ARCHEOLOGICAL MUSEUM, Bas-Relief Of Eleusis Room 15

Your browser doesn't support HTML5 audio

The large bas-relief of Eleusis depicting Demeter and Kore with Triptolemus was sculpted in marble around 440 BC for the extremely important sanctuary of Eleusis, about 25 kilometers from Athens. It was here that they celebrated the Eleusinian Mysteries, the sacred ceremonies in honor of the goddess Demeter, Mother Earth and her daughter Kore, also known as Persephone. Along with the Mysteries in honor of Dionysius, they were the most important celebrations in the Ancient World.

According to legend, Kore was abducted by Hades, the god of the Underworld. Her mother Demeter wandered desperately in search of her, while the Earth was struck by a tremendous famine and drought, until Zeus took mercy on her and allowed Kore to return to the surface. Upon her return, nature once again began to flourish, but six months later, Kore was tricked into returning to the Underworld. The myth is linked with the agricultural seasons: her abduction represents the planting of the seeds underground, while the yearly return of Kore to the surface represents the growth and ripening of the crops.

The Eleusinian Mysteries were celebrated every year, in September, and thousands of people traveled from Athens to Eleusis along the sacred road that ran from the city to the sanctuary. The faithful were initiated to the Mysteries with secret practices, and celebrated a ceremony shrouded in mystery, of which very little is known. It may have been a sacred representation that offered the faithful a chance to relive the myth of Demeter and Kore, i.e. the passage from darkness to light, experiencing the fear of death and freeing themselves from it....

Scarica MyWoWo! La Travel App che ti racconta le meraviglie del mondo!