dithyramb

dithyramb
/dith"euh ram', -ramb'/, n.
1. a Greek choral song or chant of vehement or wild character and of usually irregular form, originally in honor of Dionysus or Bacchus.
2. any poem or other composition having similar characteristics, as an impassioned or exalted theme or irregular form.
3. any wildly enthusiastic speech or writing.
[1595-1605; < L dithyrambus < Gk dithýrambos]

* * *

Choric poem, chant, or hymn of ancient Greece.

Dithyrambs were sung by revelers at the festival in honour of Dionysus. The form originated about the 7th century BC in extemporaneous songs of banqueters; it was a recognized literary genre by the end of the 6th century BC. Dithyrambs were composed by Arion and Pindar, among others. By с 450 BC the form was in decline; most dithyrambs were bombastic and turgid.

* * *

song
      choral song in honour of the wine god Dionysus. The form was known as early as the 7th century BC in Greece, where an improvised lyric was sung by banqueters under the leadership of a man who, according to the poet Archilochus, was “wit-stricken by the thunderbolt of wine.” It was contrasted with the more sober paean, sung in honour of Apollo. The word's etymology is uncertain, although, like other words that end in amb, it seems to be of pre-Hellenic origin.

      The dithyramb began to achieve literary distinction about 600 BC, when, according to the Greek historian Herodotus, the poet Arion composed works of this type, named the genre, and formally presented them at Corinth. In the last decades of the 6th century BC in Athens, during the tyranny of Peisistratus, a dithyrambic competition was officially introduced into the Great Dionysia by the poet Lasus of Hermione. Dithyrambs were also performed at other festivals. The performance of dithyrambs was grandiose and spectacular: after a prologue spoken by the group's leader, two choruses in expensive apparel—one of 50 men and the other of 50 boys—sang and performed circle dances around the altar of Dionysus. Auloi (aulos) (wind instruments with double reeds) provided the instrumental accompaniment.

      The great age of the dithyramb was also the period of the flourishing of the Greek choral lyric in general. Simonides (Simonides of Ceos), Pindar, and Bacchylides all composed them. Little is known of the dithyrambs of Simonides, whom a Hellenistic epigram credited with 56 victories, but papyrus discoveries have supplied two complete dithyrambs of Bacchylides along with considerable fragments of Pindar's work. Bacchylides' ode 18 is unusual because it includes a dialogue between a chorus and a soloist. At one time scholars associated the dramatic and mimetic structure of this ode with Aristotle's famous assertion in Poetics that tragedy originated from improvisation by the leaders of the dithyramb; however, many contemporary scholars see the poem's use of dialogue for dramatic interest as a sign of the dithyramb's surrender to the more vivid methods of tragedy.

      From about 450 BC onward, dithyrambic poets such as Timotheus, Melanippides, Cinesias, and Philoxenus employed ever more startling devices of language and music until for ancient literary critics dithyrambic acquired the connotations of “turgid” and “bombastic.” True dithyrambs are rare in modern poetry, although John Dryden (Dryden, John)'s "Alexander's Feast" (1697) may be said to bear a coincidental resemblance to the form. The poets of the French Pléiade (Pléiade, La) (16th century AD) used the term to describe some of their poetry, as did the Italian physician and poet Francesco Redi (Redi, Francesco) for his "Bacco in Toscana" (1685; “Bacchus [Dionysus] in Tuscany”).

      The term may also refer to any poem in an inspired irregular strain, or to a statement or piece of writing in an exalted impassioned style, usually in praise of a particular subject. Modern examples include Friedrich Nietzsche's Dithyrambs of Dionysus (1891) and Gabriele d'Annunzio's "Alcyone" (1904).

Additional Reading
The ancient testimonies on the dithyramb have been collected in Dana Ferrin Sutton, Dithyrambographi Graeci (1989). Translations of 5th-century dithyrambic authors are in David A. Campbell (ed. and trans.), Greek Lyric V: The New School of Poetry and Anonymous Songs and Hymns (1993). Studies include Arthur Pickard-Cambridge, Dithyramb, Tragedy, and Comedy, 2nd ed., rev. by T.B.L. Webster (1962); and Bernd Seidensticker, “Dithyramb, Comedy, and Satyr-Play,” chapter 3 in Justina Gregory (ed.), A Companion to Greek Tragedy (2005), pp. 38–54.

* * *


Universalium. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужен реферат?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • Dithyramb — Dith y*ramb, n. [L. dithyrambus, Gr. ? a kind of lyric poetry in honor of Bacchus; also, a name of Bacchus; of unknown origin: cf. F. dithyrambe.] A kind of lyric poetry in honor of Bacchus, usually sung by a band of revelers to a flute… …   The Collaborative International Dictionary of English

  • dithyramb — англ. [ди/тирэм] dithyrambe фр. [дитира/нб], нем. [дитира/мбэ] ditirambo ит. [дитира/мбо] дифирамб …   Словарь иностранных музыкальных терминов

  • dithyramb — c.1600, from L. dithyrambus, from Gk. dithyrambos, of unknown origin, perhaps a pre Hellenic loan word. A wild choric hymn, originally in honor of Dionysus or Bacchus. Related: Dithyrambic …   Etymology dictionary

  • dithyramb — [dith′ə ram΄; ] also [, dith′ramb΄] n. [L dithyrambus < Gr dithyrambos] 1. in ancient Greece, an impassioned choric hymn in honor of Dionysus 2. any extravagantly emotional speech or writing dithyrambic [dith΄ə ram΄bik, dith΄ramb′bik] adj., n …   English World dictionary

  • Dithyramb — Attic relief (4th century BCE) depicting an aulos player and his family standing before Dionysos and a female consort, with theatrical masks displayed above. The dithyramb (διθύραμβος – dithurambos) was an ancient Greek hymn sung and danced in… …   Wikipedia

  • dithyramb — noun a) A choral hymn sung in ancient Athens in honor of the god Dionysus. While those who drown a truth’s empiric part b) A poem or oration in the same style. In dithyramb or dogma turn frenetic; …   Wiktionary

  • dithyramb — noun (plural dithyrambs) Etymology: Greek dithyrambos Date: circa 1647 1. a usually short poem in an inspired wild irregular strain 2. a statement or writing in an exalted or enthusiastic vein • dithyrambic …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • DITHYRAMB —    a hymn in a lofty and vehement style, originally in honour of Bacchus, in celebration of his sorrows and joys, and accompanied with flute music …   The Nuttall Encyclopaedia

  • dithyramb — dith·y·ramb || dɪθɪræmb n. wildly enthusiastic speech; passionate hymn …   English contemporary dictionary

  • dithyramb — [ dɪθɪram(b)] noun a wildly ecstatic choral hymn of ancient Greece, especially one dedicated to the god Dionysus. ↘a passionate or inflated speech, poem, or text. Derivatives dithyrambic adjective Origin C17: via L. from Gk dithurambos …   English new terms dictionary

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”