Title: Women and Religion
1Women and Religion in Classical Athens
2Hera
- goddess of marriage
- city protector
- mythic embodiment of positive and negative
potentials of marriage
3Hera
- Ixion is punished eternally for trying to rape
Hera. - The womans sexual virtue represents the
integrity of the household. - An assault on her is an assault on the household.
- In Athens, seduction was a worse crime than rape
. . .
4Athena
Athenas special powers of military prowess and
wisdom derived from her special relationship to
Zeus, and symbolize the magnitude and beneficence
of female potency when submitted to benign male
control.
5Artemis
Artemis, the huntress, remained forever a virgin,
roaming the wilderness, a liminal and often
threatening figure
Yet another aspect of this goddess was to promote
the fertility of animals, aid in childbirth, and
oversee the transition of virgins into brides
6Artemis
Prepubescent Athenian girls ran races and did
bear dances at her sanctuary at Brauron
7Aphrodite
- goddess of love
- embodies intoxicating sexuality and beauty.
- prayed to by married women men might favor Eros
- in Sappho, personally accessible
- In myth, often inconsequential
- Focus of both private worship and public cult
- Other duties civic business ...
8Terracotta sphinx head temple of Artemis
Laphria in Calydon c. 630 BC
Female Monsters
Female monsters also proliferated in Greek
mythology the boogeywoman Mormo, the sphinx,
Roman copy of a Greek sphinx with victim
9And the Gorgons (Medusa is the most famous), a
vagina dentata with an apotropaic function . . .
Sirens with their deadly singing
10Womens Rituals
Womens main civic role was in religious rituals,
and women were central to the family and
household rituals that ensured the continued
favor of the gods and right living in a complex
world.
11Womens Rituals
Women maintained the household rituals. Here a
woman brings offerings outside to the altar in
front of her house.
12Womens Rituals
A wife tends her household altar (painted inside
a wine cup)
13Womens Rituals
Women were responsible for the daily and cyclical
duties of maintaining family and household cult,
thus keeping the world running smoothly. This
woman brings offerings to the grave of a family
member.
14Religious rituals in which young girls
participated
Once I was seven I became an arrephoros. Then at
ten I became a grain grinder for the
goddess. After that, wearing a saffron robe, I
was a bear at Brauron. And as a lovely young girl
I once served as a basket-bearer (kanephoros),
wearing a string of figs. Aristophanes,
Lysistrata
- Rituals provide
- opportunities for social connections
- value in the community
- models for relationships and transitions
- Rituals symbolize
- womens work roles
- womens fertility
- womens association with nature
15Womens roles in the Panathenaic procession
- women made the robe dedicated to Athena and
probably carried it as well - The (hereditary, aristocratic) priestess of
Athena Polias (the citys patron deity)
officiated. (Gods were typically served by
priests, goddesses by priestesses.) - women carried other ritual equipment (stools are
shown)
- Women played roles in sacrificial processions
that reflect their cultures appropriate symbolic
duties for women. - the kanephoros (an aristocratic virgin girl)
carried a basket of grain in which the
sacrificial knife was held - women carried jars of water for use in the
sacrifice
16Womens Rituals
The sacred procession of the Panathenaia led up
into the acropolis and around the Parthenon
before ending at the altar in front of the
building.
17The Parthenon Frieze
The Parthenon Frieze shows the robe woven by
Athenian women dedicated to the goddess at the
Panathenaia
18The Parthenon Frieze
Women carry stools in the procession
19The Parthenon Frieze
Marshals direct young girls in the ceremonial
procession (emphasizing male supervision of
female symbolic roles)
20Parthenon Frieze
The Parthenon Frieze
Girls carry vessels to aid in the ritual libations
21Thesmophoria
- 3-day festival in October/November
- held a central role in state cult
- celebrated by adult, married citizen women (or
women who had been married) - held on the Pnyx (where the all-male, political
Assembly usually met) and displaced the Assembly - the women camped there the whole time
- Schedule of festivities
- Day 1 Anodos (way up) procession carrying
sacred items - Day 2 Nesteia (fast) Demeters mourning, or
recreation of prehistorica way of life - Day 3 Kalligeneia (beautiful offspring)
celebration with sacrifices and feasts
22Thesmophoria
Before the ritual, piglets and phallic cakes were
buried on the site. During the festival, they
were removed (nicely rotted) to be mixed with
seed grain and ensure fertility of
crops. Piglet was slang for vagina. Women
observed chastity just before and during the
festival, and celebrated with obscenity and
joking. Contradictory?
23Thesmophoria Modern interpretations
- Male attempt to control feminine fertility, a
ritual taming of womens sexual organs
(Golden/Blundell) - Contradictions inherent within a society which
relegates the female sex to the periphery of the
political-religious space but due to its own
complex, polarized ideas about male and female,
must give women a determining role in the
reproduction of the entire system (Detienne) - A double bind . . . demands chastity from the
wife but insists on her sexual nature but
Thesmophoria also offers the initiation of the
female into her own interior space (Zeitlin) - establishment of a society of women through
which they were able to demonstrate their
independence and responsibility
(Burkert/Blundell) - Women saw in their religious actions involving
grain and sprouts a celebration of their female
power over life and sexuality within the
peripheral and annoying constraints of male
pretensions (Winkler)
24Adoneia
25The Pythia at Delphi
- Chosen from maidens (later, older women)
- prophesied / transmitted Apollos will
- Relationship between Pythia and priests?
26Anthesteria
3-day Athenian festival much of the second day
was devoted to wine tasting and drinking
contests, open to all men above the age of three,
slave and free alike. Basilinna has ritual
marriage with Dionysus
27Anthesteria
28Religion can be fun Anthesteria
29Lenaia
- civic wine festival
- archaic image of Dionysus
- women prominent in rituals
- January, month of marraige
30Lenaia
31Religion can be fun Maenads
32The Worship of Dionysus
Dionysiac celebration involved loss of self and
ecstasy
33The Worship of Dionysus
Greek mythology emphasized the foreignness of
Dionysus, but archeological evidence suggests he
is as old as the other Greek gods. As god of
wine, he appealed to men as well one 3-day
Athenian festival, the Anthesteria, devoted much
of the second day to wine tasting and drinking
contests, open to all men above the age of three,
slave and free alike Major civic festivals, such
as the dramatic festivals of Lenaia and Dionysia,
as well as the more sober parts of the
Anthesteria, emphasized Dionysus role as a god
whose power supported a well balanced life, both
family and civic.
34The Worship of Dionysus
Maenadism provided women with a temporary
respite from the routine and isolation of their
domestic existence, but it also allowed them,
through their experience of ecstasy, to a mode of
expression which gave free reign to pent-up
emotions and hostilities (Blundell)
The term maenad (mad-woman) signified
possession by a god but at the same time carries
derogatory connotations, implying masculine
disapproval of uncontrolled feminine behavior
(Blundell)
35The Worship of Dionysus
Here mythic Maenads practice the ritual of
omophagia, eating raw, as they tear apart the
Theban King Pentheus, who opposed the rituals of
Dionysus.
- The violent and sexual images of Dionysiac
worship show gender tensions implicit in Greek
society - women nature (which can be terrifying)
- women away from home are wild and dangerous
- women symbolize scary ideas like self-loss and
unreason
36The Worship of Dionysus
A large body of vase painting revels in mythic
scenes of Dionysiac worship and erotic pursuit of
Maenads.
But does this show us anything other than mens
erotic fantasies?
37The Worship of Dionysus
While maenads are often shown under sexual attack
by Satyrs, as shown here, they defend themselves
effectively . . . Perhaps emphasizing that the
cult was sexual only in fantasy real maenads
were faithful wives . . .
38The Worship of Dionysus
How many real women worshipped Dionysus as
maenads? Evidence suggests the practice was
more common in some parts of the Peloponnese and
Asia Minor than in Athens Pausanias mentions
Athenian women who traveled to Delphi, performing
dances at set points along the way, in the 2nd
century CE could this reflect earlier
practices? Feminine solidarity is reflected in
the story of the women of Amphissa
39The Worship of Dionysus
I. M. Lewis, in a study of possession in many
different societies, argues that rituals like
Maenadism allow women (and other disenfranchised
groups) to express their pent-up frustrations at
their subjected social role, but is only
tolerated because the men in power recognize this
outlet as essential for the maintenance of the
status quo. Zeitlin (Blundell) Dionysiac
worship which incorporates rituals of inversion
(such as abandonment of home and children,
demonstrations of aggression, and eating of raw
flesh) would have conformed to the male view of
womens nature as a subversive and less fully
integrated element of society. This supports a
negative ideology of the female as unruly and
disorderly
40finis