Thriambus

Thriambus

:"Thriambus (genus) (Fennah, 1964) is a genus of Delphacidae. Culex thriambus is a species of the genus Culex."

A thriambus (also thriamb; Greek _gr. ) is a hymn to Dionysus, sung in processions in his honour, and at the same time an epithet of the god himself, according to Diodorus (4.5.2):

"Thriambus" is a name that has been given him, they say, because he was the first of those of whom we have a record to have celebrated a triumph ("thriambos") upon entering his native land after his campaign, this having been done when he returned from India with great booty.

It was loaned into Old Latin via Etruscan as " _la. triumpus", in Classical Latin taking the form " _la. triumphus", the Roman triumph where the victorious general takes the role of Dionysus as leader of the procession, later associated with _la. Iuppiter rather than Dionysus. Arrian traces the custom to Alexander the Great when he states ("Anabasis" 6b.28):

Certain authors have said (though to me the statement seems incredible) that Alexander led his forces through Carmania lying extended with his Companions upon two covered waggons joined together, the flute being played to him; and that the soldiers followed him wearing garlands and sporting. Food was provided for them, as well as all kinds of dainties which had been brought together along the roads by the Carmanians. They say that he did this in imitation of the Bacchic revelry of Dionysus, because a story was told about that deity, that after subduing the Indians he traversed the greater part of Asia in this manner and received the appellation of "Thriambus", and that for the same reason the processions in honour of victories after war were called "thriambi".

The term's etymology is connected with the word _gr. θρῖον "fig leaf" by Aemilius Luetcke (1829) who refers to the epithet _gr. Συκίτης "of the fig tree" of Dionysus.

From the time of Roman Greece (2nd century BC), the Greek term increasingly narrows to a translation of Latin '. In Modern Greek, _el. θρίαμβος is used in the same generalized meaning as English '.

References

*Janda, Michael: "Elysion : Entstehung und Entwicklung der griechischen Religion" (2005).
*Luetcke, Aemilius, "De Graecorum dithyrambis et poetis dithyrambicis", Berlin (1829).

ee also

*Dithyramb
*Iamb
*Bacchanalia
*Roman triumph


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