Banquets Athenians would begin the festival with a banquet during the first night in the
Agora where meat would be cut up to be distributed using a ceremonial
kopis. There was also a major banquet on the second day and a smaller banquet-style meal after the procession on the last day of the festival where people would eat bread alongside parts of the animals that were sacrificed to
Athena.
Procession The most significant aspect of the festival was the procession to the
Acropolis on the last day of the festival (28
Hekatombaion), where
Athenians would make sacrifices to the goddess
Athena. Such as a Hekatomb (sacrifice of 100 oxen or cows) The night before this procession, the younger population of
Athens would have a vigil known as a
pannychis where the people would dance on the Acropolis. During this vigil, the people of Athens would sing a
paean for Athena, a song of praise that typically would not be sung at celebrations for Athena but at celebrations for the god
Apollo instead. During the Lesser Panathenaea young girls known as
arrephoroi would carry a specially woven
peplos robe to place on the wooden
cult image of Athena located in the
Erechtheum, a temple on the north side of the Acropolis that was dedicated to Athena. In line with the occurrence of the Great Panathenaea every four years a larger peplos tapestry would be woven to be put on the statue of Athena in the
Parthenon, a temple in the centre of the Acropolis. The procession consisted of over 1,000 people from a wide range of backgrounds but was led by the high priestess and the treasurers of the temple followed by the arrephoros carrying the peplos robe. This lead group would be followed by other priests (
hieropoios), priestesses (athlothetai), and unmarried young women (
kanephoros), magistrates, soldiers, athletes, representatives from other states, musicians, and herdsmen among others. The procession would conclude with more than one hundred cows and sheep being sacrificed on the
altar of Athena in the Acropolis in a religious ceremony known as a
hecatomb. Non-Athenians also participated in the procession, with female
metics carrying
hydria I and male metics carrying bread used for the meal after the festival or other non-animal offerings on ornate trays known as skaphai. == Competitions ==