Philosophy is the science which considers truth
 
header image

Dionysus Symbols

Dionysus symbols, wine being the main one, are all suggestive of how he was born and how he lived in the world of Greek gods and goddesses. Dionysus was born of a mortal mother, Semele and the immortal and the Greek god, Zeus. Zeus had fallen in love with his priestess, Semele, as he observed her in the guise of an eagle whilst she slaughtered a bull at his altar and then swam in the river Asopus to cleanse herself. He started visiting her secretly.

Zeus had a jealous wife Hera, who found out about the affair. She pretended to be a crone and befriended Semele who knew neither who Hera truly was nor Zeus’s true identity. Suggesting that Semele ask Zeus to reveal his godliness, Hera sought to take revenge. Semele asked Zeus the same and he was sad and reluctant as he knew that it would kill her. But as he had taken an oath, he finally did reveal his true self and his thunderbolts struck Semele and being a mortal, she burned in it and died. Zeus rescued the fetus that was Dionysus and sewed him into his thigh.

Thus Dionysus, an immortal, was born. Dionysus was also identified with the Roman god, Bacchus. There are several Dionysus facts that can be quite enthralling but a few about his symbols and how they came to be so, I can mention here. Dionysus Symbols of Ivy, Leopardskin, Wine, Thyrsus, Revelry and Madness Hera, still displeased, wanted to kill Dionysus. Zeus, in an attempt to save him, turned him into a goat. Zeus took him into the dells of Nysa and to the mountain nymphs, Hyades who fed him honey and raised him tenderly and with a lot of care until he turned into a mysteriously beautiful-looking young man.

As he lived on the mountains, Dionysus learned to make wine. Hera was still in an enraged pursuit of the riddance of Dionysus and struck him with madness. In this state, he wandered over the leas and woody vales of the mountains and had several followers. They indulged into drinking the wine that Dionysus made and made contact with the divine through frenzied and wild orgies. He and his followers, shouting the mystic word euoi! , wandered as far as Egypt and then to India, always wrapped in leopardskin, had an ivy-wreathe and a thyrsus made of forest pine and fennel twined with ivy and dripping with honey, given to him by the mocking Titans instead of a rightful scepter meant for a king or god. There was always the following of satyrs, nymphs and women.

Dionysus symbols often include these and the satyrs who followed him. The tangible spirit of the elixir made everybody including Dionysus lost and found at the same time in the miraculous and seemingly eternal amorous play of raw sensuality, abandoned dance, flute-playing, drinking with the nymphs that all brought them into an ecstatic experience sublime and delirious. Human women who followed him were usually orgiastic and delirious. They were called the Maenads. If they saw a fawn, an ox or a goat, they used to eat them raw. Dionysus symbols also include a fig tree. Dionysus symbols of the Lion, Serpent, Flutes, Dolphins Other Dionysus symbols also include lions, serpents and flutes.

These stem from the story in Greek mythology in which Dionysus was lying beside the sea and his rapturous youthful beauty made the sailors on a ship think he was a prince. They planned to kidnap him. But he turned into a lion and leapt, with the ferocity of a fiend, onto them and turned the ropes of the ships into serpents and filled the ship with ivy and the sound of flutes by which the sailors went mad and were disoriented and jumped out. Whilst jumping, they were mercifully turned into dolphins. Anybody who did stand in the way of Dionysus was struck with madness. Dionysus symbols of Theater (Tragedy and Comedy), Goat and Bull The word ‘tragedy’ is also very closely associated with Dionysus as it comes from the Greek words tragodia which literally means ‘goat song’ – tragos meaning ‘goat’ and oide meaning ‘song’. The satyrs were very closely related to this form of theater. The delirious, drunken party that followed Dionysus around was called as Komos – the root of the word ‘comedy’ ( komos – carousel, revel and oidos – singer, poet). Greek theater is very closely associated to the ecstatic orgies of the Dionysian cult. There is a story that suggests Dionysus to have turned into a bull, full of rage but was ripped to pieces by the Titans who ate him then. Dionysus Symbols and King Midas’s Touch Dionysus’s teacher Silenus was one of the cult members who drank until he forgot where he was. Once he got lost wandering about in Midas’ kingdom and fell into a whirlpool; and wouldn’t have got out alive had King Midas not saved him. As a gesture of deeply felt gratitude, Dionysus told Midas that he would grant him any wish. And Midas’ greed taking over, he asked Dionysus to grant him a wish where whatever he’d touch would turn to gold. This Dionysus did, knowing it wouldn’t serve Midas too well. Midas overwhelmed, realized finally, he couldn’t eat as whatever he touched turned to gold. Finally, when King Midas went to hug his daughter and she turned to gold, he regretted having asked for such a wish and Dionysus, seeing that King Midas had finally realized his greed, took the spell away. Another one of Dionysus symbols is the need for people outside of society to take off their burdening masks and express themselves and return to the basic nature of free, unfettered spirit and wilderness – then, they were women who were suppressed in Greek society, slaves and foreigners. The cult of Dionysus wanted to liberate themselves from all the bondage that had been imposed upon them. These have been the symbols of Dionysus, Greek god of wine.

This entry was posted in default and tagged , , , . Bookmark the permalink.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*

You may use these HTML tags and attributes: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>