Bacchanalia

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The Bacchanal by Peter Paul Rubens

The term Bacchanalia describes the initiatory and celebratory rites dedicated to the Roman god Bacchus (a variant of the Greek Dionysus). These practices, which were intimately tied to the soteriological aspirations of their adherents, were largely inherited from Greek and Etruscan mystery religions, save their notable incorporation of carnality (through the use of inebriation and sexual license). Though extant on the Italian peninsula since approximately 600 B.C.E., these practices began to truly flourish during the 3rd and 2nd centuries B.C.E. The dramatic increase in the popularity of these rites, coupled with the fact that they encouraged the involvement of various "lesser" citizens (such as slaves, women, and youths), led the Roman Senate to pass an edict banning all unauthorized worship of Bacchus in 186 B.C.E.

The derogatory and potentially fallacious descriptions of the Bacchanalia that abound in classical materials (such as the writings of Livy) have caused the term to become synonymous with heedless corporeal excess — a connotation that may or may not be true to the original religious context.

Bacchus

Main article: Dionysus

Bacchus was the Roman characterization of the Greek Dionysus, a deity who represented the power of intoxication and ecstasy (literally "being outside the self").[1] He was known as the Liberator (Gk: Eleutherios / Lat: Liber), freeing individuals from their day-to-day lives through drunkenness, madness, or artistic expression.[2] Paradoxically, he was also viewed as the promoter of civilization, a lawgiver, and lover of peace — as well as the patron deity of agriculture and the theatre. The divine mission of Dionysus was to bring an end to care and worry.[3]

Bacchus/Dionysus was an important figure in the religious imagination of the Greeks and Romans, as he was thought to represent the union between the realms of the living and the dead (as per the two mythic stories of his death and rebirth).[4] This chthonic role was especially pronounced in Roman religion, which spurred on the development of the Bacchanalia — a rebirth/renewal festival with a basis in the Greek Mystery Religions.

The Bacchanalia

As noted above, the bacchanalia were the ecstatic, mystical festivals central to the cult of Bacchus introduced into Rome from lower Italy by way of Etruria (ca. 200 B.C.E.). Here, Dionysos was merged with the local fertility god Liber, the personification of joyous personal freedom. The Roman Bacchic Cult typically emphasized the sexual aspects of the religion, and invented terrifying, chthonic ordeals for initiation into its Mysteries. These festivals, which included both cultic initiations and general revelry, occurred on March 16th and 17th in the grove of Simila near the Aventine Hill and were generally restricted to female participants.

Archaeological findings reveal that Dionysus or Bacchus, as he was called by the Romans, was known and popular in Italy as early as the 6th century. Evidence shows that Bacchic rites of initiation were a form of private, not public, worship and were often performed informally by small local or family organizations. The emphasis of the ceremonies was preparation for an afterlife of punishments and/or bliss. By the end of the 3rd or early 2nd century, the cult had taken on the fervor of a religious missionary movement. The initiated held secret meetings and had secret signs by which they recognized each other, and changes were made to the initiation ceremonies, or Bacchanalia. Wine-drinking and feasting were added to the religious component, which led to ecstatic fanaticism and the practice of scandalous behavior. At first, the rites were imparted to a few, but soon they were propagated widely in order to gain many adherents.[5]

Though the cult was forcibly constrained by governmental fiat (as described below). It was revived in a slightly tamer form under Julius Caesar around 50 B.C.E., with his one time ally Mark Anthony becoming an enthusiastic devotee and lending the movement much popular support in the process. The Bacchanalian festivals, which were popular enough to be exported to most Romanised provinces, remained in existence, along with their carnivalesque street processions, until at least the time of Saint Augustine (ca. 400 C.E.).[6]

The Banning of the Bacchanalia (186 B.C.E.)

Bacchanalia (Auguste Léveque)

The explosive growth and pervasive popularity of the Bacchanalian cult led to an eventual (and perhaps unavoidable) conflict with the Roman authorities. The negative emotions aroused by the movement were only exacerbated by the sect's secrecy, as their enigmatic nature prompted many to assume the most lurid possibilities concerning their gatherings.[7] This perspective is immortalized in the writings of Livy, which simply accepted the most heinous of the allegations as gospel truth:

When conducted under Roman auspices, the festival had earlier been confined to women, but in the grove of Stimula young men were being initiated into the cult, and there were allegations of both heterosexual and homosexual licence. Though previously restricted to three days a year, the ceremonies were now being conducted five times a month; moreover, the proceedings were being held in darkness. Allegations of dire misconduct were circulating, including charges of murder of unwilling initiates, forging of the wills of the dead, and perjury.[8]

The rising climate of public hysteria concerning these "immoral" and "dangerous" practices (in addition to concerns that the initiates were using these meetings to hatch political conspiracies) led to an emergency meeting of the Roman Senate — the so-called Senatus consultum de Bacchanalibus — that issued an edict prohibiting unauthorized Bacchanalian observances throughout all of Italy in 186 B.C.E. In spite of the severe punishment inflicted on those found in violation of this decree (Livy claims there were more executions than imprisonment), the Bacchanalia survived in Southern Italy long past the repression.

Modern scholars hold Livy's account in doubt and believe that the Senate acted against the Bacchants for one of three reasons: first, because women occupied leadership positions in the cult and thus undercut traditional Roman family values; second, because slaves and the poor were among the cult's members, which raised the specter of populist revolution; and third, as a display of the Senate's supreme power over affairs of state — a potentially vital deterrent against the personal ambitions of returning generals from the Punic campaigns.[9] These multifarious motives are well summarized by Sarolta Takács:

In Livy's narrative, the cult of Bacchus represents disorder and madness while the state represented by the (all male) Senate stands for order and sanity. The account stresses moral and even sexual debaucheries committed by Bacchants. If we had only Livy's narrative we would conclude that the Roman Senate feared and reacted against the cult for the same reasons as Euripides' Pentheus. The inscription from Tiriolo, however, points to a political reason: the Senate wanted control over the cult and demonstrated its political power over all of Italy. In Rome, where politics and religion were intertwined, such control belonged traditionally to the ruling elite and in the case of Bacchic worship senatorial control over the cult needed to be established. There was a desire to curb Hellenistic influences on public life, a zeal to subdue, bring into line, and structure a "foreign" cult. Or, in terms of power, Rome reigned supreme over her immediate neighbors and allies. The high number of executions leaves me with the feeling, though, that in 186 B.C.E., as it happens too often in human history, religion served as a smoke-screen. That those who were singled out for undermining the ruling authority, Rome, were executed not for their participation in a cult but so that a political order could prevail.[10]

Notes

  1. Mikalson, 92.
  2. Sutton, p.2, mentions Dionysus as The Liberator in relation to the City Dionysia festivals.
  3. Fox, p.221. Fox cites Euripides as a direct source for this statement. Euripedes, Bacchae, Choral II, lines 379-381: "[370] Holiness, queen of the gods, Holiness, who bear your golden wings along the earth, do you hear these words from Pentheus? Do you hear his unholy [375] insolence against Bromius, the child of Semele, the first deity of the gods at the banquets where guests wear beautiful garlands? He holds this office, to join in dances, [380] to laugh with the flute, and to bring an end to cares, whenever the delight of the grape comes at the feasts of the gods, and in ivy-bearing banquets [385] the goblet sheds sleep over men." [1]
  4. For instance, Xavier Riu, in his Dionysism and Comedy notes that "Dionysus presides over communications with the dead" (105). See also: M. P. Nilsson's The Dionysiac Mysteries of the Hellenistic and Roman age, [Acta Instituti Atheniensis Regni Sueciae, series in 80, V.], (Lund: Gleerup, 1957), for an extensive discussion of the god's chthonic character.
  5. Tripolitis, 24.
  6. Tripolitis, 25.
  7. As it stands currently, there is simply insufficient evidence to characterize the reality of the Bacchanalian cult. However, extant sources imply that the sexual promiscuity that pervaded Dionysian myths was not an accurate reflection of cultic realities, as per Heinrichs: "The satyrs of myth did not intrude into Dionysiac cult except when the mythical entourage of Dionysus was artificially revived, for instance in the Bacchic pageant staged by Ptolemy II in Alexandria, or during the Bacchic reception which the Ephesians gave Mark Antony when he made his entry as the New Dionysus, or in the masked dances in honor of Dionysus which became fashionable in Asia Minor in the imperial period. But on occasions like these, the fake satyrs lacked the active wantonness of their mythical models, and their female companions in maenadic costume had nothing to fear" (136).
  8. Livy, summarized by P. G. Walsh, "Making a Drama out of a Crisis: Livy on the Bacchanalia," Greece & Rome (2nd Series), Vol. 43(2) (October 1996), 188-203. 188.
  9. Takács (2000) provides a detailed summary of these theories. See also: Erich Gruen, Studies in Greek Culture and Roman Policy (Leiden, 1990), for more details.
  10. Takács, 310.

References
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This article incorporates text from the Encyclopædia Britannica Eleventh Edition, a publication now in the public domain.

  • Sutton, Dana F. Ancient Comedy. Twayne Publishers, 1993. ISBN 0805709576
  • Fox, William Sherwood, The Mythology of All Races, v.1, Greek and Roman, 1916, General editor, Louis Herbert Gray.
  • Henrichs, Albert. "Greek Maenadism from Olympias to Messalina." Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 82 (1978), 121-160.
  • Kraemer, Ross S. "Ecstasy and Possession: The Attraction of Women to the Cult of Dionysus." The Harvard Theological Review 72:1/2 (January - April, 1979). 55-80.
  • Mikalson, Jon D. Ancient Greek Religion. Malden, MA: Blackwell, 2005. ISBN 0631232222.
  • Powell, Barry B. Classical Myth (Second Edition). Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1998. ISBN 0-13-716714-8.
  • Riu, Xavier. Dionysism and Comedy. Rowman and Littlefield Publishers, 1999. ISBN 0847694429. [2]
  • Stewart, Zeph. "The God Nocturnus in Plautus' Amphitruo." The Journal of Roman Studies 50: Parts 1 and 2 (1960). 37-43.
  • Takács, Sarolta A. "Politics and Religion in the Bacchanalian Affair of 186 B.C.E." Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 100 (2000). 301-310.
  • Tripolitis, Antonia. Religions of the Hellenistic-Roman Age. Grand Rapids, MI: Wm. B. Eerdmans, 2002. ISBN 080284913X

External links

All links retrieved December 21, 2007

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