Gymnopaedia

The Gymnopaedia, in ancient Sparta, was a yearly celebration during which naked youths displayed their athletic and martial skills through the medium of war dancing. The custom was introduced in 668 BC,[1] concurrently with the introduction of naked athletics.[2]

Corybantian dance, the type of dance most likely danced on Gymnopedia festivals (image from Smith's Dictionary of Antiquities).

Etymology

The word Gymnopaedia derives from the ancient Greek Γυμνοπαιδίαι, composed of the words γυμνός (gymnos, "naked" or "unarmed") and παιδιά "paedia" from παῖς (pais, "child" or "youth"). In Greek the plural form, Γυμνοπαιδίαι, appears most often.[3]

In addition to gymnopaedia, modern transliterations and adaptations include gymnopaidiai (mostly older translations of Greek texts, maintaining a plural form for the word), gymnopaidiae (Latinized plural form), gymnopedia, gymnopaedie (in German), and gymnopédie (in French, including Erik Satie's Gymnopédies).

Ancient Sparta

The word Gymnopaedia appears in texts of Herodotus, and several authors in the Attic and Koine Greek periods.

The festival, dedicated to Apollo, was celebrated every year in the summertime with gymnastic contests.[4] The festival lasted for several, perhaps for ten days. The statues of Apollo, Artemis and Leto stood in a part of the Agora, and it was around these statues that the Spartan youths, both boys and girls, performed their choruses and dances in the honour of Apollo. On the last day grown men also performed choruses and dances in the theatre, and during these gymnastic exhibitions they sang the songs.[5]

Though gymnopaedia typically has close links to childhood rites of passage, it was also an important rite of passage for all Spartans, including those aged between twenty and thirty (eiren). The main way in which the eiren were involved in the Gymnopaedia was through ball playing and the participants were known as sphaireis, or ball-players. The ball playing consisted of the players attempting to hit each other with a ball.[6] This rite was conducted in the theatre. In addition, some features of the Gymnopaedia combined the ball playing with boxing.[7] Therefore, this rite of passage was designed to improve their endurance, strength and combat skills.

The Gymnopaedia was a polis event and religious festival, which involved the entire society, including girls and women. In addition to the military aspects, the festival also consisted of several dances conducted by different genders, as well as at different ages. Girls would perform in dances together as this would encourage socialisation and loyalty.[8] There is evidence of young men and women taking part in dances together.[9] This festival was also an opportunity for youths to scout out potential marriage partners as they demonstrated their physicality and fitness to each other.[10] It has been suggested that the dances were based on military movements with a strict structure, which in turn led to the Spartan women developing a greater physical prowess and agility.[9]

Another significant aspect of the gymnopaedia was the nudity. While nudity was not common in Sparta, it did occur in relation to specific cults and rituals.[11] The main reason for this nudity was that the lack of identifying clothing that in turn led to the lack of rank. Therefore a sense of uniformity was created for all participants as well as a sense of loyalty to Spartan society.[7]

Plato praises gymnopaedia-like exercises and performances in The Laws as a medium of education: by dancing in the summer heat, Spartan youth were trained in both musical grace and warrior grit simultaneously. The boys in their dances performed rhythmic movements that resembled the exercises of the palaestra and the pancration, and also imitated the dance of tragedy.[12]

The Gymnopaedia was also held in memory of Sparta's defeat by Argos at Hysiai in 669 or 668 BC. By recognizing their defeat, the Spartans hoped to appease the gods and prevent future defeats. During the festive days, those Spartans who had fallen on that occasion were always praised in songs at this festival.[13] The military style of dancing reinforces the emphasis on military success in Spartan society.

The whole season of the gymnopaediae, during which Sparta was visited by great numbers of strangers, was one of great merriment and rejoicings.[14]

While for the earliest of these authors the meaning of Gymnopaedia appears predominantly as a festival (including dances, sports, and other activities), in later antiquity gymnopaedia refers to a specific dance.

Roman era

Eight centuries after the first gymnopaedia, the festival survived in Lacedaemonia into the Roman era. According to Lucian of Samosata's dialogue Of Pantomime, it retained some connection to martial arts, as the youths would engage in gymnopaedia immediately after their daily military training. On the other hand, he describes the gymnopaedia as "yet another dance", neither involving nudity nor exclusivity for men.

See also

  • For the pyrrhic dance, a war dance spread throughout ancient Greece, see Korybantes
  • Gymnopédie, 19th century music and poetry referring to gymnopaedia; particularly the three piano compositions by the French composer Erik Satie.
  • Hyacinthia
  • Spartan pederasty

References

Citations

  1. Cartledge 2003, p. 102.
  2. Smith 1890, p. 931.
  3. Singular: see Plutarch, Moralia 208d.
  4. Pausanias, Desrciption of Ancient Greece, 3.11.7
  5. Pausanias, Desrciption of Ancient Greece, 3.11.7
  6. Lucian, Anacharsis 38; A. M. Harmon (Trans.)
  7. Pettersson 1992.
  8. Papapostolou et al. 2010.
  9. Wheeler 1856.
  10. Natalie Dent, How did the rites of passage in Sparta contribute to their representation as a "military society"
  11. Brelich 1969.
  12. Hippagoras ap. Ath. xiv. p. 631
  13. Plutarch, Life of Agesilaus 29
  14. Xenophon, Memorabilia'c 1.2.61; Plutarch, Life of Agesilaus

Sources

  • Brelich, Angelo (1969). Paides e Parthenoi. Rome: Ed. dell'Ateneo.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Cartledge, Paul (2003). Spartan Reflections. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-23124-5.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Papapostolou, Metaxia; Konstantinakos, Pantelis; Mountakis, Costas; Georgiadis, Kostas (2010). "Rites of Passage and their Role in the Socialization of the Spartan Youth". CHOREGIA. 6 (1): 43–52. doi:10.4127/ch.2010.0044. ISSN 1791-4027.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Pettersson, Michael (1992). Cults of Apollo at Sparta : the Hyakinthia, the Gymnopaidiai and the Karneia (Phd). University of Gothenburg. hdl:2077/13641.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Smith, William, ed. (1890). A dictionary of Greek and Roman antiquities. Vol. 1. London: John Murray.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)
  • Wheeler, James Talboys (1856). The Life and Travels of Herodotus in the Fifth Century. Harper & brothers.CS1 maint: ref=harv (link)

Further reading

  • Meursius, Johannes] (1618). Orchestra, sive de saltationibus veterum. Leiden.
    • Reprint of the 1745 Florentine edition + comments, updates (in English) by Frits Naerebout and Alkis Raftis, Joannes Meursius and his "Orchestra, sive de saltationibus veterum" of 1618. Dutch Dance Studies, 3., (Theatre of Greek Dances) Dora Stratou, Athens (distributed by the Pauper Press), 2003, 85 pg., ISBN 960-86150-5-4
  • Muller Jzn., F. and Thiel, J.H., Beknopt Grieks-Nederlands woordenboek, Wolters Groningen, 2nd edition (20th century, after 1919)
  • Müller, Otfried, Die Dorier, 1824
    • Abridged English translation, known as The Dorians: The History and Antiquities of the Doric Race, 2nd. ed. rev., 2 Vol., translated from the German by Henry Tufnell and George Cornewall Lewis, A. M., publ. John Murray, Albemarle Str., London, 1839.
  • Xenophon. Polity of Athenians and Lacedaemonians. Translated by Dakyns, H. G.
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