The Secret History

The Secret History The Dionysian Mysteries

The Dionysian mysteries were secret religious rituals held during ancient Greek times to honor the god Dionysus. Dionysus (also known as Bacchus) was the god associated with wine, intoxication, fertility, fruits and vegetables, madness and ecstasy. When individuals participated in rites to honor him, they used techniques such as consuming alcohol and other intoxicants, and taking part in ritualized dances and orgies in hopes of achieving a different state of consciousness. Freed from typical social constraints, participants in the ritual could achieve a transcendent state of being and potentially have a direct encounter with the god himself.

It is unclear where the mysteries began but they seemed to have spread through the ancient Mediterranean world alongside the spread of the cultivation of grapevines and the consumption of wine. Intoxication associated with consuming wine was sometimes interpreted as someone having an experience of divine possession, and this relationship later led to individuals deliberately consuming wine to trigger this experience. Some scholars also believe that in order to heighten the experience of intoxication, individuals would have also consumed substances such as the poppy (which contains the compound that can be turned into opium). The rituals were practiced in secret, and only individuals who had been initiated into the cult were able to witness or take part in the rituals. As a result of this secrecy, it is not clear what exactly was involved in the celebration of the mysteries, though they celebrated a cycle of death and rebirth. Individuals sought to enter into a primal, liberated state of ecstasy, and the rituals typically took place in outdoor locations where individuals could dance, run, and move about wildly. The wild, unconstrained nature of the rituals, and the fact that worship of Dionysus was often appealing to marginalized individuals such as women, slaves, and non-citizens, led governments to often be skeptical of the cult and even at times seek to suppress it.

The Greek tragedy The Bacchae (405 BCE), written by Euripides, draws on some of the themes of the Dionysian mysteries. In the play, the god Dionysius seeks to punish individuals for questioning his divinity, and to encourage the people of Thebes (where the play is set) to worship him. He drives the women of Thebes, including his aunts, into a state of ecstatic frenzy. The women include Agave, the mother of the Theban king Pentheus. Pentheus has tried to reject the worship of Dionysus, and as punishment, Dionysus tricks him, leading to Pentheus being torn to pieces by the women, including his own mother.

The popularity of the cult of Dionysus and the Dionysian mysteries led to these rituals eventually spreading to Roman culture beginning around 200 BCE. A god of wine, freedom, intoxication, and ecstasy named Bacchus was introduced into the Roman pantheon, and Roman citizens began to worship him by taking part in private rituals. The Roman historian Livy discussed the bacchanalian rituals in his history of Rome, presenting them as highly sexualized and violent. While his description was most likely exaggerated and inaccurate, his attitude shows how these rituals (for both men and women, and individuals from many different social classes) were viewed as subversive, and potentially threatening to the stability of the state. In 186 BCE, the Roman state introduced reforms to exert greater state control of the rituals, and gradually over time, these rituals merged into more structured worship of the Roman god Liber in formalized festivals.

In subsequent European culture, many artists were interested in the idea of the bacchanal, interpreting it loosely as an occasion involving drunken revelry and freedom from sexual and social constraints. Bacchanals and Dionysian rituals were often popular subjects in visual art as they created an opportunity for artists to paint naked bodies and justify their subject matter as being related to Classical history.