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DIONYSIA , festivals in honour of theSee also: god Dionysus generally, but in particular the festivals celebrated in See also: Attica and by the branches of the See also: Attic-Ionic See also: race in the islands and in See also: Asia Minor
.
In Attica there were two festivals annually
.
(1) The lesser Dionysia, or ra sag' aypo6s, was held in the country places for four days (about the 19th to the 22nd of See also: December) at the first tasting of the new See also: wine
.
It was accompanied by songs, dance, phallic processions and the impromptu performances of itinerant players, who with others from the city thronged to take See also: part in the excitement of the rustic See also: sports
.
A favourite amusement was the Ascoliasmus, or dancing on one See also: leg upon a leathern bag (aaKOS), which had been smeared with oil
.
(2) The greater Dionysia, or 7a Ev aarei, was held in the city of Athens for six days (about the 28th of See also: March to the 2nd of
See also: April)
.
This was a festival of joy at the departure of winter and the promise of summer, Dionysus being regarded as having delivered the See also: people from the wants and troubles of winter
.
The religious See also: act of the festival was the conveying of the See also: ancient image of the god, which had been brought from Eleutherae to Athens, from the ancient sanctuary of the Lenaeum to a small See also: temple near the Acropolis and back again, with a See also: chorus of boys and a procession carrying masks and singing the dithyrambus
.
The festival culminated in the production of tragedies, comedies and satyric dramas in the See also: great theatre of Dionysus
.
Other festivals in honour of Dionysus were the
See also: Anthesteria (q.v.); the Lenaea (about the 28th to the 31St of See also: January), or festival of vats, at which, after a great public banquet, the citizens went through the city in procession to attend the dramatic representations; the Oschophoria (October–November), a vintage festival, so called from the blanches of See also: vine with grapes carried by twenty youths frorp the ephebi, two from each tribe, in a race from the temple of Dionysus in Athens to the temple of Athena Sciras in Phalerum
.
See A
.
See also: Mommsen, Feste der Stadt Athen (1898); L
.
Preller, Griechische Mythologie; L . C . See also: Purser in See also: Smith's
See also: Dictionary of Antiquities (3rd ed., 1890) ; article DIouvsos in W
.
H
.
Roscher's Lexikon der Mythologie; and the exhaustive account with bibliography by J
.
See also: Girard in Daremberg and Saglio's Dictionnaire See also: des antiquites
.
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