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Ancient Greek religion - Overview |  | Ancient Greek religion - Overview: Encyclopedia II - Ancient Greek religion - Overview |  | It is perhaps misleading to speak of "Greek religion" as a unified system of dogma or ritual; perhaps the most conspicuous aspect of the religions practised in the Greek city states is their overall variety and their localism. Different cities worshipped different deities, sometimes with epithets that specified their local nature; Athens had Athena; Sparta, Artemis; Corinth was a center for the worship of Aphrodite; Delphi and Delos had Apollo; Olympia had Zeus, and so on down to the smaller cities and towns. Identity of names was not even a ...
See also:Ancient Greek religion, Ancient Greek religion - Overview, Ancient Greek religion - Worship, Ancient Greek religion - Theology, Ancient Greek religion - Mystery religions, Ancient Greek religion - Suppression of paganism, Ancient Greek religion - Revival of paganism |  | | Ancient Greek religion, Ancient Greek religion - Mystery religions, Ancient Greek religion - Overview, Ancient Greek religion - Revival of paganism, Ancient Greek religion - Suppression of paganism, Ancient Greek religion - Theology, Ancient Greek religion - Worship, Greek mythology, Major world religions, Mythology of same-sex love, Paganism, Roman religion, Roman mythology |  | |
|  |  | Ancient Greek religion: Encyclopedia II - Ancient Greek religion - Overview
Ancient Greek religion - Overview
It is perhaps misleading to speak of "Greek religion" as a unified system of dogma or ritual; perhaps the most conspicuous aspect of the religions practised in the Greek city states is their overall variety and their localism. Different cities worshipped different deities, sometimes with epithets that specified their local nature; Athens had Athena; Sparta, Artemis; Corinth was a center for the worship of Aphrodite; Delphi and Delos had Apollo; Olympia had Zeus, and so on down to the smaller cities and towns. Identity of names was not even a guarantee of a similar cultus; the Greeks themselves were well aware that the Artemis worshipped at Sparta, the virgin huntress, was a very different deity from the Artemis who was a many-breasted fertility goddess at Ephesus. When literary works such as the Iliad related conflicts among the gods because their followers were at war on earth, these conflicts were a celestial reflection of the earthly pattern of local deities. Though the worship of the major deities spread from one locality to another, and though most larger cities boasted temples to several major gods, the identification of different gods with different places remained strong to the end.
The variety in Greek religion is also caused by the long history of Greece. Greek religion spans a period from Minoan and Mycenean periods to the days of Hellenistic Greece and its ultimate conquest by the Roman Empire. Religious ideas continued to develop over this time; by the time of the earliest major monument of Greek literature, the Iliad attributed to Homer, a consensus had already developed about who the major Olympian gods were. Still, changes to the canon remained possible; the Iliad seems to have been unaware of Dionysus, a god whose worship apparently spread after it was written, and who became important enough to be named one of the twelve chief Olympian deities, ousting the ancient goddess of the hearth, Hestia.
In addition to the local cults of major gods, various places like crossroads and sacred groves had their own tutelary spirits. There were often altars erected outside the precincts of the temples. Shrines like hermai were erected outside the temples as well. Heroes, in the original sense, were demigods or deified humans who were part of local legendary history; they too had local hero-cults, and often served as oracles for purposes of divination. What religion was, first and foremost, was traditional; the idea of novelty or innovation in worship was out of the question, almost by definition. Religion was the collection of local practices to honour the local gods.
A major function of religion was the validation of the identity and culture of individual communities. The myths were regarded by many as history rather than allegory, and their embedded genealogies were used by groups to proclaim their divine right to the land they occupied, and by individual families to validate their exalted position in the social order.
Other related archivesAchilles, Agamemnon, Alexander the Great, Anatolian, Aphrodite, Apollo, Argonauts, Artemis, Athena, Athens, Christian, Christianity, Christianization, Clytemnestra, Corinth, Dark Ages, Delos, Delphi, Dionysus, Earth-gods, Eastern Orthodoxy, Egyptian, Eleusinian, Eleusis, Ephesus, Etruscan, Etruscan cult and belief, Furies, George Gemistos Plethon, Gorgon, Greece, Greek, Greek Orthodox, Greek mythology, Greek religion, Hellenic polytheism, Hellenistic, Heracles, Hermes, Heroes, Hesiod, Hestia, Homer, Homeric, Homeric Hymns, Iliad, Ionia, Iphigenia, Jason, Julian, Labors, Libanius, Magna Graecia, Major world religions, Massilia, Minoan, Minotaur, Mithras, Mycenean, Mysteries, Mythology of same-sex love, Neo-Platonists, Neopaganism, Odysseus, Odyssey, Oedipus, Olympia, Olympians, Orestes, Orpheus, Osiris, Paganism, Pan, Pelops, Perseus, Persian, Porphyry, Poseidon, Prayer, Primordial gods, Renaissance, Renaissance humanism, Roman, Roman Empire, Roman emperor, Roman mythology, Roman religion, Samothrace, Satyrs, Sea-gods, Socrates, Sparta, Syncretism, Tantalus, Thebes, Theodosius I, Theogony, Theology, Theseus, Titans, Triptolemus, Trojan War, Wicca, Zeus, afterlife, altars, atheism, bacchantes, centaurs, clergy, creation myth, cult practices, cultus, demigods, denomination, divination, dogma, dragons, epics, fertility goddess, folklore, groves, hermai, hero-cults, idol, legendary, maenads, murder, mystery religions, mythology, neo-Platonic, neo-pagan, nymphs, oracles, orthodoxy, paganism, pantheon, philosophers, pilgrimage, polytheistic, populists, quest, ritual, sacrifice, temenos, temples, tutelary, twelve chief Olympian deities, worship
 Adapted from the Wikipedia article "Overview", under the G.N U Free Docmentation License. Please also see http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki |
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