Oxford8


 


Michael Barnes


Oxford Readings in Greek Religion


Chapter 8: Anthony Snodgrass: “The Archaeology
of the Hero”


 


Views on the Origin of Hero Worship


I. Homeric Fundamentalism


A. Popular belief that hero cults inspired by Epic

B. Farnell’s Greek Hero Cults

C. Archeological discoveries that support Farnell’s case


II. Ancestor Worship


A. Earliest form much older than Homer

1. Rohde says it comes from “that remote period which is
obscured for us by the intervening mass of the Homeric poems”

2. Homer and Hesiod betray some familiarity with earlier form
of hero worship, but use other words than heroes ­ hemitheoi
or daimones

a. Hesiod speaks of treating the dead of bygone age as ‘spirits
of the underworld’

B. Ambiguity of heros

1. one meaning familiar to readers of Homer

a. ‘hero’ is hero already in lifetime

b. title awarded not only to warrior or king, but to free men
of varied estate

c. does not show hero worshiped after death

2. another more commonly used meaning

a. denotes person who has become ‘heroized’ only through death

b. honored by sacrifice and cult, specifically around grave, where
power is located

c. notoriety and influence confined to region where grave is
located, which is fixed dwelling place after death

C. Parallel between Greek heroes and saints of early Christendom

D. Speculation that ‘living hero’ was speciality of Ionian Epic
in early stages of Classical period and that from Ionia, idea of ‘living
hero’ and perhaps term heros originated

1. must have been very early because of inclusion of ‘Age of Heroes’
in Works and Days

2. implies that “worship of the transfigured dead was the
only form of contact with the heroic past on the Greek mainland” before
Hesiod

E. Archeological evidence for older practice of worship of ancestors
and chthonic spirits

1. institution of cults at Bronze Age tombs

a. appears frequently on Greek mainland, rarely in islands, not
at all in Ionia

b. corresponds with geographical division mentioned above

c. circumstances make it almost certain that their importance
was local or regional

2. form of burial in prehistoric tombs where cult installed contradicts
burial practices of Epic

a. inhumations instead of cremations

b. multiple not single

c. rock-cut chambers (tholoi) as opposed to under tumuli


III. Worship of Recent Dead


A. glorification of hero, specifically oikistes (founder) that
was central to polis of Classical times

B. burials at Eretria and Lefkandi

1. if Lefkandi actual case of cult immediately after death of
prominent figure, its early date assures that this practice evolved independently
from Ionian Epic

C. lavish or ‘heroic’ burial ceremonies for newly-deceased

D. early institution of cults to ‘real’, Homeric heroes

1. fusion between two meanings of heros to certain extent

2. prehistoric graves not found near where cults established for
major heroes

3. evidence that these ‘hero-cults’ perhaps differently intended
at time of foundation


IV. Political Use of Hero Cults


A. Often employed to ‘underline the territorial integrity of the
emergent polis’

B. Cases where might have been used as separatist claims against
the polis

C. Possibly even markers for territorial claims by individual
landowners


 


“the phenomena of the installation of cult at pre-historic
tombs is to be understood in a way quite independent of the influence of
Homeric Epic, and..other phenomena may also be less susceptible to this
influence than we have come to believe.”


 


Main Page: CLST 4003H. Greek Religion.