Thargelia
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For more information on Thargelia, visit Britannica.com.
Thargēlia, principal festival of Apollo at Athens and throughout Ionia, celebrated on the 7th Thargelion (May–June), a pre-harvest festival with first-fruit offerings from the still unripe crops of all kinds of corn and vegetables cooked together in a pot (the offering being called thargelos). The interesting feature of this festival took place on the day before, namely purification (perhaps for a new beginning) by means of scapegoats. Two men (representing the men and women of the city), chosen for their ugliness, were fed and led around the city (so as to absorb all pollution), then pelted, flogged with branches of figs, and driven out; in early times they were no doubt killed by being beaten with real rods and stoned.
Thargelia (Greek Θαργήλια) was one of the chief Athenian festivals in honour of the Delian Apollo and Artemis, held on their birthdays, the 6th and 7th of the month Thargelion (about May 24 and May 25).
Essentially an agricultural festival, the Thargelia included a purifying and expiatory ceremony. While the people offered the first-fruits of the earth to the god in token of thankfulness, it was at the same time necessary to propitiate him, lest he might ruin the harvest by excessive heat, possibly accompanied by pestilence. The purificatory preceded the thanksgiving service. On the 6th a sheep was sacrificed to Demeter Chloe on the Acropolis, and perhaps a swine to the Fates, but the most important ritual was the following. Two men, the ugliest that could be found (the Pharmakoi) were chosen to die, one for the men, the other (according to some, a woman) for the women. On the day of the sacrifice they were led round with strings of figs on their necks, and whipped on the genitals with rods of figwood and squills. When they reached the place of sacrifice on the shore, they were stoned to death, their bodies burnt, and the ashes thrown into the sea (or over the land, to act as a fertilizing influence).
It is agreed that an actual human sacrifice took place on this occasion, replaced in later times by a milder form of
expiation. Thus at
The ceremony on the 7th was of a cheerful character. All kinds of first-fruits were carried in procession and offered to the god, and, as at the Pyanepsia (or Pyanopsia), branches of olive bound with wool, borne by children, were affixed by them to the doors of the houses. These branches, originally intended as a charm to avert failure of the crops, were afterwards regarded as forming part of a supplicatory service. On the second day choruses of men and boys took part in musical contests, the prize for which was a tripod. Further, on this day adopted persons were solemnly received into the genos and phrairia of their adoptive parents.
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