Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Introduction: Athenian History and Society in the Age of Pericles
- 1 Democracy and Empire
- 2 Athenian Religion in the Age of Pericles
- 3 The Athenian Economy
- 4 Warfare in Athenian Society
- 5 Art and Architecture
- 6 Other Sorts: Slaves, Foreigners, and Women in Periclean Athens
- 7 Drama and Democracy
- 8 The Bureaucracy of Democracy and Empire
- 9 Plato’s Sophists, Intellectual History after 450, and Sokrates
- 10 Democratic Theory and Practice
- 11 Athens and Sparta and the Coming of the Peloponnesian War
- Conclusion: Pericles and Athens
- Bibliography
- Index
2 - Athenian Religion in the Age of Pericles
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 28 March 2009
- Frontmatter
- Introduction: Athenian History and Society in the Age of Pericles
- 1 Democracy and Empire
- 2 Athenian Religion in the Age of Pericles
- 3 The Athenian Economy
- 4 Warfare in Athenian Society
- 5 Art and Architecture
- 6 Other Sorts: Slaves, Foreigners, and Women in Periclean Athens
- 7 Drama and Democracy
- 8 The Bureaucracy of Democracy and Empire
- 9 Plato’s Sophists, Intellectual History after 450, and Sokrates
- 10 Democratic Theory and Practice
- 11 Athens and Sparta and the Coming of the Peloponnesian War
- Conclusion: Pericles and Athens
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
Aristophanes' hero Strepsiades brings the Clouds to a boisterous finale by burning down the Thinkery, whose leader Socrates has been subverting the minds and morals of young Athenians. Strepsiades himself was a short-term convert to the comic philosopher's slick sophistry and outlandish new gods - which include Cosmic Spin (Dinos), Aether, and especially the Clouds - but events in the play cause him to recognize his error and repent. With his parting words, he berates the Socratic crew for their other worldly speculations:
What were you thinking when you outraged the gods and peered at the seat of the Moon?
Chase them, hit them, stone them - for lots of reasons, but most of all because they wronged the gods.
Clouds 1506-91This chapter will focus on the right ways to treat the gods, by outlining the major beliefs and practices of Athenian religion(s) in the time of Pericles.
First, a disclaimer: no ancient Greek word corresponds to our term “religion.” Acts performed in recognition of unseen powers intermingled constantly with other aspects of daily life, rather than defining a discrete area of human activity. There were no widely accepted dogmatic texts, no priestly class, no creed. Nevertheless, activities and objects set apart for the gods had a particular status (hieron). The unseen entities that Strepsiades knows as theoi or daimones had a special claim on one’s attention, as Clouds makes clear, and nomizein tous theous, “doing the customary things for the gods,” was considered essential to the city’s well-being.
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- The Cambridge Companion to the Age of Pericles , pp. 46 - 69Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2007
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