Panathenaea The Panathenaea was the most important of all the festivals at Athens: it was in honour of Athena herself. Tradition had it that the festival.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
The Parthenon Greek Architecture
Advertisements

Ovoid lekythos – Wedding Procession
Goddess of Intelligence, Warfare, and Women’s Crafts
Religion and worship in Athens
Model of the Acropolis.
Women in Myth & Religion Athena & the Maenads. Lecture outline Beginning of the Athens – foundation myth of masculine citizenship The First Woman, Pandora.
Greek Culture and Society Term II, Lecture 7 Greek Religion.
Sacred Laws Sacrifices and Festivals – Codification. Sacrifices and Festivals – Codification. Why a code for a sacrifice and festival? Why a code for a.
Greek Culture and Society Term II, Lecture 4 Greek Religion.
Bored of Pop Quizzes? How about the answers to the final exam? Or at least the questions? Identification –Erechtheion –cavea.
1. Doric column Ionic column 3. Doric column with fluting.
Vocabulary Parthenon Athena frieze procession
Classical Athenian Priestesses
(Statue of Olympic Zeus) According to the earliest records, the first Olympic games were held in 776 BC. The Olympic games originate in athletic contests.
Greece: Athens InteractiveGreece: Athens Interactive Video of the Acropolis: History Channel Video of the Acropolis: History Channel Greece: Athens InteractiveVideo.
Greek Art and Archaeology Lecture 12: The Athenian Acropolis in the Sixth Century.
Ancient Greek Architecture Doric Ionic Corinthian.
The Rise of Greek Cities
Chapter 5 The Greek City-States (c B.C.–404 B.C.) Part I #1-34 Mr. C. Dennison Cardinal Hayes HS Bronx, NY.
CHARACTERISTICS OF THE CLASSICAL CIVILIZATION POLITICAL LIFE  The Delian League was formed  Under Pericles, Athens became the leader of this league 
KEKROPS, first King of Attica (the region where Athens is located), is half man, half serpent.
ALEXANDER THE GREAT formed a huge empire, formed a huge empire, spread Greek culture into Egypt and many parts of Asia spread Greek culture into Egypt.
Periclean Athens. Pericles, c Son of Xanthippus, Athenian general in 479. Mother was niece of Alcmaeonid Cleisthenes. Financial backer of Aeschylus’
Art History Greek Art. Archaic Period ► B.C.
Hosted by Riley B. and Clare C Geography Government Daily life The “Golden” “Age”
Greece: Religious Beliefs. Overview  Polytheistic - worshipped many gods.  Believed gods communicated with them.  Through songs of birds, rustling.
Chapter 5 The Greek City-States (c B.C.–404 B.C.) Part I #1-34 Mr. C. Dennison Cardinal Hayes HS Bronx, NY.
Ancient Greece & Sophocles Notes by Olaina Anderson.
ANCIENT GREECE Contents City states Olympics  Gods Gods.
Hosted by Riley B. and Clare C Persian Wars Religion Architecture Life
Architecture of Ancient Greece Troy. Thermopylae. Dark Age BC Geometric BC Oriental BC Archaic BC Classical BC.
The gold ivory statue of Athena by Maria Gkougkoutsi.
Kekrops the Great King of Athens Kekrops was an early earth-born king of Attika and founder of the city of Athens. Attic iconography presented him as a.
Spartan society: Historiography Archaeological sources.
Ancient Greece. Greek City-States  The central focus of Greek life and society was the polis  Polis = Greek city-state. community of people with a.
City-State and Democracy Forms of Government. Polis  City-State.
Amasis The foreigner? Lover of domestic scenes Vases 3 and 4 Vase 3 Weaving Vase 4 Wedding procession.
What mattered to the Ancient Athenians?. Where was Athens? Largest city state in Greece. Greek main land; region Attica. Region rich in resources, especially.
By Daniel Guest. Ancient Greece was very fascinating. It included many different city states and cultures. Such as Sparta, the war like polis, and Athens,
Section 2- Vocabulary -tenant farmers: people who paid rent, either in money or crops, to grow crops on another person’s land -metic: resident alien -slavery:
Parthenon. Pheidias (490?-430?) East Pediment.
Acropolis By: Darren Simington, and Colin Runnels.
Acropolis Acropolis means 'high city' in Greek. Most city- states in ancient Greece had at their centre a rocky mound or hill where they built their important.
The Parthenon  Built from BC  Surrounded by a Doric colonnade (8 x 17)  The treasury was moved to the inside of the Parthenon  The Parthenon.
Sparta and Athens. Tyranny in the City-States  Nobles, who owned large farms, seized power from the Greek kings  Farmers had to borrow money from nobles,
Seafaring traders Extend Boundaries The Point: Trading societies extended the development of civilizations beyond the Fertile Crescent region.
Major achievements were made in ancient Greece during the Golden Age of Athens under Pericles rule. Mrs. DelGrosso Ms. West.
Athens V Sparta. Greek City-States Athens Sparta Mediterranean Sea Aegean Sea Asia Minor Greece.
Ancient Greece What was life like for women?.
2/16/11 BR – Can you compare and contrast a cat and a dog? How are they the same? How are they different Today: Compare and Contrast.
Ancient Greece Athens vs. Sparta.
Group 2: The parthenon frieze. Synopsis ● First page First page ● Synopsis Synopsis ● Sightseeing Sightseeing ● Conclusion Conclusion ● End End Introduction:
Ancient Greece.
Students will define the vocabulary associated with Chapter 4.2
Rise of Greek City-States
Ancient Greece & Religion
Parthenon The Parthenon was a temple to Athena built on top of the highest hill in Athens, the Acropolis (Acropolis means High City). In the Late Bronze.
Know Your Know Your ACROPOLIS! ACROPOLIS!.
Ancient Greece What was life like for women?.
The Greek Polis Athens and Sparta.
Diagram/picture *IN COLOR Diagram/picture *IN COLOR
Athena Polias.
The Greek Polis Athens and Sparta.
The Panathenaia
PANATHENAIA.
Agora at foot of Acropolis. Summer 1987
David again brought together all the able young men of Israel—thirty thousand. He and all his men went to Baalah (Kirjath Jearim) in Judah to bring.
Section 2- Vocabulary -tenant farmers: people who paid rent, either in money or crops, to grow crops on another person’s land -metic: resident alien -slavery:
Panathenaea The Panathenaea was the most important of all the festivals at Athens: it was in honour of Athena herself. Tradition had it that the festival.
Ancient Greeks BY BEN AND OBINNA.
Presentation transcript:

Panathenaea The Panathenaea was the most important of all the festivals at Athens: it was in honour of Athena herself. Tradition had it that the festival had been inaugurated by the mythical king Erichthonius. When the agricultural communities of Attica were 'synoecized' with Athens, the festival was reorganized; was given the name Panathenaea; and was kept on the twenty-eighth of Hekatombaion (July). The Panathenaea was the most important of all the festivals at Athens: it was in honour of Athena herself. Tradition had it that the festival had been inaugurated by the mythical king Erichthonius. When the agricultural communities of Attica were 'synoecized' with Athens, the festival was reorganized; was given the name Panathenaea; and was kept on the twenty-eighth of Hekatombaion (July). Starting in 566/5 B.C. (the archonship of Hippoclides), the Great Panathenaea was instituted: this was celebrated every four years, with conspicuous brilliance, it lasted twelve days, and there were many rites and sacrifices. The most prominent of these was the so- called hecatomb. There were also competitions, open to all Hellenes, in music and athletics. The sacrificed meat was distributed to the citizens in the Agora area. Another competition included in the Great Panathenaea was for the pyrrich dance: armed men, from every age group, took part in this. Starting in 566/5 B.C. (the archonship of Hippoclides), the Great Panathenaea was instituted: this was celebrated every four years, with conspicuous brilliance, it lasted twelve days, and there were many rites and sacrifices. The most prominent of these was the so- called hecatomb. There were also competitions, open to all Hellenes, in music and athletics. The sacrificed meat was distributed to the citizens in the Agora area. Another competition included in the Great Panathenaea was for the pyrrich dance: armed men, from every age group, took part in this.

The night before the Great Panathenaea, there was a vigil, with dancing by young men and girls. At sunrise on the twenty-eighth of Hekatombaion - Athena's birth day - the torch-race started. The object was to bring the new fire from the grove of Academus, beyond the city walls, to the altar of Athena on the Acropolis. There followed a grand procession, in which the whole citizen population took part. Its starting-point was the Kerameikos; its finishing-point was the Acropolis; and its purpose was to transfer offerings to Athena, principally the sacred peplos destined to clothe the wooden image of Athena Polias. The night before the Great Panathenaea, there was a vigil, with dancing by young men and girls. At sunrise on the twenty-eighth of Hekatombaion - Athena's birth day - the torch-race started. The object was to bring the new fire from the grove of Academus, beyond the city walls, to the altar of Athena on the Acropolis. There followed a grand procession, in which the whole citizen population took part. Its starting-point was the Kerameikos; its finishing-point was the Acropolis; and its purpose was to transfer offerings to Athena, principally the sacred peplos destined to clothe the wooden image of Athena Polias.

Procession at the Panathenea- Athens towards the Acropolis

The peplos was a huge rectangular textile showing the Gigantomachy ('Battle of Gods and Giants'). It was woven every year by women of Athens - the so-called ergastinai under the supervision of the woman priest of the god. This was the same subject that appeared on the pediment of the temple of Athena on the Acropolis in Pisistratus' time. It was linked with the myth of the distinguished part played by Athena in the Battle of the Gods and the Giants. The textile was unfurled like a sail on a ship-on-wheels. The ship made its way through the Agora. When it reached the Areopagus hill, the peplos was taken down and carried onward by hand, to be entrusted to the male priests who had the task of wrapping it round the god's likeness. Those who took part in the procession were women (kanephoroi) with baskets of offerings for the god; elderly men (thallophoroi) holding branches of olive; young male riders and other males (skaphephoroi) with vessels called skaphai; and women or young girls (hydriaphoroi) carrying a water-jug on the shoulder. The donation and transport of these vessels was a metic privilege. In the procession there were also Athena's sacrificial animals - she-goats, rams, bulls, cows, and sheep. It is the procession of the Great Panathenaea which has been seen by most scholars as the scene portrayed on the Parthenon frieze. The peplos was a huge rectangular textile showing the Gigantomachy ('Battle of Gods and Giants'). It was woven every year by women of Athens - the so-called ergastinai under the supervision of the woman priest of the god. This was the same subject that appeared on the pediment of the temple of Athena on the Acropolis in Pisistratus' time. It was linked with the myth of the distinguished part played by Athena in the Battle of the Gods and the Giants. The textile was unfurled like a sail on a ship-on-wheels. The ship made its way through the Agora. When it reached the Areopagus hill, the peplos was taken down and carried onward by hand, to be entrusted to the male priests who had the task of wrapping it round the god's likeness. Those who took part in the procession were women (kanephoroi) with baskets of offerings for the god; elderly men (thallophoroi) holding branches of olive; young male riders and other males (skaphephoroi) with vessels called skaphai; and women or young girls (hydriaphoroi) carrying a water-jug on the shoulder. The donation and transport of these vessels was a metic privilege. In the procession there were also Athena's sacrificial animals - she-goats, rams, bulls, cows, and sheep. It is the procession of the Great Panathenaea which has been seen by most scholars as the scene portrayed on the Parthenon frieze.Parthenon frieze

Young men leading oxen to be sacrificed to Athena. Scene from the Parthenon frieze. Athens, Acropolis Museum

Women carrying hydriai. Scene form the Panathenaia Procession on the Parthenon frieze B.C. Athens, Acropolis Museum 864

Panathenaic amphora (type of vase with two handles) from Eretria, showing Athena 'Guardian of the City' B.C. Athens, National Archaeological Museum.