REDEFINING ANCIENT ORPHISM

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REDEFINING ANCIENT ORPHISM This book examines the fragmentary and contradictory evidence for Orpheus as the author of rites and poems to redefine Orphism as a label applied polemically to extra-ordinary religious phenomena. Replacing older models of an Orphic religion, this richer and more complex model provides insight into the boundaries of normal and abnormal Greek religion. The study traces the construction of the category of Orphic from its first appearances in the Classical period, through the centuries of philosophical and religious polemics, especially in the formation of early Christianity and again in the debates over the origins of Christianity in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. A paradigm shift in the scholarship of Greek religion, this study provides scholars of classics, early Christianity, ancient religion, and philosophy with a new model for understanding the nature of ancient Orphism, including ideas of afterlife, cosmogony, sacred scriptures, rituals of purification and initiation, and exotic mythology. radcliffe g. edmonds iii is the Paul Shorey Professor of Greek and Chair of the Department of Greek, Latin and Classical Studies at Bryn Mawr College. He is author of Myths of the Underworld Journey: Plato, Aristophanes, and the Orphic Gold Tablets (2004) and editor of The Orphic Gold Tablets and Greek Religion: Further Along the Path (2011).

REDEFINING ANCIENT ORPHISM A Study in Greek Religion RADCLIFFE G. EDMONDS III Bryn Mawr College

University Printing House, Cambridge cb28bs, United Kingdom Cambridge University Press is part of the University of Cambridge. It furthers the University s mission by disseminating knowledge in the pursuit of education, learning and research at the highest international levels of excellence. Information on this title: /9781107038219 C 2013 This publication is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provisions of relevant collective licensing agreements, no reproduction of any part may take place without the written permission of Cambridge University Press. First published 2013 Printed in the United Kingdom by Clays, St Ives plc. A catalogue record for this publication is available from the British Library Library of Congress Cataloguing in Publication data Edmonds, Radcliffe G. (Radcliffe Guest), 1970 Redefining ancient Orphism : a study in Greek religion /. pages. cm Includes bibliographical references and index. isbn 978-1-107-03821-9 (hardback) 1. Dionysia. 2. Dionysus (Greek deity) Cult. 3. Cults Greece. I. Title. bl820.b2e36 2013 292.9 dc23 2013012164 isbn 978-1-107-03821-9 Hardback Cambridge University Press has no responsibility for the persistence or accuracy of urls for external or third-party internet websites referred to in this publication, and does not guarantee that any content on such websites is, or will remain, accurate or appropriate.

Contents List of illustrations Acknowledgments Note on abbreviations page viii ix xii part i introduction: definitions old and new 1 The name of Orpheus 3 Ancient Orpheus 4 Ageoldnewage 5 Redefining ancient Orphism 6 2 Orphism through the ages: A history of scholarship 11 The Classical category 14 The Hellenistic category 16 Roman period 24 The crystallization of the category among the Christians and Neoplatonists 27 The Christian apologists construction of Orphism 30 The Neoplatonic construction of Orphism 37 Orphism as a systematic religion 43 Orpheus in the middle ages 47 The Renaissance of Orpheus 49 From the Renaissance to the nineteenth century 51 The impact of new evidence: The Orphic gold tablets 55 More new discoveries: The Linear B tablets, gold tablets, and the Derveni papyrus 59 Orphism in the twenty-first century 63 Redefining ancient Orphism: Rejecting the Orphic exception 68 3 The problem of definition 71 Cue validity 72 Beyond Linforth: A new definition 73 Emic vs. etic definitions 76 v

vi Contents Valid cues: Extra-ordinary purity, sanctity, antiquity, and strangeness 77 Consequences of the new definition 82 Conclusion: Redefining ancient Orphism 88 part ii orphic scriptures or the vaporings of many books? 4 Orphic textuality: A hubbub of books 95 Orphic textuality 96 The hubbub of books in Classical Athens 111 The epideixis of exegesis: The Derveni author and his text 124 The name of Orpheus 135 5 Orphic hieroi logoi: Sacred texts for the rites 139 Sacred texts: Myth and ritual again 139 The form of Orphic poems 144 The nature of the Rhapsodic collection 148 6 Orphic mythology: The content of Orphic poems 160 Cosmogony 163 Poems for the sacred rites 172 Tales from the life of Orpheus 188 Exotic myths 190 part iii orphic doctrines or the pure from the pure? 7 Orphic purity: Piety or superstition? 195 Introduction: Pure from the pure 195 An absence of Orphics 198 Ritual experts and their clients 200 The works of Orpheus: Teletai and katharmoi 208 Conclusion: The Orphic label for rites and people 244 8 Life in the afterlife: The initiates privilege and the mythic tradition 248 Life in the afterlife 248 The Homeric afterlife 252 Orpheus and eschatology 267 Orphic ideas of the soul 269 Conclusions 291 9 Original sin or ancestral crimes: Zagreus and the concern with purification 296 The web of Penelope 296 Recompense for the ancient grief 304

Contents vii That old Titanic nature 326 Misreading the eating 334 The playthings of Dionysos 345 The blood of the earthborn 360 Olympiodorus innovation 374 10 Conclusions: Redefining ancient Orphism 392 Blunting Occam s Razor: Some methodological considerations 392 Orphica within Greek religion 395 Bibliography 400 Index 423 Index locorum 426

Illustrations 1 Alabaster bowl (3rd 6th century ce), with details of the inscriptions. page 84 2 Etruscan mirror, Corpus Speculorum Etruscorum, U.S.A. 2:14. 104 3 Line drawing of bone tablet from Olbia. 199 viii

Acknowledgments This project has been many years in the making, and the people to whom I owe debts of gratitude are too many to name. Bruce Lincoln, Jonathan Z. Smith, James Redfield, and Chris Faraone aided and encouraged me in graduate school when I first encountered the problem of Orphism, introducing me to the scholarship and teaching me how to analyze it critically. It has become a cliché in scholarship to speak of standing on the shoulders of giants (even appearing as a trite acronym, OTSOG), but there is a profound truth in it nonetheless. I started my researches into Greek religion with the works of Burkert, Bremmer, Graf, Parker, and Sourvinou-Inwood, beginning with the conclusions they had drawn as they were changing the very way Greek religion is understood. Likewise, my study of Orphism began with Burkert, Graf, Brisson, and Detienne, so my understanding of it was shaped from the outset by the innovations of these giants in the field and the vision of it I have come to depends upon the point from which I started. This work would not have been possible without Alberto Bernabé, whose monumental studies of the Orphic fragments have provided scholars in the twenty-first century with an invaluable resource. Although I disagree fundamentally with many of his conclusions, I have been fortunate indeed to have a scholarly opponent so friendly and courteous as well as so erudite. Many of my ideas have been honed in conversation with him, whether in print, at conferences, or even across the dinner table, and, while he will assuredly not agree with many of the conclusions I draw in this study, I am grateful nonetheless for his stimulating opposition. My thanks are due as well to Fritz Graf and Sarah Johnston, who for many years have discussed matters Orphic with me (along with a plethora of other fascinating things); their kindness and conversations have been important to me. Claude Calame and Jan Bremmer have likewise provided helpful critiques and discussions, sharing their advanced researches with me as I embarked upon my own. Luc Brisson has generously given of his ix

x Acknowledgments time and encouragement; I am indeed grateful to him as one of the giants without whom I could never have begun my own labors. His vast erudition has been a valuable resource for me, and his scholarly clarifications of the complex Neoplatonic tradition have been essential for the development of the study of Orphica in the twenty-first century. My progress along the way has been much aided by discussions with Miguel Herrero and Fabienne Jourdan, whose researches into the early Christian tradition have taught me much and for whose collegial conversations I remain very grateful. The shape of this project owes much to my reading of several studies in the history of religions that have profoundly shaped my approach here. First and foremost of these is J. Z. Smith s Drudgery Divine, which I encountered early in my scholarly career and which first taught me to examine the history of scholarship with the same attention as the texts themselves. Michael Williams Rethinking Gnosticism : An Argument for Dismantling a Dubious Category and Karen King s What is Gnosticism? likewise provided me with models for thinking about Orphism as a category within the history of scholarship rather than a thing that existed in antiquity. Bruce Lincoln s Theorizing Myth (and the graduate seminar from which it stemmed) remains profoundly influential in my thinking. This book is the result of many years of working, and different pieces of it have been published in various venues along the way. I have learned much from the conversations sparked by the responses to those publications, and most of the material previously published appears here in somewhat altered form, some bits with only the most superficial of changes and others with profound revisions. An earlier version of Chapter 6 appeared as Orphic Mythology within the Blackwell Companion to Greek Mythology, while sections of Chapter 8 are appearing as A Lively Afterlife and Beyond: The Soul in Plato, Homer, and the Orphica, in a forthcoming volume of Les Etudes Platoniciennes entitled Platon et ses prédécesseurs Psukhê. A version of one section of Chapter 9 appeared as A Curious Concoction: Tradition and Innovation in Olympiodorus Orphic Creation of Mankind in the American Journal of Philology 130 (2009): 511 532, while large portions of Chapters 9 and 10 were published online through the Center for Hellenic Studies as Recycling Laertes Shroud: More on Orphism and Original Sin (http://chs.harvard.edu/chs/redmonds). This project was begun during my time as a Fellow at the Center for Hellenic Studies, and I am grateful to the director, Gregory Nagy, and to my fellow Fellows for making my time there so fruitful and enjoyable. Bryn Mawr College made the work possible by supporting my research leaves at the beginning and end of the process. I am grateful too to my students

Acknowledgments over the past few years, who (mostly) refrained from rolling their eyes when I once again dragged the Orphica into discussions in class. I particularly want to thank Edward Whitehouse and Abbe Walker, whose sharp eyes and keen awareness were invaluable in putting together the indices and keeping the citations straight. My thanks also go to Michael Sharp and the editorial team at Cambridge University Press, who have shepherded this project through the many stages of its development. Finally, my love and gratitude to my wife and children, for their patience and support as I wrestled with this project for so many years. xi

Note on abbreviations Abbreviations of ancient authors and works follow those of The Oxford Classical Dictionary, 3rd edn. (Oxford 1999), making use of the abbreviationsinthegreek Lexicon of Liddell, Scott, and Jones for works not in the OCD. BNP refers to the entries in the electronic edition of the Brill s New Pauly, which are cited by the author s name and nd (no date). xii