The Lesser Dionysia were vintage
festivals, celebrated in rural districts in the month of November, and were
characterized by drinking, feasting, and joviality of all kinds.
In connection with some of the
festivals in honour of Dionysus were certain mystic observances, into which only
women, called Menades or Bacchantes, were initiated. Clad in fawn-skins, they
assembled by night on the mountain sides, {199} some carrying blazing torches,
others thyrsi, and all animated with religious enthusiasm and frenzy. They
shouted, clapped their hands, danced wildly, and worked themselves up to such a
pitch of excitement and fury that in their mad frenzy they tore in pieces the
animal brought as a sacrifice to Dionysus.
Under the name of Bacchanalia,
these mystic rites were introduced into Rome, where men also were allowed to
participate in them; but they were attended with such frightful excesses that
the state authorities at length interfered and prohibited them.