(Redirected from Ancient Greek Religion)
'Greek religion' encompasses the collection of beliefs and rituals practiced in
Ancient Greece in form of
cult practices, there for the practical counterpart of
Greek mythology. Within the Greek world, religious practice varied enough so that one might speak of ''Greek religions.'' The cult practices of the Hellenes extended beyond mainland Greece, to the islands and coasts of
Ionia in Asia Minor, to
Magna Graecia (Sicily and southern Italy), and to scattered Greek colonies in the Western Mediterranean, such as
Massilia (Marseille). Greek examples tempered
Etruscan cult and belief to inform much of the
Roman religion.
There is a scholarly belief that early Greek religion came from, or was strongly influenced by,
shamanistic practices from the
steppes of
Central Asia to the Greek colony of
Olbia in
Scythia, on the northern shore of the
Black Sea, then all the way down to Greece.
Overview

Main sanctuaries of classical Greece.
It is perhaps misleading to speak of 'Greek religion.' In the first place, the Greeks did not have a term for "religion" in the sense of a dimension of existence distinct from all others, and grounded in the belief that the gods exercise authority over the fortunes of human beings and demand recognition as a condition for salvation. The Greeks spoke of their religious doings as "''ta theia''" (literally, "things having to do with the gods"), but this loose usage did not imply the existence of any authoritative set of "beliefs." Indeed, the Greeks did not have a word for "belief" in either of the two senses familiar to us. Since the existence of the gods was a given, it would have made no sense to ask whether someone "believed" that the gods existed. On the other hand, individuals could certainly show themselves to be more or less mindful of the gods, but the common term for that possibility was "''nomizein''", a word related to "''nomos''" ("custom," "customary distribution," "law"); to ''nomizein'' the gods was to acknowledge their rightful place in the scheme of things, and to act accordingly by giving them their due. Some bold individuals could ''nomizein'' the gods, but deny that they were due some of the customary observances. But these customary observances were so highly unsystematic that it is not easy to describe the ways in which they were normative for anyone.
First, there was no single truth about the gods. Although the different Greek peoples all recognized the 13 major gods (
Zeus,
Hera,
Poseidon,
Apollo,
Artemis,
Aphrodite,
Ares,
Hephaestus,
Athena,
Hermes,
Demeter, and
Hestia and
Dionysus), in different locations these gods had such different histories with the local peoples as often to make them rather distinct gods or goddesses. Different cities worshipped different deities, sometimes with
epithets that specified their local nature;
Athens had
Athena;
Sparta,
Nike and
Artemis;
Corinth was a center for the worship of
Aphrodite;
Delphi and
Delos had
Apollo;
Olympia had
Zeus, and so on down to the smaller cities and towns. Identity of names was not even a guarantee of a similar
cultus; the Greeks themselves were well aware that the Artemis worshipped at Sparta, the virgin huntress, was a very different deity from the Artemis who was a many-breasted
fertility goddess at
Ephesus. When literary works such as the
Iliad related conflicts among the gods because their followers were at war on earth, these conflicts were a celestial reflection of the earthly pattern of local deities. Though the worship of the major deities spread from one locality to another, and though most larger cities boasted temples to several major gods, the identification of different gods with different places remained strong to the end.
Second, there was no single true way to live in dealing with the gods. "The things that have to do with the gods" had no fixed center, and responsibilities for these things had a variety of forms. Each individual city was responsible for its own
temples and
sacrifices, but it fell to the wealthy to sponsor the "''leitourgeiai''" (literally, "works for the people," from which the word "
liturgy" comes) --the festivals, processions, choruses, dramas, and games held in honor of the gods. "''
Phratries''" (members of a large hereditary group) oversaw observances that involved the entire group, but fathers were responsible for sacrifices in their own households, and women often had autonomous religious rites.
Third, individuals had a great deal of autonomy in dealing with the gods. After some particularly striking experience, they could bestow a new title upon a god, or declare some particular site as sacred (cf.
Gen. 16:13-14
[1], where
Hagar does both). No authority accrued to the individual who did such a thing, and no obligation fell upon anyone else--only a new opportunity or possibility was added to the already vast and ill-defined repertoire for nomizeining the gods.
Finally, the lines between divinity and humanity were in some ways clearly defined, in other ways ambiguous. Setting aside the complicated genealogies in which gods sired children upon human women and goddesses bore the children of human lovers, after death historical individuals could receive cultic honors for their deeds during life--in other words, a
hero cult. Indeed, even during life, victors at the
Olympics, for instance, were considered to have acquired extraordinary power, and on the strength of their glory (
kudos), would be chosen as generals in time of war. Itinerant healers and leaders of initiatory rites would sometimes be called into a city to deliver it from disasters, without such a measure implying any disbelief in the gods or exaltation of such "saviors." To put it differently,
"''sôteria''" ("deliverance," "salvation") could come from divine or human hands and, in any event, the Greeks offered cultic honors to abstractions like Chance, Necessity, and Luck, divinities who stood in ambiguous relation to the personalized gods of the tradition. All in all, there was no "
dogma" or "
theology" in the Greek tradition, no
heresy, possibility of
schism, or any other social phenomenon articulated according to the background orientation to a codified order of religious understanding. Such variety in Greek religion reflects the long, complicated history of the Greek-speaking peoples.
Greek religion spans a period from
Minoan and
Mycenean periods to the days of
Hellenistic Greece and its ultimate conquest by the
Roman Empire. Religious ideas continued to develop over this time; by the time of the earliest major monument of Greek literature, the ''
Iliad'' attributed to
Homer, a consensus had already developed about who the major Olympian gods were. Still, changes to the canon remained possible; the ''Iliad'' seems to have been unaware of
Dionysus, a god whose worship apparently spread after it was written, and who became important enough to be named one of the
twelve chief Olympian deities, ousting the ancient goddess of the hearth,
Hestia. It has been written by scholars that Dionysus was a "foreign" deity, brought into Greece from outside local cults, external to Greece proper.
Quoting
Smith's
Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, article on Zeus, "According to the Homeric account Zeus, like the other Olympian gods, dwelt on Mount Olympus in Thessaly, which was believed to penetrate with its lofty summit into heaven itself (77. i. 221, &c., 354, 609, xxi. 438). He is called the father of gods and men (i. 514, v. 33 ; comp. Aeschyl. Sept. 512), the most high and powerful among the immortals, whom all others obey (II. xix. 258, viii. 10, &c.)."
In addition to the local cults of major gods, various places like crossroads and sacred
groves had their own
tutelary spirits. There were often
altars erected outside the precincts of the temples. Shrines like ''
hermai'' were erected outside the temples as well.
Heroes, in the original sense, were
demigods or deified humans who were part of local
legendary history; they too had local
hero-cults, and often served as
oracles for purposes of
divination. Religion was first and foremost traditional; the idea of novelty or innovation in worship was out of the question, almost by definition. Religion was the collection of local practices to honour the local gods.
Scholar Andrea Purvis has written on the private cults in Ancient Greece as a traceable point for many practices and worship of deities.
A major function of religion was the validation of the identity and culture of individual communities. The
myths were regarded by many as history rather than
allegory, and their embedded
genealogies were used by groups to proclaim their
divine right to the land they occupied, and by individual families to validate their exalted position in the
social order.
''Link title''
Mystery Religions
Those whose spiritual leanings were not satisfied by the public cult of the gods could turn to various
mystery religions. Here, they could find religious consolations that the traditional cultus could not provide: a chance at mystical awakening, a systematic religious doctrine, a map to the
afterlife, a communal worship, and a band of spiritual fellowship. Some of these mysteries, like the mysteries of
Eleusis and
Samothrace, were ancient and local. Others were spread from place to place, like the mysteries of
Dionysus. During the
Hellenistic period and the
Roman Empire, exotic mystery religions like those of
Osiris and
Mithras became widespread.
Hellenism
Main articles: Hellenistic religion
Christianization
Main articles: Christianization.
Main articles: End of Hellenic Religion
In the late 4th century, the Imperial courts were predominantly Christian, as was the populace;
Christianity tolerated relatively few internal quarrels; and a deep conviction that right belief,
orthodoxy, was what mattered to God. The Christian emperors closed pagan oracles, temples and end the pagan games by degrees, in a series of increasingly stringent decrees.
Finally, the public practice of the Greek religion was made illegal by the Emperor
Theodosius I and this was enforced by his successors. The Greek religion, stigmatized as "
paganism", the religion of country-folk (''pagani'') - other scholars suggest the force of ''paganus'' was "(mere) civilian" - survived only in rural areas and in forms that were submerged in Christianized rite and ritual, as Europe entered into the
Dark Ages.
The European
Renaissance scarcely touched Greece.
Renaissance humanism in Italy and western Europe included the rediscovery and reintroduction of the culture and learning of ancient Greek thought and philosophy, which included a renewed appreciation of the ancient religion and myth, reinterpreted from a humanist point-of-view.
Polytheistic revivals
Main articles: Hellenic neopaganism
"Hellenismos", as the religion was named by the Emperor Julian the Philosopher, has experienced a number of revivals, in the arts, humanities and spirituality of the
Renaissance as well as contemporary
Neopagan Hellenic polytheism.
Many
neo-pagan religious paths, such as
Wicca, use aspects of ancient Greek religions in their practice;
Hellenic polytheism focuses exclusively thereon, as far as the fragmentary nature of the surviving source material allows. It reflects
neo-Platonic-
Platonic speculation (which is represented in
Porphyry,
Libanius, and
Julian), as well as Classical cult practice.
The overwhelming majority of modern Greeks are Greek Orthodox. According to estimates, there are perhaps as many as 10,000 polytheist followers out of a total Greek population of 10 million. The neopagan revival is limited largely to the transient communities of the Greek islands. Temple worship is unknown, there are no real congregations.
Subsequent to a 2006 court decision that officially recognised the revived ancient Greek religion, followers aspire to have the right to perform marriages, baptisms and funerals as afforded to
druids in Britain who worship at
Stonehenge, and Danish believers in Thor and the Nordic gods.
[1]
Notes
★ Cf. E.R. Dodds ''The Greeks and the Irrational''
★ M.L. West, ibid., p.17. "In another place Herodotus tells us of a cult of Dionysos Baccheios, Dionysos of the Bacchoi, at Borysthenes (
Olbia), one of the noteworthy of all Greek colonies".
★ Xavier Riu, ''Dionysism and Comedy'', p. 104, "Dionysus comes from the Outside-- the other world".
★
Smith, William, ''
Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology'', 1870, article on Zeus,
[2]
References
★ Albertus Bernabé (ed.), ''Orphicorum et Orphicis similium testimonia et fragmenta. Poetae Epici Graeci. Pars II. Fasc. 1.''
Bibliotheca Teubneriana, München/Leipzig: K.G. Saur, 2004. ISBN 3-598-71707-5.
review of this book
★
Walter Burkert, ''Greek Religion.'' Boston: Harvard University Press, 1987. ISBN 0-674-36281-0. Widely regarded as the standard modern account.
★ Walter Burkert, ''
Homo necans'', 1972.
★
Cook, Arthur Bernard, ''Zeus: A Study in Ancient Religion'', (3 volume set), (1914-1925). New York, Bibilo & Tannen: 1964.
ASIN B0006BMDNA
★
★ Volume 1: ''Zeus, God of the Bright Sky'', Biblo-Moser,
June 1,
1964, ISBN 0-8196-0148-9 (reprint)
★
★ Volume 2: ''Zeus, God of the Dark Sky (Thunder and Lightning)'', Biblo-Moser,
June 1,
1964, ISBN 0-8196-0156-X
★
★ Volume 3: ''Zeus, God of the Dark Sky (earthquakes, clouds, wind, dew, rain, meteorites)''
★
Mircea Eliade, ''Shamanism: Archaic Techniques of Ecstasy'', 1951.
★ Lewis Richard Farnell, ''Cults of the Greek States'' 5 vols. Oxford; Clarendon 1896-1909. Still the standard reference.
★ Lewis Richard Farnell, ''Greek Hero Cults and Ideas of Immortality, 1921.
★ Jack Finegan, ''Myth and Mystery: An Introduction to the Pagan Religions of the Biblical World'', 1989. ISBN 0-8010-2160-X
★
George Grote, ''A History of Greece: From the earliest period to the close of the generation contemporary with Alexander the Great'', 1846.
★
Jane Ellen Harrison, ''Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion,'' 1903. An early classic, against which many modern accounts have reacted.
★ Jane Ellen Harrison, ''Themis: A Study of the Social Origins of Greek Religion'', 1912.
[3]
★ Jane Ellen Harrison, ''Epilegomena to the Study of Greek Religion'', 1921.
★
Karl Kerényi, ''The Gods of the Greeks''
★ Karl Kerényi, ''Dionysus: Archetypical Image of Indestructible Life''
★ Karl Kerényi, ''Eleusis: Archetypal Image of Mother and Daughter.'' The central modern accounting of the
Eleusinian Mysteries.
★ Karl Meuli, ''Scythica'', 1935.
★ Jon D. Mikalson, ''Athenian Popular Religion.'' Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 1983. ISBN 0-8078-4194-3.
★
William Mitford, ''The History of Greece'', 1784. Cf. v.1, Chapter II, ''Religion of the Early Greeks''
★ Clifford H. Moore, ''The Religious Thought of the Greeks, 1916.
★ Martin P. Nilsson, ''Greek Popular Religion'', 1940.
[4]
★ Martin P. Nilsson, ''History of Greek Religion'', 1949.
★ Robert Parker, ''Athenian Religion: A History'' Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1996. ISBN 0-19-815240-X.
★ Andrea Purvis, ''Singular Dedications: Founders and Innovators of Private Cults in Classical Greece'', 2003.
★ William Ridgeway, ''The Dramas and Dramatic Dances of non-European Races in special Reference to the Origin of Greek Tragedy, with an Appendix on the Origin of Greek Comedy'', 1915.
★ William Ridgeway, ''Origin of Tragedy with Special Reference to the Greek Tragedians'', 1910.
★ Xavier Riu, ''Dionysism and Comedy'', Lanham: Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, 1999. ISBN 0-8476-9442-9.
★
Erwin Rohde, ''Psyche: The Cult of Souls and Belief in Immortality among the Greeks'', 1925.
★
William Smith, ''
Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology'', 1870,
[5]
★ William Smith, ''
Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities'', 1870.
[6]
★
Martin Litchfield West, ''The Orphic Poems'', 1983.
★ Martin Litchfield West, ''Early Greek philosophy and the Orient'', Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1971.
★ Martin Litchfield West, ''The East Face of Helicon: west Asiatic elements in Greek poetry and myth'', Oxford [England] ; New York: Clarendon Press, 1997.
See also
★
Supreme Council of Ethnikoi Hellenes
★
Greek mythology
★
Religion in ancient Rome
★
Mythology of same-sex love
★
Paganism
★
Roman religion
★
Roman mythology