Dionysia
The Dionysia was a large festival in ancient Athens in honor of the god Dionysus, the central events of which were the theatrical performances of dramatic tragedies and, from 487 BC, comedies. It was the second-most important festival after the Panathenaia. The Dionysia actually consisted of two related festivals, the Rural Dionysia and the City Dionysia, which took place in different parts of the year. They were also an essential part of the Dionysian Mysteries.
Rural Dionysia
The Dionysia was originally a rural festival in Eleutherae, Attica, probably celebrating the cultivation of vines. It was probably a very ancient festival, perhaps not originally associated with Dionysus. This "rural Dionysia" was held during the winter, in the month of Poseideon. The central event was the pompe, the procession, in which phalloi were carried by phallophoroi. Also participating in the pompe were kanephoroi, obeliaphoroi, skaphephoroi, hydriaphoroi, and askophoroi.After the pompe procession was completed, there were contests of dancing and singing, and choruses would perform dithyrambs. Some festivals may have included dramatic performances, possibly of the tragedies and comedies that had been produced at the City Dionysia the previous year. This was more common in the larger towns, such as Piraeus and Eleusis.
Because the various towns in Attica held their festivals on different days, it was possible for spectators to visit more than one festival per season. It was also an opportunity for Athenian citizens to travel outside the city if they did not have the opportunity to do so during the rest of the year. This also allowed travelling companies of actors to perform in more than one town during the period of the festival.
The comic playwright Aristophanes parodied the Rural Dionysia in his play The Acharnians.
City Dionysia
Origins
The City Dionysia was the urban part of the festival, possibly established during the tyranny of Peisistratus in the 6th century BC. This festival was held probably from the 10th to the 16th of the month Elaphebolion, three months after the rural Dionysia, probably to celebrate the end of winter and the harvesting of the year's crops. According to tradition, the festival was established after Eleutherae, a town on the border between Attica and Boeotia, had chosen to become part of Attica. The Eleuthereans brought a statue of Dionysus to Athens, which was initially rejected by the Athenians. Dionysus then punished the Athenians with a plague affecting the male genitalia, which was cured when the Athenians accepted the cult of Dionysus. This was recalled each year by a procession of citizens carrying phalloi.The urban festival was a relatively recent invention. This ceremony fell under the auspices of the Archons of Athens, rather than the basileus, to whom religious festivals were given when the office of archon was created in the 7th century BC.
''Pompe'' and ''Proagon''
The archon prepared for the City Dionysia as soon as he was elected, by choosing his two páredroi and ten epimelētai to help organize the festival. On the first day of the festival, the pompē was held, in which citizens, metics, and representatives from Athenian colonies marched to the Theatre of Dionysus on the southern slope of the Acropolis, carrying the wooden statue of Dionysus Eleuthereus, the "leading" or eisagōgē. As with the Rural Dionysia, they also carried phalloi, made of wood or bronze, aloft on poles, and a cart pulled a much larger phallus. Basket-carriers and water and wine-carriers participated in the pompe here, as in the Rural Dionysia.During the height of the Athenian Empire in the mid-5th century BC, various gifts and weapons showcasing Athens' strength were carried as well. Also included in the procession were bulls to be sacrificed in the theatre. The most conspicuous members of the procession were the chorēgoí, who were dressed in the most expensive and ornate clothing. After the pompē, the chorēgoí led their choruses in the dithyrambic competitions. These were extremely competitive, and the best flute players and celebrity poets offered their musical and lyrical services. After these competitions, the bulls were sacrificed, and a feast was held for all the citizens of Athens. A second procession, the kōmos, occurred afterwards, which was most likely a drunken :wikt:revelry|revelry through the streets.
The next day, the playwrights announced the titles of the plays to be performed, and judges were selected by lot: the "proagōn". It is unknown where the proagōn originally took place, but after the mid-5th century BC, it was held in the Odeon of Pericles on the foot of Acropolis. The proagōn was also used to give praise to notable citizens, or often foreigners, who had served Athens in some beneficial way during the year. During the Peloponnesian War, orphaned children of those who had been killed in battle were also paraded in the Odeon, possibly to honour their fathers. The proagōn could be used for other announcements as well; in 406 BC the death of the playwright Euripides was announced there.
Dramatic performances
Following the pompe, the Theatre of Dionysus was purified by the sacrifice of a bull. According to tradition, the first performance of tragedy at the Dionysia was by the playwright and actor Thespis in 534 BC. His award was reportedly a goat, a common symbol for Dionysus, and this "prize" possibly suggests the origin of the word "tragedy".During the fifth century BC, five days of the festival were set aside for performance, though scholars disagree exactly what was presented each day. At least three full days were devoted to tragic plays, and each of three playwrights presented his set of three tragedies and one satyr play on the successive days. Most of the extant Greek tragedies, including those of Aeschylus, Euripides, and Sophocles, were performed at the Theatre of Dionysus. The archons, epimeletai, and judges watched from the front row.
The other two days of the festival were likely devoted to dithyrambic contests until 487/6 BC, when comic poets were officially admitted to the agons and eligible for their own prizes. Each of five comic writers presented a single play, though it is unknown whether they were performed continuously on one day, or over the course of the five-day festival. Until 449 BC, only dramatic works were awarded prizes in the agon, but after that time, actors also became eligible for recognition. It was considered a great honour to win the comedic prize at the City Dionysia, despite the belief that comedies were of secondary importance. The Lenaia festival, held earlier in the year, featured comedy more prominently and officially recognized comic performances with prizes in 442 BC.
Impressive tragic output continued without pause through the first three quarters of the fourth century BC, and some scholars consider this time a continuation of the classical period. Though much of the work of this period is either lost or forgotten, it is considered to owe a great debt to the playwright Euripides. His plays, along with other fifth-century BC writers, were often re-staged during this period. At least one revival was presented each year at City Dionysia. It has been suggested that audiences may have preferred to see well-known plays re-staged, rather than financially support new plays of questionable quality; or alternately, that revivals represented a nostalgia for the glory of Athens from before the devastation of the Peloponnesian War. Nevertheless, plays continued to be written and performed until the 2nd century BC, when new works of both comedy and tragedy seem to have been eliminated. After that point drama continued to be produced, but prizes were awarded to wealthy producers and famous actors rather than the long-dead playwrights whose work was being performed.
Another procession and celebration was held on the final day, when the judges chose the winners of the tragedy and comedy performances. The winning playwrights were awarded a wreath of ivy.
Known winners of the City Dionysia
Tragedy
- Pre 484 - Choerilus, Phrynichus, Pratinus
- 484 BC – Aeschylus
- 4?? BC - Euetes
- 472 BC – Aeschylus
- 471 BC – Polyphrasmon
- 4?? BC - Nothippus
- 468 BC – Sophocles
- 467 BC – Aeschylus ; Aristias took 2nd place
- 4?? BC - Mesatus
- 463 BC – Aeschylus
- 460 BC - Aristias
- 458 BC – Aeschylus ; Sophocles took 2nd place
- 449 BC – Herakleides
- 447 BC – Sophocles
- 441 BC – Euripides
- 438 BC - Sophocles; Euripides took 2nd place with
- 431 BC – Euphorion, son of Aeschylus; Sophocles took 2nd place; Euripides took 3rd with Medea
- 428 BC – Euripides
- 427 BC – Philocles, nephew of Aeschylus; Sophocles took 2nd place with Oedipus Rex
- 416 BC – Agathon
- 415 BC – Xenocles
- 409 BC – Sophocles
- 405 BC – Euripides
- 401 BC - Sophocles
- 372 BC – Astydamas
- 3?? BC - Aphareus
Comedy
- 486 BC – Chionides
- 472 BC – Magnes
- 458 BC – Euphonius
- 450 BC – Crates
- 446 BC – Callias
- 43? BC - Cratinus
- 437 BC – Pherecrates
- 435 BC – Hermippus
- 427 BC - Unknown; Aristophanes took 2nd place with The Banqueters
- 426 BC - Aristophanes
- 423 BC – Cratinus
- 422 BC – Cantharus
- 421 BC – Eupolis of Athens took 1st place with his play Kolakes ; Aristophanes took 2nd place with Peace
- 414 BC – Ameipsias, Aristophanes "The Birds", Phrynichos "Solitary"
- 410 BC – Plato the Comic
- 402 BC – Cephisodoros
- 290 BC – Poseidippus
- 278 BC – Philemon
- 185 BC – Laines
- 183 BC – Philemon
- 154 BC – Chairion
Modern adaptations
The New York Classical Club, through Fordham University's Classics Department, stages a competition every April wherein groups of high school students produce unique adaptations of the same play. The competition aims to engage the themes and style of the ancient plays with renewed vigor and an accessible, thought provoking frame. Several notable schools from the area participate, including Stuyvesant and Regis. Adaptations are cut to twenty minutes, and source plays have included The Bacchae by Euripides and the entire collection of Ovid's Metamorphoses.
Dionycia is a group based in New York City. It strives for eclectic and synthetic adaptations of all Greek and Roman stories, retaining the scope and spirit of the original Athenian festival. Dionycia recognizes the balance which the Greek plays struck between true entertainment and platforms to explore themes, concerns, and ideas. The group has written and performed plays in somewhat of a modern or postmodern style. One example, "Daydreaming: Non-Platonic Solids in the Sky," portrays technology as contemporary philosophy, adapting The Clouds by Aristophanes touching off from The Matrix, exercise trends, and the spirit of those old Chinese curses, May you live in interesting times.
Modern followers of Hellenism celebrate Dionysia as a holiday and use a version of the Attic calendar to calculate it.