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THARGELIA , one of the chief Athenian festivals in honour of the DelianSee also: Apollo and See also: Artemis, held on their birthdays, the 6th and 7th of the See also: month Thargelion (about the 24th and 25th of May)
.
The name, which was derived by the ancients from %pecv rip 'jnv (" to reap the See also: land "), is more probably connected with -repo-i va1 (cf
.
See also: Lat. torreo, tostus), signifying the produce of the See also: earth " baked " by the See also: sun
.
Essentially an agricultural festival, the Thargelia included a purifying and expiatory ceremony
.
While the See also: people offered the first-fruits of the earth to the See also: god in token of thankfulness, it was at the same See also: time necessary to propitiate him, lest he might ruin the harvest by excessive heat, possibly accompanied by pestilence
.
The purificatory preceded the thanksgiving service
.
On the 6th a See also: sheep was sacrificed to See also: Demeter Chloe on the Acropolis, and perhaps a See also: swine to the Fates, but the most important ritual was the following
.
Two men, who were called c&apµaeoi or vv8aKXot, the ugliest that could be found, were chosen to die, one for the men, the other (according to some, a woman) for the See also: women
.
On the See also: day of the sacrifice they were led round with strings of See also: figs on their necks, and whipped on the genitals with rods of figwood and squills
.
When they reached the place of sacrifice on the See also: shore, they were stoned to See also: death, their bodies burnt, and the ashes thrown into the See also: sea (or over the land, to See also: act as a fertilizing influence)
.
The See also: whipping with squills and figwood was intended to stimulate the reproductive energies of the 4appasbs, who represented the god of vegetation, annually slain to be See also: born again
.
It is agreed that an actual human sacrifice took place on this occasion, replaced in later times by a milder See also: form of expiation
.
Thus at Leucas a criminal was annually thrown from a See also: rock into the sea as a scapegoat: but his fall was checked by live birds and feathers attached to his See also: person, and men watched below in small boats, who caught him and escorted him beyond the boundary of the city
.
Similarly, at Massilia, on the occasion of some heavy calamity (plague or See also: famine), one of the poorest inhabitants volunteered as a scapegoat
.
For a See also: year he was fed up at the public expense, then clothed in sacred garments, led through the city amidst execrations, and cast out beyond the boundaries
.
The ceremony on the 7th was of a cheerful character
.
All kinds of first-fruits were carried in procession and offered to the god, and, as at the Pyanepsia (or Pyanopsia), eipeo-uavai (branches of See also: olive bound with wool), See also: borne by See also: children, were affixed by them to the doors of the houses
.
These branches, originally intended as a charm to avert failure of the crops, were afterwards regarded as forming
See also: part of a supplicatory service
.
On the second day choruses of men and boys took part in musical contests, the prize for which was a See also: tripod
.
Further, on this day adopted persons were solemnly received into the genos and phrairia of their adoptive parents (see See also: APATURIA)
.
See Preller-Robert, Griechische Mythologie, i
.
(1894); G
.
F
.
Schemann, Griechische Alterthumer (4th ed. by J
.
H . Lipsius, 1897-1902); P . Stengel, Die griechischen Kullusalterthumer (1890); article inSee also: Smith's
See also: Dictionary of See also: Greek and See also: Roman Antiquities, revised by L
.
C
.
See also: Purser (3rd ed., 1891) ; A
.
See also: Mommsen, Feste der Stadt Athen (1898); L
.
R
.
Farnell, Cults of the Greek States, iv
.
(1906), pp
.
268-283; J
.
G
.
Frazer, See also: Golden Bough (2nd ed., 1900), ii. appendix C, " Offerings of First-Fruits," and iii. p
.
93, § 15, " On Scapegoats "; W . Mannhardt, Antike Wald- and Feldkulte (2nd ed. by W . Heuschkel, 1904-5) . |
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