Dionysos
(Continued from page 1)

Dionysos turns a ship into grapevines, and the bad sailors into dolphins
(Athenian black-figure vase from the 500's BC)
One story about Dionysos, which you can see painted on this vase, is that he once disguised himself as a rich young man and sailed on a Greek merchant ship on the ocean. The bad sailors, once they got out of sight of land, decided to throw the young man overboard and take all his money for themselves. But because Dionysos was really a god, when they tried to throw him into the water, Dionysos instead turned them into dolphins and made them leap overboard (you can see the dolphins all around the ship). He stayed on the ship and made grapevines grow everywhere.
Other stories about Dionysos are about the growing and dying of the grapevines: like Persephone, Dionysos is born in the spring, and grows through the summer, as the grapes do. In the fall, he is cut down, murdered, trampled, like the grapes. His blood is the same as the wine: his blood IS wine, and wine is his blood. Whenever you drink wine, it is (for the Greeks) the blood of Dionysos. (Compare the Christian idea of communion). But then every spring he is born again (Compare the story of Attis from Western Asia, or Osiris in Egypt).
Because Dionysos is born again and again, over and over, he is also the subject of a mystery cult. Some Greeks believed that if you worshipped Dionysos in special ways, you could improve your life on this earth by being born again like Dionysos, starting fresh. Some people even seem to have believed that you could improve your life after death, making your death into a kind of rebirth into a better life.
To find out more about Dionysos, check out these books on Amazon.com or at your local library:
The Spirit of Spring: A Tale of the Greek God Dionysos, by Penelope Proddow (1994). For kids.
D'aulaire's Book of Greek Myths, by Edgar and Ingri D'Aulaire.
Greek Religion, by Walter Burkert (reprinted 1987). By a leading expert, for adults. He has sections on each of the Greek gods, and discusses their deeper meanings, and their function in Greek society.
Ancient Mystery Cults, by Walter Burkert (reprinted 1989). More about Dionysos and other mystery cults.



