BW Edit after Greek artist of the Classical Period (late 5th century BCE) (Fragment of a terracotta plaque: kalathiskos dancer) (Metropolitan Museum of Art, Acc. 53.5.39)
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BW Edit after Greek artist of the Classical Period (late 5th century BCE) (Fragment of a terracotta plaque: kalathiskos dancer) (Metropolitan Museum of Art, Acc. 53.5.39)
celebrating carneia/karneia today!
im not sure if its today or already passed but i was told it was todaybut if it isn't please let me know ^^ but today i am celebrating apollo
The Karneia was a festival of Apollo celebrated by the Dorians during their month of Karneios, which corresponds roughly to the late summer Athenian month of Metageitnion (August-September). (Karneios was a month during which no war could be waged and was the cause of the Spartans’ failure to support Leonidas at the battle of Marathon.) The date varied; in Cyrene it was held on the 7th, in Thera on the 20th, and in Sparta on the full moon (August 19 in 2024). Customs varied as well by region and over time but included such things as the dancing of young men and women, a several-day musical competition, and a foot race in which participants called “grape runners” pursue a single runner in order to capure not only the man but good fortune for the city. (Burkert, Greek Religion 234)
Karneia feast.
Karneia - 7-15th Karneus (Metageitnion)
(Information drawn from Cults of Apollo at Sparta (1992) by Michael Petersson, pg 57-71.)
Karneia is the third part of the Spartan ritual cycle, following Hyakinthia and Gymnopaidiai. Ancient celebrations included a race which would predict the city's fortune for next year, representatives from the three Spartan phylai (tribes) living in nine tents for the nine days following commands from a herald, and the singing of unaccompanied paeans.
Pausanias gives two possible origins of the cult, the first being that during the Dorian migration, a seer working under the general hippotes called Karnos was killed and the festival was to appease Apollon's wrath at the death (Karnus was referred to as a phasma apollonos, a manifestation of the god). The second origin story is that Karneios was a Lakonian god already honoured in the region before the arrival of the Dorians, and was worshipped with epithets like "of the house" and "of runners." A seer's daughter had to take Dorian leaders to learn from him how to conquer the region, and this seer had a shrine dedicated to Karneios in the home.
Karneios is regarded as either a manifestation of Apollon or an older god merged with him, similar to Lakonian Hyakinthos theories (other elements linking the Karneia to Hyakinthia include aetiological stories about Timomachos whose cuirass is displayed at the earlier spring event). Representations of Apollon Karneios show him with ram horns, and ram-headed herms are thought to depict him. In Sparta, the ram was a symbol of leadership, also depicted on statues of generals and associated with Zeus Agetor, who presided over certain Spartan military matters. In other locations, the cult was alternately referred to as Agetoria.
Petersson theorises that the Karneia was half a ritual of purification for the deaths of the seer Karnos and Spartan enemies in war, and half a ritualized reaffirmation of Spartan power in Lakonia. Apollon is here not as a warrior god, but in his role as upholder of societal order and as a protector of livestock and crops. Thus the military part of the celebration, men from different Spartan groups living in camp together, was part of promoting group interaction and social peace.
The race consisted of staphylodromoi, the runners, who would chase a man praying for good harvest, most likely the grape harvest at this time of year. This was supposedly the archaic nature of the cult, made more warlike by the incoming Dorians. The man represented either the grape crop, the year's livestock, or a generic mantic figure. Contrary to normal scapegoat rituals, the race was a form of augury. If the representation was caught it meant good luck, and bad luck if he escaped capture.
Finally, on the full moon during the nine day festival, participants would sing in choruses. Music was central to both Spartan ritual and military endeavours, to the point that it was the muses Spartans prayed to before entering battle.
Karneia Festival
(Coin depicting Apollo with horns)
The Karneia festival is believed to be a part agrarian part military festival to Apollo Karneios (of flocks and herds), celebrated in Sparta, the Peloponnese, and other Dorian states. It was celebrated for 9 days, from 7th-15th, in the month of Karneios (previously thought to be Athenian Metageitnion, but closer to Boedromion according to this calendar). Apollo Karneios appears in iconography with the horns of a ram (pictured above).
CARNEIUS (Karneios), a surname of Apollo under which he was worshipped in various parts of Greece, especially in Peloponnesus, as at Sparta and Sicyon, and also in Thera, Cyrene, and Magna Graecia. (Paus. iii. 13. § 2, &c., ii. 10. § 2, 11. § 2; Pind. Pyth. v. 106; Plut. Sympos. viii. 1; Paus. iii. 24. § 5, iv. 31. § 1, 33. § 5.) The origin of the name is explained in different ways. Some derived it from Carnus, an Acarnanian soothsayer, whose murder by Hippotes provoked Apollo to send a plague into the army of Ilippotes while he was on his march to Peloponnesus. Apollo was afterwards propitiated by the introduction of the worship of Apollo Carneius. (Paus. iii. 13. § 3; Schol. ad Theocrit. v. 83.) Others believed that Apollo was thus called from his favourite Carnus or Carneius, a son of Zeus and Europa, whom Leto and Apollo had brought up. (Paus. l. c. ; Hesych. s. v. Karneios.) Several other attempts to explain the name are given in Pausanias and the Scholiast on Theocritus. It is evident, however, that the worship of the Carneian Apollo was very ancient, and was probably established in Peloponnesus even before the Dorian conquest. Respecting the festival of the Carneia see Dict. of Ant. s. v. Karneia. (Theoi.com)
To celebrate the agrarian nature of the festival, five youths (Καρνεᾶται karnaetai) were chosen from each tribe to serve under a priest to oversee the proceedings of the festival for 4 years. A group of runners called σταφυλοδρόμοι ("running with bunches of grapes in their hands") would pursue another man (or, later, animal) who was adorned with garlands. If the man was caught, this was a good omen, but if not the city expecting to fare poorly in their coming endeavours.
For the military portion:
In the second part of the festival nine tents were set up in the country, in each of which nine citizens, representing the phratries (or obae), feasted together in honour of the god. [...] According to Demetrius of Scepsis (in Athenaeus iv. 141), the Carnea was an imitation of life in camp. (Brittanica)
It is believed the festival also included ram sacrifices and musical performances.
Poets shall sing often in your praise both on the seven-stringed mountain tortoise-shell and in songs unaccompanied by the lyre when at Sparta the month of Carnea comes circling round and the moon is aloft the whole night long, and also in rich, gleaming Athens. Such is the theme for song that you have left for poets by your death. (Euripides, Alcestis 449)
Dorians had an armistice agreement throughout the Karneia festival, similar to the hieromenia (sacred month) of the various Games, and none were allowed to wage war during this time. In 419BCE, the Argives avoided this by manipulating the calendar; they called every day the 27th of the month before Karneios so they could continue marching and invade Epidaurus. (Thucydides, History of the Peloponnesian War 5.54) This is the reason for the late arrival of the Spartans at the Battle of Marathon (490 BCE), and why King Leonidas was sent to Thermopylae with inadequate troops (480 BCE).
[... the Lakedaemonians] resolved to send help to the Athenians, but they could not do this immediately, for they were unwilling to break the law. It was the ninth day of the rising month, and they said that on the ninth they could not go out to war until the moon's circle was full. (Herodotus 6.106 (also Pausanias 1.28.4))
Further reading:
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0016.tlg001.perseus-eng1:6.106
http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text.jsp?doc=Perseus:text:1999.04.0063:entry=carneia-cn
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carnea
Die boooooys 👽👽👽#pause #linkindeebio #teilmal #makingof #videodreh #trap #rap #karneia #dancebattle #trapuminaten #deutscherhiphop #hiphop #goodday (hier: Würzburg)
Dionysos, seated on a rock and wearing high fur-lined boots, fancy head-dress and only a mantle over his thighs , watches a maenad dance by the Karneia painter, c. 400 BC