The Eleusinian
Mysteries:
Healing and
Transformation
Dionysos
&
His Female Companions
CCC
Dionysos was Zeus's youngest immortal son. In
a group of the tales concerning him, he was born (as also was
Herakles, the son of Alkmene), of a mortal mother. In other stories
Dionysos was held to be a son of Persephone, and received the surname
of Chthonios, "the subterranean".
One of the names given to the child's father
is that of Hades. When Persephone had eaten the pomegranate seed she
left her husband only reluctantly or, according to another tale, she
never left him at all. She was honored and sacrosanct queen of the
Realm of the Dead, and did not allow herself to be carried off by
Theseus and Peirithoos. Furthermore, the royal couple of the
Underworld proved themselves worthy of the dead (or so at least, the
uninitiated were told) by remaining childless, like death itself. The
very name of Hades conveys only a negative impression, according with
men's colorless picture of the Underworld. This represents, however,
only one aspect of what was, in fact, a great god. But we know that
Persephone's husband was also called Zeus Katachthonios,
"subterranean Zeus", and that it was Zeus who seduced his daughter.
As Katachthonios, Zeus was the father of the subterranean Dionysos,
and in the same quality he was also called Zagreus, "the great
hunter". This was also one of he names of his son. For us Dionysus
had many & various forms. Even he did not actually appear as a
mask - carried by men or hung up to be worshipped - he had a
peculiar, fascinating mask-face. Ancient portrayals show him holding
in his hand the kantharos, a wine-jar with large handles, and
occupying the place where one would expect to see Hades. On a vase by
the archaic master Xenokles we see, on one side, Zeus, Poseidon and
Hades, each with his emblems of power, the last has his head turned
back to front and, on the other side, the subterranean Dionysos
welcoming Persephone, who is obviously being sent to him by Hermes
and her mother. Dionysos is striding forward to meet his bride: a
bearded, dark bridegroom, with the kantharos in his hand, against a
background of grapes. Or is this the scene of parting? If so, one
sees that the goddess will return to this spouse.
In most tales, however, Dionysos appears as a
tender boy, the son of his mother. She, indeed, immediately
disappears and is soon replaced by loving nurses. We can recognize
the two aspects that Zeus also displayed: the aspect, on the one
hand, of the father and husband, and the aspect, on the other hand,
of the son of the divine child. Throughout mythology other beings
besides Zeus and Dionysos had this double aspect. But no other god so
much appeared to be a second Zeus as Dionysos did: a Zeus of women,
admittedly, whereas the Olympian was much more a Zeus of men. The
more characteristic animals of these two gods - in the forms of their
worship, that is to say, and in certain stories of them, in which
even today they are scarcely distinguishable were the serpent and the
bull, both of which appeared in the Mediterranean earlier than the
horse.
Dionysos
Demeter & Persephone
C
The tale that Zeus mated with Persephone's
mother, and later with Persephone herself, his own daughter in the
form of a serpent, has been preserved only in an Orphic story, and
only in a few fragments. The place of these marriages, and the births
that resulted from them, was a cave. The goddess by whom Zeus begat
Persphone was originally his mother Rhea: Demeter appears as a third
party interposed between the mother and daughter, both of whom
appeared earlier in Greece than she did. She is described as Rhea's
alter ego, yet she is also identified with Persephone: Zeus begat
Dionysos, so it is expressly stated, by Demeter or by
Persephone.
Here, first, is a late poetical version of
the tale: Demeter came from Crete to Sicily, where, near the spring
of Kyane, she discovered a cave. There she hid her daughter
Persephone and set as guardians over her two serpents that at other
times were harnessed to her chariot. In the cave the maiden worked in
wool (the customary occupation for maidens), under the protection of
Pallas Athene, in her sacred citadel at Athens. Persephone began
weaving a great web, a robe for her father or her mother, which was a
picture of the whole world. While she was engaged in this work Zeus
came to her in the shape of a serpent, and he begat by his daughter
that god who, in the Orphic stories, was to be his successor, the
fifth ruler of the world. This was also revealed to us in a hymn of
the followers of Orpheus in which they told stories of Zeus's
marriage with Persephone. According to them, this was not a case of a
seduction carried out against the mother's will: it all happened
(even Zeus's metamorphosis into a serpent), as Demeter had intended,
and at her instigation. This shows us from what ancient times the
original story must date: from times when it was still mothers who
gave their daughters to husbands, and not the fathers who had
authority and allowed their daughters to be abducted. The birth of
the son and successor to the throne actually took place in the
maternal cave. A late ivory relief shows the bed in the cave: the bed
in which the horned child (the horns signify that he is the son of
Persephone), had just been born to the goddess.
This same illustration, late but after an
ancient original, also shows the subsequent scene in the cave, with
the enthroned child: the enthronement is an ancient ceremony in the
mysteries of the great mother Rhea and her Korybantes, or whatever
else her male companions were called. In this illustration they are
two Kouretes, who dance round the throne with drawn swords while a
kneeling woman holds a mirror in front of the delighted child. The
Orphic story also named the toys of the new ruler of the world: toys
that became symbols of those rites of initiation which were first
undergone by the divine boy, the first Dionysos: dice, ball, top,
golden apples, bull-roarer and wool. The last two played a part in
the ceremony of initiation, the other had more to do with the tale
itself. This tale can now be told only in the version adopted by the
followers of Orpheus, who introduced the Titans into the story. There
is, however, another version according to which it was not
necessarily the Titans who behaved so cruelly to the son of Zeus and
Persephone, but simply "earth-born beings", without nearer
description. It is known, however, that the Kouretes were included
amongst such beings. It is also known that of the sons of the Great
Mother the two older ones were always hostile to the third. The
number of the Titans who murdered the first Dionysos is expressly
stated to have been two.
In the Orphic continuation of the story, the
Kouretes were replaced, as I have indicated, by the Titans. It was
told that they surprised the child-god as he was playing with the
toys. Jealous Hera had instigated them to this: it was she who on a
previous occasion had sent the Kouretes against Epaphos, the
Dionysos-like son of Zeus and the cow-shaped Io. The Titans had
whitened their faces with chalk. They came like spirits of the dead
from the Underworld, to which Zeus had banished them. They attacked
the playing boy, tore him into seven pieces and threw these into a
cauldron standing on a tripod. When the flesh was boiled, they began
roasting it over the fire on seven spits.
One would be inclined to regard the meal
prepared in this fashion as a cannibal meal, were it not that the
horns worn by the torn-up, boiled and roasted child suggest that the
victim was in fact a sacrificed kid or small calf, the former animal
being used at certain ceremonies and in certain regions, and the
other animal in other regions. They were treated exactly as the god
was treated in this story. In one tale Zeus himself appeared at the
Titans' meal, drawn thither by the smell of roasting. With his
lightning he hurled the Titans back into Tartaros and gave the
child-god's limbs to Apollon, who took them to Parnassus and set them
beside his own tripod at Delphi. In another tale it seems that when
Zeus smote the Titans with his lightning they had already eaten the
flesh of Dionysos. They must have been hurled back into the
Underworld, since in the Orphic hymn they are invoked as the
subterranean ancestors of mankind. But from the steam caused by the
flash of lightning, which set them on fire, was formed a sort of ash.
The ash turned into that substance from which the followers of
Orpheus taught that men were made. This teaching, however, is of much
later date than the story of the sufferings of the horned
child-god.
The story was also told: The boiled limbs of
the first Dionysos, the son of Demeter, went into the earth. The
earth-born beings had torn him to pieces and boiled him, but Demeter
gathered the limbs together. This may, however, be a story concerning
the creation of the vine. We learnt from the followers of Orpheus
that Dionysos's last gift was wine, and indeed he himself by then
assumed the name Oinos, "Wine". It was Zeus who brought fulfillment,
but it was Dionysos who completed the fulfillment or, to use a modern
expression, "set the crown on the world's creation". But this notion,
too, is of later date. In the original tale the boiled limbs of the
god were burnt( with the exception of a single limb), and we may
presume that the vine arose from the ashes. All tales spoke of this
exception of one limb, which was devoured neither by the Titans nor
by the fire nor by the earth. A goddess was present at the meal in
later tales, the goddess Pallas Athene, and she hid the limb in a
covered basket. Zeus took charge of it. It was said to have been
Dionysos's heart. This statement contains a pun: for it is also said
that Zeus entrusted the kradiaios Dionysos to the goddess Hipta, so
that she might carry her head. "Hipta" was a name in Asia Minor for
the great mother Rhea, and Kradiaios is a word of double meaning: it
can be derived from the kradia, "heart", and from the krade,
"fig-tree", in which latter derivation it means an object made of
fig-wood. The basket on Hipta's head was a liknon, a winnowing-fan,
such as was carried on the head of festal processions and contained a
phallus under a pile of fruit, Dionysos himself having made the
phallus of fig-wood. It also reported that the Liknites, "he in the
winnowing fan", was repeatedly "awakened" by the Thyiades, the women
who served Dionysos on Mount Parnassus.
Author unknown
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