Online Encyclopedia

BACCHANALIA

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V03, Page 121 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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BACCHANALIA  , the

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Lat. name for the wild and mystic festivals of Bacchus (Dionysus) . They were introduced into Rome from
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lower Italy by way of
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Etruria, and held in secret, attended by
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women only, on three days in the
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year in the grove of Simila (Stimula,
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Semele; Ovid,
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Fasti, vi . 503), near the Aventine hill . Subsequently,
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admission to the
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rites were extended to men and celebrations took place five times a month . The evil reputation of these festivals, at which the grossest debaucheries took place, and all kinds of crimes and
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political conspiracies were supposed to be planned, led in 186 B.C. to a decree of the senate—the so-called Senatus consultum de Bacchanalibus, inscribed on a
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bronze tablet discovered in
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Calabria (164o), now at Vienna—by which the Bacchanalia were prohibited throughout the whole of Italy, except in certain
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special cases, in which the senate reserved the right of allowing them, subject to certain restrictions . But, in spite of the severe punishment inflicted upon those who were found to be implicated in the criminal practices disclosed by state investigation, the Bacchanalia were not stamped out, at any
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rate in the south of Italy, for a very long time (Livy xxxix . 8–19, 41; x1 . 19) .

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