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Amphidromia

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Ancient Greek Religion

Main doctrines
Polytheism · Mythology · Hubris
Orthopraxy · Reciprocity · Virtue
Practices

Amphidromia · Iatromantis
Pharmakos · Temples
Votive Offerings · Animal sacrifice

Deities
Twelve Olympians:
Ares · Artemis · Aphrodite · Apollo
Athena · Demeter · Hades · Hera ·
Hermes · Hephaestus · Poseidon · Zeus
---
Primordial deities:
Aether · Chaos · Cronos · Erebus
Gaia · Hemera · Nyx · Tartarus · Oranos
---
Lesser gods:
Eros · Hebe · Hecate · Helios
Herakles · Hestia · Iris · Selene · Pan · Nike
Texts
Iliad · Odyssey
Theogony · Works and Days
See also:
Decline of Hellenistic polytheism
Hellenic Polytheistic Reconstructionism
Supreme Council of Ethnikoi Hellenes

The Amphidromia, in ancient Greece, was a ceremonial feast celebrated on the fifth or seventh day after the birth of a child.

It was a family fes­tival of the Athenians, at which the newly born child was introduced into the family, and children of poorer families received its name. Children of wealthier families held a naming ceremony on the tenth day called dekate. This ceremony, unlike the Amphidromia, was open to the public by invitation. No particular day was fixed for this solemnity; but it did not take place very soon after the birth of the child, for it was believed that most children died before the seventh day, and the solemnity was therefore generally deferred till after that period, that there might be at least some probability of the child remaining alive.

According to Suidas, the festival was held on the fifth day, when the women who had lent their assistance at the birth washed their hands, but this purifi­cation preceded the real solemnity. The friends and relations of the parents were invited to the festival of the amphidromia, which was held in the evening, and they generally appeared with pre­sents, among which are mentioned the cuttlefish and the marine polyp.[1] The house was decorated on the outside with olive branches if the child was a boy, or with garlands of wool if the child was a girl; and a repast was prepared, at which, if we may judge from a fragment of Ephippus in Athenaeus (ix. p. 370 ; comp. ii. p. 65), the guests must have been rather merry.

The child was then carried round the fire by the nurse, and thus, as it were, pre­sented to the gods of the house and to the family, and at the same time received its name, to which the guests were witnesses.[2] The carrying of the child round the hearth was the principal part of the solemnity, from which its name was derived. But the Scholiast on Aristophanes (Lysistr. 758) derives its name from the fact that the guests, whilst the name was given to the child, walked or danced around it.

This festival is sometimes called from the day on which it took place.[3]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Hesych. and Harpocr. s.v.
  2. ^ Isaeus. De Pyrrhi Haered. p. 34. s. 30. Bekker.
  3. ^ Hesych. and Aristoph. Av. 923; K. F. Hermann, Lekrb. d. gottesdienstliclien altertliumer d. Griechen, § 48. n. 6.

[edit] Sources

  • This article incorporates content from the 1728 Cyclopaedia, a publication in the public domain.
  • Smith, William. Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities. 1870.
  • Golden, Mark. "Children and Childhood in Classical Athens." Johns Hopkis press. 1990
  • Alexander, Timothy Jay (2007). A Beginner’s Guide to Hellenismos. Lulu Press, Inc. ISBN 978-1-4303-2456-0. 
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