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Campus Savors Suovetaurilia-2014 Classics Picnic

a man holding a piece of paper and holding a stick

In front of his classmates and nearly 250 guests at Goodrich Ballpark during Saturday's re-enactment of an ancient Greco-Roman feast and sacrifice, Matt Binder ’16 plays the role of the priest Chryses from Book 1 of Homer’s Iliad.

a man wearing sunglasses and a red shirt holding a grill

Associate Professor of Classics Jeremy Hartnett ’96 employs some anachronistic technologies to divide the meat into equal portions. The animal was raised by Professor of Chemistry Scott Feller and his wife, Wendy, at Silver Valley Farm.

a sign on the grass

This re-creation of a boundary stone marks the temenos (sacred area) for the sacrifice and feast. Based on an inscription found in the Athenian Agora, it was created by D’Aireon Nunn ’16.

a man holding tongs to a grill

Former Classics minor Jose Herrera ’13 brought his daughter, Osiris, back to campus for the festivities. Here his skills at the grill are put to the test.

a man in a red robe holding a stick with flowers in his hair

Sam Bennett ’14 served as Chief Priest for the ceremony. Here, he leads the procession from the stadium concourse around the left field fence and to the sacred area behind right field. Also visible are fellow seniors Matt Michaloski, Scott Campell, Reid Smith, and Thomas Brooks.

a man in a robe holding a stick

The Chief Priest addresses the crowd, asking them in Greek to “Keep holy silence!” as the rituals commence. Sam really looked the part—fans at the stadium even posed for “selfies” with him

a group of men in clothing

Students from Professor Bronwen Wickkiser’s course on Ancient Greek Religion and Magic reenact a scene from Homer’s Iliad. During the reenactment, the Greek goddess of victory, Nike, is invoked by the narrator (Ian MacDougall ’14, at right). Nike arrives in the modernized form of Cam Sobleski ’14 (center). Chief Priest Sam Bennett ’14 watches Wabash’s kicker and punter, respectively, crack themselves up.

a man holding a piece of meat

Any public ceremony worth its salt must start by considering the will of the gods. Here, Ted Augustus (no joke) Nilsson ‘15 plays the role of haruspex. After considering the bone of one of the lambs, Ted pronounces the day auspicious. Everything augurs well for a successful day. (After dropping its first game, the Wabash baseball team notched a victory in the second!)

two people holding a stuffed animal

The Ancient Wallies replaced the hecatomb of bulls with a DePauw Tiger. (Kudos to Prof. Bronwen Wickkiser and Henry Hartnett for creatively modifying a dollar-store lion.)

two men wearing white robes and holding a fork

Steven Peters and Logan O’Connor, faithful to the text of Homer, produce their five-tined forks in anticipation of the meat they will soon consume. (Somehow these particular forks, liberated from the Sigma Chi house, don’t feel especially epic.)

a fire burning in a fire pit

The highlight of the sacrifice: a thigh bone of a sheep, wrapped in omentum, the thick—and, it turns out, highly combustible—layer of abdominal fat, is set on fire for the gods to savor. (Our thanks to Professor Feller for providing the thigh bone and, mirabile dictu, the omentum.)

a man in a robe holding a cup and a man in a towel

Matt Binder ’15 and Steven Peters ’15 circle around the fire while chanting the refrain of a Hymn to Zeus that dates to the fourth century BCE, recovered from an inscription on the island of Crete.

a group of men in toga clothing

During the climax of the ritual, the crowd of ca. 250 attendees chants tois theois, “to the gods,” as Chief Priest Sam Bennett ’14 pours out a libation on the altar. Matt Binder ’16, Sam Vaught ’16, Tyrone Evans ’16, and Josh Jones ’14 look on.

a man in a white robe holding a piece of meat

Dylan Mayer holds up the thigh bone wrapped in omentum before setting it afire for the gods.

a woman wearing a blue cape and a flower headband

Emerita Professor Leslie Day looks resplendent in period clothing. The students in her course on food and drink in the ancient world prepared side dishes for the feast.

a group of people standing around a fire

D’Aireon Nunn ’16 and students of Professor Wickkiser’s Beginning Greek and Homer courses and Professor Joe Day’s seminar on Talking to Gods perform a hymn in both Greek and English.

a woman wearing a hat and sunglasses

Professor Bronwen Wickkiser is all smiles as she watches students perform the Greek hymn.

a man wearing a white towel and sunglasses

Steven Peters ’16 pauses amidst the Greek hymn to invoke Zeus.

a man and boy looking at something

Silas Hartnett shows his dad the proper way to butcher meat.

a group of people outside

Sam Vaught waves garlands as the chorus of Wallies circles the altar while chanting, in Greek, the refrain of a hymn to Zeus.

a group of people sitting in a crowd

An audience of about 250 (including Marty Tuohy ’91, who traveled all the way down Via Sexaginta Quinque from Chicago) soaked in the spectacle between the two games of a Wabash baseball doubleheader.

a group of people eating food

Students in Leslie Day’s course on food and drink in the ancient world recreated Greek and Roman dishes using original recipes. Spartan barley porridge, anyone?

a man standing on fire

Professor Emeritus Joe Day and Dylan Mayer ’17 check out the blazing thigh bone.

a man wearing a toga and drinking from a red cup

A new way to communicate with the gods? Joe Mount ’15 doesn’t mind an anachronism or two. 'Zeus, Y R U L8?'


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