READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
GEORGE GROTE'S HISTORY OF GREECE
CHAPTER XLIX (49)PAN-HELLESIC FESTIVALS-OLYMPIC, PYTHIAN, NEMEAN, AND ISTHMIAN.
In the preceding
chapters I have been under the necessity of presenting to the reader a
picture altogether incoherent and destitute of
central effect,—to specify briefly each of the two or three hundred towns which agreed in bearing the Hellenic
name, and to recount its birth and early life, as far as our evidence goes,—but without
being able to point out any action and reaction,
exploits or sufferings, prosperity or misfortune, glory
or disgrace, common to all. To a
great degree, this is a characteristic inseparable from the
history of Greece from its beginning to
its end, for the only political unity which it ever receives is the melancholy unity of subjection under all-conquering
Rome. Nothing short of force will efface in the mind of a free Greek the idea of his city as an
autonomous and separate organization; the village
is a fraction, but the city is an
unit,—and the highest of all political
units, not admitting of being consolidated with others into a ten or a hundred, to
the sacrifice of its own separate and individual mark. Such is the character of the race, both in their primitive country and in their colonial settlements,—in their early as well
as in their late history,—splitting by natural
fracture into a multitude of self-administering, indivisible cities. But that which
marks the early historical period
before Peisistratus, and which impresses upon it an
incoherence at once so fatiguing
and so irremediable, is, that as yet no causes
have arisen to counteract this political isolation.
Each city, whether progressive or stationary, prudent or adventurous,
turbulent or tranquil, follows out its own thread of existence, having no
partnership or common purposes with the rest, and not
yet constrained into any active partnership with them by extraneous
forces. In like manner, the races which on every side surround the Hellenic world appear
distinct and unconnected, not yet taken up into any cooperating mass or system.
Contemporaneously
with the accession of Peisistratus, this state of things
becomes altered both in and out of Hellas,—the former as a consequence
of the latter: for at that time begins the formation
of the great Persian empire, which absorbs into itself not only Upper Asia and Asia Minor, but also
Phenicia, Egypt, Thrace, Macedonia, and a considerable number of the Grecian cities
themselves; and the common danger, threatening the greater states
of Greece proper from this vast aggregate, drives them, in spite of great reluctance and jealousy, into active union. Hence arises a new impulse, counterworking
the natural tendency to political
isolation in the Hellenic cities, and centralizing their
proceedings to a certain extent for the two
centuries succeeding 560 b.c.; Athens and Sparta both availing themselves of the centralizing tendencies which
had grown out of the Persian war. But during the interval between 776-560 BC, no such tendency
can be traced even in commencement, nor any constraining
force calculated to bring it about. Even Thucydides, as we
may see by his excellent preface, knew of nothing
during these two centuries
except separate city-politics and occasional
wars between neighbors: the only event, according
to him, in which any considerable number of Grecian cities were
jointly concerned, was the war between Chalcis and Eretria,
the date of which we do not know. In this war, several cities
took part as allies; Samos, among others, with Eretria,—Miletus
with Chalcis: how far the alliances of either may have
extended, we have no evidence to inform us, but the presumption
is that no great number of Grecian
cities was comprehended in them. Such as it was, however,
this war between Chalcis and Eretria was the nearest
approach, and the only approach, to a Pan-Hellenic
proceeding which Thucydides indicates between the
Trojan and the Persian wars. Both he and Herodotus present
this early period only by way of preface and contrast
to that which follows,— when the Pan-Hellenic spirit
and tendencies, though never at any time predominant, yet counted for a powerful
element in history, and sensibly modified the universal
instinct of city-isolation. They tell us little about
it, either because they could find no trustworthy informants,
or because there was nothing in it to captivate the imagination in the same
manner as the Persian or the Peloponnesian wars. From whatever cause their
silence arises, it is deeply to be regretted, since the phenomena of the two
centuries from 776-560 bc, though not susceptible of any central
grouping, must have presented the most instructive matter for study, had they
been preserved. In no period of history have there ever been formed a greater
number of new political communities, under such variety of circumstances,
personal as well as local. And a few chronicles, however destitute of
philosophy, reporting the exact march of some of these colonies from their
commencement,— amidst all the difficulties attendant on amalgamation with
strange natives, as well as on a fresh distribution of land,—would have added
greatly to our knowledge both of Greek character and Greek social existence.
Taking
the two centuries now under review, then, it will appear that there is not only
no growing political unity among the Grecian states, but a tendency even to the
contrary,—to dissemination and mutual estrangement. Not so, however, in regard
to the other feelings of unity capable of subsisting between men who
acknowledge no common political authority,—sympathies founded on common
religion, language, belief of race, legends, tastes and customs, intellectual
appetencies, sense of proportion and artistic excellence, recreative
enjoyments, etc. On all these points the manifestations of Hellenic unity
become more and more pronounced and comprehensive, in spite of increased
political dissemination, throughout the same period. The breadth of common
sentiment and sympathy between Greek and Greek, together with the conception of
multitudinous periodical meetings as an indispensable portion of existence,
appears decidedly greater in 560 bc than it had been a century before. It was fostered
by the increased conviction of the superiority of Greeks as compared with
foreigners,—a conviction gradually more and more justified as Grecian art and
intellect improved, and as the survey of foreign countries became extended,—as well as by the many new efforts of men of genius a the field of music,
poetry, statuary, and architecture, each of whom touched chords of feeling
belonging to other Greeks hardly less than to his own peculiar city. At the
same time, the life of each
peculiar city continues distinct, and even gathers to itself a greater
abundance of facts and internal interests. Sc that during
the two centuries now under review there was in the mind of every Greek an
increase both of the city-feeling and of the Pan-Hellenic
feeling, but on the other hand a decline of the old sentiment of separate race,—Doric,
Ionic, Aeolic.
I have already, in my former volume, touched upon the manysided character of the Grecian religion, entering as
it did into all the enjoyments and sufferings, the hopes and
fears, the affections and antipathies, of the people,—not simply imposing
restraints and obligations, but protecting, multiplying, and diversifying all
the social pleasures and all the decorations of existence. Each city and even
each village had its peculiar religious festivals, wherein the sacrifices to
the gods were usually followed by public
recreations of one kind or other,—by feasting on the victims, processional
marches, singing and dancing, or competition in strong
and active exercises. The festival was originally local, but friendship or
communion of race was shown by inviting others, non-residents, to partake in
its attractions. In the case of a colony and
its metropolis, it was a frequent practice that citizens of the metropolis were
honored with a privileged scat at the festivals of
the colony, or that one of their number was presented with the first taste of
the sacrificial victim. Reciprocal frequentation
of religious festivals was thus the standing evidence of friendship and
fraternity among cities not politically united. That it must have existed to a
certain degree from the earliest days, there can be no reasonable doubt; though
in Homer and Hesiod we find only the celebration of funeral games, by a chief
at his own private expense, in honor of his deceased father or friend,—with
all the accompanying recreations, however, of
a public festival, and with strangers not only present, but
also contending for valuable prizes. Passing the historical
Greece during the seventh century bc, we find
evidence of two festivals, even then very considerable, and frequented by Greeks from many different cities and districts,—the festival at Delos, in honor of Apollo, the great place of meeting for Ionians throughout the Aegean—and the Olympic
games. The Homeric Hymn to the Delian Apollo, which must be placed earlier than
600 bc, dwells with emphasis on the splendor of the Delian festival,unrivalled
throughout Greece, as it would appear, during all
the first period of this history, for wealth, finery
of attire, and variety of
exhibitions as well in poetical genius as in bodily
activity,—equalling probably at that time, if not surpassing, the Olympic games. The
complete and undiminished grandeur of this Delian Pan-Ionic
festival is one of our chief
marks of the first period
of Grecian history, before the comparative
prostration of the Ionic Greeks through the rise of Persia: it was celebrated periodically in every fourth year, to the honor of
Apollo and Artemis. It was distinguished from the Olympic games by two circumstances both deserving
of notice,—first, by including solemn matches not only of gymnastic, but also of musical and poetical excellence, whereas
the latter had no place at Olympia; secondly, by the admission of
men, women, and children indiscriminately as spectators, whereas women were formally excluded from the Olympic ceremony. Such
exclusion may have depended in part on the
inland situation of Olympia, less easily approachable by females than the island of Delos;
but even making allowance for this
circumstance, both the one distinction
and the other mark the rougher character of the Aetolo-Dorians in
Peloponnesus. The Delian festival, which greatly dwindled
away during the subjection of the Asiatic and
insular Greeks to Persia, was revived afterwards by Athens during the period
of her empire, when she was seeking in every way to
strengthen her central ascendency in the Aegean. But
though it continued to be ostentatiously celebrated under her management, it
never regained that commanding sanctity and crowded frequentation which we find
attested in the Homeric Hymn to Apollo for its earlier period.
Very
different was the fate of the Olympic festival,—on the banks of the Alpheius in Peloponnesus, near the old oracular temple of
the Olympian Zeus—which not only grew up uninterruptedly from small beginnings
to the maximum of PanHellenic importance, but even preserved its crowds of
visitors and its celebrity for many centuries after the extinction of Greek
freedom, and only received its final abolition, after more than eleven hundred
years of continuance, from the decree of the Christian emperor Theodosius in
394 ad. I have already recounted,
in the preceding volume of this history, the attempt made by Pheidon, despot of
Argos, to restore to the Pisatans, or to acquire for
himself, the administration of this festival,—an event which proves the
importance of the festival in Peloponnesus, even so early as 740 bc. At that time, and for some years
afterwards, it seems to have been frequented chiefly, if not exclusively, by
the neighboring inhabitants of central and western Peloponnesus,— Spartans,
Messenians, Arcadians, Triphylians, Pisatans, Eleians, and Achaeans,—and it forms an important
link connecting the Etolo-Eleians, and their
privileges as Agonothets to solemnize and preside
over it, with Sparta. From the year 720 bc, we trace positive evidences of the gradual presence of
more distant Greeks,— Corinthians, Megarians, Boeotians, Athenians, and even
Smyrnaeans from Asia.
We
observe also another proof of growing importance, in the increased number and
variety of matches exhibited to the spectators, and in the substitution of the
simple crown of olive, an honorary reward, in place of the more substantial
present which the Olympic festival and all other Grecian festivals began by
conferring upon the victor. The humble constitution of the Olympic games
presented originally nothing more than a match of runners in
the measured course called the Stadium: a continuous series of the victorious runners was formally inscribed
and preserved by the Eleians, beginning with Koroebus in 776 BC and was made to serve by chronological inquirers from the third
century BC downwards, as a means of measuring the chronological
sequence of Grecian events. It was on the occasion of the 7th Olympiad after Koroebus, that Daikles the
Messenian first received for his victory in the stadium no farther recompense
than a wreath from the sacred olive-tree near Olympia: the honor of being
proclaimed victor was found sufficient, without any pecuniary addition. But
until the 14th Olympiad, there was no other match for the spectators to witness
beside that of simple runners in the stadium. On that occasion a second race was
first introduced, of runners in the double stadium, or up and down the course;
in the next, or 15th Olympiad (720 bc), a
third match, the long course for runners, or several times up and down the
stadium. There were thus three races,—the simple stadium, the double stadium,
or diaulos, and the long course, or dolichos, all for runners,—which continued without addition until the 18th
Olympiad, when the wrestling-match and the complicated pentathlon—including
jumping, running, the quoit, the javelin, and wrestling—were both added. A farther novelty appears in the 23d Olympiad
(688 bc), the boxing-match; and another, still
more important, in the 25th (680 bc), the
chariot with four full-grown horses. This last-mentioned addition is deserving
of special notice, not merely as it diversified the scene by the introduction of horses, but also as it brought in a totally new class of competitors,—rich
men and women, who possessed the finest horses and could hire
the most skilful drivers, without any personal superiority, or power of bodily display, in themselves. The prodigious exhibition
of wealth in which the chariot proprietors indulged, id not only
an evidence of growing importance in the Olympic games, but also served materially to increase
that importance, and to heighten the interest of spectators. Two farther
matches were added in the 33d Olympiad (648 bc),—the pankration, or boxing
and wrestling conjoined, with the hand unarmed or divested of
that hard leather cestus worn by the pugilist, which rendered the
blow of the latter more terrible, but at the same time prvented
him from grasping or keeping hold of his adversary,—and
the single race-horse. Many other novelties were introduced one
after the other, which it is unnecessary fully to enumerate,—the
race between men clothed in full
panoply, and bearing each his shield,—the
different matches between boys, analogous to those
between full-grown men, and between colts, of the same nature
as between full-grown horses. At the maximum of its attraction the Olympic solemnity
occupied live days, but until the 77th Olympiad, all the
various matches had been compressed into one,—beginning
at daybreak and not always closing before dark. The
77th Olympiad follows immediately after the successful expulsion of the Persian
invader from Greece, when the Pan-Hellenic
feeling had been keenly stimulated by resistance to a common
enemy; and we may easily conceive that this was a
suitable moment fur imparting additional dignity to the chief national festival.
We are thus enabled partially to trace the steps by
which, during the two centuries succeeding 776 bc, the festival of the Olympic
Zeus in the Pisatid gradually passed from a local to a
national character, and acquired an attractive force capable of bringing
together into temporary union the dispersed fragments of Hellas,
from Marseilles to Trebizond. In this important function it did not long stand
alone. During the sixth century BC, three other
festivals, at first local, became successively nationalized,—the Pythia near
Delphi, the Isthmia, near Corinth, the Nemea near Kleonae, between Sicyon and Argos.
In regard to the Pythian festival, we find a short notice of the
particular incidents and individuals by whom its reconstitution and enlargement were brought about,—a notice the more interesting,
inasmuch as these very incidents are themselves a manifestation of something
like Pan-Hellenic patriotism, standing almost alone in an age which presents
little else in operation except distinct city-interests. At the time when the
Homeric Hymn to the Delphinian Apollo was composed (probably in the seventh century bc), the Pythian festival had as yet acquired little eminence.
The rich and holy temple of Apollo was then purely oracular, established for
the purpose of communicating to pious inquirers “the
counsels of the immortals.” Multitudes of visitors
came to consult it, as well as to sacrifice victims and to deposit costly
offerings; but while the god delighted in the sound of the harp as an
accompaniment to the singing of paeans, he was by no
means anxious to encourage horse-races and chariotraces
in the neighborhood, nay, this psalmist considers that the noise of horses
would be “a nuisance,” the drinking of mules a desecration to the sacred
fountains, and the ostentation of fine built chariots
objectionable, as tending to divert the attention of
spectators away from the great temple and its wealth.
From
such inconveniences the god was protected by placing his sanctuary “in the
rocky Pytho,”—a rugged and uneven recess, of no great
dimensions, embosomed in the southern declivity of Parnassus, and about two
thousand feet above the level of the sea, while the topmost Parnassian summits
reach a height of near eight thousand feet. The situation was extremely
imposing, but unsuited by nature for the congregation of any considerable
number of spectators,—altogether impracticable for chariot-races, —and only
rendered practicable by later art and outlay for the theatre as well as for the
stadium; the original stadium, when first established, was placed in the plain
beneath. It furnished little means of subsistence, but the sacrifices and
presents of visitors enabled the ministers of the temple to live in abundance,and gathered together by degrees a village around it. Near the sanctuary
of Pytho, and about the same altitude, was situated
the ancient Phocian town of Krissa, on a projecting spur of Parnassus,—overhung
above by the line of rocky precipice called the Phaedriades,
and itself overhanging below the deep ravine through which flows the river Pleistus. On the other side of this river rises the steep
mountain Kirphis, which projects southward into the
Corinthian gulf,—the river reaching that gulf through the Krissaean or Kirrhacan plain, which stretches westward nearly
to the Locrian town of Amphissa; a plain for the most part fertile and
productive, though least so in its eastern part
immediately under the Kirphis, where the sea
port Kirrha was placed. The temple, the oracle, and the wealth of Pyrho belong to the very earliest
periods of Grecian antiquity; but the octennial solemnity in honor of the god
included at first no other competition except that
of bards, who sang each a paean with the harp. It Las
been already mentioned, in my preceding volume, that the Amphictyonic assembly
held one of its half-yearly meetings near the temple of Pytho,
the other at Thermopylae.
In those early times when the Homeric Hymn to Apollo was composed,
the town of Krissa appears to have been great and powerful, possessing all the
broad plain between Parnassus, Kirphis, and the gulf,
to which latter it gave its name,—and possessing also, what was a property not less valuable, the adjoining
sanctuary of Pytho itself,
which the Hymn identifies with Krissa, not
indicating Delphi as a separate place. The Krissaeans, doubtless, derived great profits from the number of visitors who came to visit Delphi, both by land and by sea, and Kirrha was originally
only the name for their seaport. Gradually, however,
the port appears to have grown in importance at the expense
of the town, just as Apollonia and Ptolemais came to equal Cyrene and Barka, and as Plymouth Dock has swelled into
Devonport; while at the same time, the
sanctuary of Pytho with its administrators expanded into the town of Delphi, and came to claim an independent existence of its own.
The original relations between Krissa, Kirrha,
and Delphi, were in this manner at length subverted,
the first declining and the two latter rising.
The Krissaeans found
themselves dispossessed of the management of the temple,
which passed to the Delphians, as well as
of the profits arising from the visitors, whose disbursements
went to enrich the inhabitants of Kirrha.
Krissa was a primitive city of
the Phocian name, and could boast of a place as such in the Homeric Catalogue,
so that her loss of importance was not likely to be quietly endured. Moreover, in addition to the above facts, already sufficient in themselves as
seeds of quarrel, we arc told
that the Kirrhaeans abused their position as masters
of the avenue to the temple
by sea, and levied exorbitant tolls on the
visitors who landed there,—a number constantly increasing from the multiplication of the transmarine colonies, and
from the prosperity of those in Paly and Sicily. Besides such offence against the general Grecian public, they had also incurred the enmity of
their Phocian neighbors by outrages upon women,
Phocian as well as Argeian, who were returning from
the temple.
Thus stood the case, apparently, about 595 bc, when the Amphictyonic meeting
interfered—either prompted by the Phocians, or perhaps on their own spontaneous impulse, out of regard to the
temple—to punish the Kirrhaeans.
After a war pf ten years, the first Sacred War in Greece,
this object was completely
accomplished, by a joint force of Thessalians under Eurylochus,
Sicyonians under Kleisthenes, and Athenians under Alkmaeon; the
Athenian Solon being the person who
originated and enforced, in the Amphictyonic council, the proposition
of interference. Kirrha appears to have
made a strenuous resistance until its supplies from
the sea were intercepted by the naval force of the Sicyonians Kleisthenes; and even after the town was taken,
its inhabitants defended themselves for some time on the heights of Kirphis. At length, however, they were thoroughly subdued.
Their town was destroyed, or left to subsist merely as a landing-place; and the
whole adjoining plain was consecrated to the Delphian god, whose domains thus touched the sea. Under this sentence, pronounced by the religious feeling of Greece, and sanctified by a solemn oath
publicly sworn and inscribed al Delphi, the land was condemned to remain untilled and unplanted,
without any species of human care, and serving
only for the pasturage of cattle. The
latter circumstance was convenient to the temple, inasmuch as it
furnished abundance of victims for the pilgrims who landed and came to
sacrifice,—for without preliminary sacrifice no man could consult the oracle;
while the entire prohibition of tillage was the only means of obviating the
growth of another troublesome neighbor on the
sea-board. The fate of Kirrha in this
war is ascertained: that of Krissa is not so clear,
nor do we know whether it was destroyed, or left
subsisting in a position of inferiority with regard to
Delphi. From this time forward, however, the Delphian
community appears as substantive and autonomous,
exercising in their own right the management
of the temple; though we shall find, on more
than one occasion, that the Phocians contest this right,
and lay claim to the management
of it for themselves,—a remnant of that early period when the
oracle stood in the domain of the Phocian Krissa. There
seems, moreover, to have been a standing antipathy between
the Delphians and the Phocians.
The Sacred War just mentioned, emanating from a solemn Amphictyonic
decree, carried on jointly by troops of different states whom
we do not know to have ever
before cooperated, and directed exclusively
towards an object of common interest, is in itself a
fact of high importance as manifesting a decided growth of
Pan-Hellenic feeling. Sparta is not named as interfering,—a circumstance which seems remarkable when we consider both her
power, even as it then stood, and
her intimate connection with the Delphian oracle,—while
the Athenians appear as the prime movers, through
the greatest and best of their citizens: the credit of a large-minded patriotism rests prominently upon them.
But if this Sacred War itself is a
proof that the Pan-Hellenic spirit was growing
stronger, the positive result in which it ended reinforced that
spirit still farther. The spoils of Kirrha were employed by the victorious allies in founding the Pythian games. The
octennial festival hitherto celebrated at Delphi in honor of the
god, including no other competition except in the harp and the
paean, was expanded into comprehensive games on the model of
the Olympic, with matches not only of music, but also of gymnastics
and chariots,—celebrated, not at Delphi itself, but on the
maritime plain near the ruined Kirrha,—and under the
direct superintendence of the Amphictions themselves. I have already mentioned that Solon provided large
rewards for such Athenians as gained victories in the Olympic and Isthmian
games, thereby indicating his sense of the great value of the national games as a means of
promoting Hellenic intercommunion It was the
same feeling which instigated the foundation of the new games on the Kirrhaean plain,
in commemoration of the vindicated honor of
Apollo, and in the territory newly made over to him. They
were celebrated in the latter half of summer, or first half
of every third Olympic year,—the Amphictions
being the ostensible agonothets,
or administrators, and appointing persons to discharge the duty in their names. At the first Pythian ceremony
(in 586 bc), valuable rewards were given to the
different victors; at the second (582 bc), nothing was conferred but wreaths of laurel,— the rapidly
attained celebrity of the games being such as to render any farther reward
superfluous. The Sicyonians despot Kleisthenes himself, one of the leaders in
the conquest of Kirrha, gained the prize at the
chariot-race of the second Pythia. We find other great personages in Greece
frequently mentioned as competitors, and the games long maintained a dignity
second only to the Olympic, over which, indeed, they had some advantages;
first, that they were not abused for the purpose of promoting petty jealousies
and antipathies of any administering state, as the Olympic games were perverted
by the Eleians, on more than one occasion; next, that they comprised music and
poetry as well as bodily display. From the circumstances attending their
foundation, the Pythian games deserved, even more than the Olympic, the title
bestowed on them by Demosthenes,— “The common Agon of the Greeks.”
The
Olympic and Pythian games continued always to be the most venerated solemnities
in Greece: yet the Nemea and Isthmia acquired a
celebrity not much inferior; the Olympic prize counting for the highest of all.
Both the Nemea and the Isthmia were distinguished
from the other two festivals by occurring, not once in four years, but once in
two years; tike former in the second and fourth years of each Olympiad, the
latter in the first and third years. To both is
assigned, according to Greek custom, an origin connected with the interesting
persons and circumstances of Grecian antiquity: but our historical knowledge
of both begins with the sixth century bc. The first historical Nemead is
presented as belonging to Olympiad 52 or 53 (572-568 bc), a few years subsequent to the Sacred War above mentioned
and to the origin of the Pythia. The festival was celebrated in honor of the Nemean
Zeus, in the valley of Nemea, between Phlius and Kleonte, and originally by the Kleonaeans themselves, until, at some period after 460 bc, the Argeians deprived them of
that honor and assumed the honors of administration to themselves. The Nemean
games had their Hellanodikae to superintend, to keep
order, and to distribute the prizes, as well as the Olympic.
Respecting the Isthmian festival, our first historical information
is a little earlier, for it has already been stated that Solon conferred
a premium upon every Athenian citizen who gained a
prize at that festival as well as at the Olympian,—in or after 591 bc. It was celebrated by the Corinthians attheir isthmus, in honor of Poseidon ; and if we may draw any inference
from the legends respecting its foundation, which is ascribed
sometimes to Theseus, the Athenians appear to have identified it with the
antiquities of their own state.
We
thus perceive that the interval between 600-560 BC exhibits
the first historical manifestation of the Pythia, Isthmia, and Nemea,—the first
expansion of all the three from local into Pan-Hellenic festivals. To the Olympic
games, for some time the only great centre of union among all the widely dispersed Greeks, are now added three other sacred agones of
the like public, open, national character; constituting visible marks, as well
as tutelary bonds, of collective Hellenism, and
insuring to every Greek who went to compete in
the matches, a safe and inviolate transit even through hostile Hellenic states.
These four, all in or near Peloponnesus, and one of which occurred in each year, formed the
period, or cycle, of sacred games, and those who had gained prizes
at all the four received the enviable designation of periodonikes: the honors paid to Olympic
victors on their return to their native city were
prodigious, even in the sixth century bc, and became even more extravagant
afterwards. We may remark that in the Olympic games
alone, the oldest as well as the most illustrious of the four, the musical and intellectual
element was wanting: all the
three more recent agones included crowns for
exercises of music and poetry, along with
gymnastics, chariots, and horses.
Nor
was it only in the distinguishing national stamp set upon these
four great festivals that the gradual increase of Hellenic family-feeling exhibited itself, during the course of this earliest period of our history. Pursuant to the same tendencies, religious festivals in all the considerable
towns gradually became more and more open and accessible, and attracted guests as well as competitors
from beyond the border; the dignity of the state, at well as the honor rendered to the
presiding god, being measured by numbers,
admiration, and envy, in the frequenting visitors. There is no positive
evidence, indeed, of such expansion in the Attic
festivals earlier than the reign of Peisistratus, who first added
the quadrennial or greater Panathenma to the ancient
annual or lesser Panathenaea; nor can we
trace the steps of progress in
regard to Thebes, Orchomenus, Thespiae,
Megara, Sicyon, Pellene, Egina, Argos, etc., but we
find full reason for believing that such was the general reality. Of the Olympic or Isthmian victors whom Pindar and Simonides
celebrated, many derived a portion of
their renown from previous victories acquired at several
of these local contests,—victories
sometimes so numerous, as to prove how widespread the habit of
mutual frequentation had become; though we find, even in the third century BC,
treaties of alliance between different cities, in which it is thought necessary
to confer this mutual right by express stipulation. Temptation was offered, to
the distinguished gymnastic or musical
competitors, by prizes of great value; and Timaeus
even asserted, as a proof of the overweening pride of Kroton and Sybaris,
that these cities tried to supplant the preeminence of the Olympic
games, by instituting games of their own with the richest
prizes, to be celebrated at the same time,—a statement
in itself not worthy of credit, but nevertheless
illustrating the animated rivalry known to
prevail among the Grecian cities, in procuring for
themselves splendid and crowded games. At the time when the
Homeric Hymn to Demeter was composed, the worship of that goddess seems to have been purely local at Eleusis; but before
the Persian war, the festival celebrated by the Athenians every
year, in honor of the Eleusinian Demeter, admitted Greeks of
all cities to be initiated, and was attended by vast crowds of them.
It was thus that the simplicity and strict local application of the
primitive religious festival, among the greater states in Greece, gradually
expanded, on certain great occasions periodically recurring,
into an elaborate and regulated series of exhibitions,—not
merely admitting, but soliciting the fraternal presence of all Hellenic spectators. In this respect
Sparta seems to have formed an exception to
the remaining states: her festivals were for herself
alone, and her general rudeness towards
other Greeks was not materially softened
even at the Karneia, or Hyakinthia,
or Gymnopaediae. On the other hand, the Attic
Dionysia were gradually exalted, from their original rude spontaneous
outburst of village feeling in thankfulness to the god, followed by song, dance,
and revelry of various kinds,—into costly and diversified performances, first, by a trained chorus, next, by
actors superadded to it; and the dramatic
compositions thus produced, as they embodied the perfection
of Grecian art, so they were eminently calculated to invite a Pan-Hellenic
audience and to encourage the sentiment of Hellenic
unity. The dramatic literature of Athens, however, belongs properly
to a later period; previous to the year 560 BC, we see only those
commencements of innovation which drew upon Thespis
the rebuke of Solon, who himself contributed to impart to the
Panathenaic festival a more solemn and attractive character, by checking the license of the rhapsodes, and insuring to those present a full, orderly recital of the Iliad.
The
sacred games and festivals, here alluded to as a class, took hold of the Greek
mind by so great a variety of feelings, as to counterbalance
in a high degree the political disseverance, and to
keep alive among their widespread cities, in the midst of constant jealousy
and frequent quarrel, a feeling of brotherhood and congenial
sentiment such as must otherwise have died away. The Theors, or sacred envoys, who came to Olympia or Delphi from so many different points, all sacrificed to the same god
and at the same altar, witnessed the same sports, and contributed by
their donatives to enrich or adorn one respected scene. Nor must we forget that
the festival afforded opportunity for a sort of
fair, including much traffic amid so large a mass of spectators, and besides the
exhibitions of the games themselves, there were
recitations and lectures in a spacious council-room for those
who chose to listen to them,
by poets, rhapsodes, philosophers, and historians,—among
which last, the history of Herodotus is said to have been publicly read by its author. Of the wealthy and
great men in the various cities, many contended
simply for the chariot victories and horse victories.
But there were others whose ambition was of a character
more strictly personal, and who stripped naked as runners, wrestlers,
boxers, or pankratiasts, having gone through the extreme fatigue of a complete previous training.
Kylon, whose unfortunate attempt to usurp the sceptre at Athens has been recounted, had gained the prize in the Olympic, stadium:
Alexander son of Amyntas, the prince
of Macedon, had run for it. The great family of the Diagoridae at Rhodes, who
furnished magistrates and generals to their native city, supplied a still
greater number of successful boxers and pankratiusae at Olympia, while other instances also occur of generals named by various
cities from the lists of successful Olympic gymnasts; and the odes of Pindar,
always dearly purchased, attest how many of the great and wealthy were found in
that list. The perfect popularity and equality of persons at these
great games, is a feature not less remarkable than the exact adherence to
predetermined rule, and the self-imposed submission of the immense crowd to a
handful of servants armed with sticks, who executed the orders of the Eleian Hellanodikae. The ground upon which the ceremony took
place, and even the territory of the administering state, was protected by a “Truce
of God,” during the month of the festival, the commencement of which was
formally announced by heralds sent round to the different states. Treaties of
peace between different cities were often formally commemorated by pillars
there erected, and the general impression of the scene suggested nothing but
ideas of peace and brotherhood among Greeks. And I may remark that
the impression of the games as belonging to all
Greeks, and to none but Greeks, was stronger and clearer during the interval between 600-300 bc, than it came to be afterwards. For the
Macedonian conquest had the effect of diluting and corrupting Hellenism,
by spreading an exterior varnish of Hellenic tastes and
manners over a wide area of incongruous foreigners, who were
incapable of the real elevation of the Hellenic character ; so that although in later times the games continued
undiminished, both in attraction and in number of
visitors, the spirit of Pan-Hellenic communion,
which had once animated the scene, was gone forever.
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