 vols. Newcastle upon Tyne: Cambridge Scholars Publishing (or. Norwegian 2007, translated by the author).