Hephaestus and Dionysus were good friends. It was Dionysus that Hephaestus let take him back to Olympus.
King Midas asked Dionysus to take back his "gift" which caused everything Midas touched to turn to gold.
In the story "The Golden Touch," King Midas is granted a wish by the god Dionysus to turn everything he touches into gold. Initially delighted by his newfound power, Midas soon realizes that it comes with unintended consequences as he turns his daughter into gold. Desperate to reverse the wish, Midas asks Dionysus to take back his gift and learns the valuable lesson that material wealth is not as important as the love of family and friends.
Dionysus and Midas were never enemies, Midas was in fact favored by Dionysus twice - once for granting his wish, and the second time in telling Midas how to rid himself of it.
King Midas, because whatever he touched turned to gold, so he could never eat or drink anything until he asked Dionysus to take back his wish. (to turn whatever he touched to gold)
Dionysus agreed to take back his gift, often depicted in myths, because of the ungratefulness or disrespect shown by those who received it. In stories like that of King Pentheus, the consequences of rejecting or misusing the divine gift of wine and revelry led to chaos and punishment. Ultimately, Dionysus aimed to teach a lesson about the importance of reverence for the divine and the balance between joy and excess.
He didn't. There was no such myth of Semele being brought back to the mortal world alive by Dionysus. For the fact, that she has already been killed by Hera.
In 534 BC the first festival of Dionysus was instituted in Ancient Greek Theatre
Yes. One step back, and two steps forward.
Dionysus was god of wine and grapes, so because crops die in the winter and come back in the spring, he was associated with death and resurrection.
He can make a person go mad and he can bring back a person from the underworld.
Dionysus