Athenian Popular Religion
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"This is in no sense a general history of Athenian religion," Mikalson writes, "even within the narrow historical boundaries set. It is rather an investigation of what might be termed the consensus of popular religious belief, a consensus consisting of those beliefs which an Athenian citizen thought he could express publicly and for which he expected fo find general acceptance among his peers."
What emerges in Mikalson's study is a remarkable homogeneity of religious beliefs at the popular level. The topics discussed at length in Athenian Popular Religion include the areas of divine intervention in human life, the gods and human justice, gods and oaths, divination, death and the afterlife, the nature of the gods, social aspects of popular religion, and piety and impiety.
Mikalson challenges the common opinion that popular religious belief in Athens deteriorated significantly from the mid-fifth to the mid-fourth century B.C. "The error in understanding the development of Athenian religion has arisen, it seems to me, because scholars have failed to distinguish properly between the differing natures of the sources for our knowledge of religious beliefs in the earlier and later periods," Mikalson writes. The difference between those sources "is more than simply one of years. It is a difference between poetry and prose, with all the factors which that difference implies."
Jon D. Mikalson
Jon D. Mikalson is Professor of Classics at the University of Virginia. He is the author of The Sacred and Civil Calendar of the Athenian Year (1975), Athenian Popular Religion (1983), and Honor Thy Gods: Popular Religion in Greek Tragedy (1991).
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Athenian Popular Religion - Jon D. Mikalson
Athenian Popular Religion
Athenian Popular Religion
JON D. MIKALSON
THE UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA PRESS
CHAPEL HILL AND LONDON
Both the initial research and the publication of this work were made possible in part through grants from the National Endowment for the Humanities, a federal agency whose mission fa to award grants to support education, scholarship, media programming, libraries, and museums, in order to bring the results of cultural activities to a broad, general public.
© 1983 The University of North Carolina Press
All rights reserved
Manufactured in the United States of America
03 02 01 00 8 7 6 5
Library of Congress Cataloging in Publication Data
Mikalson, Jon D., 1943—
Athenian popular religion.
Bibliography: p.
Includes indexes.
1. Athens (Greece)—Religion. 1. Title.
BL793.A76M54 1981 292’. 08 82-25616
ISBN 0-8078-1563-2
ISBN 0-8078-4194-3 (pbk.)
THIS BOOK WAS DIGITALLY MANUFACTURED.
CONTENTS
Preface
Abbreviations
CHAPTER ONE
Introduction
CHAPTER TWO
Priority of the Divine
CHAPTER THREE
Areas of Divine Intervention
CHAPTER FOUR
The Gods and Human Justice
CHAPTER FIVE
The Gods and Oaths
CHAPTER SIX
Divination
CHAPTER SEVEN
The Gods and Death
CHAPTER EIGHT
The Nature of Divine Intervention
CHAPTER NINE
The Nature of the Gods
CHAPTER TEN
The Afterlife
CHAPTER ELEVEN
Some Social Aspects of Popular Religion
CHAPTER TWELVE
Piety and Impiety
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
The Consensus
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
Some Historical Considerations
Notes
Bibliography
Index of Passages Cited
General Index
PREFACE
This book presents what Athenian people, apart from poets and philosophers, said about their gods and religious beliefs in the late fifth and fourth centuries B.C. The gods and religious views of Homer, Pindar, Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides, Plato, Aristotle, and other philosophic and literary masters have been widely studied for generations, in some cases for centuries. But such studies are, fundamentally, treatments of Greek theological and intellectual history. Athenian writers clearly expected their audiences to be familiar with current literary treatments and philosophic theories about the gods and religion, but the question has remained open of the extent to which their audiences shared these views and made them a part of their religious life. It was this question that led me to collect, from what I judged to be reliable sources, the religious beliefs and attitudes that were publicly expressed and casually accepted by the great majority of Athenian citizens.
What emerged from this collection was a surprisingly consistent and homogeneous corpus of popular religious beliefs. Amidst remarkable multiplicity and variety of rituals, myths, and cult figures the Athenians maintained rather straightforward, simple, and self-consistent ideas of what the gods provided for them, what was expected of worshippers, what was pious and impious, and so forth. These popular beliefs often lack the intellectual and metaphysical dynamism of the theories of intellectuals
of the time, but a recognition and understanding of them is of fundamental importance to our view of Athenian society. This understanding will also substantially aid our efforts to describe and appreciate more fully both the traditional and the innovative elements in the handling of religion by creative thinkers such as Euripides and Plato.
Two works, Jean Rudhardt’s Notions fondamentales de la pensée religieuse et actes constitutifs du culte dans la Grèce classique and Kenneth Dover’s Greek Popular Morality, have been especially helpful to me. They provide good collections of material and also clear much of the ground. I have, in some ways, done less than they with this same material, but in this instance a less ambitious approach may produce a more sound and useful study. Dover and Rudhardt each incorporate numerous poetic sources into their discussions of popular religion. It is, I contend, better methodology first to determine from reliable evidence what can be proved to be popular belief. Only after this has been satisfactorily accomplished can we isolate and evaluate statements of popular beliefs or allusions to them in the poets and the philosophers.
I intend to provide a descriptive study of Athenian popular religion and have not introduced current psychological and anthropological theory and speculation concerning Greek religion. It seems that accurate description must precede theoretical interpretation, and that both prosper when they are somewhat independent. Sound and independent description permits us, as we read studies in Greek religion, to recognize more clearly when we are moving from the descriptive and analytical to the interpretive, the theoretical, and even the fantastic. It will also allow us to distinguish better what was common and widespread in religion among the Greeks and Athenians from what was idiosyncratic and peculiar even to them. Such distinctions are of the utmost importance, particularly in the complex and protean subject of Greek religion.
The completion of this work was made possible largely by the support of the National Endowment for the Humanities and of the University of Virginia. They provided the means for a precious year of uninterrupted work. That year was spent at Cambridge University, where the pleasure of my stay was greatly enhanced by the kindnesses of Geoffrey Kirk and John Morrison. In particular I wish to thank A. Geoffrey Woodhead who, with his colleagues at Corpus Christi College, provided such warm hospitality. I am also grateful to the readers of the University of North Carolina Press and to the others who have offered valuable suggestions and criticisms.
JON D. MIKALSON
University of Virginia
ABBREVIATIONS
The names and works of classical authors are abbreviated in the text and notes in general accord with the system in the Oxford Classical Dictionary². Modern works cited frequently in the notes have been assigned a short title; full citations appear in the Bibliography.
Athenian Popular Religion
ONE
Introduction
The general character of Greek religion and the nature of the ancient sources that happened to survive have made it surprisingly difficult to determine the religious beliefs and attitudes of the ordinary
ancient Greek, Our sources for Greek religion tend to fall into two groups: firstly, the poetic and philosophic, and secondly, the scholastic and archaeological. The writings of poets and philosophers have provided the raw material for numerous studies of ancient Greek religious thought, but these studies, based as they are on creative literary works, really treat theology and the development of Greek intellectual thought, not the religion of ordinary people. We learn of many important details of Greek ritual and cult practice from the ancient scholarly tradition as it is preserved in the Suda (x A.D.) and other ancient lexica compiled by Harpocration (I-II A.D.), Hesychius (V A.D.), and Photius (IX A.D.). Similar scholarly
explications of religious terminology and ritual are provided by scholiasts whose notes and explanations survive in the manuscripts of some classical authors. These various scholastic sources, especially when they can be supplemented by epigraphical and other archaeological material, sometimes allow us to give a reasonably complete description of what the ancient Greek did in cult practice. But they scarcely ever offer any sure indication of what the individual thought or believed when he performed these cultic acts.
What we should most welcome, of course, is a confessional
literature in which individuals spell out their own religious beliefs and detail those points in which they differ from conventional beliefs. But such a literature is alien to Greek religion. So too is the concept of a book of revelation, such as the Bible, that sets forth what a person should believe. The Greeks also did not have a national or state church or a centrally organized priesthood to put forward and promote religious dogma. We thus lack for the Greeks convenient sources for what the ordinary person was expected to believe.
We must also remember that the ancient Greeks resided in several hundred small city-states that prided themselves on their independence from one another. In varying degrees Sparta, Corinth, Thebes, Athens, and the other city-states differed from one another in political, social, and economic structure, and it is only reasonable to assume that they also differed to some extent in their religion. We know from Pausanias’ travel guide of the second century A.D. and from modern studies that myths and cult practices varied considerably from one city-state to another, and one has every reason to assume that religious beliefs also may have differed significantly.¹ One should be wary of assuming that a religious belief or practice must have been current in all the city-states and among all Greeks simply because it is attested for one city-state.
Religious beliefs and attitudes, however conservative they may have been, must also have changed throughout the centuries. Historical sense would suggest, and the evidence indicates, that there was a considerable difference between the religious beliefs of, for example, the Athenian of the sixth century B.C. who saw the beginning of the construction of the temple of Zeus Olympios and the Athenian of the second century A.D. who saw its completion under the Roman emperor Hadrian.² The names of the deities and many of the cult practices remained the same throughout these centuries, and this tends to conceal changes in religious belief. But the religious beliefs did change, and in studying Greek religion we must distinguish carefully between those held in different time periods as well as in different city-states.
This book focuses upon the religious beliefs and attitudes attested for Athens during the late fifth and fourth centuries B.C., approximately from the end of the Peloponnesian War (405) to the death of Alexander the Great (323). Athens alone of the city-states can realistically form the subject of a general study of religious beliefs, because from her alone do we have anything more than the most meager scraps of evidence for religious history, The late fifth and fourth centuries are the most promising period for such a study, because in comparison with other periods, fairly abundant evidence for social history exists in surviving political and forensic orations and in the inscriptions. By limiting the study to Athens of the late fifth and fourth centuries I hope to avoid the inaccuracies and contradictions inherent in the synoptic approach to Greek religion, an approach that sometimes indiscriminately amalgamates evidence from widely disparate places and historical periods.
This is not to claim that beliefs and practices discovered in this period were necessarily limited to it. Some originated before it, and some continued to exist far beyond it. Some did both. On occasion in discussing a statement of religious belief or practice 1 refer to a source from an earlier or later time, but only if the belief has been attested to for the period in question. My intent throughout is to avoid attributing to the late fifth and fourth centuries beliefs and concepts that have their proper place in an earlier or later time.
This book concerns popular
Athenian religious beliefs and attitudes. Popular
is not used here to indicate middle-class
or lower-class
in social terms,³ nor is it being used in a pejorative sense. This study does not treat the Greek peasant whose private and communal religious practices and beliefs Martin Nilsson has so carefully and sympathetically described, but investigates rather what Nilsson terms the popular religion of the townspeople.⁴ It focuses on religious views and attitudes that were acceptable to the majority of Athenians of the late fifth and fourth centuries. These are the views and beliefs which were a part of the common cultural experience of the Athenians and which were spoken of and acted upon daily by average Athenian citizens. They form, as Guthrie puts it, the routine of religion which was accepted by most of the citizens of Athens as a matter of course.
⁵ During the late fifth and fourth centuries many innovative and idiosyncratic religious beliefs and theories were being developed and discussed by literary and philosophic figures, and these have been studied extensively by scholars. I have excluded these from this study, unless it can be demonstrated that they had an impact on popular religious belief during this period. Some philosophical and religious theories, and in particular those of Plato, did influence later times, but unless the influence is detectable during this period, they have been excluded.
Descriptions of individual deities, of cult practices, and of festivals will also be very limited, being used primarily to clarify statements of religious belief. In default of clear and convenient statements of popular beliefs, many scholars of Greek religion have concentrated their efforts on objective descriptions of deities, rituals, cults, and festivals, and have occasionally attempted to extrapolate from these descriptions the feelings and motives of the worshipers. This study differs considerably from such studies in that it directs attention first to what the Athenians said ( ) about their religion and treats what they did ( ) only to the extent that it clarifies or illustrates what they said.
I have introduced little of recent sociological, anthropological, and psychological theory about Greek religion. In Greek ritual and myth particularly there are fossilized remnants of much earlier, primitive practices and beliefs. Since the late nineteenth century there have been numerous attempts to build upon these remnants theories about Greek religion, theories which usually derive from current work in the social sciences and which are supported by parallels from other cultures. It is my view that descriptive work should precede theoretical interpretation and that both prosper when they are reasonably independent. It is also wise for us to know clearly what the Greeks consciously said about their religion before we begin to mine the somewhat murky depths of their subconsciousness. My intent is to present a descriptive study of one aspect of Athenian popular religion and to leave it to others to create a comparative, theoretical approach to it. I do not mean to disparage the theoretical work being done in certain areas of Greek religion, because excellent insights and valuable material have been offered by scholars such as E. R. Dodds in Greeks and the Irrational and Walter Burkert in Homo Necans. But in the study of popular religion the need now is for some descriptive work; a theoretical bias would only impede this work.
The primary ancient evidence for this study is threefold: the orators, the inscriptions, and the historian Xenophon.⁶ Although the importance of the orations of Demosthenes, Aeschines, Isocrates, Lycurgus, and others as a source for popular ethical and religious beliefs has been noted from time to time, it was only comparatively recently that they have been given their proper place in the study of these matters.⁷
The orations presented in the law courts and the citizen assemblies are the best evidence available for popular religious beliefs of the period. In the law courts the speakers addressed juries of from five hundred to twenty-five hundred or more Athenian adult male citizens, who were chosen by a rather complicated allotment process. A jury was not, of course, a perfect cross section of the Athenian citizenry, and the elderly, the urban, and those of the lower income groups may well have been somewhat overrepresented. This, at least, is suggested by the caricature of jurors in Aristophanes’ Wasps.⁸ In addition these trials were held only in the city, and the pay for jurors was comparatively meager.⁹ But nevertheless, next to the ecclesia, the Athenians’ general legislative assembly, the juries of the law courts represent the best cross section of Athenian society available to us.
The speakers