About This Book
The author traces Greek religion through five stages, beginning with seasonal and tribal rites centered on vegetation and a recurring year-god whose death and rebirth promise renewal. That cycle-based, mother-goddess-focused worship is set against the later Olympian system of enduring immortal gods, after which a period of intensified spiritual inquiry and philosophical reinterpretation reshapes myths into more abstract meanings. The narrative then follows the emergence of mystery cults, savior figures, and widespread syncretism that blend older folk practices with newer beliefs, and concludes with a progressive transformation and attenuation of ancient rites as they survive in modified popular and Christian forms.
About the Author
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