Panegyris Explained

A panegyris (Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: πανήγυρις "gathering"), is an Ancient Greek general, national or religious assembly.[1] [2] Each was dedicated to the worship of a particular god. It is also associated with saint days and holy festivals.[3] Panegryis is used three ways: A meeting of the inhabitants from one town and its vicinity, a meeting of inhabitants of an entire province, district, or of people belonging to a particular tribe, and for national meetings. The panegyreis were festivals in which prayers were made, sacrifices offered, and also processions.[4]

Relation to panegyry and panegyric

Πανήγυρις is also transliterated as panegyry,[5] and in turn, some sources define panegyry to be a panegyric.[6] [7] A panegyric is a formal public speech. This could be a separate usage of panegyry, an obsolete usage, or simply an error.

References

  1. Entry πανήγυρις at LSJ
  2. Book: Smith , William . William Smith (lexicographer) . Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities, Second Edition . Little, Brown, and Company . 1870 . 861 .
  3. Web site: Bebis . George . The Saints of the Orthodox Church . . 2006-12-20 .
  4. Web site: LacusCurtius • Greek Festivals — Panegyris (Smith's Dictionary, 1875). 2021-11-08. penelope.uchicago.edu.
  5. Web site: Greek New Testament - πανήγυρις. 2021-11-08. www.laparola.net.
  6. Web site: The Free Dictionary . Farlex . 2006-12-21 .
  7. Web site: Dictionary.com . Lexico Publishing Group, LLC . 2006-12-21 .