Eleusinian Mysteries, most famous of the secret religious rites of ancient Greece. According to the myth told in the Homeric Hymn to Demeter, the earth goddess Demeter went to Eleusis in search of her daughter Kore (Persephone), who had been abducted by Hades
(Pluto), god of the underworld. Befriended by the royal family of
Eleusis, she agreed to rear the queen’s son. She was, however, prevented
by the queen’s unknowing interference from making the boy immortal and
eternally young. After this occasion, she revealed her identity to the
royal family and commanded that a temple be built for her into which she
retired.
According to the Hymn to Demeter,
the Mysteries at Eleusis originated in the two-fold story of Demeter’s
life—her separation from and reunion with her daughter and her failure
to make the queen’s son immortal. After Eleusis was incorporated, the
city of Athens took responsibility for the festival, but the festival
never lost its local associations.
The Mysteries began with the march of the mystai (initiates) in
solemn procession from Athens to Eleusis. The rites that they then
performed in the Telesterion, or Hall of Initiation, were and remain a
secret. Something was recited, something was revealed, and acts were
performed, but there is no sure evidence of what the rites actually
were, though some garbled information was given by later, Christian
writers who tried to condemn the Mysteries as pagan abominations. It is
clear, however, that neophytes were initiated in stages and that the
annual process began with purification rites at what were called the
Lesser Mysteries held at Agrai (Agrae) on the stream of Ilissos, outside
of Athens, in the month of Anthesterion (February–March). The Greater
Mysteries at Eleusis was celebrated annually in the month of Boedromion
(September–October). It included a ritual bath in the sea, three days of fasting, and completion of the still-mysterious central rite. These acts completed the initiation, and the initiate was promised benefits of some kind in the afterlife.
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