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Pandia (festival)

The Pandia was an ancient state festival attested as having been held annually at Athens as early as the time of Demosthenes.[1] Although little that is known of the Pandia is certain,[2] it was probably a festival for Zeus,[3] and was celebrated in the spring after the City Dionysia in the middle of the month of Elaphebolion (late March and early April).

Dates edit

The exact date of the Pandia has been much discussed.[4] Demosthenes, speech Against Midias (21.8) has a meeting, during which the conduct of the City Dionysia was reviewed, being held after the Pandia. This places the Pandia, at least during the time of Demosthenes, after the City Dionysia. Some have seen an association between the Pandia and the full-moon, placing the celebration on 14 Elaphebolion.[5] But according to Pickard-Cambridge, Gould and Lewis, the association with the full-moon "can neither be affirmed nor rejected",[6] and modern scholarship appears to favor the later dates of 16 or 17 Elaphebolion.[7]

Rites edit

The derivation of the festival's name and exactly whom the festival may have honored have been the subject of considerable discussion.[8] Zeus, the goddess Selene, Pandia, a daughter of Zeus and Selene, and Pandion, a mythical king, have all been seen as being possibly connected with the festival.

The name "Pandia" is associated with the goddess Selene, the Greek personification of the moon. Originally Pandia may have been an epithet of Selene,[9] but by at least the time of the Homeric Hymn to Selene,[10] Pandia ("all brightness")[11] had become a daughter of Selene and Zeus, and Pandia Selene or Selene's daughter Pandia, have been offered as possible origins for the name of the festival.

Another mythological figure whose name has been suggested as a possible source for the name of the festival is Pandion, a legendary king of Athens who, as part of the tribal reforms of Cleisthenes at the end of the sixth century BC, became the eponymous hero of the Athenian tribe Pandionis. However some scholars think it is more likely that the hero derived his name from the festival as its legendary founder.[12] An inscription[13] dating from c. 386 BC, which refers to a decree of the tribe Pandionis, commending a "priest of Pandion" for services performed at the Pandia, supports the notion of a link between Pandion and the festival.[14]

While mentioning both Selene and Pandion in connection with the festival's name, Photius states that the festival was held for Zeus,[15] and although according to Robert Parker this association with Zeus may only be "a probably correct etymological guess",[16] many scholars are content to assign the festival to Zeus.[17] It is also possible that more than one of these mythological figures were associated with the festival, and who the festival honored may have changed over time.[18]

Pandia of Plotheia edit

A festival of the same name is attested for the deme Plotheia; what relationship if any this festival may have had with the Pandia of Athens is unknown.[19]

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Demosthenes, Against Midias 21.8–9; Inscriptiones Graecae, II2 1140, line 5; Harpocration, Lexicon of the Ten Orators s.v.; Pollux, Onomasticon 1.37. Though the earliest mentions of the festival we have date only from the fourth century BC, the festival was probably much older, Parke, p. 136, says that the festival "was probably a survival from the archaic past which had become fossilized", Parker (1996), p. 75 says "The panegyris or 'all-assembly' is in fact as ancient a Greek institution as any that we know of. If, as is likely, the system of tribal competition in Attic cults is archaic, there must always have been some pan-Attic festivals. Some old favourites (the Pandia for instance, the 'all-Zeus' festival or the Dipolieta) perhaps gradually faded away in the classical period", while Robertson sees the festival as marking the spring migration of sheep to mountain pastures, and having originated at least as early as the Mycenean period (Robertson 1991, p. 5; Robertson 1993, p. 15).
  2. ^ Burkert, p. 182; Parke, pp. 135–136; Parker 2005, pp. 447–448.
  3. ^ Parker 2005, p. 447.
  4. ^ Mikalson 1975, p. 137.
  5. ^ Smith, "Pandia", "Dionysia"; Cook, p. 733; Willetts, pp. 178; Robertson 1996, p. 75 note 109.
  6. ^ Pickard-Cambridge, Gould and Lewis, p. 66.
  7. ^ Harris, p. 190; Canevaro, p. 213; Pickard-Cambridge, Gould and Lewis, p. 66; Mikalson 1975, p. 137.
  8. ^ For example see Willetts, pp. 178-179; Smith, "Pandia"; Harpers, "Pandia"; Photius, Lexicon s.v. Πάνδια; Scholiast on Demosthenes, 21.39a; Lexicon Patmense s.v. Πάνδια; Lexica Segueriana s.v. Πάνδια (Bekker, p. 292). For possible meanings of the name see Cook, p. 423 note 2 which derives it from the adjective Δῖοσ, meaning 'of' or 'belonging to Zeus', see also Parker 1996, p. 75, however Robertson 1996, p. 75 note 109 says that while "the festival name Pandia is sometimes thought to mean "Common festival of Zeus"—i.e. one celebrated jointly by several communities, ... the true meaning is surely "Rites of the all-bright sky".
  9. ^ Willetts, p. 178; Cook, p. 732; Roscher, p. 100; Scholiast on Demosthenes, 21.39a.
  10. ^ Hymn to Selene (32) 15–16.
  11. ^ Fairbanks, p. 162. Regarding the meaning of "Pandia", Kerenyi, p. 197, says: '"the entirely shining" or the "entirely bright"— doubtless the brightness of nights of full moon.'
  12. ^ Parke, p. 136; Kearns, pp. 81, 87, 192; Sourvinou-Inwood, p. 74; Parker 2005, p. 448; Lexicon Patmense s.v. Πάνδια. According to Kearns pp. 68–69, there was "a very wide spread cultic-mythic phenomenon in which a hero or heroine is worshipped in conjunction with a god, while an aetiological myth explains that he or she was the first to perform the rite."
  13. ^ Inscriptiones Graecae, II2 1140, line 5.
  14. ^ Canevaro, p 212; Harding, p. 42; Anderson, p. 130, p. 251 note 15; Robertson 1993, p. 15; Parke, p. 136.
  15. ^ Cook, p. 732; Photius, Lexicon s.v. Πάνδια.
  16. ^ Parker 2005, p. 478.
  17. ^ For example see: Harris, p. 190; Harding, p. 42; Anderson, p. 130; Sourvinou-Inwood, p. 74; Robertson 1996, p. 41, p. 65 note 1; Parke, pp. 135–136.
  18. ^ Kearns, p. 81, says "If the Pandia were a festival of Zeus, as the Panathenaia of Athena, it is nonetheless clear that the Pandion received a lesser sacrifice"; Smith, "Pandia" says "It is not impossible that in course of time the tribe Pandionis may have regarded themselves as specially connected with this festival, though we have no clear evidence of it, nor again that Zeus, as Preller thinks, may afterwards have been associated in the worship"; and Cook, p. 732 says "that the festival Pandia was ab initio connected with this Selene Pandia is far from clear", while Willetts, p. 179 sees a possible "metamorphosis" ... from a female to a male—Pandia to Pandion". Regarding the possibility of multiple honorees for Attic festivals see Parker 2005, p. 155, which says: "ancient scholars were uncertain what god two festivals (Skira, Oschophoria) belonged to, and the controversy has continued into modern times. But in both cases it seems that it is the principle of 'one god per festival' that is at fault."
  19. ^ Mikalson 1977, p. 430; Parker 2005, pp. 73–74; p. 74 note 96, pp. 477–478; Dillon and Garland, pp. 354–355; Inscriptiones Graecae, I3 258, line 9.

References edit

  • Anderson, Greg, The Athenian Experiment: Building an Imagined Political Community in Ancient Attica, 508-490 B.C., University of Michigan Press, 2003. ISBN 9780472113200.
  • Bekker, Immanuel, Anecdota Graeca: Lexica Segueriana, Apud G.C. Nauckium, 1814.
  • Burkert, Walter, Homo Necans: The Anthropology of Ancient Greek Sacrificial Ritual and Myth, University of California Press, 1983. ISBN 0520036506.
  • Canevaro, Mirko, The Documents in the Attic Orators: Laws and Decrees in the Public Speeches of the Demosthenic Corpus, Oxford University Press, 2013. ISBN 9780199668908.
  • Cook, Arthur Bernard, Zeus: Zeus, God of the Bright Sky, Volume 1 of Zeus: A Study in Ancient Religion, Biblo and Tannen, 1914.
  • Dillon, Matthew, Lynda Garland, Ancient Greece: Social and Historical Documents from Archaic Times to the Death of Alexander, Routledge, 2010. ISBN 9780203854556.
  • Demosthenes. Demosthenes with an English translation by A. T. Murray, Ph.D., LL.D. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1939.
  • Evelyn-White, Hugh, The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G. Evelyn-White. Homeric Hymns. Cambridge, MA.,Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1914.
  • Harding, Phillip, The Story of Athens: The Fragments of the Local Chronicles of Attika, Routledge, 2007. ISBN 9781134304479.
  • Harris, Edward M., Demosthenes, Speeches 20-22, University of Texas Press, 2010. ISBN 9780292794139.
  • Kearns, Emily, The Heroes of Attica (Bulletin Supplement 57), University of London Institute of Classical Studies 1989. ISBN 978-0900587603.
  • Mikalson, Jon D. (1975), The Sacred and Civil Calendar of the Athenian Year, Princeton University Press. ISBN 0691035458.
  • Mikalson, Jon D. (1977), "Religion in the Attic Demes". The American Journal of Philology (The Johns Hopkins University Press) 98 (4): 424–435.
  • Parke, Herbert William, Festivals of the Athenians, Cornell University Press, 1977.
  • Parker, Robert (1996), Athenian Religion: A History, Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-814979-4.
  • Parker, Robert (2005), Polytheism and Society at Athens, Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-927483-3.
  • Pickard-Cambridge, Sir arthur W., John Gould and D. M. Lewis, The Dramatic Festivals of Athens Oxford University Press, USA; 2 edition (January 12, 1989). ISBN 0-19-814258-7.
  • Robertson, Noel (1991), "Myth, Ritual and Livelihood in Early Greece" in Ancient Economy in Mythology: East and West, ed. M. Silver (Savage, Md. 1991). ISBN 0847676293.
  • Robertson, Noel (1993), Festivals and Legends: The Formation of Greek Cities in the Light of Public Ritual, The University of Toronto Press.
  • Robertson, Noel (1996), "Athena's Shrines and Festivals" in Worshipping Athena: Panathenaia and Parthenon, The University of Wisconsin Press.
  • Roscher, Wilhelm Heinrich, Über Selene und Verwandtes, B. G. Teubner, Leizig 1890.
  • Sourvinou-Inwood, Christiane, Tragedy and Athenian Religion, Lexington Books, 2003. ISBN 9780739104002.
  • Smith, William; A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities. William Smith, LLD. William Wayte. G. E. Marindin. Albemarle Street, London. John Murray. 1890. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Willetts, R. F., Cretan Cults and Festivals, Greenwood Press, 1980. ISBN 9780313220500.

pandia, festival, pandia, ancient, state, festival, attested, having, been, held, annually, athens, early, time, demosthenes, although, little, that, known, pandia, certain, probably, festival, zeus, celebrated, spring, after, city, dionysia, middle, month, el. The Pandia was an ancient state festival attested as having been held annually at Athens as early as the time of Demosthenes 1 Although little that is known of the Pandia is certain 2 it was probably a festival for Zeus 3 and was celebrated in the spring after the City Dionysia in the middle of the month of Elaphebolion late March and early April Contents 1 Dates 2 Rites 3 Pandia of Plotheia 4 See also 5 Notes 6 ReferencesDates editThe exact date of the Pandia has been much discussed 4 Demosthenes speech Against Midias 21 8 has a meeting during which the conduct of the City Dionysia was reviewed being held after the Pandia This places the Pandia at least during the time of Demosthenes after the City Dionysia Some have seen an association between the Pandia and the full moon placing the celebration on 14 Elaphebolion 5 But according to Pickard Cambridge Gould and Lewis the association with the full moon can neither be affirmed nor rejected 6 and modern scholarship appears to favor the later dates of 16 or 17 Elaphebolion 7 Rites editThe derivation of the festival s name and exactly whom the festival may have honored have been the subject of considerable discussion 8 Zeus the goddess Selene Pandia a daughter of Zeus and Selene and Pandion a mythical king have all been seen as being possibly connected with the festival The name Pandia is associated with the goddess Selene the Greek personification of the moon Originally Pandia may have been an epithet of Selene 9 but by at least the time of the Homeric Hymn to Selene 10 Pandia all brightness 11 had become a daughter of Selene and Zeus and Pandia Selene or Selene s daughter Pandia have been offered as possible origins for the name of the festival Another mythological figure whose name has been suggested as a possible source for the name of the festival is Pandion a legendary king of Athens who as part of the tribal reforms of Cleisthenes at the end of the sixth century BC became the eponymous hero of the Athenian tribe Pandionis However some scholars think it is more likely that the hero derived his name from the festival as its legendary founder 12 An inscription 13 dating from c 386 BC which refers to a decree of the tribe Pandionis commending a priest of Pandion for services performed at the Pandia supports the notion of a link between Pandion and the festival 14 While mentioning both Selene and Pandion in connection with the festival s name Photius states that the festival was held for Zeus 15 and although according to Robert Parker this association with Zeus may only be a probably correct etymological guess 16 many scholars are content to assign the festival to Zeus 17 It is also possible that more than one of these mythological figures were associated with the festival and who the festival honored may have changed over time 18 Pandia of Plotheia editA festival of the same name is attested for the deme Plotheia what relationship if any this festival may have had with the Pandia of Athens is unknown 19 See also editAthenian festivalsNotes edit Demosthenes Against Midias 21 8 9 Inscriptiones Graecae II2 1140 line 5 Harpocration Lexicon of the Ten Orators s v Pollux Onomasticon 1 37 Though the earliest mentions of the festival we have date only from the fourth century BC the festival was probably much older Parke p 136 says that the festival was probably a survival from the archaic past which had become fossilized Parker 1996 p 75 says The panegyris or all assembly is in fact as ancient a Greek institution as any that we know of If as is likely the system of tribal competition in Attic cults is archaic there must always have been some pan Attic festivals Some old favourites the Pandia for instance the all Zeus festival or the Dipolieta perhaps gradually faded away in the classical period while Robertson sees the festival as marking the spring migration of sheep to mountain pastures and having originated at least as early as the Mycenean period Robertson 1991 p 5 Robertson 1993 p 15 Burkert p 182 Parke pp 135 136 Parker 2005 pp 447 448 Parker 2005 p 447 Mikalson 1975 p 137 Smith Pandia Dionysia Cook p 733 Willetts pp 178 Robertson 1996 p 75 note 109 Pickard Cambridge Gould and Lewis p 66 Harris p 190 Canevaro p 213 Pickard Cambridge Gould and Lewis p 66 Mikalson 1975 p 137 For example see Willetts pp 178 179 Smith Pandia Harpers Pandia Photius Lexicon s v Pandia Scholiast on Demosthenes 21 39a Lexicon Patmense s v Pandia Lexica Segueriana s v Pandia Bekker p 292 For possible meanings of the name see Cook p 423 note 2 which derives it from the adjective Dῖos meaning of or belonging to Zeus see also Parker 1996 p 75 however Robertson 1996 p 75 note 109 says that while the festival name Pandia is sometimes thought to mean Common festival of Zeus i e one celebrated jointly by several communities the true meaning is surely Rites of the all bright sky Willetts p 178 Cook p 732 Roscher p 100 Scholiast on Demosthenes 21 39a Hymn to Selene 32 15 16 Fairbanks p 162 Regarding the meaning of Pandia Kerenyi p 197 says the entirely shining or the entirely bright doubtless the brightness of nights of full moon Parke p 136 Kearns pp 81 87 192 Sourvinou Inwood p 74 Parker 2005 p 448 Lexicon Patmense s v Pandia According to Kearns pp 68 69 there was a very wide spread cultic mythic phenomenon in which a hero or heroine is worshipped in conjunction with a god while an aetiological myth explains that he or she was the first to perform the rite Inscriptiones Graecae II2 1140 line 5 Canevaro p 212 Harding p 42 Anderson p 130 p 251 note 15 Robertson 1993 p 15 Parke p 136 Cook p 732 Photius Lexicon s v Pandia Parker 2005 p 478 For example see Harris p 190 Harding p 42 Anderson p 130 Sourvinou Inwood p 74 Robertson 1996 p 41 p 65 note 1 Parke pp 135 136 Kearns p 81 says If the Pandia were a festival of Zeus as the Panathenaia of Athena it is nonetheless clear that the Pandion received a lesser sacrifice Smith Pandia says It is not impossible that in course of time the tribe Pandionis may have regarded themselves as specially connected with this festival though we have no clear evidence of it nor again that Zeus as Preller thinks may afterwards have been associated in the worship and Cook p 732 says that the festival Pandia was ab initio connected with this Selene Pandia is far from clear while Willetts p 179 sees a possible metamorphosis from a female to a male Pandia to Pandion Regarding the possibility of multiple honorees for Attic festivals see Parker 2005 p 155 which says ancient scholars were uncertain what god two festivals Skira Oschophoria belonged to and the controversy has continued into modern times But in both cases it seems that it is the principle of one god per festival that is at fault Mikalson 1977 p 430 Parker 2005 pp 73 74 p 74 note 96 pp 477 478 Dillon and Garland pp 354 355 Inscriptiones Graecae I3 258 line 9 References editAnderson Greg The Athenian Experiment Building an Imagined Political Community in Ancient Attica 508 490 B C University of Michigan Press 2003 ISBN 9780472113200 Bekker Immanuel Anecdota Graeca Lexica Segueriana Apud G C Nauckium 1814 Burkert Walter Homo Necans The Anthropology of Ancient Greek Sacrificial Ritual and Myth University of California Press 1983 ISBN 0520036506 Canevaro Mirko The Documents in the Attic Orators Laws and Decrees in the Public Speeches of the Demosthenic Corpus Oxford University Press 2013 ISBN 9780199668908 Cook Arthur Bernard Zeus Zeus God of the Bright Sky Volume 1 of Zeus A Study in Ancient Religion Biblo and Tannen 1914 Dillon Matthew Lynda Garland Ancient Greece Social and Historical Documents from Archaic Times to the Death of Alexander Routledge 2010 ISBN 9780203854556 Demosthenes Demosthenes with an English translation by A T Murray Ph D LL D Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1939 Evelyn White Hugh The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G Evelyn White Homeric Hymns Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1914 Harding Phillip The Story of Athens The Fragments of the Local Chronicles of Attika Routledge 2007 ISBN 9781134304479 Harris Edward M Demosthenes Speeches 20 22 University of Texas Press 2010 ISBN 9780292794139 Kearns Emily The Heroes of Attica Bulletin Supplement 57 University of London Institute of Classical Studies 1989 ISBN 978 0900587603 Mikalson Jon D 1975 The Sacred and Civil Calendar of the Athenian Year Princeton University Press ISBN 0691035458 Mikalson Jon D 1977 Religion in the Attic Demes The American Journal of Philology The Johns Hopkins University Press 98 4 424 435 Parke Herbert William Festivals of the Athenians Cornell University Press 1977 Parker Robert 1996 Athenian Religion A History Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 814979 4 Parker Robert 2005 Polytheism and Society at Athens Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 927483 3 Pickard Cambridge Sir arthur W John Gould and D M Lewis The Dramatic Festivals of Athens Oxford University Press USA 2 edition January 12 1989 ISBN 0 19 814258 7 Robertson Noel 1991 Myth Ritual and Livelihood in Early Greece in Ancient Economy in Mythology East and West ed M Silver Savage Md 1991 ISBN 0847676293 Robertson Noel 1993 Festivals and Legends The Formation of Greek Cities in the Light of Public Ritual The University of Toronto Press Robertson Noel 1996 Athena s Shrines and Festivals in Worshipping Athena Panathenaia and Parthenon The University of Wisconsin Press Roscher Wilhelm Heinrich Uber Selene und Verwandtes B G Teubner Leizig 1890 Sourvinou Inwood Christiane Tragedy and Athenian Religion Lexington Books 2003 ISBN 9780739104002 Smith William A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities William Smith LLD William Wayte G E Marindin Albemarle Street London John Murray 1890 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Willetts R F Cretan Cults and Festivals Greenwood Press 1980 ISBN 9780313220500 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pandia festival amp oldid 1144863293, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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