The second most famous Mysteries were those on the island of
Samothrace. While information on the Samothracian Mysteries is even more scarce than that on the Eleusinian Mysteries (and more late, dating to the Hellenistic and Roman periods), it is known that they significantly borrowed from the ones at Eleusis (including the term 'Mysteries'); archaeological and linguistic data continues to shed light on this religious school. These rituals were also associated with those of neighboring islands, such as the mysteries of the
Cabeiri.
Philip II of Macedon and his later wife Olympias were said to have met during the initiation ceremony at Samothrace.
Heracles,
Jason,
Cadmus,
Orpheus and the
Dioscuri were all said to have been initiated here.
Myth Little is known about any core foundational myths for the entities worshipped by cult initiates at Samothrace—including their identities, as they tended to be discussed anonymously, being referred to as the "Samothracian gods" or the "Great Gods". However, comparisons have been made between the "gods of Samothrace" and the Cabeiri--
chthonic deities from comparable pre- or non-Greek cultures such as
Thrace or
Phrygia. There is a definite connection in that each deity or set of deities purportedly offered protection on the seas and help in difficult times, though the extent of this connection is impossible to conclude. It is therefore likely that if the Samothracian gods were not the Cabeiri themselves, then the cult was at least heavily influenced by this comparative religion, along with Thracian elements of worship present on the island before an established Greek presence.
Initiation Unlike at Eleusis, initiation at Samothrace was not restricted to a few days of the year, instead lasting from April to November (the sailing season) with a large event likely taking place in June, potentially over two nights. The future initiates would enter the sanctuary of Samothrace from the east, into a circular space (now called the Theatral Circle) 9 meters in diameter with flagstones and a grandstand of five steps.
Livy records that here, the initiates would listen to a proclamation concerning the absence of crime and bloodshed. Libations and sacrifices of rams were likely made at the beginning of the rituals, similar to at Eleusis. The initiates would have moved to another building at night for the actual initiation, though archaeologists are unsure whether this was the Hall of the Choral Dancers, the Hieron, the Anaktoron, the Rotunda of Arsinoe II, or another building. In the 3rd century CE,
Hippolytus of Rome in his
Refutation of All Heresies quotes a
Gnostic author who provides a summary of some of the images here: There stand two statues of naked men in the Anaktoron of the Samothracians, with both hands stretched up toward heaven and their pudenda turned up, just as the statue of Hermes at Kyllene. The aforesaid statues are images of the primal man and of the regenerated, spiritual man who is in every respect consubstantial with that man. The scarcity of evidence precludes understanding the specifics of the initiation, though there may have been dancing such as at Eleusis associated with the mythology of the search for
Harmonia. At the end of the initiation, the initiates were given a purple
fillet. On the
epopteia, the second night of initiation, the “usual preliminary lustration rites and sacrifices” took place; little else is known, except that it may have been similar to the Eleusinian
epopteia and would have climaxed with the showing of a great light.
Aftermath The initiations of the first and second nights were concluded with a banquet. Archaeologists have uncovered many dining rooms in association with the cult at Samothrace, as well as thousands of bowls for libations and other materials such as lamps. In addition to the purple fillet, initiates also left with a “Samothracian ring” (a magnetic iron ring coated in gold), and some initiates would set up a record of their initiation in the
stoa of the sanctuary. == Mithraic Mysteries ==