Loading...
Thumbnail Image
Item

Sacred Struggles: Hero Cults and the Shaping of Panhellenic Space

Tindall, Maia R
Abstract
Across the Archaic and Classical Greek world, Panhellenic sanctuaries emerged as spaces where fragmented poleis could converge in ritual, myth, and athletic competition. This thesis investigates how hero cults — honoring figures who occupied the liminal space between mortal and divine — contributed to the formation of these sanctuaries as religious and ideological centers. What roles did these cults play in legitimizing sacred space, mediating local traditions, and shaping collective Hellenic identity? And how did mythological narratives translate into spatial and ritual structures that sustained Panhellenic coherence? Focusing on Olympia, Delphi, Isthmia, and Nemea, this study argues that hero cults were not passive remnants of local myth but active agents in constructing the religious and political significance of these sanctuaries. Where previous scholarship has emphasized athleticism, architecture, and state patronage, this thesis foregrounds the centrality of mythic-historical figures in embedding sanctuaries within a shared cultural framework. These heroes shaped territorial claims, ritual authority, and sacred narratives that both reflected and reinforced communal values. Drawing on archaeological remains, literary sources, and spatial analysis, this project reveals that the cults of heroes structured sacred landscapes to accommodate both local expression and Panhellenic belonging. In doing so, it challenges the separation between myth and cult and offers a new perspective on how religious memory and ritual innovation helped sustain a unified Hellenic worldview amid enduring political fragmentation.
Description
Date
2025-05-01
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Download Dataset
Rights Holder
Usage License
Embargo
Research Projects
Organizational Units
Journal Issue
Keywords
Citation
Department
Classical Studies
DOI
Embedded videos