Listed 8 sub titles with search on: Ancients' feasts, games and rituals for wider area of: "NORTH AEGEAN Region GREECE" .
ANTISSA (Ancient city) LESVOS
The city of Antissa had been accustomed to celebrate the festival
of Dionysus with great magnificence. Year by year great provision was made for
the occasion, and costly sacrifices were prepared. Now one year the city found
itself in need of funds; and shortly before the festival, on the proposal of a
citizen named Sosipolis, the people after vowing that they would next year offer
to Dionysus a double amount, collected all that had been provided and sold it.
In this way they realized a large sum of money to meet their necessity.
On one occasion the people of Lampsacus were expecting to be attacked
by a large fleet of triremes. The price of barley meal being then four drachmae
for a bushel and a half, they instructed the retailers to sell it at six drachmae.
Oil, which was at three drachmae for six pints, was to be sold at four drachmae
and a half, and wine and other commodities at a proportionate increase. In this
way the retailer got the original price, It happened that certain aliens residing
in the city had lent money on the security of citizens' property. As these aliens
did not possess the right of holding such property, the people offered to recognize
the title of anyone who chose to pay into the treasury one third of the amount
secured.
HERAION (Ancient sanctuary) SAMOS
The Heraea of Samos, which
island also derived the worship of Hera from Argos
(Paus. vii. 4,4), were perhaps the most brilliant of all the festivals of this
divinity. A magnificent procession, consisting of maidens and married women in
splendid attire, and with floating hair (Asius, ap. Athen. xii. p. 525), together
with men and youths in armour (Polyaen. Strat. i. 23, vi. 45), went to the temple
of Hera (Heraeon). After
they arrived within the sacred precincts, the men deposited their armour; and
prayers and vows were offered up to the goddess. Her altar consisted of the ashes
of the victims which had been burnt to her. (Paus. v. 13,5)
This extract is from: A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities (1890) (eds. William Smith, LLD, William Wayte, G. E. Marindin). Cited April 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
KAVIRIO (Ancient sanctuary) LEMNOS (LIMNOS)
The sanctuary dedicated to the Kabeiroi, the Kabeirion as it was called,
was established on the cape of Chloi, exactly opposite the famous Kabeirion of
Samothrace. The Kabeirion
of Limnos was well known in
ancient times. Celebrations used to take place here till the early Christian period.
The cape is quite steep and so unapproachable to most people, to those who did
not have the right to participate in the mysterious celebrations. The high wall
which was built on the landward side made the sanctification area impossible to
reach. Telesteria and rooms used for initiations were constructed on two terraces.
Repositories accepted the rich offerings. The Kabeirian mysteries lasted 9 days.
During these 9 days all the fires were put out on the island and the sacred boat
sailed to Delos, which was
the island of Apollon, the god who was thought to be the god of light, in order
to bring the new light. Till the return of the ship, life on the island was rather
unnatural: People did not cook food and the family never sat altogether around
the table. They used to invoke the gods who where believed to live under the earth.
The day when the sacred ship arrived, bringing the light from Delos,
was a day of celebration. This light symbolised the new, purified bellow the Kabeirion
- were it is said to be Philoctetes cave - praying for a renovated life.
This text (extract) is cited June 2003 from the Lemnos
Provincial Government tourist pamphlet (1997).
The religious ceremonies that were held in honor of the Kaveri were
called "Kaverian Sacraments" . They were held at the holy altar of the Kaveri
that was built at cape Chloe opposite of Ifestia. During the Hellenistic period
the worship of the Kaveri took international character and people from all over
the world came to the centers of worship like Lemnos, Samothrace and Thive.
Unlike the sacraments of Elefsis the initiations were free for men,
women and children from all nationalities, free and slaves. The initiations were
done when the group or the individual decided to appear to the gods and not only
during the period of festivals. Something like the Christian baptism. The public
ceremonies were almost similar to those of other sanctuaries. Therefore sacrifices
of animals to the gods were done, prayers and dedications.
The main event was the festival of "porphyria", where the discovery
of fire came to life and as tradition believes it was done in Lemnos. The trades-union
of metalworkers played a specific role. They climbed the hill of Mosihlon where
they lit a clean and "uninfected" flame with a copper object ie a copper mirror
which they held opposite the sun, something like todays feeling of the Olympic
flame.
After 175 BC when Lemnos became a member of Delos alliance, the new
light was taken from the holy altar of Delos. For nine days they extinguished
all the fires of the island and they sent a ship to Delos to bring the new light.
During the waiting period, the people called upon the underground gods until the
ship arrived and Ifestos triumphed.
This text is cited Jan 2004 from the Limnos Medical Association URL below.
Cabeiria (ta kabeiria). The mysterious rites of the Pelasgic gods known as the
Cabeiri, celebrated in the islands lying between Euboea and the Hellespont, in
Lemnos, Imbros, and especially in Samothrace. This worship was also known on the
adjacent coasts of Europe and Asia Minor, at Thebes and Andania in Greece, and,
according to Strabo (iv.), in an island near Britannia. Like the Elensinia, an
almost complete secrecy had been maintained as to the ceremonies and teaching
of these mysteries. Yet we know the names of the gods; and, from an examination
of the various forms under which we find them, Lenormant has been able to discover
what he calls a Cabeiric group. They are four in number, thus differing essentially
from the Phoenician Kabirim, who, as their Semitic name shows, are also "great
gods", but are eight in number, representing the planets and the universe
formed from their union. The names of the Samothracian Cabeiri, as revealed by
Mnaseas of Patara and Dionysodorus, two historians of the Alexandrian Age, are
Axieros (=Demeter), Axiokersa (=Persephone), Axiokersos (=Hades), Casmilos (=Hermes).
Sometimes the two goddesses blend in one, viz. Earth (Varro, L. L. v. 58); sometimes
as Aphrodite and Venus; but to most of the Romans they represent Juno and Minerva
( Serv. ad Verg. Aen.iii. 12). Axiokersos appears further as Zeus, Uranus, Iupiter,
Apollo, Dionysus-Liber; and Casmilos as Mercurius or Eros. The group is a primal
mother goddess, whose issue are two divinities, a male and a female, from whom
again springs a fourth, Casmilos, the orderer of the universe.
Herodotus (ii. 51) is the first historian who mentions them. Though
known while Athens was flourishing (Aristoph. Pax, 277), it was not till Alexandrian
times that they really became famous. During this period Samothrace was a sort
of sacred island, as it was under the Roman dominion, for the idea was prevalent
that the Penates (Serv. ad Verg. Aen.ii. 325 Verg. Aen., iii. 12Verg. Aen., viii.
619) were identical with the gods of Samothrace. Legend told how that Dardanus,
Eetion, or Iasion, and Harmonia, wife of Cadmus, were children of Electra and
Zeus; that Iasion was given the mysteries by Zeus, married Cybele, and begat Corybas;
and after Iasion was received among the gods, Dardanus, Cybele, and Corybas brought
the mysteries to Asia. The legends vary in details, but almost all agree in making
Dardanus and Iasion sons of Zeus and Electra, and connecting the Samothracian
mysteries with them. It is to be remarked, in passing, that, while legend brought
the mysteries from Samothrace to Asia, there can be hardly any doubt that the
passage was the other way (cf. Strabo, x. 472); for the whole tenor of the worship
is Asiatic. We have many inscriptions of Romans who were initiated (C. I. L. iii.
713-721), and we hear besides of other Romans of high position who were initiated,
among them probably Cicero (Nat. Deor. i. 42, 119). Throughout the Roman period
the Cabeiric mysteries were held in high estimation, second only to the Eleusinian,
and they were still in existence in the time of Libanius.
From the earliest times, the Pelasgi are said to have sacrificed a
tenth of their produce to the Cabeiri in order to be preserved from famine. The
chief priest was probably the hierophantes mentioned by Galen (iii. 576); and
the purifying priest koes or koies. The basileus of the inscriptions was the highest
eponymous magistrate of Samothrace. As in all mysteries, the votary must be purified
in body and mind before initiation; and thus we have some evidence of auricular
confession. But, as far as we know, there was not any special preparatory intellectual
training required. Women and children appear to have been admitted as well as
men. Of the religious ceremonies themselves we may say we know nothing. They consisted
of dromena kai legomena. We hear of dances by the pii Samothraces, and the priests
who executed these dances were called Saoi (?). The Romans, who traced their Penates
to Samothrace, referred their Salii to these Saoi. There were two classes of votaries--
the mustai and the mustai eusebeis, mystae pii--the latter being apparently those
initiated for the first time. In the Samothracian mysteries, sacra accipere (paralambanein
ta musteria), which is the regular phrase for primary initiation, seems to be
applied to the higher grades. But the whole matter is quite obscure and unsettled.
The scholiast on Apollonius Rhodius tells us that the initiated wore
a purple band (tainia) round their waist (which reminds us of the Brahminical
thread); that Agamemnon quelled a mutiny of the Greeks by wearing one; and that
Odysseus, who wore a fillet for the band, was miraculously saved in shipwreck.
Preservation in times of peril, and especially in perils on the sea, was the chief
service that the Cabeiri were supposed to render to those who called on them by
name, and none knew their names except the initiated. It was the electric fires
of the Cabeiri that, according to the legend, lighted on the heads of the Dioscuri
during the Argonautic voyage. Diodorus further says, in the course of an important
discussion on the Cabeiri (v. 47-49), that those who were initiated became more
pious, more righteous, and in every respect better than they were before. On the
basis of this, Lenormant thinks it probable that the doctrine of rewards and punishments
in a future life was inculcated, though, with Lobeck, we may well suppose that
no more is necessarily implied than the impulse to virtue, which is always united
with religious emotion excited by impressive and gracious ceremonies (Cf. Apoll.
Rhod. i. 917).
The initiations at Samothrace took place at any time from May to September,
in this differing from the Eleusinian and more resembling the Orphic Mysteries.
There appears, however, to have been a specially great ceremony at the commencement
of August ( Lucull. 13).
From the manner in which Cicero speaks of the Samothracian mysteries
in the passage already cited, it is probable that he was initiated. He says of
their ceremonies, quibus explicatis ad rationemque revocatis, rerum magis natura
cognoscitur quam deorum. And the Cabeiri themselves do appear to be symbols of
the creation of the world. From the primeval mother emanate or differentiate themselves
two elements--matter (earth) and force (especially fire, celestial and terrestrial).
Indeed, the name Cabeiri appears to mean "the Burners", from kaiein,
and by the action of the former on the latter the ordered world is generated.
The etymological identity of the Pelasgian with the Phoenician Cabeiri is doubted
by Lenormant; the name of the latter being from a Semitic root, which in Arabic
appears as kebir, "great". Many hold that all the ceremonies of the
Cabeiri, and those of the other mysteries, were pure inventions of the priests,
nothing more than mere stories about gods. The reader, with regard to this phase
of the subject, is referred to the article Mysteria.
This text is from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. Cited Sep 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
SAMOS (Island) NORTH AEGEAN
The Samians, too, voted that their festival of Hera should be called Lysandreia. And the poet Choerilus was always kept in his retinue, to adorn his achievements with verse; while with Antilochus, who composed some verses in his honor, he was so pleased that he filled his cap with silver and gave it to him. And when Antimachus of Colophon and a certain Niceratus of Heracleia competed with one another at the Lysandreia in poems celebrating his achievements, he awarded the crown to Niceratus, and Antimachus, in vexation, suppressed his poem.
Festival of Hera at Samos
Festival celebrated in Samos, in honour of Eros.
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