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VII. Transformations
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 February 2016
Extract
Although we have already noticed various changes in the period under survey, we, too, have been insufficiently (Ch. I.1) able to escape a certain static view. In this last chapter, therefore, we will concentrate on changes in Greek religion. We first discuss the Eleusinian mysteries (§ 1), then Orphic ideas and Bacchic mysteries (§ 2), and conclude with a sketch of the more structural transformations during the transition to the Hellenistic period (§3).
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References
Notes
1. For an excellent, if perhaps too static, view see now Burkert, W., Ancient Mystery Cults (Cambridge Mass, and London, 1987)Google Scholar ~ Antike Mys terien (Munich, 1990); F. Graf, ‘Mystéria’, in Bremmer, Encyclopaedia of Ancient Religions. Mithraism: most recently, Turcan, R., Mithra et le Mithraicisme (Paris, 1993)Google Scholar; K. Dowden, ‘Mithraic mysteries’, in Bremmer, Encyclopaedia of Ancient Religions.
2. Full reconstruction: Burkert, Homo necans, pp. 248–97; add K. Clinton, ‘The sanctuary of Demeter and Kore at Eleusis’, in Marinatos/Hägg, Greek Sanctuaries, pp. 110–24. Degrees: Dowden, K., ‘Grades in the Eleusinian Mysteries’, Rev. Hist. Rel. 197 (1980), 409-27CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Iconography: Clinton, K., Myth and Cult. The Iconography of the Eleusinian Mysteries (Stockholm, 1992)Google Scholar.
3. The enigmatic detail is only supplied by the Gnostic ‘Naassenian’, who is quoted by the third-century church father Hippolytus in his Refutation of All Heresies (5.8.39f), for whose Gnostic sources see Mansfield, J., Heresiography in Context (Leiden, 1992), pp. 318-23CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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13. Graf (n. 11), 590; J. Vinogradov, ‘Zur sachlichen und geschichtlichen Deutung der Orphikerplättchen von Olbia’, in Borgeaud, Orphisme, pp. 77–86; Zhmud, L.’, ‘Orphism and Graffiti from Olbia’, Hermes 120 (1992), 159-68Google Scholar.
14. For these later poems see the many studies of Luc Brisson, now conveniently collected in his Orphée et l’Orphisme dans l’Antiquité gréco-romaine (London, 1995).
15. The text has been published in ZPE 47 (1982), after p. 300; see also West, Orphic Poems, pp. 75–7. At a conference on the papyrus at Princeton in May 1993 Prof. K. Tsantsanoglou presented two additional fragments, which precede those already published.
16. Night was also first with Silence in Antiphanes’ comedy Theogony (?), cf. Kassel, L. and Austin, C., Poetae comici Graeci 2 (Berlin and New York, 1991), pp. 366fGoogle Scholar. Eudemus: Brisson, L., ‘Damascius et l’Orphisme’, in Borgeaud, Ph. (ed), Orphisme et Orphée en l’honneur de Jean Rudhardt (Geneva, 1991), pp. 157–209, esp. 201fGoogle Scholar.
17. Cf. Robert, L., Opera minora selecta 7 (Amsterdam, 1990), pp. 569-73Google Scholar, with a discussion of, surely Orphic, dedications to Night. For Night first see also Graf (n. 11), 588.
18. As is shown by Dirk Obbink (n. 9) against West, Orphic Poems, p. 251.
19. Lloyd-Jones, H., Greek Epic, Lyric, and Tragedy (Oxford, 1990), pp. 80–105 Google Scholar.
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21. Cf. G. Casadio, ‘La metempsicosi tra Orfeo e Pitagora’, in Borgeaud, Orphisme, pp. 119–55. For an ‘Orphic katabasis’ see Lloyd-Jones, H., Greek Comedy, Hellenistic Literature, Greek Religion and Miscellanea (Oxford, 1990), pp. 333-42Google Scholar; Horsfall, N., ZPE 96 (1993), 17fGoogle Scholar.
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23. Cf. Zuntz, G., Persephone (Oxford, 1971), pp. 277–393 Google Scholar (list on p. 286); see also the list in Graf, ‘Dionysian Eschatology’, 257f; add the unpublished Lesbian text announced in Arch. Reports 1988–9, 93; this chapter, note 26. Bottini, A., Archeologia della salvezza (Milano, 1992)Google Scholar, is useful for the archaeological background of the Italian tablets.
24. The Hipponium tablet (published in 1974) already mentions ‘mystai and bacchoi’, see most recently Bernabé, A., ‘El poema òrfico de Hipponion’, in Férez, J. A. López (ed), Estudios actuales sobre textos griegos (Madrid, 1991), pp. 219-35Google Scholar.
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27. Bacchic mysteries: Versnel, , Inconsistencies 1, pp. 150-5Google Scholar; Burkert, ‘Bacchic Teletai in the Hellenistic Age’, in Carpenter/Faraone, Masks of Dionysus, pp. 259–75.
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29. This may confirm the suggestion, with some hesitations, of Graf, ‘Dionysian . . . Eschatology’, 250 that the leaves presuppose the funeral. But would these ‘priests’ always have been available in the case of sudden deaths outside big cities? Or were the leaves sometimes handed out during an initiation for later use at the funeral?
30. Cumae: Turcan, R., ‘Bacchoi ou Bacchants’, in L’Association dionysiaque dans les sociétés anciennes (Rome, 1986), pp. 227-46Google Scholar; Casadio, G., ‘I Cretesi di Euripide e l’ascesi Orfica’, Didattica del Classico 2 (1990), 278–310, esp. 293fGoogle Scholar.
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32. Orphic books: Détienne, L’écúture d’Orphée, pp. 109–15. Sophists: Mansfeld, J., Mnemosyne IV 33 (1980), 94 n. 345Google Scholar.
33. Eleusis: Graf, Eleusis und die orphische Dichtung Athens. Thebes: Moret, ‘Circé tisseuse’.
34. For a new overview see Parker, R., ‘Early Orphism’, in Powell, A., The Greek World (London, 1985)Google Scholar, to which I am much indebted.
35. Apollo: West, M. L., Studies in Aeschylus (Stuttgart, 1990), pp. 34–43 CrossRefGoogle Scholar. Derveni papyrus: this is shown on the basis of Philochorus FGrH 328 F 185 by Dirk Obbink (n. 9).
36. Versnel, Inconsistencies 1, p. 108; especially, Dirk Obbink (n. 9).
37. Cf. Henrichs, A., ‘The Sophists and Hellenistic Religion: Prodicus as the Spiritual Father of the Isis Aretalogies’, HSCP 88 (1984), 139-58Google Scholar.
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47. Attraction: Humphreys, ‘Dynamics’, p. 107. For Pan and Nymphs: van Straten, F. T., ‘Daikrates’ dream’, Bull. Ant. Besch. 51 (1976), 1–38 Google Scholar; Connor, W. R., ‘Seized by the Nymphs: Nympholepsy and Symbolic Expression in Classical Greece’, Class. Ant. 1 (1988), 155-89CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
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