Orphism


The Orphic Hymns
Orpheus and the Roots of Platonism
Orphic Tradition and the Birth of the Gods
Words of Power: Ḥurūfī Teachings between Shi'ism and Sufism in Medieval Islam (Shi'i Heritage Series)
Apollinaire, Cubism and Orphism
Orphism: The Evolution of Non-Figurative Painting in Paris, 1910-1914 (Oxford Studies in the History of Art and Architecture)
Overarching Greek Trends in European Philosophy (IVITRA Research in Linguistics and Literature)
Orpheus: A History of Religions
Orpheus and Greek Religion
Ritual Texts for the Afterlife: Orpheus and the Bacchic Gold Tablets
The Magic of the Orphic Hymns: A New Translation for the Modern Mystic
Orpheus
Platón y El Orfismo: Diálogos Entre Religión y Filosofía
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Orphei Hymni
 
by
Anonymous
Études sur les Hymnes Orphiques (Religions in the Graeco-Roman World, 143) (French Edition)
Colin Wilson
As to Orphism, it soon blended with the worship of the god Dionysus, who originated in Thrace, and who was worshipped there in the form of a bull. Dionysus was quickly accepted in seventh-century Greece, because he was exactly what the Greeks needed to complete their pantheon of gods; under the name Bacchus he became the god of wine, and his symbol was sometimes an enormous phallus. Frazer speaks of Thracian rites involving wild dances, thrilling music and tipsy excess, and notes that such going ...more
Colin Wilson, The Occult

Jane Ellen Harrison
Plutarch is by temperament, and perhaps also by the decadent time in which he lived, unable to see the good side of the religion of fear, unable to realize that in it was implicit a real truth, the consciousness that all is not well with the world, that there is such a thing as evil. Tinged with Orphism as he was, he took it by tis gentle side and never realized that it was this religion of fear, of consciousness of evil and sin and the need of purification, of which Orphism took hold and which ...more
Jane Ellen Harrison, Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion

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