Agrionia

Title
Agrionia
Publication Date
2013
Author(s)
Dillon, Matthew P
( author )
OrcID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-6874-0513
Email: mdillon@une.edu.au
UNE Id une-id:mdillon
Editor
Editor(s): Roger S Bagnall, Kai Brodersen, Craige B Champion, Andrew Erskine and Sabine R Huebner
Type of document
Entry In Reference Work
Language
en
Entity Type
Publication
Publisher
Blackwell Publishing Ltd
Place of publication
Chichester, United Kingdom
Edition
1
DOI
10.1002/9781444338386.wbeah17017
UNE publication id
une:14435
Abstract
A festival celebrated principally at Orchomenos but also at Chaeronea, both in central Greece. Plutarch in the second century CE provides the main details in an account of a specific celebration at Orchomenos (Plut. 'Mor'. 299e-300a). In the myth of the festival, three sisters, daughters of Minyas of Orchomenos, became subject to 'mania' (madness), the particular area of the god Dionysos. They craved human flesh and ripped apart alive and consumed one sister's son in a situation that parallels the depiction in Euripides' 'Bacchae' of the women followers of Dionysos at Thebes, in which the maenads tear apart live animals and the king of Thebes with their bare hands.
Link
Citation
The Encyclopedia of Ancient History, v.I. Ab-An, p. 224-224
ISBN
9781405179355
9781444338386
Start page
224
End page
224

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