28 Oct 2020

Ichthyocentaurs

Ichthyocentaurs are figures from classical mythology linked to the sea, better described as fish-centaurs, the upper part of their body was human in form and the lower part in the shape of a fish tail, similar to mermaids. This connotation differentiates them from the most famous centaurs, other myt...
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28 Oct 2020

Symposium

Among the Greeks and Romans, the symposium or convivium was the practice that followed the banquet, during which diners drank, sang songs and dedicated themselves to entertainment of various kinds, with philosophical conversations, plays or leisure activities. The symposium was dedicated to adult m...
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28 Oct 2020

Oceanus

Oceanus, son of Uranus and Gaea, was a Titan and for the ancient Greeks the god of water, distinguished from Poseidon, Neptune for the Romans, who was one of the twelve gods of Olympus. A solemn worship of Oceanus was established in ancient Greece and the custom spread of making offerings and sacrif...
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28 Oct 2020

Marine thiasos

In Greek mythology, the thiasus was originally the procession of Dionysus, composed of the maenads, or half human and half animal figures like the sileni and satyrs. The marine thiasos, on the other hand, refers to a composition of mythological figures, linked to the sea, that surrounded Poseidon. ...
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28 Oct 2020

Arion

The myth of Arion of Methymna is narrated by some sources including the Histories of Herodotus. The young composer was the first to write dithyrambs, original forms of tragedy, and was not inferior to anyone in his time. After a long stay with Periander of Corinth, his desire was to reach Italy and ...
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28 Oct 2020

Pardalis

The Latin word pardalis indicates the spotted panther skin, connected in myth to the god Dionysus. The deity, together with his followers, satyrs and maenads, all wore panther skins. The panther was a sacred animal to the god of wine, and in the mosaic floors of the late antiquity residence there ...
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28 Oct 2020

Lycurgus and Ambrosia

Lycurgus is remembered in various stories and versions, but in all of them he represents the mythical figure of a sovereign, in perennial conflict with the god Dionysus. Homer describes the episode in which Lycurgus drove the bacchae and satyrs out of his kingdom, together with the god himself. Oth...
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28 Oct 2020

Lycurgus and Ambrosia

Lycurgus is remembered in various stories and versions, but in all of them he represents the mythical figure of a sovereign, in perennial conflict with the god Dionysus. Homer describes the episode in which Lycurgus drove the bacchae and satyrs out of his kingdom, together with the god himself. Ot...
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28 Oct 2020

Maenads

The maenads were the three daughters of Minyas, King of Orchomenus, a city near Thebes. According to the mythological story, the young women were not interested in worshipping Dionysus, who, irritated, drove the sisters to madness. The story ends with the intervention of Hermes, the Roman Mercury, w...
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28 Oct 2020

Silenus

Originally the ancient tales refer to the sileni as mythological figures who, together with the fauns, satyrs and nymphs, populated the woods. In this context, the sileni are considered spirits of water and springs. Their representation was very widespread in iconographies, both in wall paintings an...
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