Summary
Walter Burkert's Greek Religion offers a comprehensive survey of ancient Greek religious practices and beliefs from the Minoan-Mycenaean age through the archaic and classical periods, emphasizing rituals like sacrifice and purification, temples, gods, festivals, and philosophical attitudes, grounded in archaeological, literary, and inscriptional evidence.Harvard University Press
Project Relevance
Directly connects to initiation and mystery traditions via detailed analysis of Eleusinian, Bacchic, and Orphic cults, which involve secret rituals, esoteric experiences, and hidden knowledge promising afterlife benefits, linking to power dynamics in religious secrecy within the polis religion.Harvard University Press, Hellenic Herald
Key Themes
Mystery cults at Eleusis (Demeter/Persephone), Bacchus/Dionysus followers, Orphic and Pythagorean traditions; ritual ecstasy, purification, afterlife beliefs—core to Western mystery schools canon, with indirect ties to Eastern syncretism but no direct AI genealogy, Russian esotericism, or US intelligence links.Google Books
Scholarly Reputation
Canonical standard work on Greek religion since 1977, by the era's preeminent historian; remains essential, highly influential yet somewhat dated in parts, praised as a marvel of scholarship.Harvard University Press, Bryn Mawr Review