The winnowing-fan (λίκνον [
líknon], also meaning a "cradle") featured in the rites accorded
Dionysus and in the
Eleusinian Mysteries: "it was a simple agricultural implement taken over and mysticized by the religion of Dionysus,"
Jane Ellen Harrison remarked.
Dionysus Liknites ("Dionysus of the winnowing fan") was wakened by the Dionysian women, in this instance called
Thyiades, in a cave on
Parnassus high above
Delphi; the winnowing-fan links the god connected with the
mystery religions to the agricultural cycle, but mortal Greek babies too were laid in a winnowing-fan. In
Callimachus's
Hymn to Zeus,
Adrasteia lays the infant Zeus in a golden
líknon, her goat suckles him and he is given honey. In the
Odyssey, the dead oracle
Teiresias tells
Odysseus to walk away from Ithaca with an oar until a wayfarer tells him it is a winnowing fan (i.e., until Odysseus has come so far from the sea that people don't recognize oars), and there to build a shrine to Poseidon. ==China==