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Dionysus

In ancient Greek religion and myth, Dionysus (/d.əˈnsəs/; Ancient Greek: Διόνυσος Dionysos) is the god of the grape-harvest, winemaking, orchards and fruit, vegetation, fertility, festivity, insanity, ritual madness, religious ecstasy, and theatre.[2][3] The Romans called him Bacchus (/ˈbækəs/ or /ˈbɑːkəs/; Ancient Greek: Βάκχος Bacchos)[4] for a frenzy he is said to induce called bakkheia. As Dionysus Eleutherios ("the liberator"), his wine, music, and ecstatic dance free his followers from self-conscious fear and care, and subvert the oppressive restraints of the powerful.[5] His thyrsus, a fennel-stem sceptre, sometimes wound with ivy and dripping with honey, is both a beneficent wand and a weapon used to destroy those who oppose his cult and the freedoms he represents.[6] Those who partake of his mysteries are believed to become possessed and empowered by the god himself.[7]

Dionysus
(Bacchus)
God of wine, vegetation, fertility, festivity, ritual madness, religious ecstasy, and theatre
Member of the Twelve Olympians
AbodeMount Olympus
AnimalsBull, panther, tiger or lion, goat, snake
SymbolThyrsus, grapevine, ivy, theatrical masks, phallus
FestivalsBacchanalia (Roman), Dionysia
Personal information
Parents
SiblingsAeacus, Angelos, Apollo, Ares, Artemis, Athena, Eileithyia, Enyo, Eris, Ersa, Hebe, Helen of Troy, Hephaestus, Heracles, Hermes, Minos, Pandia, Persephone, Perseus, Rhadamanthus, Tantalus, the Graces, the Horae, the Litae, the Muses, the Moirai
ConsortAriadne
ChildrenPriapus, Hymen, Thoas, Staphylus, Oenopion, Comus, Phthonus, the Graces, Deianira
Equivalents
Roman equivalentBacchus, Liber
Etruscan equivalentFufluns
Egyptian equivalentOsiris

His origins are uncertain, and his cults took many forms; some are described by ancient sources as Thracian, others as Greek.[8][9][10] In Orphic religion, he was variously a son of Zeus and Persephone; a chthonic or underworld aspect of Zeus; or the twice-born son of Zeus and the mortal Semele. The Eleusinian Mysteries identify him with Iacchus, the son or husband of Demeter. Most accounts say he was born in Thrace, traveled abroad, and arrived in Greece as a foreigner. His attribute of "foreignness" as an arriving outsider-god may be inherent and essential to his cults, as he is a god of epiphany, sometimes called "the god that comes".[11]

Wine was a religious focus in the cult of Dionysus and was his earthly incarnation.[12] Wine could ease suffering, bring joy, and inspire divine madness.[13] Festivals of Dionysus included the performance of sacred dramas enacting his myths, the initial driving force behind the development of theatre in Western culture.[14] The cult of Dionysus is also a "cult of the souls"; his maenads feed the dead through blood-offerings, and he acts as a divine communicant between the living and the dead.[15] He is sometimes categorised as a dying-and-rising god.[16]

Romans identified Bacchus with their own Liber Pater, the "Free Father" of the Liberalia festival, patron of viniculture, wine and male fertility, and guardian of the traditions, rituals and freedoms attached to coming of age and citizenship, but the Roman state treated independent, popular festivals of Bacchus (Bacchanalia) as subversive, partly because their free mixing of classes and genders transgressed traditional social and moral constraints. Celebration of the Bacchanalia was made a capital offence, except in the toned-down forms and greatly diminished congregations approved and supervised by the State. Festivals of Bacchus were merged with those of Liber and Dionysus.

Name

Etymology

 
Dionysus extending a drinking cup (kantharos) (late sixth century BC)

The dio- prefix in Ancient Greek Διόνυσος (Diónūsos; /di.ó.nyː.sos/) has been associated since antiquity with Zeus (genitive Dios), and the variants of the name seem to point to an original *Dios-nysos.[17] The earliest attestation is the Mycenaean Greek dative form 𐀇𐀺𐀝𐀰 (di-wo-nu-so),[18][17] featured on two tablets that had been found at Mycenaean Pylos and dated to the twelfth or thirteenth century BC. At that time, there could be no certainty on whether this was indeed a theonym,[19][20] but the 1989–90 Greek-Swedish Excavations at Kastelli Hill, Chania, unearthed, inter alia, four artefacts bearing Linear B inscriptions; among them, the inscription on item KH Gq 5 is thought to confirm Dionysus's early worship.[21] In Mycenaean Greek the form of Zeus is di-wo.[22] The second element -nūsos is of unknown origin.[17] It is perhaps associated with Mount Nysa, the birthplace of the god in Greek mythology, where he was nursed by nymphs (the Nysiads),[23] although Pherecydes of Syros had postulated nũsa as an archaic word for "tree" by the sixth century BC.[24][25] On a vase of Sophilos the Nysiads are named νύσαι (nusae).[26] Kretschmer asserted that νύση (nusē) is a Thracian word that has the same meaning as νύμφη (nýmphē), a word similar with νυός (nuos) (daughter in law, or bride, I-E *snusós, Sanskr. snusā).[27] He suggested that the male form is νῦσος (nūsos) and this would make Dionysus the "son of Zeus".[26] Jane Ellen Harrison believed that the name Dionysus means "young Zeus".[28] Robert S. P. Beekes has suggested a Pre-Greek origin of the name, since all attempts to find an Indo-European etymology are doubtful.[18][17]

Meaning and variants

Later variants include Dionūsos and Diōnūsos in Boeotia; Dien(n)ūsos in Thessaly; Deonūsos and Deunūsos in Ionia; and Dinnūsos in Aeolia, besides other variants. A Dio- prefix is found in other names, such as that of the Dioscures, and may derive from Dios, the genitive of the name of Zeus.[29]

Nonnus, in his Dionysiaca, writes that the name Dionysus means "Zeus-limp" and that Hermes named the new born Dionysus this, "because Zeus while he carried his burden lifted one foot with a limp from the weight of his thigh, and nysos in Syracusan language means limping".[30] In his note to these lines, W. H. D. Rouse writes "It need hardly be said that these etymologies are wrong".[30] The Suda, a Byzantine encyclopedia based on classical sources, states that Dionysus was so named "from accomplishing [διανύειν] for each of those who live the wild life. Or from providing [διανοεῖν] everything for those who live the wild life."[31]

Origins

 
Dionysus triumph, a mosaic from the House of Poseidon, Zeugma Mosaic Museum

Academics in the nineteenth century, using study of philology and comparative mythology, often regarded Dionysus as a foreign deity who was only reluctantly accepted into the standard Greek pantheon at a relatively late date, based on his myths which often involve this theme – a god who spends much of his time on earth abroad, and struggles for acceptance when he returns to Greece. However, more recent evidence has shown that Dionysus was in fact one of the earliest gods attested in mainland Greek culture.[13] The earliest written records of Dionysus worship come from Mycenaean Greece, specifically in and around the Palace of Nestor in Pylos, dated to around 1300 BC.[32] The details of any religion surrounding Dionysus in this period are scant, and most evidence comes in the form only of his name, written as di-wo-nu-su-jo ("Dionysoio" = 'of Dionysus') in Linear B, preserved on fragments of clay tablets that indicate a connection to offerings or payments of wine, which was described as being "of Dionysoio". References have also been uncovered to "women of Oinoa", the "place of wine", who may correspond to the Dionysian women of later periods.[32]

Other Mycenaean records from Pylos record the worship of a god named Eleuther, who was the son of Zeus, and to whom oxen were sacrificed. The link to both Zeus and oxen, as well as etymological links between the name Eleuther or Eleutheros with the Latin name Liber Pater, indicates that this may have been another name for Dionysus. According to Károly Kerényi, these clues suggest that even in the thirteenth century BC, the core religion of Dionysus was in place, as were his important myths. At Knossos in Minoan Crete, men were often given the name "Pentheus", who is a figure in later Dionysian myth and which also means "suffering". Kerényi argued that to give such a name to one's child implies a strong religious connection, potentially not the separate character of Pentheus who suffers at the hands of Dionysus' followers in later myths, but as an epithet of Dionysus himself, whose mythology describes a god who must endure suffering before triumphing over it. According to Kerényi, the title of "man who suffers" likely originally referred to the god himself, only being applied to distinct characters as the myth developed.[32] The oldest known image of Dionysus, accompanied by his name, is found on a dinos by the Attic potter Sophilos around 570 BC and is located in the British Museum.[33] By the seventh century, iconography found on pottery shows that Dionysus was already worshiped as more than just a god associated with wine. He was associated with weddings, death, sacrifice, and sexuality, and his retinue of satyrs and dancers was already established. A common theme in these early depictions was the metamorphosis, at the hand of the god, of his followers into hybrid creatures, usually represented by both tame and wild satyrs, representing the transition from civilized life back to nature as a means of escape.[13]

Epithets

 
The over-life size second-century AD Ludovisi Dionysus, with panther, satyr and grapes on a vine, Palazzo Altemps, Rome
 
Epiphany of Dionysus mosaic, from the Villa of Dionysus (second century AD) in Dion, Greece, Archeological Museum of Dion
 
A Roman fresco depicting Bacchus, Boscoreale, c. 30 BC

Dionysus was variably known with the following epithets:

Acratophorus, Ἀκρατοφόρος ("giver of unmixed wine"), at Phigaleia in Arcadia.[34]

Aisymnetes, Αἰσυμνήτης (insensitive) who rules the faith (μοίρα).

Acroreites at Sicyon.[35]

Adoneus, a rare archaism in Roman literature, a Latinised form of Adonis, used as epithet for Bacchus.[36]

Aegobolus Αἰγοβόλος ("goat-shooter") at Potniae, in Boeotia.[37]

Aesymnetes Αἰσυμνήτης ("ruler" or "lord") at Aroë and Patrae in Achaea.

Agrios Ἄγριος ("wild"), in Macedonia.

Androgynos Ἀνδρόγυνος (androgynous, specifically in intercourse) referring to the god taking both an active male and a passive female role.[38][39]

Anthroporraistes, Ἀνθρωπορραίστης ("man-destroyer"), a title of Dionysus at Tenedos.[40]

Bassareus, Βασσαρεύς a Thracian name for Dionysus, which derives from bassaris or "fox-skin", which item was worn by his cultists in their mysteries.[41][42]

Bougenes, Βουγενής or Βοηγενής ("borne by a cow"), in the Mysteries of Lerna.[43][44]

 
Marble sarcophagus with the Triumph of Dionysos, who is riding a panther, with attendants, the Four Seasons, Tellus and Ocean, c. 220-230

Braetes, Βραίτης ("related to beer") at Thrace.[45]

Briseus Βρῑσεὐς ("he who prevails") in Smyrna.[46][47]

Bromios Βρόμιος ("roaring", as of the wind, primarily relating to the central death/resurrection element of the myth,[48] but also the god's transformations into lion and bull,[49] and the boisterousness of those who drink alcohol. Also cognate with the "roar of thunder", which refers to Dionysus' father, Zeus "the thunderer".[50])

Choiropsalas χοιροψάλας ("pig-plucker": Greek χοῖρος = "pig", also used as a slang term for the female genitalia). A reference to Dionysus's role as a fertility deity.[51][52]

Chthonios Χθόνιος ("the subterranean")[53]

Cittophorus Κιστοφόρος ("basket-bearer, ivy-bearer"), Alludes To baskets being sacred to the god.[38][54]

Dimetor Διμήτωρ ("twice-born") Refers to Dionysus's two births.[38][55][56][57]

Dendrites Δενδρίτης ("he of the trees"), as a fertility god.

Dithyrambos, Διθύραμβος used at his festivals, referring to his premature birth.

Eleutherios Ἐλευθέριος ("the liberator"), an epithet shared with Eros.

Endendros ("he in the tree").[58]

Enorches ("with balls"),[59] with reference to his fertility, or "in the testicles" in reference to Zeus' sewing the baby Dionysus "into his thigh", understood to mean his testicles).[60] used in Samos and Lesbos.

Eridromos ("good-running"), in Nonnus' Dionysiaca.[61]

Erikryptos Ἐρίκρυπτος ("completely hidden"), in Macedonia.

Euaster (Εὐαστήρ), from the cry "euae".[62]

Euius (Euios), from the cry "euae" in lyric passages, and in Euripides' play, The Bacchae.[63]

Iacchus, Ἴακχος a possible epithet of Dionysus, associated with the Eleusinian Mysteries. In Eleusis, he is known as a son of Zeus and Demeter. The name "Iacchus" may come from the Ιακχος (Iakchos), a hymn sung in honor of Dionysus.

Indoletes, Ἰνδολέτης, meaning slayer/killer of Indians. Due to his campaign against the Indians.[64]

 
The Conquest of India by Dionysus at the archaeological museum of Sétif, c. 200–300 AD

Isodaetes, Ισοδαίτης, meaning "he who distributes equal portions", cult epithet also shared with Helios.[65]

Kemilius, Κεμήλιος (kemas: "young deer, pricket").[66][67]

Liknites ("he of the winnowing fan"), as a fertility god connected with mystery religions. A winnowing fan was used to separate the chaff from the grain.

 
Detail of the bronze Ponte Garibaldi Bacchus, Palazzo Massimo, Rome

Lenaius, Ληναίος ("god of the wine-press") [68]

Lyaeus, or Lyaios (Λυαῖος, "deliverer", literally "loosener"), one who releases from care and anxiety.[69]

Lysius, Λύσιος ("delivering, releasing"). At Thebes there was a temple of Dionysus Lysius.[70][71][72]

Melanaigis Μελάναιγις ("of the black goatskin") at the Apaturia festival.

Morychus Μόρυχος ("smeared"); in Sicily, because his icon was smeared with wine lees at the vintage.[73][74]

Mystes Μύστης ("of the mysteries") at Tegea in Arcadia.[75][76]

Nysian Nύσιος, according to Philostratus, he was called like this by the ancient Indians.[77] Most probably, because according to legend he founded the city of Nysa.[78][79][80]

Oeneus, Οἰνεύς ("wine-dark") as god of the wine press.[81][82]

Omadios ("flesh-eater"), Eusebius writes in Preparation for the Gospel that, Euelpis of Carystus states that, in Chios and Tenedos they did human sacrifice to Dionysus Omadios.[83]

Phallen , (Φαλλήν) (probably "related to the phallus"), at Lesbos.[84][85]

Phleus ("related to the bloοm of a plant").[86][87][88]

Pseudanor Ψευδάνωρ (literally "false man", referring to his feminine qualities), in Macedonia.

Perikionius, Περικιόνιος ("climbing the column (ivy)", a name of Dionysus at Thebes.[89]

Semeleios[90] (Semeleius or Semeleus),[91] an obscure epithet meaning 'He of the Earth', 'son of Semele'.[92][93][94][95] Also appears in the expression Semeleios Iakchus plutodotas ("Son of Semele, Iakchus, wealth-giver").[96]

Skyllitas, Σκυλλίτας ("related to the vine-branch") at Kos.[97][98]

Sykites, Συκίτης ("related to figs"), at Laconia.[99]

Taurophagus, Ταυροφάγος ("bull eating").[100]

Tauros Ταῦρος ("a bull"), occurs as a surname of Dionysus.[101][102]

Theoinus, Θέοινος (wine-god of a festival in Attica).[103][104][105]

Τhyiοn, Θυίων ("from the festival of Dionysus 'Thyia' (Θυῐα) at Elis").[106][107]

Thyllophorus, Θυλλοφόρος ("bearing leaves"), at Kos.[108][109]

In the Greek pantheon, Dionysus (along with Zeus) absorbs the role of Sabazios, a Thracian/Phrygian deity. In the Roman pantheon, Sabazius became an alternative name for Bacchus.[110]

Worship and festivals in Greece

Dionysus worship became firmly established by the seventh century BC.[111] He may have been worshiped as early as c. 1500–1100 BC by Mycenaean Greeks;[112][21] and traces of Dionysian-type cult have also been found in ancient Minoan Crete.[32]

Dionysia

 
Marble head of Dionysus, 2nd century AD, Capitoline Museums, Rome

The Dionysia, Haloa, Ascolia and Lenaia festivals were dedicated to Dionysus.[113] The Rural Dionysia (or Lesser Dionysia) was one of the oldest festivals dedicated to Dionysus, begun in Attica, and probably celebrated the cultivation of vines. It was held during the winter month of Poseideon (the time surrounding the winter solstice, modern December or January). The Rural Dionysia centered on a procession, during which participants carried phalluses, long loaves of bread, jars of water and wine as well as other offerings, and young girls carried baskets. The procession was followed by a series of dramatic performances and drama competitions.[114]

The City Dionysia (or Greater Dionysia) took place in urban centers such as Athens and Eleusis, and was a later development, probably beginning during the sixth century BC. Held three months after the Rural Dionysia, the Greater festival fell near the spring equinox in the month of Elaphebolion (modern March or April). The procession of the City Dionysia was similar to that of the rural celebrations, but more elaborate, and led by participants carrying a wooden statue of Dionysus, and including sacrificial bulls and ornately dressed choruses. The dramatic competitions of the Greater Dionysia also featured more noteworthy poets and playwrights, and prizes for both dramatists and actors in multiple categories.[114][14]

Anthesteria

 
A mosaic from Antioch of Dionysos, 2nd century AD

The Anthesteria (Ἀνθεστήρια) was an Athenian festival that celebrated the beginning of spring. It spanned three days: Pithoigia (Πιθοίγια, "Jar-Opening"), Choes (Χοαί, "The Pouring") and Chythroi (Χύτροι "The Pots").[115] It was said the dead arose from the underworld during the span of the festival. Along with the souls of the dead, the Keres also wandered through the city and had to be banished when the festival ended.[116] On the first day, Wine vats were opened.[117] The wine was opened and mixed in honour of the god.[118] The rooms and the drinking vessels were adorned with flowers along with children over three years of age.[115]

On the second day, a solemn ritual for Dionysus occurred along with drinking. People dressed up, sometimes as members of Dionysus's entourage, and visited others. Choes was also the occasion of a solemn and secret ceremony. In one of the sanctuaries of Dionysus in the Lenaeum, which for the rest of the year was closed. The basilissa (or basilinna), wife of the basileus, underwent through a symbolic ceremonial marriage to the god, possibly representing a Hieros gamos. The basilissa was assisted by fourteen Athenian matrons (called Gerarai) who were chosen by the basileus and sworn to secrecy.[115][119]

The last day was dedicated to the dead. Offerings were also offered to Hermes, due to his connection to the underworld. It was considered a day of merrymaking.[115] Some poured Libations on the tombs of deceased relatives. Chythroi ended with a ritual cry intended to order the souls of the dead to return to the underworld.[119] Keres were also banished from the festival on the last day.[116]

To protect themselves from evil, people chewed leaves of whitethorn and smeared their doors with tar to protect themselves. The festival also allowed servants and slaves to join in on the festivities.[115][116]

Bacchic Mysteries

 
Marble relief of a Maenad and two satyrs in a Bacchic procession. AD 100, British Museum, London.

The central religious cult of Dionysus is known as the Bacchic or Dionysian Mysteries. The exact origin of this religion is unknown, though Orpheus was said to have invented the mysteries of Dionysus.[120] Evidence suggests that many sources and rituals typically considered to be part of the similar Orphic Mysteries actually belong to Dionysian mysteries.[13] Some scholars have suggested that, additionally, there is no difference between the Dionysian mysteries and the mysteries of Persephone, but that these were all facets of the same mystery religion, and that Dionysus and Persephone both had important roles in it.[13][121] Previously considered to have been a primarily rural and fringe part of Greek religion, the major urban center of Athens played a major role in the development and spread of the Bacchic mysteries.[13]

The Bacchic mysteries served an important role in creating ritual traditions for transitions in people's lives; originally primarily for men and male sexuality, but later also created space for ritualizing women's changing roles and celebrating changes of status in a woman's life. This was often symbolized by a meeting with the gods who rule over death and change, such as Hades and Persephone, but also with Dionysus' mother Semele, who probably served a role related to initiation into the mysteries.[13]

The religion of Dionysus often included rituals involving the sacrifice of goats or bulls, and at least some participants and dancers wore wooden masks associated with the god. In some instances, records show the god participating in the ritual via a masked and clothed pillar, pole, or tree is used, while his worshipers eat bread and drink wine. The significance of masks and goats to the worship of Dionysus seems to date back to the earliest days of his worship, and these symbols have been found together at a Minoan tomb near Phaistos in Crete.[32]

Eleusinian Mysteries

 
Bacchus, Ceres and Amor, (1595–1605). Oil on canvas by Hans von Aachen.
 
Roman marble relief (first century AD) from Naukratis showing the Greek god Dionysus, snake-bodied and wearing an Egyptian crown.

As early as the fifth century BC, Dionysus became identified with Iacchus, a minor deity from the tradition of the Eleusinian Mysteries.[122] This association may have arisen because of the homophony of the names Iacchus and Bacchus. Two black-figure lekythoi (c. 500 BC), possibly represent the earliest evidence for such an association. The nearly-identical vases, one in Berlin,[123] the other in Rome,[124] depict Dionysus, along with the inscription IAKXNE, a possible miswriting of IAKXE.[125] More early evidence can be found in the works of the fifth-century BC Athenian tragedians Sophocles and Euripides.[126] In Sophocles' Antigone (c. 441 BC), an ode to Dionysus begins by addressing Dionysus as the "God of many names" (πολυώνυμε), who rules over the glens of Demeter's Eleusis, and ends by identifying him with "Iacchus the Giver", who leads "the chorus of the stars whose breath is fire" and whose "attendant Thyiads" dance in "night-long frenzy".[127] And in a fragment from a lost play, Sophocles describes Nysa, Dionysus' traditional place of nurture: "From here I caught sight of Nysa, haunt of Bacchus, famed among mortals, which Iacchus of the bull's horns counts as his beloved nurse".[128] In Euripides' Bacchae (c. 405 BC), a messenger, describing the Bacchic revelries on mount Cithaeron, associates Iacchus with Bromius, another of the names of Dionysus, saying, they "began to wave the thyrsos ... calling on Iacchus, the son of Zeus, Bromius, with united voice."[129]

An inscription found on a stone stele (c. 340 BC), found at Delphi, contains a paean to Dionysus, which describes his travels.[130] From Thebes, where he was born, he first went to Delphi where he displayed his "starry body", and with "Delphian girls" took his "place on the folds of Parnassus",[131] then next to Eleusis, where he is called "Iacchus":

And in your hand brandishing your night-
lighting flame, with god-possessed frenzy
you went to the vales of Eleusis
...
where the whole people of Hellas'
land, alongside your own native witnesses
of the holy mysteries, calls upon you
as Iacchus: for mortals from their pains
you have opened a haven without toils.[132]

Strabo, says that Greeks "give the name 'Iacchus' not only to Dionysus but also to the leader-in-chief of the mysteries".[133] In particular, Iacchus was identified with the Orphic Dionysus, who was a son of Persephone.[134] Sophocles mentions "Iacchus of the bull's horns", and according to the first-century BC historian Diodorus Siculus, it was this older Dionysus who was represented in paintings and sculptures with horns, because he "excelled in sagacity and was the first to attempt the yoking of oxen and by their aid to effect the sowing of the seed".[135] Arrian, the second-century Greek historian, wrote that it was to this Dionysus, the son of Zeus and Persephone, "not the Theban Dionysus, that the mystic chant 'Iacchus' is sung".[136] The second-century poet Lucian also referred to the "dismemberment of Iacchus".[137]

The fourth- or fifth-century poet Nonnus associated the name Iacchus with the "third" Dionysus. He described the Athenian celebrations given to the first Dionysus Zagreus, son of Persephone, the second Dionysus Bromios, son of Semele, and the third Dionysus Iacchus:

They [the Athenians] honoured him as a god next after the son of Persephone, and after Semele's son; they established sacrifices for Dionysos late born and Dionysos first born, and third they chanted a new hymn for Iacchos. In these three celebrations Athens held high revel; in the dance lately made, the Athenians beat the step in honour of Zagreus and Bromios and Iacchos all together.[138]

By some accounts, Iacchus was the husband of Demeter.[139] Several other sources identify Iacchus as Demeter's son.[140] The earliest such source, a fourth-century BC vase fragment at Oxford, shows Demeter holding the child Dionysus on her lap.[141] By the first-century BC, Demeter suckling Iacchus had become such a common motif, that the Latin poet Lucretius could use it as an apparently recognizable example of a lover's euphemism.[142] A scholiast on the second-century AD Aristides, explicitly names Demeter as Iacchus' mother.[143]

Orphism

 
Satyr giving a grapevine to Bacchus as a child; cameo glass, first half of the first century AD; from Italy

In the Orphic tradition, the "first Dionysus" was the son of Zeus and Persephone, and was dismembered by the Titans before being reborn.[144] Dionysus was the patron god of the Orphics, who they connected to death and immortality, and he symbolized the one who guides the process of reincarnation.[145]

This Orphic Dionysus is sometimes referred to with the alternate name Zagreus (Greek: Ζαγρεύς). The earliest mentions of this name in literature describe him as a partner of Gaia and call him the highest god. Aeschylus linked Zagreus with Hades, as either Hades' son or Hades himself.[146] Noting "Hades' identity as Zeus' katachthonios alter ego", Timothy Gantz thought it likely that Zagreus, originally, perhaps, the son of Hades and Persephone, later merged with the Orphic Dionysus, the son of Zeus and Persephone.[147] However, no known Orphic sources use the name "Zagreus" to refer to the Orphic Dionysus. It is possible that the association between the two was known by the third century BC, when the poet Callimachus may have written about it in a now-lost source.[148] Callimachus, as well as his contemporary Euphorion, told the story of the dismemberment of the infant Dionysus,[149] and Byzantine sources quote Callimachus as referring to the birth of a "Dionysos Zagreus", explaining that Zagreus was the poets' name for the chthonic aspect of Dionysus.[150] The earliest definitive reference to the belief that Zagreus is another name for the Orphic Dionysus is found in the late first century writings of Plutarch.[151] The fifth century Greek poet Nonnus' Dionysiaca tells the story of this Orphic Dionysus, in which Nonnus calls him the "older Dionysos ... illfated Zagreus",[152] "Zagreus the horned baby",[153] "Zagreus, the first Dionysos",[154] "Zagreus the ancient Dionysos",[155] and "Dionysos Zagreus".[156]

Worship and festivals in Rome

Liber and importation to Rome

 
Dionysus with long torch sitting on a throne, with Helios, Aphrodite and other gods. Antique fresco from Pompeii.

The mystery cult of Bacchus was brought to Rome from the Greek culture of southern Italy or by way of Greek-influenced Etruria. It was established around 200 BC in the Aventine grove of Stimula by a priestess from Campania, near the temple where Liber Pater ("the Free Father") had a State-sanctioned, popular cult. Liber was a native Roman god of wine, fertility, and prophecy, patron of Rome's plebeians (citizen-commoners), and one of the members of the Aventine Triad, along with his mother Ceres and sister or consort Libera. A temple to the Triad was erected on the Aventine Hill in 493 BC, along with the institution of celebrating the festival of Liberalia. The worship of the Triad gradually took on more and more Greek influence, and by 205 BC, Liber and Libera had been formally identified with Bacchus and Proserpina.[157] Liber was often interchangeably identified with Dionysus and his mythology, though this identification was not universally accepted.[158] Cicero insisted on the "non-identity of Liber and Dionysus" and described Liber and Libera as children of Ceres.[159]

 
Bust of Dionysus in the temple of Liber Pater in the forum, first century AD

Liber, like his Aventine companions, carried various aspects of his older cults into official Roman religion. He protected various aspects of agriculture and fertility, including the vine and the "soft seed" of its grapes, wine and wine vessels, and male fertility and virility.[159] Pliny called Liber "the first to establish the practice of buying and selling; he also invented the diadem, the emblem of royalty, and the triumphal procession."[160] Roman mosaics and sarcophagi attest to various representations of a Dionysus-like exotic triumphal procession. In Roman and Greek literary sources from the late Republic and Imperial era, several notable triumphs feature similar, distinctively "Bacchic" processional elements, recalling the supposedly historic "Triumph of Liber".[161]

Liber and Dionysus may have had a connection that predated Classical Greece and Rome, in the form of the Mycenaean god Eleutheros, who shared the lineage and iconography of Dionysus but whose name has the same meaning as Liber.[32] Before the importation of the Greek cults, Liber was already strongly associated with Bacchic symbols and values, including wine and uninhibited freedom, as well as the subversion of the powerful. Several depictions from the late Republic era feature processions, depicting the "Triumph of Liber".[161]

Bacchanalia

 
Sacrifice to Bacchus. Oil on canvas by Massimo Stanzione, c. 1634

In Rome, the most well-known festivals of Bacchus were the Bacchanalia, based on the earlier Greek Dionysia festivals. These Bacchic rituals were said to have included omophagic practices, such as pulling live animals apart and eating the whole of them raw. This practice served not only as a reenactment of the infant death and rebirth of Bacchus, but also as a means by which Bacchic practitioners produced "enthusiasm": etymologically, to let a god enter the practitioner's body or to have her become one with Bacchus.[162][163]

 
Bacchus with leopard (1878) by Johann Wilhelm Schütze

In Livy's account, the Bacchic mysteries were a novelty at Rome; originally restricted to women and held only three times a year, they were corrupted by an Etruscan-Greek version, and thereafter drunken, disinhibited men and women of all ages and social classes cavorted in a sexual free-for-all five times a month. Livy relates their various outrages against Rome's civil and religious laws and traditional morality (mos maiorum); a secretive, subversive and potentially revolutionary counter-culture. Livy's sources, and his own account of the cult, probably drew heavily on the Roman dramatic genre known as "Satyr plays", based on Greek originals.[164][165] The cult was suppressed by the State with great ferocity; of the 7,000 arrested, most were executed. Modern scholarship treats much of Livy's account with skepticism; more certainly, a Senatorial edict, the Senatus consultum de Bacchanalibus was distributed throughout Roman and allied Italy. It banned the former Bacchic cult organisations. Each meeting must seek prior senatorial approval through a praetor. No more than three women and two men were allowed at any one meeting, and those who defied the edict risked the death penalty.

Bacchus was conscripted into the official Roman pantheon as an aspect of Liber, and his festival was inserted into the Liberalia. In Roman culture, Liber, Bacchus and Dionysus became virtually interchangeable equivalents. Thanks to his mythology involving travels and struggles on earth, Bacchus became euhemerised as a historical hero, conqueror, and founder of cities. He was a patron deity and founding hero at Leptis Magna, birthplace of the emperor Septimius Severus, who promoted his cult. In some Roman sources, the ritual procession of Bacchus in a tiger-drawn chariot, surrounded by maenads, satyrs and drunks, commemorates the god's triumphant return from the conquest of India. Pliny believed this to be the historical prototype for the Roman Triumph.[166]

Post-classical worship

Late Antiquity

 
Statue of Bacchus, Paris, Louvre Museum (second century AD)

In the Neoplatonist philosophy and religion of Late Antiquity, the Olympian gods were sometimes considered to number 12 based on their spheres of influence. For example, according to Sallustius, "Jupiter, Neptune, and Vulcan fabricate the world; Ceres, Juno, and Diana animate it; Mercury, Venus, and Apollo harmonize it; and, lastly, Vesta, Minerva, and Mars preside over it with a guarding power."[167] The multitude of other gods, in this belief system, subsist within the primary gods, and Sallustius taught that Bacchus subsisted in Jupiter.[167]

In the Orphic tradition, a saying was supposedly given by an oracle of Apollo that stated "Zeus, Hades, [and] Helios-Dionysus" were "three gods in one godhead". This statement apparently conflated Dionysus not only with Hades, but also his father Zeus, and implied a particularly close identification with the sun-god Helios. When quoting this in his Hymn to King Helios, Emperor Julian substituted Dionysus' name with that of Serapis, whose Egyptian counterpart Osiris was also identified with Dionysus.

Worship from the Middle Ages to the Modern period

 
Bacchus by Paulus Bor

Three centuries after the reign of Theodosius I which saw the outlawing of pagan worship across the Roman Empire, the 692 Quinisext Council in Constantinople felt it necessary to warn Christians against participating in persisting rural worship of Dionysus. The council decried the Bacchic rites of the feast day Brumalia, "the public dances of women", ritual cross-dressing, the wearing of Dionysiac masks, and the invoking of Bacchus' name when "squeez[ing] out the wine in the presses" or "when pouring out wine into jars".[168]

According to the Lanercost chronicle, during Easter in 1282 in Scotland, the parish priest of Inverkeithing led young women in a dance in honor of Priapus and Father Liber, commonly identified with Dionysus. The priest danced and sang at the front, carrying a representation of the phallus on a pole. He was killed by a Christian mob later that year.[169] Historian C. S. Watkins believes that Richard of Durham, the author of the chronicle, identified an occurrence of apotropaic magic with his knowledge of ancient Greek religion, rather than recording an actual case of survival of pagan rituals.[170]

The late medieval Byzantine scholar Gemistus Pletho secretly advocated in favor of a return to paganism in medieval Greece.[citation needed]

In the eighteenth century, Hellfire Clubs appeared in Britain and Ireland. Though activities varied between the clubs, some of them were very pagan, and included shrines and sacrifices. Dionysus was one of the most popular deities, alongside deities like Venus and Flora. Today one can still see the statue of Dionysus left behind in the Hellfire Caves.[171]

In 1820, Ephraim Lyon founded the Church of Bacchus in Eastford, Connecticut. He declared himself High Priest, and added local drunks to the list of membership. He maintained that those who died as members would go to a Bacchanalia for their afterlife.[172]

Modern pagan and polytheist groups often include worship of Dionysus in their traditions and practices, most prominently groups which have sought to revive Hellenic polytheism, such as the Supreme Council of Ethnic Hellenes (YSEE).[173] In addition to libations of wine, modern worshipers of Dionysus offer the god grape vines, ivy, and various forms of incense, particularly styrax.[174] They may also celebrate Roman festivals such as the Liberalia (March 17, close to the Spring Equinox) or Bacchanalia (Various dates), and various Greek festivals such as the Anthesteria, Lenaia, and the Greater and Lesser Dionysias, the dates of which are calculated by the lunar calendar.[175]

Identification with other gods

Osiris

 
Painted wood panel depicting Serapis, who was considered the same god as Osiris, Hades, and Dionysus in Late Antiquity. Second century AD.

In the Greek interpretation of the Egyptian pantheon, Dionysus was often identified with Osiris.[176] Stories of the dismemberment of Osiris and the re-assembly and resurrection by Isis closely parallel those of the Orphic Dionysus and Demeter.[177] According to Diodorus Siculus,[178] as early as the fifth century BC, the two gods had been syncretized as a single deity known as Dionysus-Osiris. The most notable record of this belief is found in Herodotus' 'Histories'.[179] Plutarch also described his belief that Osiris and Dionysus were identical, stating that anyone familiar with the secret rituals associated with both gods would recognize obvious parallels, and that their dismemberment myths and associated public symbols are enough additional evidence that they are the same god worshiped by two different cultures.[180]

Other syncretic Greco-Egyptian deities arose out of this conflation, including with the gods Serapis and Hermanubis. Serapis was believed to be both Hades and Osiris, and the Roman Emperor Julian considered him the same as Dionysus as well. Dionysus-Osiris was particularly popular in Ptolemaic Egypt, as the Ptolemies claimed descent from Dionysus, and as Pharaohs they had claim to the lineage of Osiris.[181] This association was most notable during a deification ceremony where Mark Antony became Dionysus-Osiris, alongside Cleopatra as Isis-Aphrodite.[182]

Egyptian myths about Priapus said that the Titans conspired against Osiris, killed him, divided his body into equal parts, and "slipped them secretly out of the house". All but Osiris' penis, which since none of them "was willing to take it with him", they threw into the river. Isis, Osiris' wife, hunted down and killed the Titans, reassembled Osiris' body parts "into the shape of a human figure", and gave them "to the priests with orders that they pay Osiris the honours of a god". But since she was unable to recover the penis she ordered the priests "to pay to it the honours of a god and to set it up in their temples in an erect position."[183]

Hades

 
Pinax of Persephone and Hades on the throne, from the holy shrine of Persephone at Locri.

The fifth–fourth century BC philosopher Heraclitus, unifying opposites, declared that Hades and Dionysus, the very essence of indestructible life (zoë), are the same god.[184] Among other evidence, Karl Kerényi notes in his book[185] that the Homeric Hymn "To Demeter",[186] votive marble images[187] and epithets[188] all link Hades to being Dionysus. He also notes that the grieving goddess Demeter refused to drink wine, as she states that it would be against themis for her to drink wine, which is the gift of Dionysus, after Persephone's abduction, because of this association; indicating that Hades may in fact have been a "cover name" for the underworld Dionysus.[189] He suggests that this dual identity may have been familiar to those who came into contact with the Mysteries.[190] One of the epithets of Dionysus was "Chthonios", meaning "the subterranean".[191]

 
Votive relief of Dionysus and Pluto with adorant. Fourth century BC. From Karystos, Archaeological museum of Chalkida.

Evidence for a cult connection is quite extensive, particularly in southern Italy, especially when considering the heavy involvement of death symbolism included in Dionysian worship;[192] statues of Dionysus[193][194] found in the Ploutonion at Eleusis gives further evidence as the statues found bear a striking resemblance to the statue of Eubouleus, also called Aides Kyanochaites (Hades of the flowing dark hair),[195][196][197] known as the youthful depiction of the Lord of the Underworld. The statue of Eubouleus is described as being radiant but disclosing a strange inner darkness[198][196] Ancient portrayals show Dionysus holding in his hand the kantharos, a wine-jar with large handles, and occupying the place where one would expect to see Hades. Archaic artist Xenocles portrayed on one side of a vase, Zeus, Poseidon and Hades, each with his emblems of power; with Hades' head turned back to front and, on the other side, Dionysus striding forward to meet his bride Persephone, with the kantharos in his hand, against a background of grapes.[199] Dionysus also shared several epithets with Hades such as Chthonios, Eubouleus and Euclius.

Both Hades and Dionysus were associated with a divine tripartite deity with Zeus.[200][201] Zeus, like Dionysus, was occasionally believed to have an underworld form, closely identified with Hades, to the point that they were occasionally thought of as the same god.[201]

According to Marguerite Rigoglioso, Hades is Dionysus, and this dual god was believed by the Eleusinian tradition to have impregnated Persephone. This would bring the Eleusinian in harmony with the myth in which Zeus, not Hades, impregnated Persephone to bear the first Dionysus. Rigoglioso argues that taken together, these myths suggest a belief that is that, with Persephone, Zeus/Hades/Dionysus created (in terms quoted from Kerényi) "a second, a little Dionysus", who is also a "subterranean Zeus".[201] The unification of Hades, Zeus, and Dionysus as a single tripartite god was used to represent the birth, death and resurrection of a deity and to unify the 'shining' realm of Zeus and the dark underworld realm of Hades.[200] According to Rosemarie Taylor-Perry,[200][201]

it is often mentioned that Zeus, Hades and Dionysus were all attributed to being the exact same god... Being a tripartite deity Hades is also Zeus, doubling as being the Sky God or Zeus, Hades abducts his 'daughter' and paramour Persephone. The taking of Kore by Hades is the act which allows the conception and birth of a second integrating force: Iacchos (Zagreus-Dionysus), also known as Liknites, the helpless infant form of that Deity who is the unifier of the dark underworld (chthonic) realm of Hades and the Olympian ("Shining") one of Zeus.

Sabazios and Yahweh

 
Bronze hand used in the worship of Sabazios (British Museum).[202] Roman first–second century AD. Hands decorated with religious symbols were designed to stand in sanctuaries or, like this one, were attached to poles for processional use.[203]

The Phrygian god Sabazios was alternately identified with Zeus or with Dionysus. The Byzantine Greek encyclopedia, Suda (c. tenth century), stated:[204]

Sabazios ... is the same as Dionysos. He acquired this form of address from the rite pertaining to him; for the barbarians call the bacchic cry "sabazein". Hence some of the Greeks too follow suit and call the cry "sabasmos"; thereby Dionysos [becomes] Sabazios. They also used to call "saboi" those places that had been dedicated to him and his Bacchantes ... Demosthenes [in the speech] "On Behalf of Ktesiphon" [mentions them]. Some say that Saboi is the term for those who are dedicated to Sabazios, that is to Dionysos, just as those [dedicated] to Bakkhos [are] Bakkhoi. They say that Sabazios and Dionysos are the same. Thus some also say that the Greeks call the Bakkhoi Saboi.

Strabo, in the first century, linked Sabazios with Zagreus among Phrygian ministers and attendants of the sacred rites of Rhea and Dionysos.[205] Strabo's Sicilian contemporary, Diodorus Siculus, conflated Sabazios with the secret Dionysus, born of Zeus and Persephone,[206] However, this connection is not supported by any surviving inscriptions, which are entirely to Zeus Sabazios.[207]

Several ancient sources record an apparently widespread belief in the classical world that the god worshiped by the Jewish people, Yahweh, was identifiable as Dionysus or Liber via his identification with Sabazios. Tacitus, Lydus, Cornelius Labeo, and Plutarch all either made this association, or discussed it as an extant belief (though some, like Tacitus, specifically brought it up in order to reject it). According to Plutarch, one of the reasons for the identification is that Jews were reported to hail their god with the words "Euoe" and "Sabi", a cry typically associated with the worship of Sabazius. According to scholar Sean M. McDonough, it is possible that Plutarch's sources had confused the cry of "Iao Sabaoth" (typically used by Greek speakers in reference to Yahweh) with the Sabazian cry of "Euoe Saboe", originating the confusion and conflation of the two deities. The cry of "Sabi" could also have been conflated with the Jewish term "sabbath", adding to the evidence the ancients saw that Yahweh and Dionysus/Sabazius were the same deity. Further bolstering this connection would have been coins used by the Maccabees that included imagery linked to the worship of Dionysus such as grapes, vine leaves, and cups. However the belief that the Jewish god was identical with Dionysus/Sabazius was widespread enough that a coin dated to 55 BC depicting a kneeling king was labelled "Bacchus Judaeus" (BACCHIVS IVDAEVS), and in 139 BC praetor Cornelius Scipio Hispalus deported Jewish people for attempting to "infect the Roman customs with the cult of Jupiter Sabazius".[208]

Mythology

 
Birth of Dionysus, on a small sarcophagus that may have been made for a child (Walters Art Museum)[209]
 
The education of Dionysus. Fresco, now in the Museo Nazionale Romano, Rome, c. 20 AD

Various different accounts and traditions existed in the ancient world regarding the parentage, birth, and life of Dionysus on earth, complicated by his several rebirths. By the first century BC, some mythographers had attempted to harmonize the various accounts of Dionysus' birth into a single narrative involving not only multiple births, but two or three distinct manifestations of the god on earth throughout history in different lifetimes. The historian Diodorus Siculus said that according to "some writers of myths" there were two gods named Dionysus, an older one, who was the son of Zeus and Persephone,[210] but that the "younger one also inherited the deeds of the older, and so the men of later times, being unaware of the truth and being deceived because of the identity of their names thought there had been but one Dionysus."[211] He also said that Dionysus "was thought to have two forms...the ancient one having a long beard, because all men in early times wore long beards, the younger one being youthful and effeminate and young."[212]

 
Marble bust of youthful Dionysus. Knossos, second century AD. Archaeology museum of Heraklion.
 
Wall protome of a bearded Dionysus. Boeotia, early fourth century BC.

Though the varying genealogy of Dionysus was mentioned in many works of classical literature, only a few contain the actual narrative myths surrounding the events of his multiple births. These include the first century BC Bibliotheca historica by Greek historian Diodorus, which describes the birth and deeds of the three incarnations of Dionysus;[213] the brief birth narrative given by the first century AD Roman author Hyginus, which describes a double birth for Dionysus; and a longer account in the form of Greek poet Nonnus's epic Dionysiaca, which discusses three incarnations of Dionysus similar to Diodorus' account, but which focuses on the life of the third Dionysus, born to Zeus and Semele.

First birth

Though Diodorus mentions some traditions which state an older, Indian or Egyptian Dionysus existed who invented wine, no narratives are given of his birth or life among mortals, and most traditions ascribe the invention of wine and travels through India to the last Dionysus. According to Diodorus, Dionysus was originally the son of Zeus and Persephone (or alternately, Zeus and Demeter). This is the same horned Dionysus described by Hyginus and Nonnus in later accounts, and the Dionysus worshiped by the Orphics, who was dismembered by the Titans and then reborn. Nonnus calls this Dionysus Zagreus, while Diodorus says he is also considered identical with Sabazius.[214] However, unlike Hyginus and Nonnus, Diodorus does not provide a birth narrative for this incarnation of the god. It was this Dionysus who was said to have taught mortals how to use oxen to plow the fields, rather than doing so by hand. His worshipers were said to have honored him for this by depicting him with horns.[214]

 
Bronze mask depicting Dionysus bearded and horned, c. 2nd century BC, height 21.4 cm.[215]

The Greek poet Nonnus gives a birth narrative for Dionysus in his late fourth or early fifth century AD epic Dionysiaca. In it, he described how Zeus "intended to make a new Dionysos grow up, a bullshaped copy of the older Dionysos" who was the Egyptian god Osiris. (Dionysiaca 4)[216] Zeus took the shape of a serpent ("drakon"), and "ravished the maidenhood of unwedded Persephoneia." According to Nonnus, though Persephone was "the consort of the blackrobed king of the underworld", she remained a virgin, and had been hidden in a cave by her mother to avoid the many gods who were her suitors, because "all that dwelt in Olympos were bewitched by this one girl, rivals in love for the marriageable maid." (Dionysiaca 5)[217] After her union with Zeus, Persephone's womb "swelled with living fruit", and she gave birth to a horned baby, named Zagreus. Zagreus, despite his infancy, was able to climb onto the throne of Zeus and brandish his lightning bolts, marking him as Zeus' heir. Hera saw this and alerted the Titans, who smeared their faces with chalk and ambushed the infant Zagreus "while he contemplated his changeling countenance reflected in a mirror." They attacked him. However, according to Nonnus, "where his limbs had been cut piecemeal by the Titan steel, the end of his life was the beginning of a new life as Dionysos." He began to change into many different forms in which he returned the attack, including Zeus, Cronus, a baby, and "a mad youth with the flower of the first down marking his rounded chin with black." He then transformed into several animals to attack the assembled Titans, including a lion, a wild horse, a horned serpent, a tiger, and, finally, a bull. Hera intervened, killing the bull with a shout, and the Titans finally slaughtered him and cut him into pieces. Zeus attacked the Titans and had them imprisoned in Tartaros. This caused the mother of the Titans, Gaia, to suffer, and her symptoms were seen across the whole world, resulting in fires and floods, and boiling seas. Zeus took pity on her, and in order to cool down the burning land, he caused great rains to flood the world. (Dionysiaca 6)[218]

Interpretation

 
Mosaic of Dionysus fighting the Indians, Palazzo Massimo Rome, 4th century AD

In the Orphic tradition, Dionysus was, in part, a god associated with the underworld. As a result, the Orphics considered him the son of Persephone, and believed that he had been dismembered by the Titans and then reborn. The myth of the dismemberment of Dionysus was alluded to as early as the fourth century BC by Plato in his Phaedo, in which Socrates claims that the initiations of the Dionysian Mysteries are similar to those of the philosophic path. Late Neoplatonists such as Damascius explored the implications of this at length.[219] The dismemberment of Dionysus (the sparagmos) is often considered to be the most important myth of Orphism.[220]

Many modern sources identify this "Orphic Dionysus" with the god Zagreus, though this name does not seem to have been used by any of the ancient Orphics, who simply called him Dionysus.[221] As pieced together from various ancient sources, the reconstructed story, usually given by modern scholars, goes as follows.[222] Zeus had intercourse with Persephone in the form of a serpent, producing Dionysus. The infant was taken to Mount Ida, where, like the infant Zeus, he was guarded by the dancing Curetes. Zeus intended Dionysus to be his successor as ruler of the cosmos, but a jealous Hera incited the Titans to kill the child. Damascius claims that he was mocked by the Titans, who gave him a fennel stalk (thyrsus) in place of his rightful scepter.[223]

Diodorus relates that Dionysus is the son of Zeus and Demeter, the goddess of agriculture, and that his birth narrative is an allegory for the generative power of the gods at work in nature.[224] When the "Sons of Gaia" (i.e. the Titans) boiled Dionysus following his birth, Demeter gathered together his remains, allowing his rebirth. Diodorus noted the symbolism this myth held for its adherents: Dionysus, god of the vine, was born from the gods of the rain and the earth. He was torn apart and boiled by the sons of Gaia, or "earth born", symbolizing the harvesting and wine-making process. Just as the remains of the bare vines are returned to the earth to restore its fruitfulness, the remains of the young Dionysus were returned to Demeter allowing him to be born again.[214]

Second birth

 
Jupiter et Sémélé. Oil on canvas by Gustave Moreau, 1895.

The birth narrative given by Gaius Julius Hyginus (c. 64 BC – 17 AD) in Fabulae 167, agrees with the Orphic tradition that Liber (Dionysus) was originally the son of Jove (Zeus) and Proserpine (Persephone). Hyginus writes that Liber was torn apart by the Titans, so Jove took the fragments of his heart and put them into a drink which he gave to Semele, the daughter of Harmonia and Cadmus, king and founder of Thebes. This resulted in Semele becoming pregnant. Juno appeared to Semele in the form of her nurse, Beroe, and told her: "Daughter, ask Jove to come to you as he comes to Juno, so you may know what pleasure it is to sleep with a god." When Semele requested that Jove do so, she was killed by a thunderbolt. Jove then took the infant Liber from her womb, and put him in the care of Nysus. Hyginus states that "for this reason he is called Dionysus, and also the one with two mothers" (dimētōr).[225]

Nonnus describes how, when life was rejuvenated after the flood, it was lacking in revelry in the absence of Dionysus. "The Seasons, those daughters of the lichtgang, still joyless, plaited garlands for the gods only of meadow-grass. For Wine was lacking. Without Bacchos to inspire the dance, its grace was only half complete and quite without profit; it charmed only the eyes of the company, when the circling dancer moved in twists and turns with a tumult of footsteps, having only nods for words, hand for mouth, fingers for voice." Zeus declared that he would send his son Dionysus to teach mortals how to grow grapes and make wine, to alleviate their toil, war, and suffering. After he became protector of humanity, Zeus promises, Dionysus would struggle on earth, but be received "by the bright upper air to shine beside Zeus and to share the courses of the stars." (Dionysiaca 7).[226]

 
Jove and Semele (c. 1695) by Sebastiano Ricci

The mortal princess Semele then had a dream, in which Zeus destroyed a fruit tree with a bolt of lightning, but did not harm the fruit. He sent a bird to bring him one of the fruits, and sewed it into his thigh, so that he would be both mother and father to the new Dionysus. She saw the bull-shaped figure of a man emerge from his thigh, and then came to the realization that she herself had been the tree. Her father Cadmus, fearful of the prophetic dream, instructed Semele to make sacrifices to Zeus. Zeus came to Semele in her bed, adorned with various symbols of Dionysus. He transformed into a snake, and "Zeus made long wooing, and shouted "Euoi!" as if the winepress were near, as he begat his son who would love the cry." Immediately, Semele's bed and chambers were overgrown with vines and flowers, and the earth laughed. Zeus then spoke to Semele, revealing his true identity, and telling her to be happy: "you bring forth a son who shall not die, and you I will call immortal. Happy woman! you have conceived a son who will make mortals forget their troubles, you shall bring forth joy for gods and men." (Dionysiaca 7).[227]

During her pregnancy, Semele rejoiced in the knowledge that her son would be divine. She dressed herself in garlands of flowers and wreathes of ivy, and would run barefoot to the meadows and forests to frolic whenever she heard music. Hera became envious, and feared that Zeus would replace her with Semele as queen of Olympus. She went to Semele in the guise of an old woman who had been Cadmus' wet nurse. She made Semele jealous of the attention Zeus gave to Hera, compared with their own brief liaison, and provoked her to request Zeus to appear before her in his full godhood. Semele prayed to Zeus that he show himself. Zeus answered her prayers, but warned her than no other mortals had ever seen him as he held his lightning bolts. Semele reached out to touch them, and was burnt to ash. (Dionysiaca 8).[228] But the infant Dionysus survived, and Zeus rescued him from the flames, sewing him into his thigh. "So the rounded thigh in labour became female, and the boy too soon born was brought forth, but not in a mother's way, having passed from a mother's womb to a father's." (Dionysiaca 9). At his birth, he had a pair of horns shaped like a crescent moon. The Seasons crowned him with ivy and flowers, and wrapped horned snakes around his own horns.[229]

An alternate birth narrative is given by Diodorus from the Egyptian tradition. In it, Dionysus is the son of Ammon, who Diodorus regards both as the creator god and a quasi-historical king of Libya. Ammon had married the goddess Rhea, but he had an affair with Amaltheia, who bore Dionysus. Ammon feared Rhea's wrath if she were to discover the child, so he took the infant Dionysus to Nysa (Dionysus' traditional childhood home). Ammon brought Dionysus into a cave where he was to be cared for by Nysa, a daughter of the hero Aristaeus.[214] Dionysus grew famous due to his skill in the arts, his beauty, and his strength. It was said that he discovered the art of winemaking during his boyhood. His fame brought him to the attention of Rhea, who was furious with Ammon for his deception. She attempted to bring Dionysus under her own power but, unable to do so, she left Ammon and married Cronus.[214]

Interpretation

 
A Hellenistic Greek mosaic depicting the god Dionysos as a winged daimon riding on a tiger, from the House of Dionysos at Delos (which was once controlled by Athens) in the South Aegean region of Greece, late second century BC, Archaeological Museum of Delos

Even in antiquity, the account of Dionysus' birth to a mortal woman led some to argue that he had been a historical figure who became deified over time, a suggestion of Euhemerism (an explanation of mythic events having roots in mortal history) often applied to demi-gods. The fourth century Roman emperor and philosopher Julian encountered examples of this belief, and wrote arguments against it. In his letter To the Cynic Heracleios, Julian wrote "I have heard many people say that Dionysus was a mortal man because he was born of Semele, and that he became a god through his knowledge of theurgy and the Mysteries, and like our lord Heracles for his royal virtue was translated to Olympus by his father Zeus." However, to Julian, the myth of Dionysus's birth (and that of Heracles) stood as an allegory for a deeper spiritual truth. The birth of Dionysus, Julian argues, was "no birth but a divine manifestation" to Semele, who foresaw that a physical manifestation of the god Dionysus would soon appear. However, Semele was impatient for the god to come, and began revealing his mysteries too early; for her transgression, she was struck down by Zeus. When Zeus decided it was time to impose a new order on humanity, for it to "pass from the nomadic to a more civilized mode of life", he sent his son Dionysus from India as a god made visible, spreading his worship and giving the vine as a symbol of his manifestation among mortals. In Julian's interpretation, the Greeks "called Semele the mother of Dionysus because of the prediction that she had made, but also because the god honored her as having been the first prophetess of his advent while it was yet to be." The allegorical myth of the birth of Dionysus, per Julian, was developed to express both the history of these events and encapsulate the truth of his birth outside the generative processes of the mortal world, but entering into it, though his true birth was directly from Zeus along into the intelligible realm.[12]

Infancy

According to Nonnus, Zeus gave the infant Dionysus to the care of Hermes. Hermes gave Dionysus to the Lamides, or daughters of Lamos, who were river nymphs. But Hera drove the Lamides mad, and caused them to attack Dionysus, who was rescued by Hermes. Hermes next brought the infant to Ino for fostering by her attendant Mystis, who taught him the rites of the mysteries (Dionysiaca 9). In Apollodorus' account, Hermes instructed Ino to raise Dionysus as a girl, in order to hide him from Hera's wrath.[230] However, Hera found him, and vowed to destroy the house with a flood; however, Hermes again rescued Dionysus, this time bringing him to the mountains of Lydia. Hermes adopted the form of Phanes, most ancient of the gods, and so Hera bowed before him and let him pass. Hermes gave the infant to the goddess Rhea, who cared for him through his adolescence.[229]

Another version is that Dionysus was taken to the rain-nymphs of Nysa, who nourished his infancy and childhood, and for their care Zeus rewarded them by placing them as the Hyades among the stars (see Hyades star cluster). In yet another version of the myth, he is raised by his cousin Macris on the island of Euboea.[231]

 
The Infant Bacchus, painting (c. 1505–1510) by Giovanni Bellini

Dionysus in Greek mythology is a god of foreign origin, and while Mount Nysa is a mythological location, it is invariably set far away to the east or to the south. The Homeric Hymn 1 to Dionysus places it "far from Phoenicia, near to the Egyptian stream".[232] Others placed it in Anatolia, or in Libya ("away in the west beside a great ocean"), in Ethiopia (Herodotus), or Arabia (Diodorus Siculus).[233] According to Herodotus:

As it is, the Greek story has it that no sooner was Dionysus born than Zeus sewed him up in his thigh and carried him away to Nysa in Ethiopia beyond Egypt; and as for Pan, the Greeks do not know what became of him after his birth. It is therefore plain to me that the Greeks learned the names of these two gods later than the names of all the others, and trace the birth of both to the time when they gained the knowledge.

— Herodotus, Histories 2.146.2

The Bibliotheca seems to be following Pherecydes, who relates how the infant Dionysus, god of the grapevine, was nursed by the rain-nymphs, the Hyades at Nysa. Young Dionysus was also said to have been one of the many famous pupils of the centaur Chiron. According to Ptolemy Chennus in the Library of Photius, "Dionysus was loved by Chiron, from whom he learned chants and dances, the bacchic rites and initiations."[234]

Travels and invention of wine

 
Bacchus and Ampelos by Francesco Righetti (1782)

When Dionysus grew up, he discovered the culture of the vine and the mode of extracting its precious juice, being the first to do so;[235] but Hera struck him with madness, and drove him forth a wanderer through various parts of the earth. In Phrygia the goddess Cybele, better known to the Greeks as Rhea, cured him and taught him her religious rites, and he set out on a progress through Asia teaching the people the cultivation of the vine. The most famous part of his wanderings is his expedition to India, which is said to have lasted several years. According to a legend, when Alexander the Great reached a city called Nysa near the Indus river, the locals said that their city was founded by Dionysus in the distant past and their city was dedicated to the god Dionysus.[236] These travels took something of the form of military conquests; according to Diodorus Siculus he conquered the whole world except for Britain and Ethiopia.[237]

 
Bacchus and Ampelos ". Pre-1865 image of a Roman statue in the Galleria degli Uffizi, Florence.

Another myth according to Nonnus involves Ampelus, a satyr, who was loved by Dionysus. As related by Ovid, Ampelus became the constellation Vindemitor, or the "grape-gatherer":[238]

...not so will the Grape-gatherer escape thee. The origin of that constellation also can be briefly told. 'Tis said that the unshorn Ampelus, son of a nymph and a satyr, was loved by Bacchus on the Ismarian hills. Upon him the god bestowed a vine that trailed from an elm's leafy boughs, and still the vine takes from the boy its name. While he rashly culled the gaudy grapes upon a branch, he tumbled down; Liber bore the lost youth to the stars."

Another story of Ampelus was related by Nonnus: in an accident foreseen by Dionysus, the youth was killed while riding a bull maddened by the sting of a gadfly sent by Selene, the goddess of the Moon. The Fates granted Ampelus a second life as a vine, from which Dionysus squeezed the first wine.[239]

Return to Greece

 
Badakshan patera, "Triumph of Bacchus" (first–fourth century).[240] British Museum.

Returning in triumph to Greece after his travels in Asia, Dionysus came to be considered the founder of the triumphal procession. He undertook efforts to introduce his religion into Greece, but was opposed by rulers who feared it, on account of the disorders and madness it brought with it.

In one myth, adapted in Euripides' play The Bacchae, Dionysus returns to his birthplace, Thebes, which is ruled by his cousin Pentheus. Pentheus, as well as his mother Agave and his aunts Ino and Autonoe, disbelieve Dionysus' divine birth. Despite the warnings of the blind prophet Tiresias, they deny his worship and denounce him for inspiring the women of Thebes to madness.

 
Pentheus torn apart by Agave and Ino. Attic red-figure lekanis (cosmetics bowl) lid, c. 450–425 BC (Louvre)

Dionysus uses his divine powers to drive Pentheus insane, then invites him to spy on the ecstatic rituals of the Maenads, in the woods of Mount Cithaeron. Pentheus, hoping to witness a sexual orgy, hides himself in a tree. The Maenads spot him; maddened by Dionysus, they take him to be a mountain-dwelling lion, and attack him with their bare hands. Pentheus' aunts and his mother Agave are among them, and they rip him limb from limb. Agave mounts his head on a pike, and takes the trophy to her father Cadmus.

Euripides' description of this sparagmos was as follows:

“But she was foaming at the mouth, her eyes rolled all around; her mind was mindless now. Held by the god, she paid the man no heed. She grabbed his left arm just below the elbow: wedging her foot against the victim’s ribs she ripped his shoulder off – not by mere force; the god made easy everything they touch. On his right arm worked Ino, ripping flesh; Autonoë and the mob of maenads griped him, screaming as one. While he had breath, he cried, but they were whooping victory calls. One took an arm, a foot another, boot and all. They stripped his torso bare, staining their nails with blood, then tossed balls of flesh around. Pentheus’ body lies in fragments now: on the hard rocks, and mingled with the leaves buried in the woodland, hard to find. His mother stumbled across his head: poor head! She grabbed it, and fixed it on her thrysus, like a lions’s, to wave in joyful triumph at her hunt.”[241]

The madness passes. Dionysus arrives in his true, divine form, banishes Agave and her sisters, and transforms Cadmus and his wife Harmonia into serpents. Only Tiresias is spared.[242]

 
Lycurgus trapped by the vine, on the Lycurgus Cup

In the Iliad, when King Lycurgus of Thrace heard that Dionysus was in his kingdom, he imprisoned Dionysus' followers, the Maenads. Dionysus fled and took refuge with Thetis, and sent a drought which stirred the people to revolt. The god then drove King Lycurgus insane and had him slice his own son into pieces with an axe in the belief that he was a patch of ivy, a plant holy to Dionysus. An oracle then claimed that the land would stay dry and barren as long as Lycurgus lived, and his people had him drawn and quartered. Appeased by the king's death, Dionysus lifted the curse.[243][244] In an alternative version, sometimes depicted in art, Lycurgus tries to kill Ambrosia, a follower of Dionysus, who was transformed into a vine that twined around the enraged king and slowly strangled him.[245]

Captivity and escape

 
North African Roman mosaic: Panther-Dionysus scatters the pirates, who are changed to dolphins, except for Acoetes, the helmsman; second century AD (Bardo National Museum)

The Homeric Hymn 7 to Dionysus recounts how, while he sat on the seashore, some sailors spotted him, believing him a prince. They attempted to kidnap him and sail away to sell him for ransom or into slavery. No rope would bind him. The god turned into a fierce lion and unleashed a bear on board, killing all in his path. Those who jumped ship were mercifully turned into dolphins. The only survivor was the helmsman, Acoetes, who recognized the god and tried to stop his sailors from the start.[246]

In a similar story, Dionysus hired a Tyrrhenian pirate ship to sail from Icaria to Naxos. When he was aboard, they sailed not to Naxos but to Asia, intending to sell him as a slave. This time the god turned the mast and oars into snakes, and filled the vessel with ivy and the sound of flutes so that the sailors went mad and, leaping into the sea, were turned into dolphins. In Ovid's Metamorphoses, Bacchus begins this story as a young child found by the pirates, but transforms to a divine adult when on board.

Many of the myths involve Dionysus defending his godhead against skeptics. Malcolm Bull notes that "It is a measure of Bacchus's ambiguous position in classical mythology that he, unlike the other Olympians, had to use a boat to travel to and from the islands with which he is associated".[247] Paola Corrente notes that in many sources, the incident with the pirates happens towards the end of Dionysus' time among mortals. In that sense, it serves as final proof of his divinity, and is often followed by his descent into Hades to retrieve his mother, both of whom can then ascend into heaven to live alongside the other Olympian gods.[16]

Descent to the underworld

 
Relief of Dionysus, Nagarjunakonda, Southern India, third century. He has a light beard, is semi-nude and carries a drinking horn. There is a barrel of wine next to him.[248][249]

Pausanias, in book II of his Description of Greece, describes two variant traditions regarding Dionysus' katabasis, or descent into the underworld. Both describe how Dionysus entered into the afterlife to rescue his mother Semele, and bring her to her rightful place on Olympus. To do so, he had to contend with the hell dog Cerberus, which was restrained for him by Heracles. After retrieving Semele, Dionysus emerged with her from the unfathomable waters of a lagoon on the coast of the Argolid near the prehistoric site of Lerna, according to the local tradition.[250] This mythic event was commemorated with a yearly nighttime festival, the details of which were held secret by the local religion. According to Paola Corrente, the emergence of Dionysus from the waters of the lagoon may signify a form of rebirth for both him and Semele as they reemerged from the underworld.[16][251] A variant of this myth forms the basis of Aristophanes' comedy The Frogs.[16]

According to the Christian writer Clement of Alexandria, Dionysus was guided in his journey by Prosymnus or Polymnus, who requested, as his reward, to be Dionysus' lover. Prosymnus died before Dionysus could honor his pledge, so to satisfy Prosymnus' shade, Dionysus fashioned a phallus from an olive branch and sat on it at Prosymnus' tomb.[252] This story survives in full only in Christian sources, whose aim was to discredit pagan mythology, but it appears to have also served to explain the origin of secret objects used by the Dionysian Mysteries.[253]

This same myth of Dionysus' descent to the underworld is related by both Diodorus Siculus in his first century BC work Bibliotheca historica, and Pseudo-Apollodorus in the third book of his first century AD work Bibliotheca. In the latter, Apollodorus tells how after having been hidden away from Hera's wrath, Dionysus traveled the world opposing those who denied his godhood, finally proving it when he transformed his pirate captors into dolphins. After this, the culmination of his life on earth was his descent to retrieve his mother from the underworld. He renamed his mother Thyone, and ascended with her to heaven, where she became a goddess.[254] In this variant of the myth, it is implied that Dionysus both must prove his godhood to mortals, then also legitimize his place on Olympus by proving his lineage and elevating his mother to divine status, before taking his place among the Olympic gods.[16]

Secondary myths

Midas' golden touch

Dionysus discovered that his old school master and foster father, Silenus, had gone missing. The old man had wandered away drunk, and was found by some peasants who carried him to their king Midas (alternatively, he passed out in Midas' rose garden). The king recognized him hospitably, feasting him for ten days and nights while Silenus entertained with stories and songs. On the eleventh day, Midas brought Silenus back to Dionysus. Dionysus offered the king his choice of reward.

Midas asked that whatever he might touch would turn to gold. Dionysus consented, though was sorry that he had not made a better choice. Midas rejoiced in his new power, which he hastened to put to the test. He touched and turned to gold an oak twig and a stone, but his joy vanished when he found that his bread, meat, and wine also turned to gold. Later, when his daughter embraced him, she too turned to gold.

The horrified king strove to divest the Midas Touch, and he prayed to Dionysus to save him from starvation. The god consented, telling Midas to wash in the river Pactolus. As he did so, the power passed into them, and the river sands turned gold: this etiological myth explained the gold sands of the Pactolus.

Love affairs

 
Bacchus and Ariadne (1822) by Antoine-Jean Gros

When Theseus abandoned Ariadne sleeping on Naxos, Dionysus found and married her. She bore him a son named Oenopion, but she committed suicide or was killed by Perseus. In some variants, Dionysus had her crown put into the heavens as the constellation Corona; in others, he descended into Hades to restore her to the gods on Olympus. Another account claims Dionysus ordered Theseus to abandon Ariadne on the island of Naxos, for Dionysus had seen her as Theseus carried her onto the ship and had decided to marry her.[citation needed] Psalacantha, a nymph, promised helped Dionysus court Ariadne in exchange for his sexual favours; but Dionysus refused, so Psalacantha advised Ariadne against going with him. For this Dionysus turned her into the plant with the same name.[255]

 
 
Dionysos surrounded by his thiasus discovers Ariadne asleep at Hypnos's side. Frescoes in Pompeii

Dionysus fell in love with a nymph named Nicaea, in some versions by Eros' binding. Nicaea however was a sworn virgin and scorned his attempts to court her. So one day, while she was away, he replaced the water in the spring she used to drink from with wine. Intoxicated, Nicaea passed out, and Dionysus raped her in her sleep. When she woke up and realized what had happened, she sought him out in order to harm him, but she never found him. She bore him Telete, Satyrus, and other sons. Dionysus named the ancient city of Nicaea after her.[256]

In Nonnus's Dionysiaca, Eros made Dionysus fall in love with Aura, a virgin companion of Artemis, as part of a ploy to punish Aura for having insulted Artemis. Dionysus used the same trick as with Nicaea to get her fall asleep, tied her up, and then raped her. Aura tried to kill herself, with little success. When she gave birth to twins sons by Dionysus, Iacchus and another boy, she ate one twin before drowning herself in the Sangarius river.[257]

Also in the Dionysiaca, Nonnus relates how Dionysus fell in love with a handsome satyr named Ampelos, who was killed by Selene due to him challenging her. On his death, Dionysus changed him into the first grape-vine.[258]

Other myths

 
Terracotta head, 4-5th century, Gandhara (modern Pakistan)

A third descent by Dionysus to Hades is invented by Aristophanes in his comedy The Frogs. Dionysus, as patron of the Athenian dramatic festival, the Dionysia, wants to bring back to life one of the great tragedians. After a poetry slam, Aeschylus is chosen in preference to Euripides.

When Hephaestus bound Hera to a magical chair, Dionysus got him drunk and brought him back to Olympus after he passed out.[citation needed]

Callirrhoe was a Calydonian woman who scorned Coresus, a priest of Dionysus, who threatened to afflict all the women of Calydon with insanity (see Maenad). The priest was ordered to sacrifice Callirhoe but he killed himself instead. Callirhoe threw herself into a well which was later named after her.[citation needed]

Dionysus also sent a fox that was fated never to be caught on Thebes. Creon, king of Thebes, sent Amphitryon to catch and kill the fox. Amphitryon obtained from Cephalus the dog that his wife Procris had received from Minos, which was fated to catch whatever it pursued.[citation needed]

Another account about Dionysus's parentage indicates that he is the son of Zeus and Gê (Gaia), also named Themelê (foundation), corrupted into Semele.[259][260]

Hyginus relates that Dionysus once gave human speech to a donkey. The donkey then proceeded to challenge Priapus in a contest about which between them had the better penis; the donkey lost. Priapus killed the donkey, but Dionysus placed him among the stars, above the Crab.[261][262]

Children

Offspring and mothers
Offspring Mothers
(?)The Charites or Graces (Pasithea, Euphrosyne, Thalia) Aphrodite[263] or Coronis[264]
Ceramus, Enyeus, Euanthes, Eurymedon, Latramys, Maron, Oenopion, Phanus, Peparethus, Phlias, Staphylus, Tauropolis, Thoas Ariadne
Carmanor[265] Alexirrhoe
Iacchus[266] and his twin brother[267] Aura
Medus[268] Alphesiboea
Phlias Araethyrea or Chthonophyle
Priapus Aphrodite[269] or Chione[270] or Percote[271]
Telete, Satyrus, other sons Nicaea
Narcaeus[272] Physcoa
Comus, Methe, Sabazius, Thysa[273] Unknown

Iconography and depictions

Symbols

 
Ancient Roman relief in the Museo Archeologico (Naples) depicting Dionysus holding a thyrsus and receiving a libation, wearing an ivy wreath, and attended by a panther
 
Dionysus on a panther's back; on the left, a papposilenus holding a tambourine. Side A from a red-figure bell-shaped crater, c. 370 BC.

The earliest cult images of Dionysus show a mature male, bearded and robed. He holds a fennel staff, tipped with a pine-cone and known as a thyrsus. Later images show him as a beardless, sensuous, naked or half-naked androgynous youth: the literature describes him as womanly or "man-womanish".[274] In its fully developed form, his central cult imagery shows his triumphant, disorderly arrival or return, as if from some place beyond the borders of the known and civilized. His procession (thiasus) is made up of wild female followers (maenads) and bearded satyrs with erect penises; some are armed with the thyrsus, some dance or play music. The god himself is drawn in a chariot, usually by exotic beasts such as lions or tigers, and is sometimes attended by a bearded, drunken Silenus. This procession is presumed to be the cult model for the followers of his Dionysian Mysteries. Dionysus is represented by city religions as the protector of those who do not belong to conventional society and he thus symbolizes the chaotic, dangerous and unexpected, everything which escapes human reason and which can only be attributed to the unforeseeable action of the gods.[275]

Dionysus was a god of resurrection and he was strongly linked to the bull. In a cult hymn from Olympia, at a festival for Hera, Dionysus is invited to come as a bull; "with bull-foot raging". Walter Burkert relates, "Quite frequently [Dionysus] is portrayed with bull horns, and in Kyzikos he has a tauromorphic image", and refers also to an archaic myth in which Dionysus is slaughtered as a bull calf and impiously eaten by the Titans.[276]

 
A sculpted phallus at the entrance of the temple of Dionysus in Delos, Greece

The snake and phallus were symbols of Dionysus in ancient Greece, and of Bacchus in Greece and Rome.[277][278][279] He typically wears a panther or leopard skin and carries a thyrsus. His iconography sometimes includes maenads, who wear wreaths of ivy and serpents around their hair or neck.[280][281][282]

The cult of Dionysus was closely associated with trees, specifically the fig tree, and some of his bynames exhibit this, such as Endendros "he in the tree" or Dendritēs, "he of the tree". Peters suggests the original meaning as "he who runs among the trees", or that of a "runner in the woods". Janda (2010) accepts the etymology but proposes the more cosmological interpretation of "he who impels the (world-)tree". This interpretation explains how Nysa could have been re-interpreted from a meaning of "tree" to the name of a mountain: the axis mundi of Indo-European mythology is represented both as a world-tree and as a world-mountain.[283]

Dionysus is also closely associated with the transition between summer and autumn. In the Mediterranean summer, marked by the rising of the dog star Sirius, the weather becomes extremely hot, but it is also a time when the promise of coming harvests grow. Late summer, when Orion is at the center of the sky, was the time of the grape harvest in ancient Greece. Plato describes the gifts of this season as the fruit that is harvested as well as Dionysian joy. Pindar describes the "pure light of high summer" as closely associated with Dionysus and possibly even an embodiment of the god himself. An image of Dionysus' birth from Zeus' thigh call him "the light of Zeus" (Dios phos) and associate him with the light of Sirius.[32]

Classical art

 
Marble table support adorned by a group including Dionysos, Pan and a Satyr; Dionysos holds a rhyton (drinking vessel) in the shape of a panther; traces of red and yellow colour are preserved on the hair of the figures and the branches; from an Asia Minor workshop, 170–180 AD, National Archaeological Museum, Athens, Greece

The god, and still more often his followers, were commonly depicted in the painted pottery of Ancient Greece, much of which made to hold wine. But, apart from some reliefs of maenads, Dionysian subjects rarely appeared in large sculpture before the Hellenistic period, when they became common.[284] In these, the treatment of the god himself ranged from severe archaising or Neo Attic types such as the Dionysus Sardanapalus to types showing him as an indolent and androgynous young man, often nude.[285] Hermes and the Infant Dionysus is probably a Greek original in marble, and the Ludovisi Dionysus group is probably a Roman original of the second century AD. Well-known Hellenistic sculptures of Dionysian subjects, surviving in Roman copies, include the Barberini Faun, the Belvedere Torso, the Resting Satyr. The Furietti Centaurs and Sleeping Hermaphroditus reflect related subjects, which had by this time become drawn into the Dionysian orbit.[286] The marble Dancer of Pergamon is an original, as is the bronze Dancing Satyr of Mazara del Vallo, a recent recovery from the sea.

The Dionysian world by the Hellenistic period is a hedonistic but safe pastoral into which other semi-divine creatures of the countryside have been co-opted, such as centaurs, nymphs, and the gods Pan and Hermaphrodite.[287] "Nymph" by this stage "means simply an ideal female of the Dionysian outdoors, a non-wild bacchant".[288] Hellenistic sculpture also includes for the first time large genre subjects of children and peasants, many of whom carry Dionysian attributes such as ivy wreaths, and "most should be seen as part of his realm. They have in common with satyrs and nymphs that they are creatures of the outdoors and are without true personal identity."[289] The fourth-century BC Derveni Krater, the unique survival of a very large scale Classical or Hellenistic metal vessel of top quality, depicts Dionysus and his followers.

Dionysus appealed to the Hellenistic monarchies for a number of reasons, apart from merely being a god of pleasure: He was a human who became divine, he came from, and had conquered, the East, exemplified a lifestyle of display and magnificence with his mortal followers, and was often regarded as an ancestor.[290] He continued to appeal to the rich of Imperial Rome, who populated their gardens with Dionysian sculpture, and by the second century AD were often buried in sarcophagi carved with crowded scenes of Bacchus and his entourage.[291]

The fourth-century AD Lycurgus Cup in the British Museum is a spectacular cage cup which changes colour when light comes through the glass; it shows the bound King Lycurgus being taunted by the god and attacked by a satyr; this may have been used for celebration of Dionysian mysteries. Elizabeth Kessler has theorized that a mosaic appearing on the triclinium floor of the House of Aion in Nea Paphos, Cyprus, details a monotheistic worship of Dionysus.[292] In the mosaic, other gods appear but may only be lesser representations of the centrally imposed Dionysus. The mid-Byzantine Veroli Casket shows the tradition lingering in Constantinople around 1000 AD, but probably not very well understood.

Early modern art

 

Bacchic subjects in art resumed in the Italian Renaissance, and soon became almost as popular as in antiquity, but his "strong association with feminine spirituality and power almost disappeared", as did "the idea that the destructive and creative powers of the god were indissolubly linked".[293] In Michelangelo's statue (1496–97) "madness has become merriment". The statue tries to suggest both drunken incapacity and an elevated consciousness, but this was perhaps lost on later viewers, and typically the two aspects were thereafter split, with a clearly drunk Silenus representing the former, and a youthful Bacchus often shown with wings, because he carries the mind to higher places.[294]

 
Hendrik Goltzius, Sine Cerere et Libero friget Venus (Without Ceres and Bacchus, Venus Would Freeze), c. 1600-1603, the "Philadelphia pen painting

Titian's Bacchus and Ariadne (1522–23) and The Bacchanal of the Andrians (1523–26), both painted for the same room, offer an influential heroic pastoral,[295] while Diego Velázquez in The Triumph of Bacchus (or Los borrachos – "the drinkers", c. 1629) and Jusepe de Ribera in his Drunken Silenus choose a genre realism. Flemish Baroque painting frequently painted the Bacchic followers, as in Van Dyck's Drunken Silenus and many works by Rubens; Poussin was another regular painter of Bacchic scenes.[296]

A common theme in art beginning in the sixteenth century was the depiction of Bacchus and Ceres caring for a representation of love – often Venus, Cupid, or Amore. This tradition derived from a quotation by the Roman comedian Terence (c. 195/185 – c. 159 BC) which became a popular proverb in the Early Modern period: Sine Cerere et Baccho friget Venus ("without Ceres and Bacchus, Venus freezes"). Its simplest level of meaning is that love needs food and wine to thrive. Artwork based on this saying was popular during the period 1550–1630, especially in Northern Mannerism in Prague and the Low Countries, as well as by Rubens. Because of his association with the vine harvest, Bacchus became the god of autumn, and he and his followers were often shown in sets depicting the seasons.[297]

Modern literature and philosophy

 
The Triumph of Bacchus by Cornelis de Vos

Dionysus has remained an inspiration to artists, philosophers and writers into the modern era. In The Birth of Tragedy (1872), the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche proposed that a tension between Apollonian and Dionysian aesthetic principles underlay the development of Greek tragedy; Dionysus represented what was unrestrained chaotic and irrational, while Apollo represented the rational and ordered. This concept of a rivalry or opposition between Dionysus and Apollo has been characterized as a "modern myth", as it is the invention of modern thinkers like Nietzsche and Johann Joachim Winckelmann, and is not found in classical sources. However, the acceptance and popularity of this theme in Western culture has been so great, that its undercurrent has influenced the conclusions of classical scholarship.[298]

Nietzsche also claimed that the oldest forms of Greek Tragedy were entirely based upon the suffering Dionysus. In Nietzsche's 1886 work Beyond Good and Evil, and later The Twilight of the Idols, The Antichrist and Ecce Homo, Dionysus is conceived as the embodiment of the unrestrained will to power. In The Hellenic Religion of the Suffering God (1904), and Dionysus and Early Dionysianism (1921), the poet Vyacheslav Ivanov elaborates the theory of Dionysianism, tracing the origins of literature, and tragedy in particular, to ancient Dionysian mysteries. Ivanov said that Dionysus' suffering "was the distinctive feature of the cult" just as Christ's suffering is significant for Christianity.[299] Karl Kerényi characterizes Dionysus as representative of the psychological life force (Greek Zoê).[300] Other psychological interpretations place Dionysus' emotionality in the foreground, focusing on the joy, terror or hysteria associated with the god.[301][302][303][304][305] Sigmund Freud specified that his ashes should be kept in an Ancient Greek vase painted with Dionysian scenes from his collection, which remains on display at Golders Green Crematorium in London.

Modern film and performance art

Walt Disney depicted Bacchus in the "Pastoral" segment of the animated film Fantasia, as a Silenus-like character. In 1969, an adaption of The Bacchae was performed, called Dionysus in '69. A film was made of the same performance. The production was notable for involving audience participation, nudity, and theatrical innovations.[306] In 1974, Stephen Sondheim and Burt Shevelove adapted Aristophanes' comedy The Frogs into a modern musical, which hit broadway in 2004 and was revived in London in 2017. The musical keeps the descent of Dionysus into Hades to bring back a playwright; however, the playwrights are updated to modern times, and Dionysus is forced to choose between George Bernard Shaw and William Shakespeare.[307]

In 2006, The Orion Experience, in the album Cosmicandy, included a song titled "Cult of Dionysus". The song invokes themes from the god's cult. The entire album is described as "short, sharp, and ultimately memorable, glowing with a long-forgotten disco-synth energy."[308] The song overall plays upon the god's themes of being devious and rebelling against social norms.

In 2014, Dionysus is featured in Smite as a playable god under his Roman Bacchus name.

In 2018, Dionysus was featured in Hades, an indie rougelike action dungeon crawler video game developed and published by Supergiant Games. He is one of the cousins of the protagonist and playable character, Zagreus, who is trying to escape the underworld and find his mother whilst his father, Hades, tries to stop him. Dionysus offers boons and assist the Son of Hades in his attempts to escape from the underworld. All of his boons and powers are based of his key traits from his Mythos, focusing on alcohol related abilities and negative effects on enemies to assist the protagonist. His characterisation in the game nods back to a lot of his stories and traits from the history of the character. His interactions with other Gods also highlight his character as mischievous, a lover of festivities and of course, wine. There is also the reference of the protagonist having the name Zagreus, considered to be the first birth of Dionysus. He is voiced by Cyrus Nemati.

In 2018, the Australian musical project Dead Can Dance released an album entitled Dionysus. Musician Brendan Perry described the inspiration for the album as a trance-like, "Dionysian" experience he had at a festival during a trip to rural Spain. "It's the spring festivals like that one where you see the real remnants of Dionysian festivals. They're all over the Mediterranean in remote places where Christian influence hasn't been as great. ... People wear masks and dance in circles almost like time has stood still in their celebrations." Perry chose to employ Mediterranean folk instruments that mimic natural sounds in addition to a vocal chorus, in order to evoke the atmosphere of an ancient festival.[309]

In 2019, the South Korean boy band BTS released a rap-rock-synth-pop-hip hop track.[200][310] named "Dionysus" as part of their album Map of the Soul: Persona. The naming of this song comes from the association of the namesake with debauchery and excess, this is reflected in its lyrics talking about "getting drunk on art" - playing on the Korean words for "alcohol" (술 sul) and "art" (예술 yesul) as an example - alongside expressions about their stardom, legacy, and artistic integrity. The band's leader RM in a press release described the song as, "the joy and pain of creating something" and "an honest track".[311]

Parallels with Christianity

 
Hanging with Dionysian Figures from Antinoöpolis, fifth–seventh century (Metropolitan Museum of Art)
 
Bacchus - Simeon Solomon (1867)

Numerous scholars have compared narratives surrounding the Christian figure of Jesus with those associated with Dionysus.

Death and resurrection

Some scholars of comparative mythology identify both Dionysus and Jesus with the dying-and-rising god mythological archetype.[312] On the other hand, it has been noted that the details of Dionysus' death and rebirth are starkly different both in content and symbolism from Jesus. The two stories take place in very different historical and geographic contexts. Also, the manner of death is different; in the most common myth, Dionysus was torn to pieces and eaten by the Titans, but "eventually restored to a new life" from the heart that was left over.[313][314]

Trial

Another parallel can be seen in The Bacchae where Dionysus appears before King Pentheus on charges of claiming divinity, which is compared to the New Testament scene of Jesus being interrogated by Pontius Pilate.[315][316][317] However, a number of scholars dispute this parallel, since the confrontation between Dionysus and Pentheus ends with Pentheus dying, torn into pieces by the mad women, whereas the trial of Jesus ends with him being sentenced to death. The discrepancies between the two stories, including their resolutions, have led many scholars to regard the Dionysus story as radically different from the one about Jesus, except for the parallel of the arrest, which is a detail that appears in many biographies as well.[318]

Other parallels

E. Kessler has argued that the Dionysian cult developed into strict monotheism by the fourth century AD; together with Mithraism and other sects, the cult formed an instance of "pagan monotheism" in direct competition with Early Christianity during Late Antiquity.[319] Scholars from the sixteenth century onwards, especially Gerard Vossius, also discussed the parallels between the biographies of Dionysus/Bacchus and Moses (Vossius named his sons Dionysius and Isaac). Such comparisons surface in details of paintings by Poussin.[320]

John Moles has argued that the Dionysian cult influenced early Christianity, and especially the way that Christians understood themselves as a "new" religion centered around a savior deity. In particular, he argues that the account of Christian origins in the Acts of the Apostles was heavily influenced by Euripides' The Bacchae.[312] Moles also suggests that Paul the Apostle may have partially based his account of the Lord's Supper[1 Cor 11:23–26] on the ritual meals performed by members of the Dionysian cult.[312]: 96 

Gallery

Genealogy

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Another variant, from the Spanish royal collection, is at the Museo del Prado, Madrid: illustration.
  2. ^ Hedreen, Guy Michael. Silens in Attic Black-figure Vase-painting: Myth and Performance. University of Michigan Press. 1992. ISBN 9780472102952. p. 1
  3. ^ James, Edwin Oliver. The Tree of Life: An Archaeological Study. Brill Publications. 1966. p. 234. ISBN 9789004016125
  4. ^ In Greek "both votary and god are called Bacchus". Burkert, p. 162. For the initiate as Bacchus, see Euripides, Bacchae 491. For the god, who alone is Dionysus, see Sophocles, Oedipus Rex 211 and Euripides, Hippolytus 560.
  5. ^ Csapo, Eric (2016-08-03). "The 'Theology' of the Dionysia and Old Comedy". In Eidinow, Esther (ed.). Theologies of Ancient Greek Religion. New York: Cambridge University Press. p. 118. ISBN 978-1-316-71521-5.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: date and year (link)
  6. ^ Olszewski, E. (2019). Dionysus’s enigmatic thyrsus. Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society, 163(2), 153–173.
  7. ^ Sutton, p. 2, mentions Dionysus as The Liberator in relation to the city Dionysia festivals. In Euripides, Bacchae 379–385: "He holds this office, to join in dances, [380] to laugh with the flute, and to bring an end to cares, whenever the delight of the grape comes at the feasts of the gods, and in ivy-bearing banquets the goblet sheds sleep over men."
  8. ^ Thomas McEvilley, The Shape of Ancient Thought, Allsworth press, 2002, pp. 118–121. Google Books preview
  9. ^ Reginald Pepys Winnington-Ingram, Sophocles: an interpretation, Cambridge University Press, 1980, p. 109 Google Books preview
  10. ^ Zofia H. Archibald, in Gocha R. Tsetskhladze (Ed.) Ancient Greeks west and east, Brill, 1999, pp. 429 ff.Google Books preview
  11. ^ Rosemarie Taylor-Perry, 2003. The God Who Comes: Dionysian Mysteries Revisited. Algora Press.
  12. ^ a b Julian, trans. by Emily Wilmer Cave Wright. To the Cynic Heracleios. The Works of the Emperor Julian, volume II (1913) Loeb Classical Library.
  13. ^ a b c d e f g Isler-Kerényi, Cornelia; Watson, Wilfred G. E. (2007). "An Iconography in Process". Dionysos in Archaic Greece. Brill. pp. 5–16. JSTOR 10.1163/j.ctt1w76w9x.7.
  14. ^ a b Brockett, Oscar Gross (1968). History of the Theatre. Boston: Allyn & Bacon. pp. 18–26.
  15. ^ Riu, Xavier (1999). Dionysism and Comedy. Rowman and Littlefield. p. 105. ISBN 9780847694426.
  16. ^ a b c d e Corrente, Paola. 2012. Dioniso y los Dying gods: paralelos metodológicos. Tesis doctoral, Universidad Complutense de Madrid.
  17. ^ a b c d Beekes 2009, p. 337.
  18. ^ a b Palaima, Thomas G. University of Texas at Austin, 1998
  19. ^ John Chadwick, The Mycenaean World, Cambridge University Press, 1976, pp. 99ff: "But Dionysos surprisingly appears twice at Pylos, in the form Diwonusos, both times irritatingly enough on fragments, so that we have no means of verifying his divinity."
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  23. ^ Fox, p. 217, "The word Dionysos is divisible into two parts, the first originally Διος (cf. Ζευς), while the second is of an unknown signification, although perhaps connected with the name of the Mount Nysa which figures in the story of Lykourgos: (...) when Dionysos had been reborn from the thigh of Zeus, Hermes entrusted him to the nymphs of Mount Nysa, who fed him on the food of the gods, and made him immortal."
  24. ^ Testimonia of Pherecydes in an early fifth-century BC fragment, FGrH 3, 178, in the context of a discussion on the name of Dionysus: "Nũsas (acc. pl.), he [Pherecydes] said, was what they called the trees."
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  29. ^ This is the view of Garcia Ramon (1987) and Peters (1989), summarised and endorsed in Janda (2010:20).
  30. ^ a b Nonnus, Dionysiaca 9.20–24.
  31. ^ Suda s.v. Διόνυσος .
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  35. ^ Stephanus of Byzantium, s.v. Ακρωρεία
  36. ^ Used thus by Ausonius, Epigrams, 29, 6, and in Catullus, 29; see Lee M. Fratantuono, NIVALES SOCII: CAESAR, MAMURRA, AND THE SNOW OF CATULLUS C. 57, Quaderni Urbinati di Cultura Classica, New Series, Vol. 96, No. 3 (2010), p. 107, Note 2.
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  46. ^ Aristid.Or.41
  47. ^ Macr.Sat.I.18.9
  48. ^ For a parallel see pneuma/psuche/anima The core meaning is wind as "breath/spirit"
  49. ^ Bulls in antiquity were said to roar.
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  54. ^ Suidas s.v. Kistophoros : "Kistophoros (basket-bearer, ivy-bearer) : It seems that baskets were sacred to Dionysos and the Two Goddesses [Demeter and Persephone]." [N.B. Derived from Harpocration s.v. kittophoros, the ivy-bearer.]
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  57. ^ Diodorus Siculus, Library of History 3. 62. 5 (trans. Oldfather) (Greek historian C1st B.C.): "Dionysos was named twice-born (dimetor) by the ancients, counting it as a single and first birth when the plant is set in the ground and begins to grow, and as a second birth when it becomes laden with fruit and ripens its grape-clusters--the god thus being considered as having been born once from the earth and again from the vine."
  58. ^ Janda (2010), 16–44.
  59. ^ Kerényi 1976, p. 286.
  60. ^ Jameson 1993, 53. Cf.n16 for suggestions of Devereux on "Enorkhes,"
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  112. ^ He appears as a likely theonym (divine name) in Linear B tablets as di-wo-nu-so (KH Gq 5 inscription),
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  116. ^ a b c (Photius, Lexicon, s.v. "Thyraze Kares.") To the doors, Kares, it is no longer Anthestria": some authorities contented that this is what is said to the crowd of Karian slaves, since at the Anthestria they join in the feast and do not do any work. Therefore, when the festival is over, they send them back out to work with the words, "To the doors, Keres, it is no longer Anthestria." since the souls [keres] wander about through the city at the Anthestria.
  117. ^ (Plutarch, Table-talk, 655e.) At Athens they inaugurate the new wine on the eleventh of the month, and they call the day pithoigia.
  118. ^ (Phanodemus, in Athenaeus, Deipnosophists XI. 456a; frag 12in FGrH 325.) At the temple of Dionysus in Limnai ["The Marshes"] the Athenians bring the new wine from the jars age mix it in honour of the god and then they drink it themselves. Because of this custom Dionysus is called Limnaios, because the wine was mixed with water and then for the first time drunk diluted.
  119. ^ a b Rice, David G. Stambaugh, John E. (2014). Sources for the Study of Greek Religion Corrected Edition. Society of Biblical Literature. ISBN 978-1-62837-067-6. OCLC 893453849.{{cite book}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  120. ^ Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca Library and Epitome, 1.3.2. "Orpheus also invented the mysteries of Dionysus, and having been torn in pieces by the Maenads he is buried in Pieria."
  121. ^ Dickie, M.W. 1995. The Dionysiac Mysteries. In Pella, ZPE 109, 81-86.
  122. ^ Jiménez San Cristóbal 2012, p. 125; Bowie, A. M., p. 232; Harrison, pp. 540–542.
  123. ^ Antikensammlung Berlin F1961 (Beazley Archive 302354).
  124. ^ National Etruscan Museum 42884, (Beazley Archive 9017720).
  125. ^ Versnel, pp. 32 ff.; Bowie, A. M., p. 232.
  126. ^ Jiménez San Cristóbal 2012, p. 127; Graf 2005, "Iacchus".
  127. ^ Jiménez San Cristóbal 2013, p. 279, Bowie, A. M., pp. 232–233; Sophocles, Antigone 1115–1125, 1146–1154; Versnel, pp. 23–24. Jebb, in his note to line 1146 χοράγ᾽ ἄστρων, understands the Sophoclean use of the name "Iacchus" as specifically denoting the Eleusinian Dionysus.
  128. ^ Jiménez San Cristóbal 2013, pp. 279–280; Bowie, A. M., p. 233; Sophocles, fragment 959 Radt (Lloyd-Jones, pp. 414, 415).
  129. ^ Encinas Reguero, p. 350; Jiménez San Cristóbal 2013, p. 282, with n. 41; Bowie, A. M., p. 233; Euripides, Bacchae 725. Jiménez San Cristóbal also sees possible associations between Iacchus and Dionysus in Euripides: Ion 1074–1086, The Trojan Women 1230, Cyclops 68–71, and fr. 586 Kannicht (apud Strabo, 10.3.13) = fr. 586 Nauck (Collard and Cropp, pp. 56, 57).
  130. ^ Bowie, E. L., pp. 101–110; Fantuzzi, pp. 189, 190, 191; PHI Greek Inscriptions, BCH 19 (1895) 393.
  131. ^ 21–24, Bowie, E. L., pp. 101–102.
  132. ^ 27–35, Bowie, E. L., p. 102.
  133. ^ Strabo, 10.3.10.
  134. ^ Parker 2005, p. 358; Grimal, s.v. Iacchus, p. 224; Tripp, s.v. Iacchus, p. 313; Smith 1870, s.v. Iacchus.
  135. ^ Jiménez San Cristóbal 2013, pp. 279–280; Diodorus Siculus, 4.4.2, see also 3.64.1–2.
  136. ^ Arrian, Anabasis of Alexander 2.16.3
  137. ^ Lucian, De Saltatione ("The Dance") 39 (Harmon, pp. 250, 251).
  138. ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca 48.962–968.
  139. ^ Hard, p. 134; Grimal, s.v. Iacchus, p. 224; Tripp, s.v. Iacchus, p. 313; Rose, Oxford Classical Dictionary s.v. Iacchus; scholiast on Aristophanes, Frogs 324 (Rutherford 1896, p. 316).
  140. ^ Marcovich, p. 23; Parker 2005, p. 358; Graf 1974, p. 198.
  141. ^ Marcovich, p. 23; Bianchi, p. 18; Graf 1974, p. 198; Ashmolean Museum at Oxford, Inv. 1956-355.
  142. ^ Parker 2005, p. 358 n. 139; Lucretius, 4.1168–1169. Arnobius, Adversus Gentes 3.10 (p. 157) referring to the Lucretius verse, lists "the full-breasted Cerses nursing Iaccus" as a sight "the mind longs" to see. Compare with Photius, s.v. Ἴακχος and Suda, s.v. Ἴακχος (iota,16), which identify Iacchus with Διόνυσος ἐπὶ τῷ μαστῷ ('Dionysus at the breast').
  143. ^ Parker 2005, p. 358 n. 139; scholiast on Aristides, Vol. 3, p. 648 213, 18 Dindorf.
  144. ^ Gantz, p. 118; Hard, p. 35; Grimal, s.v. Zagreus, p. 456.
  145. ^ McClelland, Norman C. (2010). Encyclopedia of Reincarnation and Karma. McFarland. pp. 76–77. ISBN 978-0-7864-5675-8.
  146. ^ Sommerstein, p. 237 n. 1; Gantz, p. 118; Smyth, p. 459.
  147. ^ Gantz, p. 118.
  148. ^ Gantz, pp. 118–119; West 1983, pp. 152–154; Linforth, pp. 309–311.
  149. ^ Callimachus, fr. 643 Pfeiffer (= Euphorion, fr. 14 Lightfoot); Gantz, p. 118–119; West 1983, p. 151; Linforth, pp. 309–310.
  150. ^ Callimachus, fr. 43.117 Pfeiffer (= fr. 43b.34 Harder); Harder, p. 368; Gantz, p. 118; West 1983, pp. 152–153; Linforth, p. 310.
  151. ^ Linforth, pp. 311, 317–318; Plutarch, The E at Delphi 389 A.
  152. ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca 5.564–565.
  153. ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca 6.165.
  154. ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca 10.294.
  155. ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca 39.72.
  156. ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca 44.255.
  157. ^ T. P. Wiseman, "Satyrs in Rome? The Background to Horace's Ars Poetica", The Journal of Roman Studies, Vol. 78 (1988), p. 7, note 52.
  158. ^ Grimal, Pierre, The Dictionary of Classical Mythology, Wiley-Blackwell, 1996, ISBN 978-0-631-20102-1.[1]
  159. ^ a b Cicero, De Natura Deorum, 2.6O. See also St Augustine, De Civitatis Dei, 4.11.
  160. ^ See Pliny, Historia Naturalis, 7.57 (ed. Bostock) at Perseus: Tufts.edu
  161. ^ a b Beard, Mary: The Roman Triumph, The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Mass., and London, England, 2007, pp. 315–317.
  162. ^ Russell, Bertrand. History of Western Philosophy.Routledge, 1996, p. 25
  163. ^ Kraemer, Ross S. "Ecstasy and Possession: The Attraction of Women to the Cult of Dionysus." The Harvard Theological Review, Vol. 72 60 Jan.–Apr. 1979.
  164. ^ ..."the Bacchic passages in the Roman drama, taken over from their Greek models, presented a pejorative image of the Bacchic cult which predisposed the Romans towards persecution before the consul denounced the cult in 186." Robert Rouselle, Liber-Dionysus in Early Roman Drama, The Classical Journal, 82, 3 (1987), p. 193.
  165. ^ Wiseman, T.P. (1988). "Satyrs in Rome? The Background to Horace's Ars Poetica". The Journal of Roman Studies. 78: 1–13. doi:10.2307/301447. JSTOR 301447. S2CID 161849654. Certainly it is hard to imagine anything less consistent with Roman mos maiorum than the anarchic hedonism of satyrs. It was precisely libido, that morally subversive aspect of the Bacchic cult, that led to its brutal suppression...
  166. ^ Pliny attributes the invention of the triumph to "Father Liber" (who by Pliny's time was identified with Bacchus and Dionysus): see Pliny, Historia Naturalis, 7.57 (ed. Bostock) at Perseus: Tufts.edu
  167. ^ a b Sallustius, On Gods and the World, ch. VI.
  168. ^ Concilium Constantinopolitanum a. 691/2 in Trullo habitum. Canon 62. H. Ohme (ed.) Acta conciliorum oecumenicorum, Series Secunda II: Concilium Universale Constantinopolitanum Tertium, Pars 4. ISBN 978-3-11-030853-2. Berlin/Boston Oktober 2013.
  169. ^ Maxwell, Herbert (1913). The Chronicle of Lanercost, 1272–1346. Glasgow, Scotland: Glasgow : J. Maclehose. pp. 29–30.
  170. ^ C. S. Watkins: History and the Supernatural in Medieval England, Cambridge University Press: Cambridge 2007, pp. 88–92.
  171. ^ Ashe, Geoffrey (2000). The Hell-Fire Clubs: A History of Anti-Morality. Gloucestershire: Sutton Publishing. p. 114. ISBN 9780750924023.
  172. ^ Bayles, Richard (1889). History of Windham County, Connecticut. New York, Preston.
  173. ^ Nasios, A. "Hearth of Hellenism: The Greek Wheel of the Year". www.ysee.gr. Retrieved 24 Jan 2009.
  174. ^ Christos Pandion Panopoulos, Panagiotis Meton Panagiotopoulos, Erymanthos Armyras, Mano Rathamanthys Madytinos (Editor, Translator), Lesley Madytinou (Editor, Translator), Vasilios Cheiron Tsantilas. 2014. Hellenic Polytheism: Household Worship. ISBN 1503121887.
  175. ^ "Dionysus". Neokoroi.org. Neokoroi. Retrieved 3 August 2017.
  176. ^ Rutherford 2016, p. 67.
  177. ^ Rutherford 2016, p. 69.
  178. ^ Diod. 4.6.3.
  179. ^ Herodotus. Histories. George Rawlinson Translation. Book 2.
  180. ^ Plutarch, Isis and Osiris. Trans. Frank Cole Babbitt, 1936.
  181. ^ Kampakoglou, Alexandros v (2016). Danaus βουγενής: Greco-Egyptian Mythology and Ptolemaic Kingship. Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies. pp. 119–122.
  182. ^ Scott, Kenneth (1929). Octavian's Propaganda and Antony's De Sua Ebrietate (24th ed.). Classical Philology. pp. 133–141.
  183. ^ Diod. 1.21.1–3
  184. ^ Heraclitus, encountering the festival of the Phallophoria, in which phalli were paraded about, remarked in a surviving fragment: "If they did not order the procession in honor of the god and address the phallus song to him, this would be the most shameless behavior. But Hades is the same as Dionysos, for whom they rave and act like bacchantes", Kerényi 1976, pp. 239–240.
  185. ^ Kerényi 1967.
  186. ^ Summary of Karl Kerényi: "The Hymn tells us that Persephone was abducted in Nysion pedion, or the Nysian Plain, a plain that was named after the Dionysian mountain of Nysa. Nysa was regarded as the birthplace and first home of Dionysus. The divine marriage of Plouton and Persephone was celebrated on 'the meadow'. The dangerous region that Kore let herself be lured to in search of flowers was likely not originally connected to Plouton but to Dionysus, as Dionysus himself had the strange surname of 'the gaping one', though despite this the notion that the wine god in his quality as the Lord of the Underworld does not appear on the surface of the hymn. People would not be able to detect the hidden meaning it if it wasn’t for archaic vase portrayals." Eleusis: Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter [pp. 34, 35]. "The Hymn to Demeter later mentions that Queen Metaneira of Eleusis later offers the disguised Demeter a beaker of sweet wine, something that Demeter refuses on the grounds that it would be against themis, the very nature of order and justice, for her to drink red wine and she instead invents a new beverage called kykeon to drink instead. The fact that Demeter refuses to drink wine on the grounds that it would be against themis indicates that she is well aware of who Persephone's abductor is, that it is the Subterranean cover name of Dionysus. The critic of the mysteries, the severe philosopher Herakleitos once declared "Hades is the same as Dionysos." The subterranean wine god was the ravisher, so how could Demeter accept something that was his gift to mankind" [p. 40]
  187. ^ Summary of Karl Kerényi: "The book later refers to Herakles initiation into the Eleusinian Mysteries so that he may enter the Underworld. In the iconography after his initiation Herakles in shown wearing a fringed white garment with a Dionysian deerskin thrown over it. Kore is shown with her mother Demeter and a snake twined around the Mystery basket, foreshadowing the secret, as making friends with snakes was Dionysian [p. 58]. The god of the Anthesteria was Dionysus, who celebrated his marriage in Athens amid flowers, the opening of wine jars, and the rising up of the souls of the dead [p. 149]. There are two reliefs in a marble votive relief of the fourth century BC. One depicts Kore crowning her mother Demeter, the deities at the second altar are Persephone and her husband Dionysus as the recumbent god has the features of the bearded Dionysus rather than of Plouton. In his right hand, he raises not a cornucopia, the symbol of wealth, but a wine vessel and in his left, he bears the goblet for the wine. Over their heads an inscription reads "To the God and Goddess" [pp. 151, 152]. The fragments of a gilded jar cover of the Kerch type show Dionysus, Demeter, little Ploutos, Kore, and a curly-haired boy clad in a long garment, one of the first son's of the Eleusinian king who was the first to be initiated. On another vase, Dionysus sits on his omphalos with his thryrsos in his left hand, sitting opposite Demeter, looking at each other severely. Kore is shown moving from Demeter towards Dionysus, as if trying to reconcile them [p. 162]. Eleusis: Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter
  188. ^ Summary of Karl Kerényi: Kore and Thea are two different duplications of Persephone; Plouton and Theos are duplications of the subterranean Dionysus. The duplication of the mystery god as subterranean father and subterranean son, as Father Zagreus and the child Zagreus, husband and son of Persephone, has more to do with the mysteries of Dionysus than with the Eleusinian Mysteries. But a duplication of the chthonian, mystical Dionysus is provided even by his youthful aspect, which became distinguished and classical as the son of Semele from the son of Persephone. Semele, though not of Eleusinian origin, is also a double of Persephone [p. 155]. Eleusis: Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter
  189. ^ Kerényi 1967, p. 40.
  190. ^ Kerényi 1976, p. 240.
  191. ^ Kerényi 1976, pp. 83, 199.
  192. ^ Loyd, Alan B (2009). What is a God?: Studies in the Nature of Greek Divinity. The Classical Press of Wales. ISBN 978-1905125357. The identification of Hades and Dionysus does not seem to be a particular doctrine of Herakleitos, nor does it commit him to monotheism. The evidence for a cult connection between the two is quite extensive, particularly in Southern Italy, and the Dionysiac mysteries are associated with death rituals.
  193. ^ "Photographic image" (JPG). My-favourite-planet.de. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
  194. ^ "Photographic image" (JPG). My-favourite-planet.de. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
  195. ^ "Photographic image" (JPG). Upload.wikimedia.org.
  196. ^ a b Summary of Karl Kerényi: These attempts at a reconstruction would remain very fragmentary were we not, in conclusion, to look attentively into the face of the god Eubouleus. The Lord of the Underworld bore this name in the youthful form represented in the statue, ascribed to Praxiteles, which is now in the National Museum at Athens and probably stood originally in the place where it was found, the Ploutonion. This youth is Plouton himself – radiant but disclosing a strange inner darkness – and at the same time his double and servant, comparable to Hermes or Pais besides Kabeiros or Theos [p. 172]. ... The plentiful hair or long curls suggest rather Hades kyanochaites, Hades of the dark hair [p. 173].
  197. ^ p. 172.
  198. ^ Kerényi, Karl (1991). Eleusis: Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter. Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691019154.
  199. ^ "London B 425 (Vase)". Perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved 6 February 2022.
  200. ^ a b c d Taylor-Perry, Rosemarie (2003). The God who Comes: Dionysian Mysteries Revisited. Barnes & Noble. pp. 4, 22, 91, 92, 94, 168. ISBN 9780875862309.
  201. ^ a b c d Rigoglioso, Marguerite (2010). Virgin Mother Goddesses of Antiquity. Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-0-230-11312-1.
  202. ^ "British Museum Collection". britishmuseum.org. Retrieved 2017-03-06.
  203. ^ "British Museum Collection". Britishmuseum.org. Retrieved 2017-03-06.
  204. ^ Sudas, under "Sabazios", "saboi"; Sider, David. "Notes on Two Epigrams of Philodemus". The American Journal of Philology, 103.2 (Summer 1982:208–213) pp. 209ff.
  205. ^ Strabo, Geography, 10.3.15.
  206. ^ Diodorus Siculus, 4.4.1.
  207. ^ E.N. Lane has taken pains to dismiss this widespread conflation: Lane, "Towards a definition of the iconography of Sabazios", Numen 27 (1980:9–33), and Corpus Cultis Jovis Sabazii:, in Études Préliminaires aux Religions Orientales dans l'Empire Romain: Conclusions 100.3 (Leiden, etc: Brill) 1989.
  208. ^ McDonough 1999, pp. 88–90
  209. ^ "Sarcophagus Depicting the Birth of Dionysus". The Walters Art Museum.
  210. ^ Diodorus Siculus, 4.4.1.
  211. ^ Diodorus Siculus, 4.4.5.
  212. ^ Diodorus Siculus, 4.5.2.
  213. ^ Diodorus Siculus, 5.75.4, noted by Kerényi 1976, "The Cretan core of the Dionysos myth" p. 111 n. 213 and pp. 110–114.
  214. ^ a b c d e Diodorus Siculus 3.62–74.
  215. ^ "situla-fitting | British Museum". The British Museum.
  216. ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca 4. 268 ff (trans. Rouse)
  217. ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca 5. 562 ff (trans. Rouse)
  218. ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca 6. 155 ff (trans. Rouse)
  219. ^ Damascius, Commentary on the Phaedo, I, 1–13 and 165–172, see in translation Westerink, The Greek Commentaries on Plato's Phaedo, vol. II, The Prometheus Trust, Westbury, 2009
  220. ^ Nilsson, p. 202 calls it "the cardinal myth of Orphism"; Guthrie, p. 107, describes the myth as "the central point of Orphic story", Linforth, p. 307 says it is "commonly regarded as essentially and peculiarly Orphic and the very core of the Orphic religion", and Parker 2002, p. 495, writes that "it has been seen as the Orphic 'arch-myth'.
  221. ^ According to Gantz, p. 118, 'Orphic sources preserved seem not to use the name "Zagreus", and according to West 1983, p. 153, the 'name was probably not used in the Orphic narrative'. Edmonds 1999, p. 37 n. 6 says: 'Lobeck 1892 seems to be responsible for the use of the name Zagreus for the Orphic Dionysos. As Linforth noticed, "It is a curious thing that the name Zagreus does not appear in any Orphic poem or fragment, nor is it used by any author who refers to Orpheus" (Linforth 1941:311). In his reconstruction of the story, however, Lobeck made extensive use of the fifth-century epic of Nonnos, who does use the name Zagreus, and later scholars followed his cue. The association of Dionysos with Zagreus appears first explicitly in a fragment of Callimachus preserved in the Etymologicum Magnum (fr. 43.117 P), with a possible earlier precedent in the fragment from Euripides Cretans (fr. 472 Nauck). Earlier evidence, however, (e.g., Alkmaionis fr. 3 PEG; Aeschylus frr. 5, 228) suggests that Zagreus was often identified with other deities.'
  222. ^ West 1983, pp. 73–74, provides a detailed reconstruction with numerous cites to ancient sources, with a summary on p. 140. For other summaries see Morford, p. 311; Hard, p. 35; March, s.v. Zagreus, p. 788; Grimal, s.v. Zagreus, p. 456; Burkert, pp. 297–298; Guthrie, p. 82; also see Ogden, p. 80. For a detailed examination of many of the ancient sources pertaining to this myth see Linforth, pp. 307–364. The most extensive account in ancient sources is found in Nonnus, Dionysiaca 5.562–70, 6.155 ff., other principal sources include Diodorus Siculus, 3.62.6–8 (= Orphic fr. 301 Kern), 3.64.1–2, 4.4.1–2, 5.75.4 (= Orphic fr. 303 Kern); Ovid, Metamorphoses 6.110–114; Athenagoras of Athens, Legatio 20 Pratten (= Orphic fr. 58 Kern); Clement of Alexandria, Protrepticus 2.15 pp. 36–39 Butterworth (= Orphic frs. 34, 35 Kern); Hyginus, Fabulae 155, 167; Suda s.v. Ζαγρεύς. See also Pausanias, 7.18.4, 8.37.5.
  223. ^ Damascius, Commentary on the Phaedo, I, 170, see in translation Westerink, The Greek Commentaries on Plato's Phaedo, vol. II (The Prometheus Trust, Westbury) 2009
  224. ^ Diodorus Siculus 3.64.1; also noted by Kerény (110 note 214).
  225. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae CLXVII
  226. ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca 7. 14 ff (trans. Rouse)
  227. ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca 7. 139 ff (trans. Rouse)
  228. ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca 8. (trans. Rouse)
  229. ^ a b Nonnus, Dionysiaca 9. (trans. Rouse)
  230. ^ Apollodorus, The Library, with an English Translation by Sir James George Frazer, F.B.A., F.R.S. in 2 Volumes. Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1921. Includes Frazer's notes. ISBN 0-674-99135-4, 0-674-99136-2
  231. ^ Conner, Nancy. "The Everything Book of Classical Mythology" 2ed
  232. ^ Homeric Hymn 1 to Dionysus : ‘There is a certain Nysa, mountain high, with forests thick, in Phoinike afar, close to Aigyptos' (Egypt's) streams.’
  233. ^ Diodorus Siculus, Library of History 4. 2. 3 (trans. Oldfather) : "Zeus taking up the child [i.e. Dionysos from the dead body of his mother Semele], handed it over to Hermes, and ordered him to take it to the cave in Nysa, which lay between Phoinikia (Phoenicia) and the Neilos (the River Nile), where he should deliver it to the Nymphai (Nymphs) that they should rear it and with great solicitude bestow upon it the best of care.
  234. ^ Photius, Library; "Ptolemy Chennus, New History" Book 4
  235. ^ Bull, 255
  236. ^ Arrian, Anabasis of Alexander 5.1.1–2.2
  237. ^ Bull, 253
  238. ^ Ovid, Fasti, iii. 407 ff. (James G. Frazer, translator).
  239. ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca 10.175–430, 11, 12.1–117 (Dalby 2005, pp. 55–62).
  240. ^ The Diffusion of Classical Art in Antiquity, John Boardman, Princeton University Press 1993, p.96
  241. ^ Eripides (2014). Bacchae. Translated by Robertson, Robin. HarperCollins Publishers. pp. lines 112-1141.
  242. ^ Euripides, Bacchae.
  243. ^ Homer., The Iliad, ISBN 978-2-291-06449-7, OCLC 1130228845
  244. ^ Homer, Iliad 6. 129 ff (trans. Lattimore) (Greek epic C8th B.C.) : "I will not fight against any god of the heaven, since even the son of Dryas, Lykourgos the powerful, did not live long; he who tried to fight with the gods of the bright sky, who once drove the fosterers of Mainomenos (rapturous) Dionysos headlong down the sacred Nyseian hill, and all of them shed and scattered their wands on the ground, stricken with an ox-goad by murderous Lykourgos, while Dionysos in terror dived into the salt surf, and Thetis took him to her bosom, frightened, with the strong shivers upon him at the man's blustering. But the gods who live at their ease were angered with Lykourgos and the son of Cronus [Zeus] struck him to blindness, nor did he live long afterwards, since he was hated by all the immortals." [N.B. The reference to the Nyseian hill and the nurses of Dionysos suggests that Homer placed the story in Boiotia while the god was still a child - contrary to subsequent accounts of the myth in which Dionysos is a youth visiting Thrake.]
  245. ^ "British Museum – The Lycurgus Cup". Britishmuseum.org.
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  247. ^ Bull, 245–247, 247 quoted
  248. ^ Varadpande, M. L. (1981). Ancient Indian And Indo-Greek Theatre. Abhinav Publications. pp. 91–93. ISBN 9788170171478.
  249. ^ Carter, Martha L. (1968). "Dionysiac Aspects of Kushān Art". Ars Orientalis. 7: 121–146, Fig. 15. ISSN 0571-1371. JSTOR 4629244.
  250. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece book 2
  251. ^ Corrente, Paola and Sidney Castillo. 2019. "Philology and the Comparative Study of Myths", The Religious Studies Project (Podcast Transcript). 3 June 2019. Transcribed by Helen Bradstock. Version 1.1, 28 May 2019. Available at: https://www.religiousstudiesproject.com/podcast/philology-and-the-comparative-study-of-myths/
  252. ^ Clement of Alexandria, Protreptikos, II-30 3–5
  253. ^ Arnobius, Adversus Gentes 5.28 (pp. 252–253) (Dalby 2005, pp. 108–117)
  254. ^ Apollodorus, Bibliotheca book 3
  255. ^ Ptolemy Hephaestion, New History 5, epitomized in Patriarch Photius's Myriobiblon 190.35
  256. ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca 16.244–280; Memnon of Heraclea, History of Heraclea book 15, as epitomized by Photius of Constantinople in his Myriobiblon 223.28
  257. ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca 48.470–634 (III pp. 458–48.928–936 (III pp. 490, 491).
  258. ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca 11. 185 ff (trans. Rouse) (Greek epic C5th A.D.) : "[Ampelos the love of Dionysos rode upon the back of a wild bull :] He shouted boldly to the fullfaced Moon (Mene)--‘Give me best, Selene, horned driver of cattle! Now I am both--I have horns and I ride a bull!’ So he called out boasting to the round Moon. Selene looked with a jealous eye through the air, to see how Ampleos rode on the murderous marauding bull. She sent him a cattlechasing gadfly; and the bull, pricked continually all over by the sharp sting, galloped away like a horse through pathless tracts. [It threw the boy and gorged him to death.]"
  259. ^ Humphreys, S. C. The Strangeness of Gods: Historical perspectives on the interpretation of Athenian religion. Oxford University Press. 2004. pp. 264-265. ISBN 978-0199269235
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  261. ^ Hyginus, Astronomica 2.23.3
  262. ^ Feldman, Louis H. (1996). Studies in Hellenistic Judaism. Brill. p. 203. ISBN 90-04-10418-6.
  263. ^ Anacreontea fragment 38. Usually said to be the daughters of Zeus by Eurynome.
  264. ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca 48.548. Nonnus also mentions both Dionysus and Hera as the parents of a Grace, Pasithea, on separate occasions, but it is unclear whether those two are supposed to be Pasithea's parents together.
  265. ^ Pseudo-Plutarch, De fluviis 7.
  266. ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca 1.26–28 I pp. 4, 5, 48.245–247 III pp. 440–443, 48.848–968 III pp. 484–493.
  267. ^ Unnamed brother of Iacchus, killed by Aura instantly upon birth.
  268. ^ Pseudo-Plutarch, De fluviis 24.
  269. ^ Pausanias, 9.31.2
  270. ^ Scholia on Theocritus' Idylls 1.21
  271. ^ Hesychius of Alexandria s. v. Priēpidos.
  272. ^ Pausanias, 5.16.7.
  273. ^ Strabo, 10.3.13, quotes the non-extant play Palamedes which seems to refer to Thysa, a daughter of Dionysus, and her (?) mother as participants of the Bacchic rites on Mount Ida, but the quoted passage is corrupt.
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  276. ^ Burkert, p. 64.
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  283. ^ see Janda (2010), 16–44 for a detailed account.
  284. ^ Smith 1991, 127–129
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  286. ^ Smith 1991, 127–154
  287. ^ Smith 1991, 127, 131, 133
  288. ^ Smith 1991, 130
  289. ^ Smith 1991, 136
  290. ^ Smith 1991, 127
  291. ^ Smith 1991, 128
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  294. ^ Bull, 228–232, 228 quoted
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  296. ^ Bull, 233–235
  297. ^ Bull (page needed)
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  312. ^ a b c Moles, John (2006). "Jesus and Dionysus in "The Acts Of The Apostles" and early Christianity". Hermathena. Trinity College Dublin. 180 (180): 65–104. JSTOR 23041662.
  313. ^ Detienne, Marcel. Dionysus Slain. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins, 1979.
  314. ^ Evans, Arthur. The God of Ecstasy. New York: St. Martins' Press, 1989
  315. ^ Wick, Peter (2004). "Jesus gegen Dionysos? Ein Beitrag zur Kontextualisierung des Johannesevangeliums". Biblica. Rome: Pontifical Biblical Institute. 85 (2): 179–198. Retrieved 2007-10-10.
  316. ^ Powell, Barry B., Classical Myth. Second ed. With new translations of ancient texts by Herbert M. Howe. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1998.
  317. ^ Studies in Early Christology, by Martin Hengel, 2005, p. 331 (ISBN 0567042804).
  318. ^ Dalby, Andrew (2005). The Story of Bacchus. London: British Museum Press.
  319. ^ E. Kessler, Dionysian Monotheism in Nea Paphos, Cyprus. Symposium on Pagan Monotheism in the Roman Empire, Exeter, 17–20 July 2006 Abstract 2008-04-21 at the Wayback Machine)
  320. ^ Bull, 240–241
  321. ^ "British Museum – statue". Britishmuseum.org.
  322. ^ This chart is based upon Hesiod's Theogony, unless otherwise noted.
  323. ^ According to Homer, Iliad 1.570–579, 14.338, Odyssey 8.312, Hephaestus was apparently the son of Hera and Zeus, see Gantz, p. 74.
  324. ^ According to Hesiod, Theogony 927–929, Hephaestus was produced by Hera alone, with no father, see Gantz, p. 74.
  325. ^ According to Hesiod, Theogony 886–890, of Zeus' children by his seven wives, Athena was the first to be conceived, but the last to be born; Zeus impregnated Metis then swallowed her, later Zeus himself gave birth to Athena "from his head", see Gantz, pp. 51–52, 83–84.
  326. ^ According to Hesiod, Theogony 183–200, Aphrodite was born from Uranus' severed genitals, see Gantz, pp. 99–100.
  327. ^ According to Homer, Aphrodite was the daughter of Zeus (Iliad 3.374, 20.105; Odyssey 8.308, 320) and Dione (Iliad 5.370–71), see Gantz, pp. 99–100.

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dionysus, confused, with, dionysius, this, article, about, deity, other, uses, dionysos, disambiguation, bacchus, redirects, here, other, uses, bacchus, disambiguation, ancient, greek, religion, myth, ancient, greek, Διόνυσος, dionysos, grape, harvest, winemak. Not to be confused with Dionysius This article is about the deity For other uses see Dionysos disambiguation Bacchus redirects here For other uses see Bacchus disambiguation In ancient Greek religion and myth Dionysus d aɪ e ˈ n aɪ s e s Ancient Greek Dionysos Dionysos is the god of the grape harvest winemaking orchards and fruit vegetation fertility festivity insanity ritual madness religious ecstasy and theatre 2 3 The Romans called him Bacchus ˈ b ae k e s or ˈ b ɑː k e s Ancient Greek Bakxos Bacchos 4 for a frenzy he is said to induce called bakkheia As Dionysus Eleutherios the liberator his wine music and ecstatic dance free his followers from self conscious fear and care and subvert the oppressive restraints of the powerful 5 His thyrsus a fennel stem sceptre sometimes wound with ivy and dripping with honey is both a beneficent wand and a weapon used to destroy those who oppose his cult and the freedoms he represents 6 Those who partake of his mysteries are believed to become possessed and empowered by the god himself 7 Dionysus Bacchus God of wine vegetation fertility festivity ritual madness religious ecstasy and theatreMember of the Twelve OlympiansSecond century Roman statue of Dionysus after a Hellenistic model ex coll Cardinal Richelieu Louvre 1 AbodeMount OlympusAnimalsBull panther tiger or lion goat snakeSymbolThyrsus grapevine ivy theatrical masks phallusFestivalsBacchanalia Roman DionysiaPersonal informationParentsZeus and SemeleZeus and Demeter some sources Zeus and Persephone Orphic Ammon and AmaltheiaSiblingsAeacus Angelos Apollo Ares Artemis Athena Eileithyia Enyo Eris Ersa Hebe Helen of Troy Hephaestus Heracles Hermes Minos Pandia Persephone Perseus Rhadamanthus Tantalus the Graces the Horae the Litae the Muses the MoiraiConsortAriadneChildrenPriapus Hymen Thoas Staphylus Oenopion Comus Phthonus the Graces DeianiraEquivalentsRoman equivalentBacchus LiberEtruscan equivalentFuflunsEgyptian equivalentOsirisThis article contains special characters Without proper rendering support you may see question marks boxes or other symbols His origins are uncertain and his cults took many forms some are described by ancient sources as Thracian others as Greek 8 9 10 In Orphic religion he was variously a son of Zeus and Persephone a chthonic or underworld aspect of Zeus or the twice born son of Zeus and the mortal Semele The Eleusinian Mysteries identify him with Iacchus the son or husband of Demeter Most accounts say he was born in Thrace traveled abroad and arrived in Greece as a foreigner His attribute of foreignness as an arriving outsider god may be inherent and essential to his cults as he is a god of epiphany sometimes called the god that comes 11 Wine was a religious focus in the cult of Dionysus and was his earthly incarnation 12 Wine could ease suffering bring joy and inspire divine madness 13 Festivals of Dionysus included the performance of sacred dramas enacting his myths the initial driving force behind the development of theatre in Western culture 14 The cult of Dionysus is also a cult of the souls his maenads feed the dead through blood offerings and he acts as a divine communicant between the living and the dead 15 He is sometimes categorised as a dying and rising god 16 Romans identified Bacchus with their own Liber Pater the Free Father of the Liberalia festival patron of viniculture wine and male fertility and guardian of the traditions rituals and freedoms attached to coming of age and citizenship but the Roman state treated independent popular festivals of Bacchus Bacchanalia as subversive partly because their free mixing of classes and genders transgressed traditional social and moral constraints Celebration of the Bacchanalia was made a capital offence except in the toned down forms and greatly diminished congregations approved and supervised by the State Festivals of Bacchus were merged with those of Liber and Dionysus Contents 1 Name 1 1 Etymology 1 2 Meaning and variants 2 Origins 3 Epithets 4 Worship and festivals in Greece 4 1 Dionysia 4 2 Anthesteria 4 3 Bacchic Mysteries 4 4 Eleusinian Mysteries 4 5 Orphism 5 Worship and festivals in Rome 5 1 Liber and importation to Rome 5 2 Bacchanalia 6 Post classical worship 6 1 Late Antiquity 6 2 Worship from the Middle Ages to the Modern period 7 Identification with other gods 7 1 Osiris 7 2 Hades 7 3 Sabazios and Yahweh 8 Mythology 8 1 First birth 8 1 1 Interpretation 8 2 Second birth 8 2 1 Interpretation 8 3 Infancy 8 4 Travels and invention of wine 8 5 Return to Greece 8 6 Captivity and escape 8 7 Descent to the underworld 8 8 Secondary myths 8 8 1 Midas golden touch 8 8 2 Love affairs 8 8 3 Other myths 8 9 Children 9 Iconography and depictions 9 1 Symbols 9 2 Classical art 9 3 Early modern art 9 4 Modern literature and philosophy 9 5 Modern film and performance art 10 Parallels with Christianity 10 1 Death and resurrection 10 2 Trial 10 3 Other parallels 11 Gallery 12 Genealogy 13 See also 14 Notes 15 References 16 Further reading 17 External linksName EditEtymology Edit Dionysus extending a drinking cup kantharos late sixth century BC The dio prefix in Ancient Greek Dionysos Dionusos di o nyː sos has been associated since antiquity with Zeus genitive Dios and the variants of the name seem to point to an original Dios nysos 17 The earliest attestation is the Mycenaean Greek dative form 𐀇𐀺𐀝𐀰 di wo nu so 18 17 featured on two tablets that had been found at Mycenaean Pylos and dated to the twelfth or thirteenth century BC At that time there could be no certainty on whether this was indeed a theonym 19 20 but the 1989 90 Greek Swedish Excavations at Kastelli Hill Chania unearthed inter alia four artefacts bearing Linear B inscriptions among them the inscription on item KH Gq 5 is thought to confirm Dionysus s early worship 21 In Mycenaean Greek the form of Zeus is di wo 22 The second element nusos is of unknown origin 17 It is perhaps associated with Mount Nysa the birthplace of the god in Greek mythology where he was nursed by nymphs the Nysiads 23 although Pherecydes of Syros had postulated nũsa as an archaic word for tree by the sixth century BC 24 25 On a vase of Sophilos the Nysiads are named nysai nusae 26 Kretschmer asserted that nysh nuse is a Thracian word that has the same meaning as nymfh nymphe a word similar with nyos nuos daughter in law or bride I E snusos Sanskr snusa 27 He suggested that the male form is nῦsos nusos and this would make Dionysus the son of Zeus 26 Jane Ellen Harrison believed that the name Dionysus means young Zeus 28 Robert S P Beekes has suggested a Pre Greek origin of the name since all attempts to find an Indo European etymology are doubtful 18 17 Meaning and variants Edit This article contains Linear B that may not render correctly in your browser Without proper rendering support you may see empty boxes instead of Unicode Later variants include Dionusos and Diōnusos in Boeotia Dien n usos in Thessaly Deonusos and Deunusos in Ionia and Dinnusos in Aeolia besides other variants A Dio prefix is found in other names such as that of the Dioscures and may derive from Dios the genitive of the name of Zeus 29 Nonnus in his Dionysiaca writes that the name Dionysus means Zeus limp and that Hermes named the new born Dionysus this because Zeus while he carried his burden lifted one foot with a limp from the weight of his thigh and nysos in Syracusan language means limping 30 In his note to these lines W H D Rouse writes It need hardly be said that these etymologies are wrong 30 The Suda a Byzantine encyclopedia based on classical sources states that Dionysus was so named from accomplishing dianyein for each of those who live the wild life Or from providing dianoeῖn everything for those who live the wild life 31 Origins Edit Dionysus triumph a mosaic from the House of Poseidon Zeugma Mosaic Museum Academics in the nineteenth century using study of philology and comparative mythology often regarded Dionysus as a foreign deity who was only reluctantly accepted into the standard Greek pantheon at a relatively late date based on his myths which often involve this theme a god who spends much of his time on earth abroad and struggles for acceptance when he returns to Greece However more recent evidence has shown that Dionysus was in fact one of the earliest gods attested in mainland Greek culture 13 The earliest written records of Dionysus worship come from Mycenaean Greece specifically in and around the Palace of Nestor in Pylos dated to around 1300 BC 32 The details of any religion surrounding Dionysus in this period are scant and most evidence comes in the form only of his name written as di wo nu su jo Dionysoio of Dionysus in Linear B preserved on fragments of clay tablets that indicate a connection to offerings or payments of wine which was described as being of Dionysoio References have also been uncovered to women of Oinoa the place of wine who may correspond to the Dionysian women of later periods 32 Other Mycenaean records from Pylos record the worship of a god named Eleuther who was the son of Zeus and to whom oxen were sacrificed The link to both Zeus and oxen as well as etymological links between the name Eleuther or Eleutheros with the Latin name Liber Pater indicates that this may have been another name for Dionysus According to Karoly Kerenyi these clues suggest that even in the thirteenth century BC the core religion of Dionysus was in place as were his important myths At Knossos in Minoan Crete men were often given the name Pentheus who is a figure in later Dionysian myth and which also means suffering Kerenyi argued that to give such a name to one s child implies a strong religious connection potentially not the separate character of Pentheus who suffers at the hands of Dionysus followers in later myths but as an epithet of Dionysus himself whose mythology describes a god who must endure suffering before triumphing over it According to Kerenyi the title of man who suffers likely originally referred to the god himself only being applied to distinct characters as the myth developed 32 The oldest known image of Dionysus accompanied by his name is found on a dinos by the Attic potter Sophilos around 570 BC and is located in the British Museum 33 By the seventh century iconography found on pottery shows that Dionysus was already worshiped as more than just a god associated with wine He was associated with weddings death sacrifice and sexuality and his retinue of satyrs and dancers was already established A common theme in these early depictions was the metamorphosis at the hand of the god of his followers into hybrid creatures usually represented by both tame and wild satyrs representing the transition from civilized life back to nature as a means of escape 13 Epithets Edit Bassareus redirects here For for the genus of beetle see Bassareus beetle The over life size second century AD Ludovisi Dionysus with panther satyr and grapes on a vine Palazzo Altemps Rome Epiphany of Dionysus mosaic from the Villa of Dionysus second century AD in Dion Greece Archeological Museum of Dion A Roman fresco depicting Bacchus Boscoreale c 30 BC Dionysus was variably known with the following epithets Acratophorus Ἀkratoforos giver of unmixed wine at Phigaleia in Arcadia 34 Aisymnetes Aἰsymnhths insensitive who rules the faith moira Acroreites at Sicyon 35 Adoneus a rare archaism in Roman literature a Latinised form of Adonis used as epithet for Bacchus 36 Aegobolus Aἰgobolos goat shooter at Potniae in Boeotia 37 Aesymnetes Aἰsymnhths ruler or lord at Aroe and Patrae in Achaea Agrios Ἄgrios wild in Macedonia Androgynos Ἀndrogynos androgynous specifically in intercourse referring to the god taking both an active male and a passive female role 38 39 Anthroporraistes Ἀn8rwporraisths man destroyer a title of Dionysus at Tenedos 40 Bassareus Bassareys a Thracian name for Dionysus which derives from bassaris or fox skin which item was worn by his cultists in their mysteries 41 42 Bougenes Boygenhs or Bohgenhs borne by a cow in the Mysteries of Lerna 43 44 Marble sarcophagus with the Triumph of Dionysos who is riding a panther with attendants the Four Seasons Tellus and Ocean c 220 230 Braetes Braiths related to beer at Thrace 45 Briseus Brῑseὐs he who prevails in Smyrna 46 47 Bromios Bromios roaring as of the wind primarily relating to the central death resurrection element of the myth 48 but also the god s transformations into lion and bull 49 and the boisterousness of those who drink alcohol Also cognate with the roar of thunder which refers to Dionysus father Zeus the thunderer 50 Choiropsalas xoiropsalas pig plucker Greek xoῖros pig also used as a slang term for the female genitalia A reference to Dionysus s role as a fertility deity 51 52 Chthonios X8onios the subterranean 53 Cittophorus Kistoforos basket bearer ivy bearer Alludes To baskets being sacred to the god 38 54 Dimetor Dimhtwr twice born Refers to Dionysus s two births 38 55 56 57 Dendrites Dendriths he of the trees as a fertility god Dithyrambos Di8yrambos used at his festivals referring to his premature birth Eleutherios Ἐley8erios the liberator an epithet shared with Eros Endendros he in the tree 58 Enorches with balls 59 with reference to his fertility or in the testicles in reference to Zeus sewing the baby Dionysus into his thigh understood to mean his testicles 60 used in Samos and Lesbos Eridromos good running in Nonnus Dionysiaca 61 Erikryptos Ἐrikryptos completely hidden in Macedonia Euaster Eὐasthr from the cry euae 62 Euius Euios from the cry euae in lyric passages and in Euripides play The Bacchae 63 Iacchus Ἴakxos a possible epithet of Dionysus associated with the Eleusinian Mysteries In Eleusis he is known as a son of Zeus and Demeter The name Iacchus may come from the Iakxos Iakchos a hymn sung in honor of Dionysus Indoletes Ἰndoleths meaning slayer killer of Indians Due to his campaign against the Indians 64 The Conquest of India by Dionysus at the archaeological museum of Setif c 200 300 AD Isodaetes Isodaiths meaning he who distributes equal portions cult epithet also shared with Helios 65 Kemilius Kemhlios kemas young deer pricket 66 67 Liknites he of the winnowing fan as a fertility god connected with mystery religions A winnowing fan was used to separate the chaff from the grain Detail of the bronze Ponte Garibaldi Bacchus Palazzo Massimo Rome Lenaius Lhnaios god of the wine press 68 Lyaeus or Lyaios Lyaῖos deliverer literally loosener one who releases from care and anxiety 69 Lysius Lysios delivering releasing At Thebes there was a temple of Dionysus Lysius 70 71 72 Melanaigis Melanaigis of the black goatskin at the Apaturia festival Morychus Moryxos smeared in Sicily because his icon was smeared with wine lees at the vintage 73 74 Mystes Mysths of the mysteries at Tegea in Arcadia 75 76 Nysian Nysios according to Philostratus he was called like this by the ancient Indians 77 Most probably because according to legend he founded the city of Nysa 78 79 80 Oeneus Oἰneys wine dark as god of the wine press 81 82 Omadios flesh eater Eusebius writes in Preparation for the Gospel that Euelpis of Carystus states that in Chios and Tenedos they did human sacrifice to Dionysus Omadios 83 Phallen Fallhn probably related to the phallus at Lesbos 84 85 Phleus related to the bloom of a plant 86 87 88 Pseudanor PSeydanwr literally false man referring to his feminine qualities in Macedonia Perikionius Perikionios climbing the column ivy a name of Dionysus at Thebes 89 Semeleios 90 Semeleius or Semeleus 91 an obscure epithet meaning He of the Earth son of Semele 92 93 94 95 Also appears in the expression Semeleios Iakchus plutodotas Son of Semele Iakchus wealth giver 96 Skyllitas Skyllitas related to the vine branch at Kos 97 98 Sykites Sykiths related to figs at Laconia 99 Taurophagus Tayrofagos bull eating 100 Tauros Taῦros a bull occurs as a surname of Dionysus 101 102 Theoinus 8eoinos wine god of a festival in Attica 103 104 105 Thyion 8yiwn from the festival of Dionysus Thyia 8yῐa at Elis 106 107 Thyllophorus 8ylloforos bearing leaves at Kos 108 109 In the Greek pantheon Dionysus along with Zeus absorbs the role of Sabazios a Thracian Phrygian deity In the Roman pantheon Sabazius became an alternative name for Bacchus 110 Worship and festivals in Greece EditMain article Cult of Dionysus Dionysus worship became firmly established by the seventh century BC 111 He may have been worshiped as early as c 1500 1100 BC by Mycenaean Greeks 112 21 and traces of Dionysian type cult have also been found in ancient Minoan Crete 32 Dionysia Edit Main article Dionysia Marble head of Dionysus 2nd century AD Capitoline Museums Rome The Dionysia Haloa Ascolia and Lenaia festivals were dedicated to Dionysus 113 The Rural Dionysia or Lesser Dionysia was one of the oldest festivals dedicated to Dionysus begun in Attica and probably celebrated the cultivation of vines It was held during the winter month of Poseideon the time surrounding the winter solstice modern December or January The Rural Dionysia centered on a procession during which participants carried phalluses long loaves of bread jars of water and wine as well as other offerings and young girls carried baskets The procession was followed by a series of dramatic performances and drama competitions 114 The City Dionysia or Greater Dionysia took place in urban centers such as Athens and Eleusis and was a later development probably beginning during the sixth century BC Held three months after the Rural Dionysia the Greater festival fell near the spring equinox in the month of Elaphebolion modern March or April The procession of the City Dionysia was similar to that of the rural celebrations but more elaborate and led by participants carrying a wooden statue of Dionysus and including sacrificial bulls and ornately dressed choruses The dramatic competitions of the Greater Dionysia also featured more noteworthy poets and playwrights and prizes for both dramatists and actors in multiple categories 114 14 Anthesteria Edit A mosaic from Antioch of Dionysos 2nd century AD The Anthesteria Ἀn8esthria was an Athenian festival that celebrated the beginning of spring It spanned three days Pithoigia Pi8oigia Jar Opening Choes Xoai The Pouring and Chythroi Xytroi The Pots 115 It was said the dead arose from the underworld during the span of the festival Along with the souls of the dead the Keres also wandered through the city and had to be banished when the festival ended 116 On the first day Wine vats were opened 117 The wine was opened and mixed in honour of the god 118 The rooms and the drinking vessels were adorned with flowers along with children over three years of age 115 On the second day a solemn ritual for Dionysus occurred along with drinking People dressed up sometimes as members of Dionysus s entourage and visited others Choes was also the occasion of a solemn and secret ceremony In one of the sanctuaries of Dionysus in the Lenaeum which for the rest of the year was closed The basilissa or basilinna wife of the basileus underwent through a symbolic ceremonial marriage to the god possibly representing a Hieros gamos The basilissa was assisted by fourteen Athenian matrons called Gerarai who were chosen by the basileus and sworn to secrecy 115 119 The last day was dedicated to the dead Offerings were also offered to Hermes due to his connection to the underworld It was considered a day of merrymaking 115 Some poured Libations on the tombs of deceased relatives Chythroi ended with a ritual cry intended to order the souls of the dead to return to the underworld 119 Keres were also banished from the festival on the last day 116 To protect themselves from evil people chewed leaves of whitethorn and smeared their doors with tar to protect themselves The festival also allowed servants and slaves to join in on the festivities 115 116 Bacchic Mysteries Edit Main articles Dionysian Mysteries and Orphism religion Marble relief of a Maenad and two satyrs in a Bacchic procession AD 100 British Museum London The central religious cult of Dionysus is known as the Bacchic or Dionysian Mysteries The exact origin of this religion is unknown though Orpheus was said to have invented the mysteries of Dionysus 120 Evidence suggests that many sources and rituals typically considered to be part of the similar Orphic Mysteries actually belong to Dionysian mysteries 13 Some scholars have suggested that additionally there is no difference between the Dionysian mysteries and the mysteries of Persephone but that these were all facets of the same mystery religion and that Dionysus and Persephone both had important roles in it 13 121 Previously considered to have been a primarily rural and fringe part of Greek religion the major urban center of Athens played a major role in the development and spread of the Bacchic mysteries 13 The Bacchic mysteries served an important role in creating ritual traditions for transitions in people s lives originally primarily for men and male sexuality but later also created space for ritualizing women s changing roles and celebrating changes of status in a woman s life This was often symbolized by a meeting with the gods who rule over death and change such as Hades and Persephone but also with Dionysus mother Semele who probably served a role related to initiation into the mysteries 13 The religion of Dionysus often included rituals involving the sacrifice of goats or bulls and at least some participants and dancers wore wooden masks associated with the god In some instances records show the god participating in the ritual via a masked and clothed pillar pole or tree is used while his worshipers eat bread and drink wine The significance of masks and goats to the worship of Dionysus seems to date back to the earliest days of his worship and these symbols have been found together at a Minoan tomb near Phaistos in Crete 32 Eleusinian Mysteries Edit Bacchus Ceres and Amor 1595 1605 Oil on canvas by Hans von Aachen Roman marble relief first century AD from Naukratis showing the Greek god Dionysus snake bodied and wearing an Egyptian crown As early as the fifth century BC Dionysus became identified with Iacchus a minor deity from the tradition of the Eleusinian Mysteries 122 This association may have arisen because of the homophony of the names Iacchus and Bacchus Two black figure lekythoi c 500 BC possibly represent the earliest evidence for such an association The nearly identical vases one in Berlin 123 the other in Rome 124 depict Dionysus along with the inscription IAKXNE a possible miswriting of IAKXE 125 More early evidence can be found in the works of the fifth century BC Athenian tragedians Sophocles and Euripides 126 In Sophocles Antigone c 441 BC an ode to Dionysus begins by addressing Dionysus as the God of many names polywnyme who rules over the glens of Demeter s Eleusis and ends by identifying him with Iacchus the Giver who leads the chorus of the stars whose breath is fire and whose attendant Thyiads dance in night long frenzy 127 And in a fragment from a lost play Sophocles describes Nysa Dionysus traditional place of nurture From here I caught sight of Nysa haunt of Bacchus famed among mortals which Iacchus of the bull s horns counts as his beloved nurse 128 In Euripides Bacchae c 405 BC a messenger describing the Bacchic revelries on mount Cithaeron associates Iacchus with Bromius another of the names of Dionysus saying they began to wave the thyrsos calling on Iacchus the son of Zeus Bromius with united voice 129 An inscription found on a stone stele c 340 BC found at Delphi contains a paean to Dionysus which describes his travels 130 From Thebes where he was born he first went to Delphi where he displayed his starry body and with Delphian girls took his place on the folds of Parnassus 131 then next to Eleusis where he is called Iacchus And in your hand brandishing your night lighting flame with god possessed frenzy you went to the vales of Eleusis where the whole people of Hellas land alongside your own native witnesses of the holy mysteries calls upon you as Iacchus for mortals from their pains you have opened a haven without toils 132 Strabo says that Greeks give the name Iacchus not only to Dionysus but also to the leader in chief of the mysteries 133 In particular Iacchus was identified with the Orphic Dionysus who was a son of Persephone 134 Sophocles mentions Iacchus of the bull s horns and according to the first century BC historian Diodorus Siculus it was this older Dionysus who was represented in paintings and sculptures with horns because he excelled in sagacity and was the first to attempt the yoking of oxen and by their aid to effect the sowing of the seed 135 Arrian the second century Greek historian wrote that it was to this Dionysus the son of Zeus and Persephone not the Theban Dionysus that the mystic chant Iacchus is sung 136 The second century poet Lucian also referred to the dismemberment of Iacchus 137 The fourth or fifth century poet Nonnus associated the name Iacchus with the third Dionysus He described the Athenian celebrations given to the first Dionysus Zagreus son of Persephone the second Dionysus Bromios son of Semele and the third Dionysus Iacchus They the Athenians honoured him as a god next after the son of Persephone and after Semele s son they established sacrifices for Dionysos late born and Dionysos first born and third they chanted a new hymn for Iacchos In these three celebrations Athens held high revel in the dance lately made the Athenians beat the step in honour of Zagreus and Bromios and Iacchos all together 138 By some accounts Iacchus was the husband of Demeter 139 Several other sources identify Iacchus as Demeter s son 140 The earliest such source a fourth century BC vase fragment at Oxford shows Demeter holding the child Dionysus on her lap 141 By the first century BC Demeter suckling Iacchus had become such a common motif that the Latin poet Lucretius could use it as an apparently recognizable example of a lover s euphemism 142 A scholiast on the second century AD Aristides explicitly names Demeter as Iacchus mother 143 Orphism Edit Satyr giving a grapevine to Bacchus as a child cameo glass first half of the first century AD from Italy In the Orphic tradition the first Dionysus was the son of Zeus and Persephone and was dismembered by the Titans before being reborn 144 Dionysus was the patron god of the Orphics who they connected to death and immortality and he symbolized the one who guides the process of reincarnation 145 This Orphic Dionysus is sometimes referred to with the alternate name Zagreus Greek Zagreys The earliest mentions of this name in literature describe him as a partner of Gaia and call him the highest god Aeschylus linked Zagreus with Hades as either Hades son or Hades himself 146 Noting Hades identity as Zeus katachthonios alter ego Timothy Gantz thought it likely that Zagreus originally perhaps the son of Hades and Persephone later merged with the Orphic Dionysus the son of Zeus and Persephone 147 However no known Orphic sources use the name Zagreus to refer to the Orphic Dionysus It is possible that the association between the two was known by the third century BC when the poet Callimachus may have written about it in a now lost source 148 Callimachus as well as his contemporary Euphorion told the story of the dismemberment of the infant Dionysus 149 and Byzantine sources quote Callimachus as referring to the birth of a Dionysos Zagreus explaining that Zagreus was the poets name for the chthonic aspect of Dionysus 150 The earliest definitive reference to the belief that Zagreus is another name for the Orphic Dionysus is found in the late first century writings of Plutarch 151 The fifth century Greek poet Nonnus Dionysiaca tells the story of this Orphic Dionysus in which Nonnus calls him the older Dionysos illfated Zagreus 152 Zagreus the horned baby 153 Zagreus the first Dionysos 154 Zagreus the ancient Dionysos 155 and Dionysos Zagreus 156 Worship and festivals in Rome EditLiber and importation to Rome Edit Dionysus with long torch sitting on a throne with Helios Aphrodite and other gods Antique fresco from Pompeii The mystery cult of Bacchus was brought to Rome from the Greek culture of southern Italy or by way of Greek influenced Etruria It was established around 200 BC in the Aventine grove of Stimula by a priestess from Campania near the temple where Liber Pater the Free Father had a State sanctioned popular cult Liber was a native Roman god of wine fertility and prophecy patron of Rome s plebeians citizen commoners and one of the members of the Aventine Triad along with his mother Ceres and sister or consort Libera A temple to the Triad was erected on the Aventine Hill in 493 BC along with the institution of celebrating the festival of Liberalia The worship of the Triad gradually took on more and more Greek influence and by 205 BC Liber and Libera had been formally identified with Bacchus and Proserpina 157 Liber was often interchangeably identified with Dionysus and his mythology though this identification was not universally accepted 158 Cicero insisted on the non identity of Liber and Dionysus and described Liber and Libera as children of Ceres 159 Bust of Dionysus in the temple of Liber Pater in the forum first century AD Liber like his Aventine companions carried various aspects of his older cults into official Roman religion He protected various aspects of agriculture and fertility including the vine and the soft seed of its grapes wine and wine vessels and male fertility and virility 159 Pliny called Liber the first to establish the practice of buying and selling he also invented the diadem the emblem of royalty and the triumphal procession 160 Roman mosaics and sarcophagi attest to various representations of a Dionysus like exotic triumphal procession In Roman and Greek literary sources from the late Republic and Imperial era several notable triumphs feature similar distinctively Bacchic processional elements recalling the supposedly historic Triumph of Liber 161 Liber and Dionysus may have had a connection that predated Classical Greece and Rome in the form of the Mycenaean god Eleutheros who shared the lineage and iconography of Dionysus but whose name has the same meaning as Liber 32 Before the importation of the Greek cults Liber was already strongly associated with Bacchic symbols and values including wine and uninhibited freedom as well as the subversion of the powerful Several depictions from the late Republic era feature processions depicting the Triumph of Liber 161 Bacchanalia Edit Main article Bacchanalia Sacrifice to Bacchus Oil on canvas by Massimo Stanzione c 1634 In Rome the most well known festivals of Bacchus were the Bacchanalia based on the earlier Greek Dionysia festivals These Bacchic rituals were said to have included omophagic practices such as pulling live animals apart and eating the whole of them raw This practice served not only as a reenactment of the infant death and rebirth of Bacchus but also as a means by which Bacchic practitioners produced enthusiasm etymologically to let a god enter the practitioner s body or to have her become one with Bacchus 162 163 Bacchus with leopard 1878 by Johann Wilhelm Schutze In Livy s account the Bacchic mysteries were a novelty at Rome originally restricted to women and held only three times a year they were corrupted by an Etruscan Greek version and thereafter drunken disinhibited men and women of all ages and social classes cavorted in a sexual free for all five times a month Livy relates their various outrages against Rome s civil and religious laws and traditional morality mos maiorum a secretive subversive and potentially revolutionary counter culture Livy s sources and his own account of the cult probably drew heavily on the Roman dramatic genre known as Satyr plays based on Greek originals 164 165 The cult was suppressed by the State with great ferocity of the 7 000 arrested most were executed Modern scholarship treats much of Livy s account with skepticism more certainly a Senatorial edict the Senatus consultum de Bacchanalibus was distributed throughout Roman and allied Italy It banned the former Bacchic cult organisations Each meeting must seek prior senatorial approval through a praetor No more than three women and two men were allowed at any one meeting and those who defied the edict risked the death penalty Bacchus was conscripted into the official Roman pantheon as an aspect of Liber and his festival was inserted into the Liberalia In Roman culture Liber Bacchus and Dionysus became virtually interchangeable equivalents Thanks to his mythology involving travels and struggles on earth Bacchus became euhemerised as a historical hero conqueror and founder of cities He was a patron deity and founding hero at Leptis Magna birthplace of the emperor Septimius Severus who promoted his cult In some Roman sources the ritual procession of Bacchus in a tiger drawn chariot surrounded by maenads satyrs and drunks commemorates the god s triumphant return from the conquest of India Pliny believed this to be the historical prototype for the Roman Triumph 166 Post classical worship EditLate Antiquity Edit Statue of Bacchus Paris Louvre Museum second century AD In the Neoplatonist philosophy and religion of Late Antiquity the Olympian gods were sometimes considered to number 12 based on their spheres of influence For example according to Sallustius Jupiter Neptune and Vulcan fabricate the world Ceres Juno and Diana animate it Mercury Venus and Apollo harmonize it and lastly Vesta Minerva and Mars preside over it with a guarding power 167 The multitude of other gods in this belief system subsist within the primary gods and Sallustius taught that Bacchus subsisted in Jupiter 167 In the Orphic tradition a saying was supposedly given by an oracle of Apollo that stated Zeus Hades and Helios Dionysus were three gods in one godhead This statement apparently conflated Dionysus not only with Hades but also his father Zeus and implied a particularly close identification with the sun god Helios When quoting this in his Hymn to King Helios Emperor Julian substituted Dionysus name with that of Serapis whose Egyptian counterpart Osiris was also identified with Dionysus Worship from the Middle Ages to the Modern period Edit Bacchus by Paulus Bor Three centuries after the reign of Theodosius I which saw the outlawing of pagan worship across the Roman Empire the 692 Quinisext Council in Constantinople felt it necessary to warn Christians against participating in persisting rural worship of Dionysus The council decried the Bacchic rites of the feast day Brumalia the public dances of women ritual cross dressing the wearing of Dionysiac masks and the invoking of Bacchus name when squeez ing out the wine in the presses or when pouring out wine into jars 168 According to the Lanercost chronicle during Easter in 1282 in Scotland the parish priest of Inverkeithing led young women in a dance in honor of Priapus and Father Liber commonly identified with Dionysus The priest danced and sang at the front carrying a representation of the phallus on a pole He was killed by a Christian mob later that year 169 Historian C S Watkins believes that Richard of Durham the author of the chronicle identified an occurrence of apotropaic magic with his knowledge of ancient Greek religion rather than recording an actual case of survival of pagan rituals 170 The late medieval Byzantine scholar Gemistus Pletho secretly advocated in favor of a return to paganism in medieval Greece citation needed In the eighteenth century Hellfire Clubs appeared in Britain and Ireland Though activities varied between the clubs some of them were very pagan and included shrines and sacrifices Dionysus was one of the most popular deities alongside deities like Venus and Flora Today one can still see the statue of Dionysus left behind in the Hellfire Caves 171 In 1820 Ephraim Lyon founded the Church of Bacchus in Eastford Connecticut He declared himself High Priest and added local drunks to the list of membership He maintained that those who died as members would go to a Bacchanalia for their afterlife 172 Modern pagan and polytheist groups often include worship of Dionysus in their traditions and practices most prominently groups which have sought to revive Hellenic polytheism such as the Supreme Council of Ethnic Hellenes YSEE 173 In addition to libations of wine modern worshipers of Dionysus offer the god grape vines ivy and various forms of incense particularly styrax 174 They may also celebrate Roman festivals such as the Liberalia March 17 close to the Spring Equinox or Bacchanalia Various dates and various Greek festivals such as the Anthesteria Lenaia and the Greater and Lesser Dionysias the dates of which are calculated by the lunar calendar 175 Identification with other gods EditOsiris Edit Painted wood panel depicting Serapis who was considered the same god as Osiris Hades and Dionysus in Late Antiquity Second century AD In the Greek interpretation of the Egyptian pantheon Dionysus was often identified with Osiris 176 Stories of the dismemberment of Osiris and the re assembly and resurrection by Isis closely parallel those of the Orphic Dionysus and Demeter 177 According to Diodorus Siculus 178 as early as the fifth century BC the two gods had been syncretized as a single deity known as Dionysus Osiris The most notable record of this belief is found in Herodotus Histories 179 Plutarch also described his belief that Osiris and Dionysus were identical stating that anyone familiar with the secret rituals associated with both gods would recognize obvious parallels and that their dismemberment myths and associated public symbols are enough additional evidence that they are the same god worshiped by two different cultures 180 Other syncretic Greco Egyptian deities arose out of this conflation including with the gods Serapis and Hermanubis Serapis was believed to be both Hades and Osiris and the Roman Emperor Julian considered him the same as Dionysus as well Dionysus Osiris was particularly popular in Ptolemaic Egypt as the Ptolemies claimed descent from Dionysus and as Pharaohs they had claim to the lineage of Osiris 181 This association was most notable during a deification ceremony where Mark Antony became Dionysus Osiris alongside Cleopatra as Isis Aphrodite 182 Egyptian myths about Priapus said that the Titans conspired against Osiris killed him divided his body into equal parts and slipped them secretly out of the house All but Osiris penis which since none of them was willing to take it with him they threw into the river Isis Osiris wife hunted down and killed the Titans reassembled Osiris body parts into the shape of a human figure and gave them to the priests with orders that they pay Osiris the honours of a god But since she was unable to recover the penis she ordered the priests to pay to it the honours of a god and to set it up in their temples in an erect position 183 Hades Edit Pinax of Persephone and Hades on the throne from the holy shrine of Persephone at Locri The fifth fourth century BC philosopher Heraclitus unifying opposites declared that Hades and Dionysus the very essence of indestructible life zoe are the same god 184 Among other evidence Karl Kerenyi notes in his book 185 that the Homeric Hymn To Demeter 186 votive marble images 187 and epithets 188 all link Hades to being Dionysus He also notes that the grieving goddess Demeter refused to drink wine as she states that it would be against themis for her to drink wine which is the gift of Dionysus after Persephone s abduction because of this association indicating that Hades may in fact have been a cover name for the underworld Dionysus 189 He suggests that this dual identity may have been familiar to those who came into contact with the Mysteries 190 One of the epithets of Dionysus was Chthonios meaning the subterranean 191 Votive relief of Dionysus and Pluto with adorant Fourth century BC From Karystos Archaeological museum of Chalkida Evidence for a cult connection is quite extensive particularly in southern Italy especially when considering the heavy involvement of death symbolism included in Dionysian worship 192 statues of Dionysus 193 194 found in the Ploutonion at Eleusis gives further evidence as the statues found bear a striking resemblance to the statue of Eubouleus also called Aides Kyanochaites Hades of the flowing dark hair 195 196 197 known as the youthful depiction of the Lord of the Underworld The statue of Eubouleus is described as being radiant but disclosing a strange inner darkness 198 196 Ancient portrayals show Dionysus holding in his hand the kantharos a wine jar with large handles and occupying the place where one would expect to see Hades Archaic artist Xenocles portrayed on one side of a vase Zeus Poseidon and Hades each with his emblems of power with Hades head turned back to front and on the other side Dionysus striding forward to meet his bride Persephone with the kantharos in his hand against a background of grapes 199 Dionysus also shared several epithets with Hades such as Chthonios Eubouleus and Euclius Both Hades and Dionysus were associated with a divine tripartite deity with Zeus 200 201 Zeus like Dionysus was occasionally believed to have an underworld form closely identified with Hades to the point that they were occasionally thought of as the same god 201 According to Marguerite Rigoglioso Hades is Dionysus and this dual god was believed by the Eleusinian tradition to have impregnated Persephone This would bring the Eleusinian in harmony with the myth in which Zeus not Hades impregnated Persephone to bear the first Dionysus Rigoglioso argues that taken together these myths suggest a belief that is that with Persephone Zeus Hades Dionysus created in terms quoted from Kerenyi a second a little Dionysus who is also a subterranean Zeus 201 The unification of Hades Zeus and Dionysus as a single tripartite god was used to represent the birth death and resurrection of a deity and to unify the shining realm of Zeus and the dark underworld realm of Hades 200 According to Rosemarie Taylor Perry 200 201 it is often mentioned that Zeus Hades and Dionysus were all attributed to being the exact same god Being a tripartite deity Hades is also Zeus doubling as being the Sky God or Zeus Hades abducts his daughter and paramour Persephone The taking of Kore by Hades is the act which allows the conception and birth of a second integrating force Iacchos Zagreus Dionysus also known as Liknites the helpless infant form of that Deity who is the unifier of the dark underworld chthonic realm of Hades and the Olympian Shining one of Zeus Sabazios and Yahweh Edit Bronze hand used in the worship of Sabazios British Museum 202 Roman first second century AD Hands decorated with religious symbols were designed to stand in sanctuaries or like this one were attached to poles for processional use 203 The Phrygian god Sabazios was alternately identified with Zeus or with Dionysus The Byzantine Greek encyclopedia Suda c tenth century stated 204 Sabazios is the same as Dionysos He acquired this form of address from the rite pertaining to him for the barbarians call the bacchic cry sabazein Hence some of the Greeks too follow suit and call the cry sabasmos thereby Dionysos becomes Sabazios They also used to call saboi those places that had been dedicated to him and his Bacchantes Demosthenes in the speech On Behalf of Ktesiphon mentions them Some say that Saboi is the term for those who are dedicated to Sabazios that is to Dionysos just as those dedicated to Bakkhos are Bakkhoi They say that Sabazios and Dionysos are the same Thus some also say that the Greeks call the Bakkhoi Saboi Strabo in the first century linked Sabazios with Zagreus among Phrygian ministers and attendants of the sacred rites of Rhea and Dionysos 205 Strabo s Sicilian contemporary Diodorus Siculus conflated Sabazios with the secret Dionysus born of Zeus and Persephone 206 However this connection is not supported by any surviving inscriptions which are entirely to Zeus Sabazios 207 Several ancient sources record an apparently widespread belief in the classical world that the god worshiped by the Jewish people Yahweh was identifiable as Dionysus or Liber via his identification with Sabazios Tacitus Lydus Cornelius Labeo and Plutarch all either made this association or discussed it as an extant belief though some like Tacitus specifically brought it up in order to reject it According to Plutarch one of the reasons for the identification is that Jews were reported to hail their god with the words Euoe and Sabi a cry typically associated with the worship of Sabazius According to scholar Sean M McDonough it is possible that Plutarch s sources had confused the cry of Iao Sabaoth typically used by Greek speakers in reference to Yahweh with the Sabazian cry of Euoe Saboe originating the confusion and conflation of the two deities The cry of Sabi could also have been conflated with the Jewish term sabbath adding to the evidence the ancients saw that Yahweh and Dionysus Sabazius were the same deity Further bolstering this connection would have been coins used by the Maccabees that included imagery linked to the worship of Dionysus such as grapes vine leaves and cups However the belief that the Jewish god was identical with Dionysus Sabazius was widespread enough that a coin dated to 55 BC depicting a kneeling king was labelled Bacchus Judaeus BACCHIVS IVDAEVS and in 139 BC praetor Cornelius Scipio Hispalus deported Jewish people for attempting to infect the Roman customs with the cult of Jupiter Sabazius 208 Mythology Edit Birth of Dionysus on a small sarcophagus that may have been made for a child Walters Art Museum 209 The education of Dionysus Fresco now in the Museo Nazionale Romano Rome c 20 AD Various different accounts and traditions existed in the ancient world regarding the parentage birth and life of Dionysus on earth complicated by his several rebirths By the first century BC some mythographers had attempted to harmonize the various accounts of Dionysus birth into a single narrative involving not only multiple births but two or three distinct manifestations of the god on earth throughout history in different lifetimes The historian Diodorus Siculus said that according to some writers of myths there were two gods named Dionysus an older one who was the son of Zeus and Persephone 210 but that the younger one also inherited the deeds of the older and so the men of later times being unaware of the truth and being deceived because of the identity of their names thought there had been but one Dionysus 211 He also said that Dionysus was thought to have two forms the ancient one having a long beard because all men in early times wore long beards the younger one being youthful and effeminate and young 212 Marble bust of youthful Dionysus Knossos second century AD Archaeology museum of Heraklion Wall protome of a bearded Dionysus Boeotia early fourth century BC Though the varying genealogy of Dionysus was mentioned in many works of classical literature only a few contain the actual narrative myths surrounding the events of his multiple births These include the first century BC Bibliotheca historica by Greek historian Diodorus which describes the birth and deeds of the three incarnations of Dionysus 213 the brief birth narrative given by the first century AD Roman author Hyginus which describes a double birth for Dionysus and a longer account in the form of Greek poet Nonnus s epic Dionysiaca which discusses three incarnations of Dionysus similar to Diodorus account but which focuses on the life of the third Dionysus born to Zeus and Semele First birth Edit Though Diodorus mentions some traditions which state an older Indian or Egyptian Dionysus existed who invented wine no narratives are given of his birth or life among mortals and most traditions ascribe the invention of wine and travels through India to the last Dionysus According to Diodorus Dionysus was originally the son of Zeus and Persephone or alternately Zeus and Demeter This is the same horned Dionysus described by Hyginus and Nonnus in later accounts and the Dionysus worshiped by the Orphics who was dismembered by the Titans and then reborn Nonnus calls this Dionysus Zagreus while Diodorus says he is also considered identical with Sabazius 214 However unlike Hyginus and Nonnus Diodorus does not provide a birth narrative for this incarnation of the god It was this Dionysus who was said to have taught mortals how to use oxen to plow the fields rather than doing so by hand His worshipers were said to have honored him for this by depicting him with horns 214 Bronze mask depicting Dionysus bearded and horned c 2nd century BC height 21 4 cm 215 The Greek poet Nonnus gives a birth narrative for Dionysus in his late fourth or early fifth century AD epic Dionysiaca In it he described how Zeus intended to make a new Dionysos grow up a bullshaped copy of the older Dionysos who was the Egyptian god Osiris Dionysiaca 4 216 Zeus took the shape of a serpent drakon and ravished the maidenhood of unwedded Persephoneia According to Nonnus though Persephone was the consort of the blackrobed king of the underworld she remained a virgin and had been hidden in a cave by her mother to avoid the many gods who were her suitors because all that dwelt in Olympos were bewitched by this one girl rivals in love for the marriageable maid Dionysiaca 5 217 After her union with Zeus Persephone s womb swelled with living fruit and she gave birth to a horned baby named Zagreus Zagreus despite his infancy was able to climb onto the throne of Zeus and brandish his lightning bolts marking him as Zeus heir Hera saw this and alerted the Titans who smeared their faces with chalk and ambushed the infant Zagreus while he contemplated his changeling countenance reflected in a mirror They attacked him However according to Nonnus where his limbs had been cut piecemeal by the Titan steel the end of his life was the beginning of a new life as Dionysos He began to change into many different forms in which he returned the attack including Zeus Cronus a baby and a mad youth with the flower of the first down marking his rounded chin with black He then transformed into several animals to attack the assembled Titans including a lion a wild horse a horned serpent a tiger and finally a bull Hera intervened killing the bull with a shout and the Titans finally slaughtered him and cut him into pieces Zeus attacked the Titans and had them imprisoned in Tartaros This caused the mother of the Titans Gaia to suffer and her symptoms were seen across the whole world resulting in fires and floods and boiling seas Zeus took pity on her and in order to cool down the burning land he caused great rains to flood the world Dionysiaca 6 218 Interpretation Edit Mosaic of Dionysus fighting the Indians Palazzo Massimo Rome 4th century AD In the Orphic tradition Dionysus was in part a god associated with the underworld As a result the Orphics considered him the son of Persephone and believed that he had been dismembered by the Titans and then reborn The myth of the dismemberment of Dionysus was alluded to as early as the fourth century BC by Plato in his Phaedo in which Socrates claims that the initiations of the Dionysian Mysteries are similar to those of the philosophic path Late Neoplatonists such as Damascius explored the implications of this at length 219 The dismemberment of Dionysus the sparagmos is often considered to be the most important myth of Orphism 220 Many modern sources identify this Orphic Dionysus with the god Zagreus though this name does not seem to have been used by any of the ancient Orphics who simply called him Dionysus 221 As pieced together from various ancient sources the reconstructed story usually given by modern scholars goes as follows 222 Zeus had intercourse with Persephone in the form of a serpent producing Dionysus The infant was taken to Mount Ida where like the infant Zeus he was guarded by the dancing Curetes Zeus intended Dionysus to be his successor as ruler of the cosmos but a jealous Hera incited the Titans to kill the child Damascius claims that he was mocked by the Titans who gave him a fennel stalk thyrsus in place of his rightful scepter 223 Diodorus relates that Dionysus is the son of Zeus and Demeter the goddess of agriculture and that his birth narrative is an allegory for the generative power of the gods at work in nature 224 When the Sons of Gaia i e the Titans boiled Dionysus following his birth Demeter gathered together his remains allowing his rebirth Diodorus noted the symbolism this myth held for its adherents Dionysus god of the vine was born from the gods of the rain and the earth He was torn apart and boiled by the sons of Gaia or earth born symbolizing the harvesting and wine making process Just as the remains of the bare vines are returned to the earth to restore its fruitfulness the remains of the young Dionysus were returned to Demeter allowing him to be born again 214 Second birth Edit Jupiter et Semele Oil on canvas by Gustave Moreau 1895 The birth narrative given by Gaius Julius Hyginus c 64 BC 17 AD in Fabulae 167 agrees with the Orphic tradition that Liber Dionysus was originally the son of Jove Zeus and Proserpine Persephone Hyginus writes that Liber was torn apart by the Titans so Jove took the fragments of his heart and put them into a drink which he gave to Semele the daughter of Harmonia and Cadmus king and founder of Thebes This resulted in Semele becoming pregnant Juno appeared to Semele in the form of her nurse Beroe and told her Daughter ask Jove to come to you as he comes to Juno so you may know what pleasure it is to sleep with a god When Semele requested that Jove do so she was killed by a thunderbolt Jove then took the infant Liber from her womb and put him in the care of Nysus Hyginus states that for this reason he is called Dionysus and also the one with two mothers dimetōr 225 Nonnus describes how when life was rejuvenated after the flood it was lacking in revelry in the absence of Dionysus The Seasons those daughters of the lichtgang still joyless plaited garlands for the gods only of meadow grass For Wine was lacking Without Bacchos to inspire the dance its grace was only half complete and quite without profit it charmed only the eyes of the company when the circling dancer moved in twists and turns with a tumult of footsteps having only nods for words hand for mouth fingers for voice Zeus declared that he would send his son Dionysus to teach mortals how to grow grapes and make wine to alleviate their toil war and suffering After he became protector of humanity Zeus promises Dionysus would struggle on earth but be received by the bright upper air to shine beside Zeus and to share the courses of the stars Dionysiaca 7 226 Jove and Semele c 1695 by Sebastiano Ricci The mortal princess Semele then had a dream in which Zeus destroyed a fruit tree with a bolt of lightning but did not harm the fruit He sent a bird to bring him one of the fruits and sewed it into his thigh so that he would be both mother and father to the new Dionysus She saw the bull shaped figure of a man emerge from his thigh and then came to the realization that she herself had been the tree Her father Cadmus fearful of the prophetic dream instructed Semele to make sacrifices to Zeus Zeus came to Semele in her bed adorned with various symbols of Dionysus He transformed into a snake and Zeus made long wooing and shouted Euoi as if the winepress were near as he begat his son who would love the cry Immediately Semele s bed and chambers were overgrown with vines and flowers and the earth laughed Zeus then spoke to Semele revealing his true identity and telling her to be happy you bring forth a son who shall not die and you I will call immortal Happy woman you have conceived a son who will make mortals forget their troubles you shall bring forth joy for gods and men Dionysiaca 7 227 During her pregnancy Semele rejoiced in the knowledge that her son would be divine She dressed herself in garlands of flowers and wreathes of ivy and would run barefoot to the meadows and forests to frolic whenever she heard music Hera became envious and feared that Zeus would replace her with Semele as queen of Olympus She went to Semele in the guise of an old woman who had been Cadmus wet nurse She made Semele jealous of the attention Zeus gave to Hera compared with their own brief liaison and provoked her to request Zeus to appear before her in his full godhood Semele prayed to Zeus that he show himself Zeus answered her prayers but warned her than no other mortals had ever seen him as he held his lightning bolts Semele reached out to touch them and was burnt to ash Dionysiaca 8 228 But the infant Dionysus survived and Zeus rescued him from the flames sewing him into his thigh So the rounded thigh in labour became female and the boy too soon born was brought forth but not in a mother s way having passed from a mother s womb to a father s Dionysiaca 9 At his birth he had a pair of horns shaped like a crescent moon The Seasons crowned him with ivy and flowers and wrapped horned snakes around his own horns 229 An alternate birth narrative is given by Diodorus from the Egyptian tradition In it Dionysus is the son of Ammon who Diodorus regards both as the creator god and a quasi historical king of Libya Ammon had married the goddess Rhea but he had an affair with Amaltheia who bore Dionysus Ammon feared Rhea s wrath if she were to discover the child so he took the infant Dionysus to Nysa Dionysus traditional childhood home Ammon brought Dionysus into a cave where he was to be cared for by Nysa a daughter of the hero Aristaeus 214 Dionysus grew famous due to his skill in the arts his beauty and his strength It was said that he discovered the art of winemaking during his boyhood His fame brought him to the attention of Rhea who was furious with Ammon for his deception She attempted to bring Dionysus under her own power but unable to do so she left Ammon and married Cronus 214 Interpretation Edit A Hellenistic Greek mosaic depicting the god Dionysos as a winged daimon riding on a tiger from the House of Dionysos at Delos which was once controlled by Athens in the South Aegean region of Greece late second century BC Archaeological Museum of Delos Even in antiquity the account of Dionysus birth to a mortal woman led some to argue that he had been a historical figure who became deified over time a suggestion of Euhemerism an explanation of mythic events having roots in mortal history often applied to demi gods The fourth century Roman emperor and philosopher Julian encountered examples of this belief and wrote arguments against it In his letter To the Cynic Heracleios Julian wrote I have heard many people say that Dionysus was a mortal man because he was born of Semele and that he became a god through his knowledge of theurgy and the Mysteries and like our lord Heracles for his royal virtue was translated to Olympus by his father Zeus However to Julian the myth of Dionysus s birth and that of Heracles stood as an allegory for a deeper spiritual truth The birth of Dionysus Julian argues was no birth but a divine manifestation to Semele who foresaw that a physical manifestation of the god Dionysus would soon appear However Semele was impatient for the god to come and began revealing his mysteries too early for her transgression she was struck down by Zeus When Zeus decided it was time to impose a new order on humanity for it to pass from the nomadic to a more civilized mode of life he sent his son Dionysus from India as a god made visible spreading his worship and giving the vine as a symbol of his manifestation among mortals In Julian s interpretation the Greeks called Semele the mother of Dionysus because of the prediction that she had made but also because the god honored her as having been the first prophetess of his advent while it was yet to be The allegorical myth of the birth of Dionysus per Julian was developed to express both the history of these events and encapsulate the truth of his birth outside the generative processes of the mortal world but entering into it though his true birth was directly from Zeus along into the intelligible realm 12 Infancy Edit Hermes and the Infant Dionysus by Praxiteles Archaeological Museum of Olympia According to Nonnus Zeus gave the infant Dionysus to the care of Hermes Hermes gave Dionysus to the Lamides or daughters of Lamos who were river nymphs But Hera drove the Lamides mad and caused them to attack Dionysus who was rescued by Hermes Hermes next brought the infant to Ino for fostering by her attendant Mystis who taught him the rites of the mysteries Dionysiaca 9 In Apollodorus account Hermes instructed Ino to raise Dionysus as a girl in order to hide him from Hera s wrath 230 However Hera found him and vowed to destroy the house with a flood however Hermes again rescued Dionysus this time bringing him to the mountains of Lydia Hermes adopted the form of Phanes most ancient of the gods and so Hera bowed before him and let him pass Hermes gave the infant to the goddess Rhea who cared for him through his adolescence 229 Another version is that Dionysus was taken to the rain nymphs of Nysa who nourished his infancy and childhood and for their care Zeus rewarded them by placing them as the Hyades among the stars see Hyades star cluster In yet another version of the myth he is raised by his cousin Macris on the island of Euboea 231 The Infant Bacchus painting c 1505 1510 by Giovanni Bellini Dionysus in Greek mythology is a god of foreign origin and while Mount Nysa is a mythological location it is invariably set far away to the east or to the south The Homeric Hymn 1 to Dionysus places it far from Phoenicia near to the Egyptian stream 232 Others placed it in Anatolia or in Libya away in the west beside a great ocean in Ethiopia Herodotus or Arabia Diodorus Siculus 233 According to Herodotus As it is the Greek story has it that no sooner was Dionysus born than Zeus sewed him up in his thigh and carried him away to Nysa in Ethiopia beyond Egypt and as for Pan the Greeks do not know what became of him after his birth It is therefore plain to me that the Greeks learned the names of these two gods later than the names of all the others and trace the birth of both to the time when they gained the knowledge Herodotus Histories 2 146 2 The Bibliotheca seems to be following Pherecydes who relates how the infant Dionysus god of the grapevine was nursed by the rain nymphs the Hyades at Nysa Young Dionysus was also said to have been one of the many famous pupils of the centaur Chiron According to Ptolemy Chennus in the Library of Photius Dionysus was loved by Chiron from whom he learned chants and dances the bacchic rites and initiations 234 Travels and invention of wine Edit Bacchus and Ampelos by Francesco Righetti 1782 When Dionysus grew up he discovered the culture of the vine and the mode of extracting its precious juice being the first to do so 235 but Hera struck him with madness and drove him forth a wanderer through various parts of the earth In Phrygia the goddess Cybele better known to the Greeks as Rhea cured him and taught him her religious rites and he set out on a progress through Asia teaching the people the cultivation of the vine The most famous part of his wanderings is his expedition to India which is said to have lasted several years According to a legend when Alexander the Great reached a city called Nysa near the Indus river the locals said that their city was founded by Dionysus in the distant past and their city was dedicated to the god Dionysus 236 These travels took something of the form of military conquests according to Diodorus Siculus he conquered the whole world except for Britain and Ethiopia 237 Bacchus and Ampelos Pre 1865 image of a Roman statue in the Galleria degli Uffizi Florence Another myth according to Nonnus involves Ampelus a satyr who was loved by Dionysus As related by Ovid Ampelus became the constellation Vindemitor or the grape gatherer 238 not so will the Grape gatherer escape thee The origin of that constellation also can be briefly told Tis said that the unshorn Ampelus son of a nymph and a satyr was loved by Bacchus on the Ismarian hills Upon him the god bestowed a vine that trailed from an elm s leafy boughs and still the vine takes from the boy its name While he rashly culled the gaudy grapes upon a branch he tumbled down Liber bore the lost youth to the stars Another story of Ampelus was related by Nonnus in an accident foreseen by Dionysus the youth was killed while riding a bull maddened by the sting of a gadfly sent by Selene the goddess of the Moon The Fates granted Ampelus a second life as a vine from which Dionysus squeezed the first wine 239 Return to Greece Edit Badakshan patera Triumph of Bacchus first fourth century 240 British Museum Returning in triumph to Greece after his travels in Asia Dionysus came to be considered the founder of the triumphal procession He undertook efforts to introduce his religion into Greece but was opposed by rulers who feared it on account of the disorders and madness it brought with it In one myth adapted in Euripides play The Bacchae Dionysus returns to his birthplace Thebes which is ruled by his cousin Pentheus Pentheus as well as his mother Agave and his aunts Ino and Autonoe disbelieve Dionysus divine birth Despite the warnings of the blind prophet Tiresias they deny his worship and denounce him for inspiring the women of Thebes to madness Pentheus torn apart by Agave and Ino Attic red figure lekanis cosmetics bowl lid c 450 425 BC Louvre Dionysus uses his divine powers to drive Pentheus insane then invites him to spy on the ecstatic rituals of the Maenads in the woods of Mount Cithaeron Pentheus hoping to witness a sexual orgy hides himself in a tree The Maenads spot him maddened by Dionysus they take him to be a mountain dwelling lion and attack him with their bare hands Pentheus aunts and his mother Agave are among them and they rip him limb from limb Agave mounts his head on a pike and takes the trophy to her father Cadmus Euripides description of this sparagmos was as follows But she was foaming at the mouth her eyes rolled all around her mind was mindless now Held by the god she paid the man no heed She grabbed his left arm just below the elbow wedging her foot against the victim s ribs she ripped his shoulder off not by mere force the god made easy everything they touch On his right arm worked Ino ripping flesh Autonoe and the mob of maenads griped him screaming as one While he had breath he cried but they were whooping victory calls One took an arm a foot another boot and all They stripped his torso bare staining their nails with blood then tossed balls of flesh around Pentheus body lies in fragments now on the hard rocks and mingled with the leaves buried in the woodland hard to find His mother stumbled across his head poor head She grabbed it and fixed it on her thrysus like a lions s to wave in joyful triumph at her hunt 241 The madness passes Dionysus arrives in his true divine form banishes Agave and her sisters and transforms Cadmus and his wife Harmonia into serpents Only Tiresias is spared 242 Lycurgus trapped by the vine on the Lycurgus Cup In the Iliad when King Lycurgus of Thrace heard that Dionysus was in his kingdom he imprisoned Dionysus followers the Maenads Dionysus fled and took refuge with Thetis and sent a drought which stirred the people to revolt The god then drove King Lycurgus insane and had him slice his own son into pieces with an axe in the belief that he was a patch of ivy a plant holy to Dionysus An oracle then claimed that the land would stay dry and barren as long as Lycurgus lived and his people had him drawn and quartered Appeased by the king s death Dionysus lifted the curse 243 244 In an alternative version sometimes depicted in art Lycurgus tries to kill Ambrosia a follower of Dionysus who was transformed into a vine that twined around the enraged king and slowly strangled him 245 Captivity and escape Edit North African Roman mosaic Panther Dionysus scatters the pirates who are changed to dolphins except for Acoetes the helmsman second century AD Bardo National Museum The Homeric Hymn 7 to Dionysus recounts how while he sat on the seashore some sailors spotted him believing him a prince They attempted to kidnap him and sail away to sell him for ransom or into slavery No rope would bind him The god turned into a fierce lion and unleashed a bear on board killing all in his path Those who jumped ship were mercifully turned into dolphins The only survivor was the helmsman Acoetes who recognized the god and tried to stop his sailors from the start 246 In a similar story Dionysus hired a Tyrrhenian pirate ship to sail from Icaria to Naxos When he was aboard they sailed not to Naxos but to Asia intending to sell him as a slave This time the god turned the mast and oars into snakes and filled the vessel with ivy and the sound of flutes so that the sailors went mad and leaping into the sea were turned into dolphins In Ovid s Metamorphoses Bacchus begins this story as a young child found by the pirates but transforms to a divine adult when on board Many of the myths involve Dionysus defending his godhead against skeptics Malcolm Bull notes that It is a measure of Bacchus s ambiguous position in classical mythology that he unlike the other Olympians had to use a boat to travel to and from the islands with which he is associated 247 Paola Corrente notes that in many sources the incident with the pirates happens towards the end of Dionysus time among mortals In that sense it serves as final proof of his divinity and is often followed by his descent into Hades to retrieve his mother both of whom can then ascend into heaven to live alongside the other Olympian gods 16 Descent to the underworld Edit Relief of Dionysus Nagarjunakonda Southern India third century He has a light beard is semi nude and carries a drinking horn There is a barrel of wine next to him 248 249 Pausanias in book II of his Description of Greece describes two variant traditions regarding Dionysus katabasis or descent into the underworld Both describe how Dionysus entered into the afterlife to rescue his mother Semele and bring her to her rightful place on Olympus To do so he had to contend with the hell dog Cerberus which was restrained for him by Heracles After retrieving Semele Dionysus emerged with her from the unfathomable waters of a lagoon on the coast of the Argolid near the prehistoric site of Lerna according to the local tradition 250 This mythic event was commemorated with a yearly nighttime festival the details of which were held secret by the local religion According to Paola Corrente the emergence of Dionysus from the waters of the lagoon may signify a form of rebirth for both him and Semele as they reemerged from the underworld 16 251 A variant of this myth forms the basis of Aristophanes comedy The Frogs 16 According to the Christian writer Clement of Alexandria Dionysus was guided in his journey by Prosymnus or Polymnus who requested as his reward to be Dionysus lover Prosymnus died before Dionysus could honor his pledge so to satisfy Prosymnus shade Dionysus fashioned a phallus from an olive branch and sat on it at Prosymnus tomb 252 This story survives in full only in Christian sources whose aim was to discredit pagan mythology but it appears to have also served to explain the origin of secret objects used by the Dionysian Mysteries 253 This same myth of Dionysus descent to the underworld is related by both Diodorus Siculus in his first century BC work Bibliotheca historica and Pseudo Apollodorus in the third book of his first century AD work Bibliotheca In the latter Apollodorus tells how after having been hidden away from Hera s wrath Dionysus traveled the world opposing those who denied his godhood finally proving it when he transformed his pirate captors into dolphins After this the culmination of his life on earth was his descent to retrieve his mother from the underworld He renamed his mother Thyone and ascended with her to heaven where she became a goddess 254 In this variant of the myth it is implied that Dionysus both must prove his godhood to mortals then also legitimize his place on Olympus by proving his lineage and elevating his mother to divine status before taking his place among the Olympic gods 16 Secondary myths Edit Midas golden touch Edit Bacchus and Ariadne by Titian at the National Gallery in London Dionysus discovered that his old school master and foster father Silenus had gone missing The old man had wandered away drunk and was found by some peasants who carried him to their king Midas alternatively he passed out in Midas rose garden The king recognized him hospitably feasting him for ten days and nights while Silenus entertained with stories and songs On the eleventh day Midas brought Silenus back to Dionysus Dionysus offered the king his choice of reward Midas asked that whatever he might touch would turn to gold Dionysus consented though was sorry that he had not made a better choice Midas rejoiced in his new power which he hastened to put to the test He touched and turned to gold an oak twig and a stone but his joy vanished when he found that his bread meat and wine also turned to gold Later when his daughter embraced him she too turned to gold The horrified king strove to divest the Midas Touch and he prayed to Dionysus to save him from starvation The god consented telling Midas to wash in the river Pactolus As he did so the power passed into them and the river sands turned gold this etiological myth explained the gold sands of the Pactolus Love affairs Edit Bacchus and Ariadne 1822 by Antoine Jean Gros When Theseus abandoned Ariadne sleeping on Naxos Dionysus found and married her She bore him a son named Oenopion but she committed suicide or was killed by Perseus In some variants Dionysus had her crown put into the heavens as the constellation Corona in others he descended into Hades to restore her to the gods on Olympus Another account claims Dionysus ordered Theseus to abandon Ariadne on the island of Naxos for Dionysus had seen her as Theseus carried her onto the ship and had decided to marry her citation needed Psalacantha a nymph promised helped Dionysus court Ariadne in exchange for his sexual favours but Dionysus refused so Psalacantha advised Ariadne against going with him For this Dionysus turned her into the plant with the same name 255 Dionysos surrounded by his thiasus discovers Ariadne asleep at Hypnos s side Frescoes in Pompeii Dionysus fell in love with a nymph named Nicaea in some versions by Eros binding Nicaea however was a sworn virgin and scorned his attempts to court her So one day while she was away he replaced the water in the spring she used to drink from with wine Intoxicated Nicaea passed out and Dionysus raped her in her sleep When she woke up and realized what had happened she sought him out in order to harm him but she never found him She bore him Telete Satyrus and other sons Dionysus named the ancient city of Nicaea after her 256 In Nonnus s Dionysiaca Eros made Dionysus fall in love with Aura a virgin companion of Artemis as part of a ploy to punish Aura for having insulted Artemis Dionysus used the same trick as with Nicaea to get her fall asleep tied her up and then raped her Aura tried to kill herself with little success When she gave birth to twins sons by Dionysus Iacchus and another boy she ate one twin before drowning herself in the Sangarius river 257 Also in the Dionysiaca Nonnus relates how Dionysus fell in love with a handsome satyr named Ampelos who was killed by Selene due to him challenging her On his death Dionysus changed him into the first grape vine 258 Other myths Edit Terracotta head 4 5th century Gandhara modern Pakistan A third descent by Dionysus to Hades is invented by Aristophanes in his comedy The Frogs Dionysus as patron of the Athenian dramatic festival the Dionysia wants to bring back to life one of the great tragedians After a poetry slam Aeschylus is chosen in preference to Euripides When Hephaestus bound Hera to a magical chair Dionysus got him drunk and brought him back to Olympus after he passed out citation needed Callirrhoe was a Calydonian woman who scorned Coresus a priest of Dionysus who threatened to afflict all the women of Calydon with insanity see Maenad The priest was ordered to sacrifice Callirhoe but he killed himself instead Callirhoe threw herself into a well which was later named after her citation needed Dionysus also sent a fox that was fated never to be caught on Thebes Creon king of Thebes sent Amphitryon to catch and kill the fox Amphitryon obtained from Cephalus the dog that his wife Procris had received from Minos which was fated to catch whatever it pursued citation needed Another account about Dionysus s parentage indicates that he is the son of Zeus and Ge Gaia also named Themele foundation corrupted into Semele 259 260 Hyginus relates that Dionysus once gave human speech to a donkey The donkey then proceeded to challenge Priapus in a contest about which between them had the better penis the donkey lost Priapus killed the donkey but Dionysus placed him among the stars above the Crab 261 262 Children Edit Offspring and mothers Offspring Mothers The Charites or Graces Pasithea Euphrosyne Thalia Aphrodite 263 or Coronis 264 Ceramus Enyeus Euanthes Eurymedon Latramys Maron Oenopion Phanus Peparethus Phlias Staphylus Tauropolis Thoas AriadneCarmanor 265 AlexirrhoeIacchus 266 and his twin brother 267 AuraMedus 268 AlphesiboeaPhlias Araethyrea or ChthonophylePriapus Aphrodite 269 or Chione 270 or Percote 271 Telete Satyrus other sons NicaeaNarcaeus 272 PhyscoaComus Methe Sabazius Thysa 273 UnknownIconography and depictions EditSymbols Edit Ancient Roman relief in the Museo Archeologico Naples depicting Dionysus holding a thyrsus and receiving a libation wearing an ivy wreath and attended by a panther Dionysus on a panther s back on the left a papposilenus holding a tambourine Side A from a red figure bell shaped crater c 370 BC The earliest cult images of Dionysus show a mature male bearded and robed He holds a fennel staff tipped with a pine cone and known as a thyrsus Later images show him as a beardless sensuous naked or half naked androgynous youth the literature describes him as womanly or man womanish 274 In its fully developed form his central cult imagery shows his triumphant disorderly arrival or return as if from some place beyond the borders of the known and civilized His procession thiasus is made up of wild female followers maenads and bearded satyrs with erect penises some are armed with the thyrsus some dance or play music The god himself is drawn in a chariot usually by exotic beasts such as lions or tigers and is sometimes attended by a bearded drunken Silenus This procession is presumed to be the cult model for the followers of his Dionysian Mysteries Dionysus is represented by city religions as the protector of those who do not belong to conventional society and he thus symbolizes the chaotic dangerous and unexpected everything which escapes human reason and which can only be attributed to the unforeseeable action of the gods 275 Dionysus was a god of resurrection and he was strongly linked to the bull In a cult hymn from Olympia at a festival for Hera Dionysus is invited to come as a bull with bull foot raging Walter Burkert relates Quite frequently Dionysus is portrayed with bull horns and in Kyzikos he has a tauromorphic image and refers also to an archaic myth in which Dionysus is slaughtered as a bull calf and impiously eaten by the Titans 276 A sculpted phallus at the entrance of the temple of Dionysus in Delos Greece The snake and phallus were symbols of Dionysus in ancient Greece and of Bacchus in Greece and Rome 277 278 279 He typically wears a panther or leopard skin and carries a thyrsus His iconography sometimes includes maenads who wear wreaths of ivy and serpents around their hair or neck 280 281 282 The cult of Dionysus was closely associated with trees specifically the fig tree and some of his bynames exhibit this such as Endendros he in the tree or Dendrites he of the tree Peters suggests the original meaning as he who runs among the trees or that of a runner in the woods Janda 2010 accepts the etymology but proposes the more cosmological interpretation of he who impels the world tree This interpretation explains how Nysa could have been re interpreted from a meaning of tree to the name of a mountain the axis mundi of Indo European mythology is represented both as a world tree and as a world mountain 283 Dionysus is also closely associated with the transition between summer and autumn In the Mediterranean summer marked by the rising of the dog star Sirius the weather becomes extremely hot but it is also a time when the promise of coming harvests grow Late summer when Orion is at the center of the sky was the time of the grape harvest in ancient Greece Plato describes the gifts of this season as the fruit that is harvested as well as Dionysian joy Pindar describes the pure light of high summer as closely associated with Dionysus and possibly even an embodiment of the god himself An image of Dionysus birth from Zeus thigh call him the light of Zeus Dios phos and associate him with the light of Sirius 32 Classical art Edit Marble table support adorned by a group including Dionysos Pan and a Satyr Dionysos holds a rhyton drinking vessel in the shape of a panther traces of red and yellow colour are preserved on the hair of the figures and the branches from an Asia Minor workshop 170 180 AD National Archaeological Museum Athens Greece The god and still more often his followers were commonly depicted in the painted pottery of Ancient Greece much of which made to hold wine But apart from some reliefs of maenads Dionysian subjects rarely appeared in large sculpture before the Hellenistic period when they became common 284 In these the treatment of the god himself ranged from severe archaising or Neo Attic types such as the Dionysus Sardanapalus to types showing him as an indolent and androgynous young man often nude 285 Hermes and the Infant Dionysus is probably a Greek original in marble and the Ludovisi Dionysus group is probably a Roman original of the second century AD Well known Hellenistic sculptures of Dionysian subjects surviving in Roman copies include the Barberini Faun the Belvedere Torso the Resting Satyr The Furietti Centaurs and Sleeping Hermaphroditus reflect related subjects which had by this time become drawn into the Dionysian orbit 286 The marble Dancer of Pergamon is an original as is the bronze Dancing Satyr of Mazara del Vallo a recent recovery from the sea The Dionysian world by the Hellenistic period is a hedonistic but safe pastoral into which other semi divine creatures of the countryside have been co opted such as centaurs nymphs and the gods Pan and Hermaphrodite 287 Nymph by this stage means simply an ideal female of the Dionysian outdoors a non wild bacchant 288 Hellenistic sculpture also includes for the first time large genre subjects of children and peasants many of whom carry Dionysian attributes such as ivy wreaths and most should be seen as part of his realm They have in common with satyrs and nymphs that they are creatures of the outdoors and are without true personal identity 289 The fourth century BC Derveni Krater the unique survival of a very large scale Classical or Hellenistic metal vessel of top quality depicts Dionysus and his followers Dionysus appealed to the Hellenistic monarchies for a number of reasons apart from merely being a god of pleasure He was a human who became divine he came from and had conquered the East exemplified a lifestyle of display and magnificence with his mortal followers and was often regarded as an ancestor 290 He continued to appeal to the rich of Imperial Rome who populated their gardens with Dionysian sculpture and by the second century AD were often buried in sarcophagi carved with crowded scenes of Bacchus and his entourage 291 The fourth century AD Lycurgus Cup in the British Museum is a spectacular cage cup which changes colour when light comes through the glass it shows the bound King Lycurgus being taunted by the god and attacked by a satyr this may have been used for celebration of Dionysian mysteries Elizabeth Kessler has theorized that a mosaic appearing on the triclinium floor of the House of Aion in Nea Paphos Cyprus details a monotheistic worship of Dionysus 292 In the mosaic other gods appear but may only be lesser representations of the centrally imposed Dionysus The mid Byzantine Veroli Casket shows the tradition lingering in Constantinople around 1000 AD but probably not very well understood Early modern art Edit Bacchus by Michelangelo 1497 Bacchic subjects in art resumed in the Italian Renaissance and soon became almost as popular as in antiquity but his strong association with feminine spirituality and power almost disappeared as did the idea that the destructive and creative powers of the god were indissolubly linked 293 In Michelangelo s statue 1496 97 madness has become merriment The statue tries to suggest both drunken incapacity and an elevated consciousness but this was perhaps lost on later viewers and typically the two aspects were thereafter split with a clearly drunk Silenus representing the former and a youthful Bacchus often shown with wings because he carries the mind to higher places 294 Hendrik Goltzius Sine Cerere et Libero friget Venus Without Ceres and Bacchus Venus Would Freeze c 1600 1603 the Philadelphia pen painting Titian s Bacchus and Ariadne 1522 23 and The Bacchanal of the Andrians 1523 26 both painted for the same room offer an influential heroic pastoral 295 while Diego Velazquez in The Triumph of Bacchus or Los borrachos the drinkers c 1629 and Jusepe de Ribera in his Drunken Silenus choose a genre realism Flemish Baroque painting frequently painted the Bacchic followers as in Van Dyck s Drunken Silenus and many works by Rubens Poussin was another regular painter of Bacchic scenes 296 A common theme in art beginning in the sixteenth century was the depiction of Bacchus and Ceres caring for a representation of love often Venus Cupid or Amore This tradition derived from a quotation by the Roman comedian Terence c 195 185 c 159 BC which became a popular proverb in the Early Modern period Sine Cerere et Baccho friget Venus without Ceres and Bacchus Venus freezes Its simplest level of meaning is that love needs food and wine to thrive Artwork based on this saying was popular during the period 1550 1630 especially in Northern Mannerism in Prague and the Low Countries as well as by Rubens Because of his association with the vine harvest Bacchus became the god of autumn and he and his followers were often shown in sets depicting the seasons 297 Modern literature and philosophy Edit The Triumph of Bacchus Diego Velazquez c 1629 The Triumph of Bacchus by Cornelis de Vos Dionysus has remained an inspiration to artists philosophers and writers into the modern era In The Birth of Tragedy 1872 the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche proposed that a tension between Apollonian and Dionysian aesthetic principles underlay the development of Greek tragedy Dionysus represented what was unrestrained chaotic and irrational while Apollo represented the rational and ordered This concept of a rivalry or opposition between Dionysus and Apollo has been characterized as a modern myth as it is the invention of modern thinkers like Nietzsche and Johann Joachim Winckelmann and is not found in classical sources However the acceptance and popularity of this theme in Western culture has been so great that its undercurrent has influenced the conclusions of classical scholarship 298 Nietzsche also claimed that the oldest forms of Greek Tragedy were entirely based upon the suffering Dionysus In Nietzsche s 1886 work Beyond Good and Evil and later The Twilight of the Idols The Antichrist and Ecce Homo Dionysus is conceived as the embodiment of the unrestrained will to power In The Hellenic Religion of the Suffering God 1904 and Dionysus and Early Dionysianism 1921 the poet Vyacheslav Ivanov elaborates the theory of Dionysianism tracing the origins of literature and tragedy in particular to ancient Dionysian mysteries Ivanov said that Dionysus suffering was the distinctive feature of the cult just as Christ s suffering is significant for Christianity 299 Karl Kerenyi characterizes Dionysus as representative of the psychological life force Greek Zoe 300 Other psychological interpretations place Dionysus emotionality in the foreground focusing on the joy terror or hysteria associated with the god 301 302 303 304 305 Sigmund Freud specified that his ashes should be kept in an Ancient Greek vase painted with Dionysian scenes from his collection which remains on display at Golders Green Crematorium in London Modern film and performance art Edit Walt Disney depicted Bacchus in the Pastoral segment of the animated film Fantasia as a Silenus like character In 1969 an adaption of The Bacchae was performed called Dionysus in 69 A film was made of the same performance The production was notable for involving audience participation nudity and theatrical innovations 306 In 1974 Stephen Sondheim and Burt Shevelove adapted Aristophanes comedy The Frogs into a modern musical which hit broadway in 2004 and was revived in London in 2017 The musical keeps the descent of Dionysus into Hades to bring back a playwright however the playwrights are updated to modern times and Dionysus is forced to choose between George Bernard Shaw and William Shakespeare 307 In 2006 The Orion Experience in the album Cosmicandy included a song titled Cult of Dionysus The song invokes themes from the god s cult The entire album is described as short sharp and ultimately memorable glowing with a long forgotten disco synth energy 308 The song overall plays upon the god s themes of being devious and rebelling against social norms In 2014 Dionysus is featured in Smite as a playable god under his Roman Bacchus name In 2018 Dionysus was featured in Hades an indie rougelike action dungeon crawler video game developed and published by Supergiant Games He is one of the cousins of the protagonist and playable character Zagreus who is trying to escape the underworld and find his mother whilst his father Hades tries to stop him Dionysus offers boons and assist the Son of Hades in his attempts to escape from the underworld All of his boons and powers are based of his key traits from his Mythos focusing on alcohol related abilities and negative effects on enemies to assist the protagonist His characterisation in the game nods back to a lot of his stories and traits from the history of the character His interactions with other Gods also highlight his character as mischievous a lover of festivities and of course wine There is also the reference of the protagonist having the name Zagreus considered to be the first birth of Dionysus He is voiced by Cyrus Nemati In 2018 the Australian musical project Dead Can Dance released an album entitled Dionysus Musician Brendan Perry described the inspiration for the album as a trance like Dionysian experience he had at a festival during a trip to rural Spain It s the spring festivals like that one where you see the real remnants of Dionysian festivals They re all over the Mediterranean in remote places where Christian influence hasn t been as great People wear masks and dance in circles almost like time has stood still in their celebrations Perry chose to employ Mediterranean folk instruments that mimic natural sounds in addition to a vocal chorus in order to evoke the atmosphere of an ancient festival 309 In 2019 the South Korean boy band BTS released a rap rock synth pop hip hop track 200 310 named Dionysus as part of their album Map of the Soul Persona The naming of this song comes from the association of the namesake with debauchery and excess this is reflected in its lyrics talking about getting drunk on art playing on the Korean words for alcohol 술 sul and art 예술 yesul as an example alongside expressions about their stardom legacy and artistic integrity The band s leader RM in a press release described the song as the joy and pain of creating something and an honest track 311 Parallels with Christianity EditMain articles Dionysus in comparative mythology and Jesus Christ in comparative mythology Hanging with Dionysian Figures from Antinoopolis fifth seventh century Metropolitan Museum of Art Bacchus Simeon Solomon 1867 Numerous scholars have compared narratives surrounding the Christian figure of Jesus with those associated with Dionysus Death and resurrection Edit Some scholars of comparative mythology identify both Dionysus and Jesus with the dying and rising god mythological archetype 312 On the other hand it has been noted that the details of Dionysus death and rebirth are starkly different both in content and symbolism from Jesus The two stories take place in very different historical and geographic contexts Also the manner of death is different in the most common myth Dionysus was torn to pieces and eaten by the Titans but eventually restored to a new life from the heart that was left over 313 314 Trial Edit Another parallel can be seen in The Bacchae where Dionysus appears before King Pentheus on charges of claiming divinity which is compared to the New Testament scene of Jesus being interrogated by Pontius Pilate 315 316 317 However a number of scholars dispute this parallel since the confrontation between Dionysus and Pentheus ends with Pentheus dying torn into pieces by the mad women whereas the trial of Jesus ends with him being sentenced to death The discrepancies between the two stories including their resolutions have led many scholars to regard the Dionysus story as radically different from the one about Jesus except for the parallel of the arrest which is a detail that appears in many biographies as well 318 Other parallels Edit E Kessler has argued that the Dionysian cult developed into strict monotheism by the fourth century AD together with Mithraism and other sects the cult formed an instance of pagan monotheism in direct competition with Early Christianity during Late Antiquity 319 Scholars from the sixteenth century onwards especially Gerard Vossius also discussed the parallels between the biographies of Dionysus Bacchus and Moses Vossius named his sons Dionysius and Isaac Such comparisons surface in details of paintings by Poussin 320 John Moles has argued that the Dionysian cult influenced early Christianity and especially the way that Christians understood themselves as a new religion centered around a savior deity In particular he argues that the account of Christian origins in the Acts of the Apostles was heavily influenced by Euripides The Bacchae 312 Moles also suggests that Paul the Apostle may have partially based his account of the Lord s Supper 1 Cor 11 23 26 on the ritual meals performed by members of the Dionysian cult 312 96 Gallery Edit Roman marble sarcophagus with the Triumph of Dionysos and the Seasons circa 260 270 AD Triumph of Dionysus The Dionysus Cup a sixth century BC kylix with Dionysus sailing with the pirates he transformed to dolphins Dionysus holding an egg and a cock terracotta from Tanagra Greece c 350 BC Dionysos riding a leopard Macedonian mosaic from Pella Greece fourth century BC Statue of Dionysus Sardanapalus Museo Palazzo Massimo Alle Terme Rome Bronze head of Dionysus 50 BC 50 AD in the British Museum 321 Statue of Dionysus in Remich Luxembourg A Bacchus themed table the top was made in Florence c 1736 and the gilded wood base in Britain or Ireland circa 1736 1740 Head of a Dionysian statue 310 290 BC Palatine Museum Bacchus Giovanni Francesco Romanelli seventeenth century Dionysian amphora Dionysian jug Terracotta vase in the shape of Dionysus head circa 410 BC on display in the Ancient Agora Museum in Athens housed in the Stoa of Attalus Amphora with cult mask of Dionysus by the Antimenes Painter around 520 BC Altes Museum Marble head of Dionysus from the Gymnasium of Salamis second century AD Cyprus Museum Nicosia Cyprus Cult mask of Dionysus from Boeotia fourth century BC Marble statuette of Dionysos early third century B C Metropolitan MuseumGenealogy EditDionysus s family tree 322 UranusGaiaUranus genitalsCronusRheaZeusHeraPoseidonHadesDemeterHestia a 323 b 324 AresHephaestusMetisAthena 325 LetoApolloArtemisMaiaHermesSemeleDIONYSUSDione a 326 b 327 AphroditeSee also Edit Ancient Greece portal Myths portal Religion portalAlpos and Nonnus Anthesteria Ascolia Dionysia and Lenaia Dionysian Mysteries and Cult of Dionysus Pan god Ampelos Cybele and Silenus Theatre of DionysusNotes Edit Another variant from the Spanish royal collection is at the Museo del Prado Madrid illustration Hedreen Guy Michael Silens in Attic Black figure Vase painting Myth and Performance University of Michigan Press 1992 ISBN 9780472102952 p 1 James Edwin Oliver The Tree of Life An Archaeological Study Brill Publications 1966 p 234 ISBN 9789004016125 In Greek both votary and god are called Bacchus Burkert p 162 For the initiate as Bacchus see Euripides Bacchae 491 For the god who alone is Dionysus see Sophocles Oedipus Rex 211 and Euripides Hippolytus 560 Csapo Eric 2016 08 03 The Theology of the Dionysia and Old Comedy In Eidinow Esther ed Theologies of Ancient Greek Religion New York Cambridge University Press p 118 ISBN 978 1 316 71521 5 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint date and year link Olszewski E 2019 Dionysus s enigmatic thyrsus Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society 163 2 153 173 Sutton p 2 mentions Dionysus as The Liberator in relation to the city Dionysia festivals In Euripides Bacchae 379 385 He holds this office to join in dances 380 to laugh with the flute and to bring an end to cares whenever the delight of the grape comes at the feasts of the gods and in ivy bearing banquets the goblet sheds sleep over men Thomas McEvilley The Shape of Ancient Thought Allsworth press 2002 pp 118 121 Google Books preview Reginald Pepys Winnington Ingram Sophocles an interpretation Cambridge University Press 1980 p 109 Google Books preview Zofia H Archibald in Gocha R Tsetskhladze Ed Ancient Greeks west and east Brill 1999 pp 429 ff Google Books preview Rosemarie Taylor Perry 2003 The God Who Comes Dionysian Mysteries Revisited Algora Press a b Julian trans by Emily Wilmer Cave Wright To the Cynic Heracleios The Works of the Emperor Julian volume II 1913 Loeb Classical Library a b c d e f g Isler Kerenyi Cornelia Watson Wilfred G E 2007 An Iconography in Process Dionysos in Archaic Greece Brill pp 5 16 JSTOR 10 1163 j ctt1w76w9x 7 a b Brockett Oscar Gross 1968 History of the Theatre Boston Allyn amp Bacon pp 18 26 Riu Xavier 1999 Dionysism and Comedy Rowman and Littlefield p 105 ISBN 9780847694426 a b c d e Corrente Paola 2012 Dioniso y los Dying gods paralelos metodologicos Tesis doctoral Universidad Complutense de Madrid a b c d Beekes 2009 p 337 a b Palaima Thomas G University of Texas at Austin 1998 John Chadwick The Mycenaean World Cambridge University Press 1976 pp 99ff But Dionysos surprisingly appears twice at Pylos in the form Diwonusos both times irritatingly enough on fragments so that we have no means of verifying his divinity The Linear B word di wo nu so Palaeolexicon Word study tool of ancient languages a b Raymoure K A November 2 2012 Khania Linear B Transliterations Minoan Linear A amp Mycenaean Linear B Deaditerranean Possible evidence of human sacrifice at Minoan Chania Archaeology News Network 2014 Raymoure K A Khania KH Gq Linear B Series Minoan Linear A amp Mycenaean Linear B Deaditerranean KH 5 Gq 1 Damos Database of Mycenaean at Oslo University of Oslo The Linear B word di wo Palaeolexicon Fox p 217 The word Dionysos is divisible into two parts the first originally Dios cf Zeys while the second is of an unknown signification although perhaps connected with the name of the Mount Nysa which figures in the story of Lykourgos when Dionysos had been reborn from the thigh of Zeus Hermes entrusted him to the nymphs of Mount Nysa who fed him on the food of the gods and made him immortal Testimonia of Pherecydes in an early fifth century BC fragment FGrH 3 178 in the context of a discussion on the name of Dionysus Nũsas acc pl he Pherecydes said was what they called the trees Greek Word Study Tool www perseus tufts edu a b Martin Nilsson Die Geschichte der Griechische Religion 1967 Vol I p 567 nyos Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project Myths of Greece and Rome by Jane Harrison 1928 This is the view of Garcia Ramon 1987 and Peters 1989 summarised and endorsed in Janda 2010 20 a b Nonnus Dionysiaca 9 20 24 Suda s v Dionysos a b c d e f g Kerenyi Karl 1976 Dionysus Trans Ralph Manheim Princeton University Press ISBN 0691029156 978 0691029153 dinos British Museum Retrieved 2022 07 18 Pausanias 8 39 6 Stephanus of Byzantium s v Akrwreia Used thus by Ausonius Epigrams 29 6 and in Catullus 29 see Lee M Fratantuono NIVALES SOCII CAESAR MAMURRA AND THE SNOW OF CATULLUS C 57 Quaderni Urbinati di Cultura Classica New Series Vol 96 No 3 2010 p 107 Note 2 Smith s v Aegobolus Pausanias 9 8 1 2 a b c Stephan Christian Suidas Religion in Geschichte und Gegenwart doi 10 1163 2405 8262 rgg4 sim 025853 Suidas s v Androgynos Androgynos androgynous A word applied to Dionysos as one doing both active male things and passive female ones specifically sexual intercourse Greek Word Study Tool Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 6 February 2022 Erwin Rohde Psyche p 269 Smith William 1870 Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology Vol 1 p 470 retrieved 11 November 2022 Nilsson Vol I p 571 Greek Word Study Tool Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 6 February 2022 Harrison Prolegomena p 414 Aristid Or 41 Macr Sat I 18 9 For a parallel see pneuma psuche anima The core meaning is wind as breath spirit Bulls in antiquity were said to roar Blackwell Christopher W Blackwell Amy Hackney 2011 Mythology For Dummies John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9781118053874 McKeown J C A Cabinet of Greek Curiosities Strange Tales and Surprising Facts from the Cradle of Western Civilization Oxford University Press New York 2013 p 210 Clement of Alexandria Exhortation to the Greeks 92 82 83 Loeb Classical Library registration required accessed 17 December 2016 Kerenyi 1967 Kerenyi 1976 Suidas s v Kistophoros Kistophoros basket bearer ivy bearer It seems that baskets were sacred to Dionysos and the Two Goddesses Demeter and Persephone N B Derived from Harpocration s v kittophoros the ivy bearer Hau Lisa Irene 2016 07 01 Diodorus Siculus Moral History from Herodotus to Diodorus Siculus Edinburgh University Press doi 10 3366 edinburgh 9781474411073 003 0003 ISBN 978 1 4744 1107 3 Suidas s v Dimetor Dimetor twice born Dionysos Diodorus Siculus Library of History 3 62 5 trans Oldfather Greek historian C1st B C Dionysos was named twice born dimetor by the ancients counting it as a single and first birth when the plant is set in the ground and begins to grow and as a second birth when it becomes laden with fruit and ripens its grape clusters the god thus being considered as having been born once from the earth and again from the vine Janda 2010 16 44 Kerenyi 1976 p 286 Jameson 1993 53 Cf n16 for suggestions of Devereux on Enorkhes Reece Steve The Epithet ἐridromos in Nonnus Dionysiaca Philologus Zeitschrift fur antike Literatur und ihre Rezeption 145 2001 357 359 explains Nonnus use of this epithet at Dionysiaca 23 28 as a translation of the moribund Homeric epithet ἐrioynios which in Cyprian means good running SOL Search Cs uky edu Retrieved 6 February 2022 Greek Word Study Tool Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 6 February 2022 Greek Anthology Volume III book 9 chapter 524 Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 6 February 2022 Versnel H S 2015 Inconsistencies in Greek and Roman Religion Transition and Reversal in Myth and Ritual Vol 1 Ter Unus Isis Dionysos Hermes Three Studies in Henotheism Brill Publications p 119 ISBN 978 90 04 09266 2 Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon kemas Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 6 February 2022 Alkaeus Temple of Zeus Hera and Dionysus Kemilius Zonnysos Kemhlios Nilsson Vol I p 575 Greek Word Study Tool Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 6 February 2022 Greek Word Study Tool Perseus tufts edu Nilsson Vol I p 574 Greek Word Study Tool Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 6 February 2022 Pausanias Description of Greece 9 16 6 Fowler p 63 Greek Word Study Tool www perseus tufts edu Mentioned by Erasmus in The Praise of Folly Greek Word Study Tool Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 6 February 2022 Pausanias 8 54 5 Philostratus the Athenian Vita Apollonii book 2 chapter 2 www perseus tufts edu ToposText topostext org Arrian Anabasis book 5 chapter 1 www perseus tufts edu Arrian Anabasis book 5 chapter 2 www perseus tufts edu Suidas 1705 Souidas Suidae lexicon Graece amp Latine Textum Graecum cum manuscriptis codicibus collatum a quamplurimis mendis purgavit notisque perpetuis illustravit versionem Latinam AEmilii Porti innumeris in locis correxit indicesque auctorum amp rerum adjecit Ludolphus Kusterus Professor humaniorum literarum in Gymnasio Regio Berolinensi Typis academicis OCLC 744697285 Suidas s v Oinops quoting Greek Anthology 6 44 5 and 7 20 2 Oinops wine dark to wine dark so and so to black so and so In the Epigrams from which we poured libations as much as is right to wine dark Bakkhos and the Satyroi But ruddy oinopos means wine coloured bright or black Feeding on the ruddy grape cluster of Bakkhos EUSEBE DE CESAREE Preparation evangelique livre IV texte grec remacle org Nilsson Vol I p 593 Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon fallhn Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 6 February 2022 Floios Fleos Fleys Plut quest conviv p 683F Aelian V H III 41 Herodian I p 400 Lenz Nilsson Vol I p 584 Greek Word Study Tool Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 6 February 2022 Greek Word Study Tool Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 6 February 2022 Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon periki onios Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 6 February 2022 Opsomer Jan La demiurgie des jeunes dieux selon Proclus In Etudes Classiques Tome 71 Nº 1 Le Timee au fil des ages son influence et ses lectures 2003 pp 18 19 footnote nr 47 25 and 37 38 footnote nr 124 ISSN 0014 200X Georges Karl Ernst Ausfuhrliches lateinisch deutsches Handworterbuch Hannover August 1918 Nachdruck Darmstadt 1998 Band 2 Sp 2582 Harrison Jane Ellen Themis Cambridge University Press 1912 p 421 Naylor H Darnley Horace Odes and Epodes A study in word order Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1922 p 37 Putnam Michael C J 1994 Structure and Design in Horace Odes 1 17 The Classical World 87 5 357 375 doi 10 2307 4351533 JSTOR 4351533 Papaioannou Sophia 2013 Embracing Vergil s Arcadia Constructions and representations of a literary topos in the poetry of the Augustans In Acta Antiqua 53 160 161 DOI 10 1556 AAnt 53 2013 2 3 2 Humphreys S C The Strangeness of Gods Historical perspectives on the interpretation of Athenian religion Oxford University Press 2004 p 235 footnote nr 34 ISBN 0 19 926923 8 Hesych skyllis klhmatis Nilsson Vol I p 584 Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon klhma t is Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 6 February 2022 Greek Word Study Tool Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 6 February 2022 Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon tayro fagos Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 6 February 2022 Euripides 2019 The Bacchae Neeland Media LLC ISBN 978 1 4209 6184 3 OCLC 1108536627 DIONYSUS TITLES amp EPITHETS Ancient Greek Religion Theoi com Retrieved 2020 07 08 Heshyh 8eoinia 8eoinos Dionysos Greek Word Study Tool Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 6 February 2022 Greek Word Study Tool Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 6 February 2022 Paus 6 26 1 Greek Word Study Tool Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 6 February 2022 Hesych 8ylla fylla or kladoi Henry George Liddell Robert Scott A Greek English Lexicon 8ylla Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 6 February 2022 Rosemarie Taylor Perry The God Who Comes Dionysian Mysteries Revisited Algora Press 2003 p 89 cf Sabazius Ferguson Everett 2003 Backgrounds of Early Christianity Wm B Eerdmans Publishing ISBN 9780802822215 He appears as a likely theonym divine name in Linear B tablets as di wo nu so KH Gq 5 inscription McConachie B Nellhaus T Sorgenfrei F C amp Underiner T 2016 Theatre Histories An Introduction 3rd ed Routledge a b Sir Arthur Pickard Cambridge The Dramatic Festivals of Athens Oxford Clarendon Press 1953 2nd ed 1968 ISBN 0 19 814258 7 a b c d e Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Anthesteria Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 2 11th ed Cambridge University Press pp 93 94 a b c Photius Lexicon s v Thyraze Kares To the doors Kares it is no longer Anthestria some authorities contented that this is what is said to the crowd of Karian slaves since at the Anthestria they join in the feast and do not do any work Therefore when the festival is over they send them back out to work with the words To the doors Keres it is no longer Anthestria since the souls keres wander about through the city at the Anthestria Plutarch Table talk 655e At Athens they inaugurate the new wine on the eleventh of the month and they call the day pithoigia Phanodemus in Athenaeus Deipnosophists XI 456a frag 12in FGrH 325 At the temple of Dionysus in Limnai The Marshes the Athenians bring the new wine from the jars age mix it in honour of the god and then they drink it themselves Because of this custom Dionysus is called Limnaios because the wine was mixed with water and then for the first time drunk diluted a b Rice David G Stambaugh John E 2014 Sources for the Study of Greek Religion Corrected Edition Society of Biblical Literature ISBN 978 1 62837 067 6 OCLC 893453849 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca Library and Epitome 1 3 2 Orpheus also invented the mysteries of Dionysus and having been torn in pieces by the Maenads he is buried in Pieria Dickie M W 1995 The Dionysiac Mysteries In Pella ZPE 109 81 86 Jimenez San Cristobal 2012 p 125 Bowie A M p 232 Harrison pp 540 542 Antikensammlung Berlin F1961 Beazley Archive 302354 National Etruscan Museum 42884 Beazley Archive 9017720 Versnel pp 32 ff Bowie A M p 232 Jimenez San Cristobal 2012 p 127 Graf 2005 Iacchus Jimenez San Cristobal 2013 p 279 Bowie A M pp 232 233 Sophocles Antigone 1115 1125 1146 1154 Versnel pp 23 24 Jebb in his note to line 1146 xorag ἄstrwn understands the Sophoclean use of the name Iacchus as specifically denoting the Eleusinian Dionysus Jimenez San Cristobal 2013 pp 279 280 Bowie A M p 233 Sophocles fragment 959 Radt Lloyd Jones pp 414 415 Encinas Reguero p 350 Jimenez San Cristobal 2013 p 282 with n 41 Bowie A M p 233 Euripides Bacchae 725 Jimenez San Cristobal also sees possible associations between Iacchus and Dionysus in Euripides Ion 1074 1086 The Trojan Women 1230 Cyclops 68 71 and fr 586 Kannicht apud Strabo 10 3 13 fr 586 Nauck Collard and Cropp pp 56 57 Bowie E L pp 101 110 Fantuzzi pp 189 190 191 PHI Greek Inscriptions BCH 19 1895 393 21 24 Bowie E L pp 101 102 27 35 Bowie E L p 102 Strabo 10 3 10 Parker 2005 p 358 Grimal s v Iacchus p 224 Tripp s v Iacchus p 313 Smith 1870 s v Iacchus Jimenez San Cristobal 2013 pp 279 280 Diodorus Siculus 4 4 2 see also 3 64 1 2 Arrian Anabasis of Alexander 2 16 3 Lucian De Saltatione The Dance 39 Harmon pp 250 251 Nonnus Dionysiaca 48 962 968 Hard p 134 Grimal s v Iacchus p 224 Tripp s v Iacchus p 313 Rose Oxford Classical Dictionary s v Iacchus scholiast on Aristophanes Frogs 324 Rutherford 1896 p 316 Marcovich p 23 Parker 2005 p 358 Graf 1974 p 198 Marcovich p 23 Bianchi p 18 Graf 1974 p 198 Ashmolean Museum at Oxford Inv 1956 355 Parker 2005 p 358 n 139 Lucretius 4 1168 1169 Arnobius Adversus Gentes 3 10 p 157 referring to the Lucretius verse lists the full breasted Cerses nursing Iaccus as a sight the mind longs to see Compare with Photius s v Ἴakxos and Suda s v Ἴakxos iota 16 which identify Iacchus with Dionysos ἐpὶ tῷ mastῷ Dionysus at the breast Parker 2005 p 358 n 139 scholiast on Aristides Vol 3 p 648 213 18 Dindorf Gantz p 118 Hard p 35 Grimal s v Zagreus p 456 McClelland Norman C 2010 Encyclopedia of Reincarnation and Karma McFarland pp 76 77 ISBN 978 0 7864 5675 8 Sommerstein p 237 n 1 Gantz p 118 Smyth p 459 Gantz p 118 Gantz pp 118 119 West 1983 pp 152 154 Linforth pp 309 311 Callimachus fr 643 Pfeiffer Euphorion fr 14 Lightfoot Gantz p 118 119 West 1983 p 151 Linforth pp 309 310 Callimachus fr 43 117 Pfeiffer fr 43b 34 Harder Harder p 368 Gantz p 118 West 1983 pp 152 153 Linforth p 310 Linforth pp 311 317 318 Plutarch The E at Delphi 389 A Nonnus Dionysiaca 5 564 565 Nonnus Dionysiaca 6 165 Nonnus Dionysiaca 10 294 Nonnus Dionysiaca 39 72 Nonnus Dionysiaca 44 255 T P Wiseman Satyrs in Rome The Background to Horace s Ars Poetica The Journal of Roman Studies Vol 78 1988 p 7 note 52 Grimal Pierre The Dictionary of Classical Mythology Wiley Blackwell 1996 ISBN 978 0 631 20102 1 1 a b Cicero De Natura Deorum 2 6O See also St Augustine De Civitatis Dei 4 11 See Pliny Historia Naturalis 7 57 ed Bostock at Perseus Tufts edu a b Beard Mary The Roman Triumph The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press Cambridge Mass and London England 2007 pp 315 317 Russell Bertrand History of Western Philosophy Routledge 1996 p 25 Kraemer Ross S Ecstasy and Possession The Attraction of Women to the Cult of Dionysus The Harvard Theological Review Vol 72 60 Jan Apr 1979 the Bacchic passages in the Roman drama taken over from their Greek models presented a pejorative image of the Bacchic cult which predisposed the Romans towards persecution before the consul denounced the cult in 186 Robert Rouselle Liber Dionysus in Early Roman Drama The Classical Journal 82 3 1987 p 193 Wiseman T P 1988 Satyrs in Rome The Background to Horace s Ars Poetica The Journal of Roman Studies 78 1 13 doi 10 2307 301447 JSTOR 301447 S2CID 161849654 Certainly it is hard to imagine anything less consistent with Roman mos maiorum than the anarchic hedonism of satyrs It was precisely libido that morally subversive aspect of the Bacchic cult that led to its brutal suppression Pliny attributes the invention of the triumph to Father Liber who by Pliny s time was identified with Bacchus and Dionysus see Pliny Historia Naturalis 7 57 ed Bostock at Perseus Tufts edu a b Sallustius On Gods and the World ch VI Concilium Constantinopolitanum a 691 2 in Trullo habitum Canon 62 H Ohme ed Acta conciliorum oecumenicorum Series Secunda II Concilium Universale Constantinopolitanum Tertium Pars 4 ISBN 978 3 11 030853 2 Berlin Boston Oktober 2013 Maxwell Herbert 1913 The Chronicle of Lanercost 1272 1346 Glasgow Scotland Glasgow J Maclehose pp 29 30 C S Watkins History and the Supernatural in Medieval England Cambridge University Press Cambridge 2007 pp 88 92 Ashe Geoffrey 2000 The Hell Fire Clubs A History of Anti Morality Gloucestershire Sutton Publishing p 114 ISBN 9780750924023 Bayles Richard 1889 History of Windham County Connecticut New York Preston Nasios A Hearth of Hellenism The Greek Wheel of the Year www ysee gr Retrieved 24 Jan 2009 Christos Pandion Panopoulos Panagiotis Meton Panagiotopoulos Erymanthos Armyras Mano Rathamanthys Madytinos Editor Translator Lesley Madytinou Editor Translator Vasilios Cheiron Tsantilas 2014 Hellenic Polytheism Household Worship ISBN 1503121887 Dionysus Neokoroi org Neokoroi Retrieved 3 August 2017 Rutherford 2016 p 67 Rutherford 2016 p 69 Diod 4 6 3 Herodotus Histories George Rawlinson Translation Book 2 Plutarch Isis and Osiris Trans Frank Cole Babbitt 1936 Kampakoglou Alexandros v 2016 Danaus boygenhs Greco Egyptian Mythology and Ptolemaic Kingship Greek Roman and Byzantine Studies pp 119 122 Scott Kenneth 1929 Octavian s Propaganda and Antony s De Sua Ebrietate 24th ed Classical Philology pp 133 141 Diod 1 21 1 3 Heraclitus encountering the festival of the Phallophoria in which phalli were paraded about remarked in a surviving fragment If they did not order the procession in honor of the god and address the phallus song to him this would be the most shameless behavior But Hades is the same as Dionysos for whom they rave and act like bacchantes Kerenyi 1976 pp 239 240 Kerenyi 1967 Summary of Karl Kerenyi The Hymn tells us that Persephone was abducted in Nysion pedion or the Nysian Plain a plain that was named after the Dionysian mountain of Nysa Nysa was regarded as the birthplace and first home of Dionysus The divine marriage of Plouton and Persephone was celebrated on the meadow The dangerous region that Kore let herself be lured to in search of flowers was likely not originally connected to Plouton but to Dionysus as Dionysus himself had the strange surname of the gaping one though despite this the notion that the wine god in his quality as the Lord of the Underworld does not appear on the surface of the hymn People would not be able to detect the hidden meaning it if it wasn t for archaic vase portrayals Eleusis Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter pp 34 35 The Hymn to Demeter later mentions that Queen Metaneira of Eleusis later offers the disguised Demeter a beaker of sweet wine something that Demeter refuses on the grounds that it would be against themis the very nature of order and justice for her to drink red wine and she instead invents a new beverage called kykeon to drink instead The fact that Demeter refuses to drink wine on the grounds that it would be against themis indicates that she is well aware of who Persephone s abductor is that it is the Subterranean cover name of Dionysus The critic of the mysteries the severe philosopher Herakleitos once declared Hades is the same as Dionysos The subterranean wine god was the ravisher so how could Demeter accept something that was his gift to mankind p 40 Summary of Karl Kerenyi The book later refers to Herakles initiation into the Eleusinian Mysteries so that he may enter the Underworld In the iconography after his initiation Herakles in shown wearing a fringed white garment with a Dionysian deerskin thrown over it Kore is shown with her mother Demeter and a snake twined around the Mystery basket foreshadowing the secret as making friends with snakes was Dionysian p 58 The god of the Anthesteria was Dionysus who celebrated his marriage in Athens amid flowers the opening of wine jars and the rising up of the souls of the dead p 149 There are two reliefs in a marble votive relief of the fourth century BC One depicts Kore crowning her mother Demeter the deities at the second altar are Persephone and her husband Dionysus as the recumbent god has the features of the bearded Dionysus rather than of Plouton In his right hand he raises not a cornucopia the symbol of wealth but a wine vessel and in his left he bears the goblet for the wine Over their heads an inscription reads To the God and Goddess pp 151 152 The fragments of a gilded jar cover of the Kerch type show Dionysus Demeter little Ploutos Kore and a curly haired boy clad in a long garment one of the first son s of the Eleusinian king who was the first to be initiated On another vase Dionysus sits on his omphalos with his thryrsos in his left hand sitting opposite Demeter looking at each other severely Kore is shown moving from Demeter towards Dionysus as if trying to reconcile them p 162 Eleusis Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter Summary of Karl Kerenyi Kore and Thea are two different duplications of Persephone Plouton and Theos are duplications of the subterranean Dionysus The duplication of the mystery god as subterranean father and subterranean son as Father Zagreus and the child Zagreus husband and son of Persephone has more to do with the mysteries of Dionysus than with the Eleusinian Mysteries But a duplication of the chthonian mystical Dionysus is provided even by his youthful aspect which became distinguished and classical as the son of Semele from the son of Persephone Semele though not of Eleusinian origin is also a double of Persephone p 155 Eleusis Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter Kerenyi 1967 p 40 Kerenyi 1976 p 240 Kerenyi 1976 pp 83 199 Loyd Alan B 2009 What is a God Studies in the Nature of Greek Divinity The Classical Press of Wales ISBN 978 1905125357 The identification of Hades and Dionysus does not seem to be a particular doctrine of Herakleitos nor does it commit him to monotheism The evidence for a cult connection between the two is quite extensive particularly in Southern Italy and the Dionysiac mysteries are associated with death rituals Photographic image JPG My favourite planet de Retrieved 6 February 2022 Photographic image JPG My favourite planet de Retrieved 6 February 2022 Photographic image JPG Upload wikimedia org a b Summary of Karl Kerenyi These attempts at a reconstruction would remain very fragmentary were we not in conclusion to look attentively into the face of the god Eubouleus The Lord of the Underworld bore this name in the youthful form represented in the statue ascribed to Praxiteles which is now in the National Museum at Athens and probably stood originally in the place where it was found the Ploutonion This youth is Plouton himself radiant but disclosing a strange inner darkness and at the same time his double and servant comparable to Hermes or Pais besides Kabeiros or Theos p 172 The plentiful hair or long curls suggest rather Hades kyanochaites Hades of the dark hair p 173 p 172 Kerenyi Karl 1991 Eleusis Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691019154 London B 425 Vase Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 6 February 2022 a b c d Taylor Perry Rosemarie 2003 The God who Comes Dionysian Mysteries Revisited Barnes amp Noble pp 4 22 91 92 94 168 ISBN 9780875862309 a b c d Rigoglioso Marguerite 2010 Virgin Mother Goddesses of Antiquity Palgrave Macmillan ISBN 978 0 230 11312 1 British Museum Collection britishmuseum org Retrieved 2017 03 06 British Museum Collection Britishmuseum org Retrieved 2017 03 06 Sudas under Sabazios saboi Sider David Notes on Two Epigrams of Philodemus The American Journal of Philology 103 2 Summer 1982 208 213 pp 209ff Strabo Geography 10 3 15 Diodorus Siculus 4 4 1 E N Lane has taken pains to dismiss this widespread conflation Lane Towards a definition of the iconography of Sabazios Numen 27 1980 9 33 and Corpus Cultis Jovis Sabazii in Etudes Preliminaires aux Religions Orientales dans l Empire Romain Conclusions 100 3 Leiden etc Brill 1989 McDonough 1999 pp 88 90 Sarcophagus Depicting the Birth of Dionysus The Walters Art Museum Diodorus Siculus 4 4 1 Diodorus Siculus 4 4 5 Diodorus Siculus 4 5 2 Diodorus Siculus 5 75 4 noted by Kerenyi 1976 The Cretan core of the Dionysos myth p 111 n 213 and pp 110 114 a b c d e Diodorus Siculus 3 62 74 situla fitting British Museum The British Museum Nonnus Dionysiaca 4 268 ff trans Rouse Nonnus Dionysiaca 5 562 ff trans Rouse Nonnus Dionysiaca 6 155 ff trans Rouse Damascius Commentary on the Phaedo I 1 13 and 165 172 see in translation Westerink The Greek Commentaries on Plato s Phaedo vol II The Prometheus Trust Westbury 2009 Nilsson p 202 calls it the cardinal myth of Orphism Guthrie p 107 describes the myth as the central point of Orphic story Linforth p 307 says it is commonly regarded as essentially and peculiarly Orphic and the very core of the Orphic religion and Parker 2002 p 495 writes that it has been seen as the Orphic arch myth According to Gantz p 118 Orphic sources preserved seem not to use the name Zagreus and according to West 1983 p 153 the name was probably not used in the Orphic narrative Edmonds 1999 p 37 n 6 says Lobeck 1892 seems to be responsible for the use of the name Zagreus for the Orphic Dionysos As Linforth noticed It is a curious thing that the name Zagreus does not appear in any Orphic poem or fragment nor is it used by any author who refers to Orpheus Linforth 1941 311 In his reconstruction of the story however Lobeck made extensive use of the fifth century epic of Nonnos who does use the name Zagreus and later scholars followed his cue The association of Dionysos with Zagreus appears first explicitly in a fragment of Callimachus preserved in the Etymologicum Magnum fr 43 117 P with a possible earlier precedent in the fragment from Euripides Cretans fr 472 Nauck Earlier evidence however e g Alkmaionis fr 3 PEG Aeschylus frr 5 228 suggests that Zagreus was often identified with other deities West 1983 pp 73 74 provides a detailed reconstruction with numerous cites to ancient sources with a summary on p 140 For other summaries see Morford p 311 Hard p 35 March s v Zagreus p 788 Grimal s v Zagreus p 456 Burkert pp 297 298 Guthrie p 82 also see Ogden p 80 For a detailed examination of many of the ancient sources pertaining to this myth see Linforth pp 307 364 The most extensive account in ancient sources is found in Nonnus Dionysiaca 5 562 70 6 155 ff other principal sources include Diodorus Siculus 3 62 6 8 Orphic fr 301 Kern 3 64 1 2 4 4 1 2 5 75 4 Orphic fr 303 Kern Ovid Metamorphoses 6 110 114 Athenagoras of Athens Legatio 20 Pratten Orphic fr 58 Kern Clement of Alexandria Protrepticus 2 15 pp 36 39 Butterworth Orphic frs 34 35 Kern Hyginus Fabulae 155 167 Suda s v Zagreys See also Pausanias 7 18 4 8 37 5 Damascius Commentary on the Phaedo I 170 see in translation Westerink The Greek Commentaries on Plato s Phaedo vol II The Prometheus Trust Westbury 2009 Diodorus Siculus 3 64 1 also noted by Kereny 110 note 214 Hyginus Fabulae CLXVII Nonnus Dionysiaca 7 14 ff trans Rouse Nonnus Dionysiaca 7 139 ff trans Rouse Nonnus Dionysiaca 8 trans Rouse a b Nonnus Dionysiaca 9 trans Rouse Apollodorus The Library with an English Translation by Sir James George Frazer F B A F R S in 2 Volumes Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1921 Includes Frazer s notes ISBN 0 674 99135 4 0 674 99136 2 Conner Nancy The Everything Book of Classical Mythology 2ed Homeric Hymn 1 to Dionysus There is a certain Nysa mountain high with forests thick in Phoinike afar close to Aigyptos Egypt s streams Diodorus Siculus Library of History 4 2 3 trans Oldfather Zeus taking up the child i e Dionysos from the dead body of his mother Semele handed it over to Hermes and ordered him to take it to the cave in Nysa which lay between Phoinikia Phoenicia and the Neilos the River Nile where he should deliver it to the Nymphai Nymphs that they should rear it and with great solicitude bestow upon it the best of care Photius Library Ptolemy Chennus New History Book 4 Bull 255 Arrian Anabasis of Alexander 5 1 1 2 2 Bull 253 Ovid Fasti iii 407 ff James G Frazer translator Nonnus Dionysiaca 10 175 430 11 12 1 117 Dalby 2005 pp 55 62 The Diffusion of Classical Art in Antiquity John Boardman Princeton University Press 1993 p 96 Eripides 2014 Bacchae Translated by Robertson Robin HarperCollins Publishers pp lines 112 1141 Euripides Bacchae Homer The Iliad ISBN 978 2 291 06449 7 OCLC 1130228845 Homer Iliad 6 129 ff trans Lattimore Greek epic C8th B C I will not fight against any god of the heaven since even the son of Dryas Lykourgos the powerful did not live long he who tried to fight with the gods of the bright sky who once drove the fosterers of Mainomenos rapturous Dionysos headlong down the sacred Nyseian hill and all of them shed and scattered their wands on the ground stricken with an ox goad by murderous Lykourgos while Dionysos in terror dived into the salt surf and Thetis took him to her bosom frightened with the strong shivers upon him at the man s blustering But the gods who live at their ease were angered with Lykourgos and the son of Cronus Zeus struck him to blindness nor did he live long afterwards since he was hated by all the immortals N B The reference to the Nyseian hill and the nurses of Dionysos suggests that Homer placed the story in Boiotia while the god was still a child contrary to subsequent accounts of the myth in which Dionysos is a youth visiting Thrake British Museum The Lycurgus Cup Britishmuseum org Theoi com Homeric Hymn to Dionysus Theoi com Retrieved 2014 06 29 Bull 245 247 247 quoted Varadpande M L 1981 Ancient Indian And Indo Greek Theatre Abhinav Publications pp 91 93 ISBN 9788170171478 Carter Martha L 1968 Dionysiac Aspects of Kushan Art Ars Orientalis 7 121 146 Fig 15 ISSN 0571 1371 JSTOR 4629244 Pausanias Description of Greece book 2 Corrente Paola and Sidney Castillo 2019 Philology and the Comparative Study of Myths The Religious Studies Project Podcast Transcript 3 June 2019 Transcribed by Helen Bradstock Version 1 1 28 May 2019 Available at https www religiousstudiesproject com podcast philology and the comparative study of myths Clement of Alexandria Protreptikos II 30 3 5 Arnobius Adversus Gentes 5 28 pp 252 253 Dalby 2005 pp 108 117 Apollodorus Bibliotheca book 3 Ptolemy Hephaestion New History 5 epitomized in Patriarch Photius s Myriobiblon 190 35 Nonnus Dionysiaca 16 244 280 Memnon of Heraclea History of Heraclea book 15 as epitomized by Photius of Constantinople in his Myriobiblon 223 28 Nonnus Dionysiaca 48 470 634 III pp 458 48 928 936 III pp 490 491 Nonnus Dionysiaca 11 185 ff trans Rouse Greek epic C5th A D Ampelos the love of Dionysos rode upon the back of a wild bull He shouted boldly to the fullfaced Moon Mene Give me best Selene horned driver of cattle Now I am both I have horns and I ride a bull So he called out boasting to the round Moon Selene looked with a jealous eye through the air to see how Ampleos rode on the murderous marauding bull She sent him a cattlechasing gadfly and the bull pricked continually all over by the sharp sting galloped away like a horse through pathless tracts It threw the boy and gorged him to death Humphreys S C The Strangeness of Gods Historical perspectives on the interpretation of Athenian religion Oxford University Press 2004 pp 264 265 ISBN 978 0199269235 Beecroft Alexander J Nine Fragments in Search of an Author Poetic Lines Attributed to Terpander The Classical Journal 103 no 3 2008 225 41 http www jstor org stable 30037959 Hyginus Astronomica 2 23 3 Feldman Louis H 1996 Studies in Hellenistic Judaism Brill p 203 ISBN 90 04 10418 6 Anacreontea fragment 38 Usually said to be the daughters of Zeus by Eurynome Nonnus Dionysiaca 48 548 Nonnus also mentions both Dionysus and Hera as the parents of a Grace Pasithea on separate occasions but it is unclear whether those two are supposed to be Pasithea s parents together Pseudo Plutarch De fluviis 7 Nonnus Dionysiaca 1 26 28 I pp 4 5 48 245 247 III pp 440 443 48 848 968 III pp 484 493 Unnamed brother of Iacchus killed by Aura instantly upon birth Pseudo Plutarch De fluviis 24 Pausanias 9 31 2 Scholia on Theocritus Idylls 1 21 Hesychius of Alexandria s v Priepidos Pausanias 5 16 7 Strabo 10 3 13 quotes the non extant play Palamedes which seems to refer to Thysa a daughter of Dionysus and her mother as participants of the Bacchic rites on Mount Ida but the quoted passage is corrupt Otto Walter F 1995 Dionysus Myth and Cult Indiana University Press ISBN 0 253 20891 2 Danielou Alain 1992 Gods of Love and Ecstasy Rochester Vermont Inner Traditions p 15 ISBN 9780892813742 Burkert p 64 Charlesworth James 2010 The Good And Evil Serpent How a Universal Symbol Became Christianized Yale University Press pp 222 223 ISBN 978 0 300 14273 0 Otto Walter Friedrich Palmer Robert B 1965 Dionysus Myth and Cult Indiana University Press pp 164 166 ISBN 978 0 253 20891 0 Steinberg Leo 2014 The Sexuality of Christ in Renaissance Art and in Modern Oblivion University of Chicago Press pp 47 83 with footnotes ISBN 978 0 226 22631 6 March Jennifer R 2014 Dictionary of Classical Mythology Oxbow pp 164 296 ISBN 978 1 78297 635 6 Csapo Eric 1997 Riding the Phallus for Dionysus Iconology Ritual and Gender Role De Construction Phoenix 51 3 4 256 257 253 295 doi 10 2307 1192539 JSTOR 1192539 Dietrich B C 1958 Dionysus Liknites The Classical Quarterly 8 3 4 244 248 doi 10 1017 S000983880002190X S2CID 246876495 see Janda 2010 16 44 for a detailed account Smith 1991 127 129 as in the Dionysus and Eros Naples Archeological Museum Smith 1991 127 154 Smith 1991 127 131 133 Smith 1991 130 Smith 1991 136 Smith 1991 127 Smith 1991 128 Kessler E Dionysian Monotheism in Nea Paphos Cyprus Bull 227 228 both quoted Bull 228 232 228 quoted Bull 235 238 242 247 250 Bull 233 235 Bull page needed Isler Kerenyi C amp Watson W 2007 Modern Mythologies Dionysos Versus Apollo In Dionysos in Archaic Greece An Understanding through Images pp 235 254 Leiden Boston Brill Retrieved from http www jstor org stable 10 1163 j ctt1w76w9x 13 Rosenthal Bernice Glatzer 2007 Chapter 13 A New Spirituality The Confluence of Nietzsche and Orthodoxy in Russian Religious Thought In Steinberg Mark D and Heather J Coleman ed Sacred Stories Religion and Spirituality in Modern Russia Bloomington and Indianapolis Indiana University Press p 344 ISBN 978 0 253 21850 6 Kerenyi K Dionysus Archetypal Image of Indestructible Life Princeton Bollingen 1976 Jeanmaire H Dionysus histoire du culte de Bacchus pp 106ff Payot 1951 Johnson R A Ecstasy Understanding the Psychology of Joy HarperColling 1987 Hillman J Dionysus Reimagined in The Myth of Analysis pp 271 281 HarperCollins 1972 Hillman J Dionysus in Jung s Writings in Facing The Gods Spring Publications 1980 Thompson J Emotional Intelligence Imaginal Intelligence in Mythopoetry Scholar Journal Vol 1 2010 Lopez Pedraza R Dionysus in Exile On the Repression of the Body and Emotion Chiron Publications 2000 Greenspun Roger March 23 1970 Screen De Palma s Dionysus in 69 New York Times Retrieved 1 August 2017 Murray Matthew The Frogs Talkin Broadway Talkin Broadway Retrieved 2 August 2017 The Orion Experience Cosmicandy PopMatters com 28 May 2007 Retrieved 6 February 2022 Grow Kory Dead Can Dance on Awakening the Ancient Instincts Within Rolling Stone November 7 2018 Lipshutz Jason April 17 2019 How BTS Dionysus Demonstrates the Group s Musical Ambition Billboard Retrieved April 22 2019 Daly Rhian April 22 2019 All the biggest talking points from BTS global press conference Jungkook s missing mixtape Suga s next prophecy and the meaning behind Map Of The Soul Persona NME Retrieved April 17 2019 a b c Moles John 2006 Jesus and Dionysus in The Acts Of The Apostles and early Christianity Hermathena Trinity College Dublin 180 180 65 104 JSTOR 23041662 Detienne Marcel Dionysus Slain Baltimore Johns Hopkins 1979 Evans Arthur The God of Ecstasy New York St Martins Press 1989 Wick Peter 2004 Jesus gegen Dionysos Ein Beitrag zur Kontextualisierung des Johannesevangeliums Biblica Rome Pontifical Biblical Institute 85 2 179 198 Retrieved 2007 10 10 Powell Barry B Classical Myth Second ed With new translations of ancient texts by Herbert M Howe Upper Saddle River New Jersey Prentice Hall Inc 1998 Studies in Early Christology by Martin Hengel 2005 p 331 ISBN 0567042804 Dalby Andrew 2005 The Story of Bacchus London British Museum Press E Kessler Dionysian Monotheism in Nea Paphos Cyprus Symposium on Pagan Monotheism in the Roman Empire Exeter 17 20 July 2006 Abstract Archived 2008 04 21 at the Wayback Machine Bull 240 241 British Museum statue Britishmuseum org This chart is based upon Hesiod s Theogony unless otherwise noted According to Homer Iliad 1 570 579 14 338 Odyssey 8 312 Hephaestus was apparently the son of Hera and Zeus see Gantz p 74 According to Hesiod Theogony 927 929 Hephaestus was produced by Hera alone with no father see Gantz p 74 According to Hesiod Theogony 886 890 of Zeus children by his seven wives Athena was the first to be conceived but the last to be born Zeus impregnated Metis then swallowed her later Zeus himself gave birth to Athena from his head see Gantz pp 51 52 83 84 According to Hesiod Theogony 183 200 Aphrodite was born from Uranus severed genitals see Gantz pp 99 100 According to Homer Aphrodite was the daughter of Zeus Iliad 3 374 20 105 Odyssey 8 308 320 and Dione Iliad 5 370 71 see Gantz pp 99 100 References EditAristides Aristides ex recensione Guilielmi Dindorfii Volume 3 Wilhelm Dindorf Weidmann G Reimer 1829 Hathi Trust Digital Library Aristophanes Frogs Matthew Dillon Ed Perseus Digital Library Tufts University 1995 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Arnobius of Sicca The Seven Books of Arnobius Adversus Gentes translated by Archibald Hamilton Bryce and Hugh Campbell Edinburg T amp T Clark 1871 Internet Archive Arrian Anabasis of Alexander Volume I Books 1 4 translated by P A Brunt Loeb Classical Library No 236 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1976 ISBN 978 0 674 99260 3 Online version at Harvard University Press Arrian Anabasis of Alexander Volume II Books 5 7 translated by P A Brunt Loeb Classical Library No 269 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1976 ISBN 978 0 674 99297 9 Online version at Harvard University Press Beekes Robert S P 2009 Etymological Dictionary of Greek Brill ISBN 978 90 04 32186 1 Bowie A M Aristophanes Myth Ritual and Comedy Cambridge University Press 1993 ISBN 0521440122 Bowie E L Time and Place Narrative and Speech in Philicus Philodams and Limenius in Hymnic Narrative and the Narratology of Greek Hymns edited by Andrew Faulkner Owen Hodkinson Brill 2015 ISBN 9789004289512 Bull Malcolm The Mirror of the Gods How Renaissance Artists Rediscovered the Pagan Gods Oxford UP 2005 ISBN 9780195219234 Burkert Walter Greek Religion Harvard University Press 1985 ISBN 0 674 36281 0 Clement of Alexandria The Exhortation to the Greeks The Rich Man s Salvation To the Newly Baptized Translated by G W Butterworth Loeb Classical Library No 92 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 1919 ISBN 978 0 674 99103 3 Online version at Harvard University Press Internet Archive 1960 edition Collard Christopher and Martin Cropp Euripides Fragments Oedipus Chrysippus Other Fragments Loeb Classical Library No 506 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 2008 ISBN 978 0 674 99631 1 Online version at Harvard University Press Dalby Andrew 2005 The Story of Bacchus London British Museum Press ISBN 0 7141 2255 6 Diodorus Siculus Diodorus Siculus The Library of History Translated by C H Oldfather Twelve volumes Loeb Classical Library Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1989 Online version by Bill Thayer Edmonds Radcliffe 1999 Tearing Apart the Zagreus Myth A Few Disparaging Remarks On Orphism and Original Sin Classical Antiquity 18 1999 35 73 PDF Encinas Reguero M Carmen The Names of Dionysos in Euripides Bacchae and the Rhetorical Language of Teiresias in Redefining Dionysos Editors Alberto Bernabe Miguel Herrero de Jauregui Ana Isabel Jimenez San Cristobal Raquel Martin Hernandez Walter de Gruyter 2013 ISBN 978 3 11 030091 8 Euripides Bacchae translated by T A Buckley in The Tragedies of Euripides London Henry G Bohn 1850 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Euripides Cyclops in Euripides with an English translation by David Kovacs Cambridge Harvard University Press forthcoming Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Euripides Ion translated by Robert Potter in The Complete Greek Drama edited by Whitney J Oates and Eugene O Neill Jr Volume 1 New York Random House 1938 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Euripides The Trojan Women in The Plays of Euripides translated by E P Coleridge Volume I London George Bell and Sons 1891 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Fantuzzi Marco Sung Poetry The Case of Inscribed Paeans in A Companion to Hellenistic Literature editors James J Clauss Martine Cuypers John Wiley amp Sons 2010 ISBN 9781405136792 Farnell Lewis Richard The Cults of the Greek States vol 5 Clarendon Press Oxford 1909 Internet Archive cf Chapter IV Cults of Dionysos Chapter V Dionysiac Ritual Chapter VI Cult Monuments of Dionysos Chapter VII Ideal Dionysiac Types Fowler R L 2013 Early Greek Mythography Volume 2 Commentary Oxford University Press 2013 ISBN 978 0198147411 Lightfoot J L Hellenistic Collection Philitas Alexander of Aetolia Hermesianax Euphorion Parthenius Edited and translated by J L Lightfoot Loeb Classical Library No 508 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 2010 ISBN 978 0 674 99636 6 Online version at Harvard University Press Fox William Sherwood The Mythology of All Races v 1 Greek and Roman 1916 General editor Louis Herbert Gray Gantz Timothy Early Greek Myth A Guide to Literary and Artistic Sources Johns Hopkins University Press 1996 Two volumes ISBN 978 0 8018 5360 9 Vol 1 ISBN 978 0 8018 5362 3 Vol 2 Graf F 1974 Eleusis und die orphische Dichtung Athens in vorhellenistischer Zeit Walter de Gruyter 1974 ISBN 9783110044980 Graf F 2005 Iacchus in Brill s New Pauly Encyclopaedia of the Ancient World Antiquity Volume 6 Lieden Boston 2005 Grimal Pierre The Dictionary of Classical Mythology Wiley Blackwell 1996 ISBN 978 0 631 20102 1 Guthrie W K C Orpheus and Greek Religion A Study of the Orphic Movement Princeton University Press 1935 ISBN 978 0 691 02499 8 Hard Robin The Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology Based on H J Rose s Handbook of Greek Mythology Psychology Press 2004 ISBN 978 0 415 18636 0 Harder Annette Callimachus Aetia Introduction Text Translation and Commentary Oxford University Press 2012 ISBN 978 0 19 958101 6 two volume set Google Books Harrison Jane Ellen Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion second edition Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1908 Internet Archive Herodotus Histories A D Godley translator Cambridge Harvard University Press 1920 ISBN 0674991338 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Hesiod Theogony in The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G Evelyn White Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1914 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Homer The Iliad with an English Translation by A T Murray PhD in two volumes Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1924 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Homer The Odyssey with an English Translation by A T Murray PH D in two volumes Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1919 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Hyginus Gaius Julius Fabulae in Apollodorus Libraryand Hyginus Fabulae Two Handbooks of Greek Mythology Translated with Introductions by R Scott Smith and Stephen M Trzaskoma Hackett Publishing Company 2007 ISBN 978 0 87220 821 6 Janda Michael Die Musik nach dem Chaos Innsbruck 2010 Jameson Michael The Asexuality of Dionysus Masks of Dionysus Ed Thomas H Carpenter and Christopher A Faraone Ithaca Cornell UP 1993 ISBN 0 8014 8062 0 44 64 Jimenez San Cristobal Anna Isabel 2012 Iacchus in Plutarch in Plutarch in the Religious and Philosophical Discourse of Late Antiquity edited by Fernando Lautaro Roig Lanzillotta and Israel Mu Oz Gallarte Brill ISBN 9789004234741 Jimenez San Cristobal Anna Isabel 2013 The Sophoclean Dionysos in Redefining Dionysus Editors Alberto Bernabe Miguel Herrero de Jauregui Ana Isabel Jimenez San Cristobal Raquel Martin Hernandez Walter de Gruyter ISBN 978 3 11 030091 8 Kerenyi Karl 1967 Eleusis Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter Princeton University Press 1991 ISBN 9780691019154 Kerenyi Karl 1976 Dionysos Archetypal Image of Indestructible Life Princeton University Press 1996 link, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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