Dictionary Definition
bacchanalian adj : used of riotously drunken
merrymaking; "a night of bacchanalian revelry"; "carousing bands of
drunken soldiers"; "orgiastic festivity" [syn: bacchanal, bacchic, carousing, orgiastic]
User Contributed Dictionary
English
Adjective
- Of or pertaining to the festival of Bacchus; relating
to or given to reveling
and drunkenness.
- Cowper:
- Even bacchanalian madness has its charms.
- Cowper:
Extensive Definition
The bacchanalia were wild and mystic festivals of
the Roman and
Greek god Bacchus.
Introduced into Rome from lower
Italy by way
of Etruria
(c. 200
BC), the bacchanalia were originally held in secret and only
attended by women. The festivals occurred on three days of the year
in the grove of Simila near the
Aventine
Hill, on March 16 and
March
17. Later, admission to the rites was extended to men and
celebrations took place five times a month. According to Livy, the extension
happened in an era when the leader of the Bacchus cult was
Paculla
Annia - though it is now believed that some men had
participated before that.
Livy informs us that the rapid spread of the
cult, which he claims indulged in all kinds of crimes and political
conspiracies at its nocturnal meetings, led in 186 BC to a decree
of the Senate—the
so-called Senatus consultum de Bacchanalibus, inscribed on a bronze
tablet discovered in Apulia in Southern
Italy (1640),
now at the Kunsthistorisches
Museum in Vienna—by
which the Bacchanalia were prohibited throughout all Italy except
in certain special cases which must be approved specifically by the
Senate. In spite of the severe punishment inflicted on those found
in violation of this decree (Livy claims there were more executions
than imprisonment), the Bacchanalia survived in Southern Italy long
past the repression.
Modern scholars hold Livy's account in doubt and
believe that the Senate acted against the Bacchants for one or more
of three reasons. First, because women occupied leadership
positions in the cult (contrary to traditional Roman family
values). Second, because slaves and the poor were the cult's
members and were planning to overthrow the Roman government. Or
third, according to a theory proposed by Erich Gruen,
as a display of the Senate's supreme power to the Italian allies as
well as competitors within the Roman political system, such as
individual victorious generals whose popularity made them a threat
to the senate's collective authority.
Modern usage
The term bacchanalia has since been extended to refer to any drunken revelry. In A Tale of Two Cities, Charles Dickens uses the phrase "the law was certainly not behind any other learned profession in its Bacchanalian propensities."See also
- Maenad - female worshippers of Dionysus
- Dionysus - Another name for Bacchus in Greek
- Thriambus - a hymn sung in processions in honour of Dionysus
- Dionysian Mysteries
- Roman Senate - political body responsible for suppressing the Bacchanalia
References
- Euripides Bacchae, a Greek tragedy, gives some insight as to what was involved in a Bacchanalian rite.
- Bacchanales. Actes des colloques Dionysos de Montpellier (1996-1998). Textes réunis par Pierre Sauzeau. Montpellier : Publications de l'Université Paul Valéry, 2000, 300 p. (ISBN 2-84269-382-5) ; Cahiers du GITA'' nº 13 (ISSN 0295-9900).
External links
bacchanalian in German: Bacchanalien
bacchanalian in Spanish: Bacanal
bacchanalian in Esperanto: Bakanalo
bacchanalian in French: Bacchanales
bacchanalian in Galician: Bacanais
bacchanalian in Italian: Baccanale
bacchanalian in Georgian: ბაკქანალია
bacchanalian in Lithuanian: Bakchanalija
bacchanalian in Dutch: Bacchanalia
bacchanalian in Polish: Bakchanalie
bacchanalian in Portuguese: Bacanal
bacchanalian in Russian: Вакханалия
bacchanalian in Serbian: Баханалије
bacchanalian in Finnish: Bakkanaalit
bacchanalian in Swedish: Backanal
bacchanalian in Turkish:
Bacchanalia