Xenia (Greek)

Xenia (Greek)

Xenia (Greek: ξενία, "xenía") is the Greek concept of hospitality, or generosity and courtesy shown to those who are far from home. It is often translated as "guest-friendship" (or "ritualized friendship") because the rituals of hospitality created and expressed a reciprocal relationship between guest and host.

The Greek god Zeus was sometimes referred to as Zeus Xenios, meaning he was god of, among other things, travelers. This created a particular religious obligation to be hospitable to travelers, but guests also had responsibilities, beyond reciprocating hospitality.

Overview

Xenia consists of three basic rules: The respect from host to guest, the respect from guest to host, and the parting gift from host to guest. The host must be hospitable to the guest and provide him with food and drink and a bath, if required. It is not polite to ask questions until the guest has stated his needs. The guest must be courteous to his host and not be a burden. The parting gift is to show the host's honor at receiving the guest. This was especially important in the ancient times when men thought gods mingled amongst them. If you had played host to a deity (a concept known as "theoxenia") and performed poorly, you would incur the wrath of a god.

The policy of xenia also includes the protection of travelling bards. They would receive hospitality in the form of a place to sleep, food, and often an assortment of gifts in turn for entertainment and news from other parts of the ancient world. The safety of these bards were believed to have been secured by the aegis-wielding Zeus, and any violation of xenia would put the violator at the mercy of either Zeus or any lower god that he saw fit to enforce the unwritten code.

In the "Iliad"

The Trojan war described in the "Iliad" of Homer actually resulted from a violation of xenia. Paris was a guest of Menelaus but seriously transgressed the bounds of xenia by abducting his host's wife, Helen. Therefore the Achaeans were required by duty to Zeus to avenge this transgression, which as a violation of xenia was an insult to Zeus's authority, resulting in the war.

In the "Odyssey"

Xenia is an important theme in Homer's "Odyssey". Every household in the epic is seen alongside xenia. Odysseus's house is inhabited by suitors with demands beyond the bounds of xenia. Menelaus and Nestor's houses are seen when Telemachus visits. There are a number of other households observed in the epic, including those of Polyphemus, Circe, Calypso, and the Phaeacians. The Phaeacians, and in particular Nausicaa, were famed for their immaculate application of xenia, as the princess and her maids offered to bathe Odysseus and then led him to the palace to be fed and entertained. It should be noted, however, that because Odysseus was indirectly responsible for Poseidon's sinking one of their ships, the Phaeacians resolved to be less trusting of subsequent travelers.

ee also

*Xenos (Greek)

References

*Some of this material comes from lectures by Dr. Elizabeth Vandiver, recorded and distributed by The Teaching Company.


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  • Xenia — may mean:Thing or concept* Xenia (Greek), the ancient Greek concept of hospitality * Xenia motif, the representation of a host s generosity to his guests * Xenia epigram, an epigram accompanying a present or gift * Xenia (genus), a genus of… …   Wikipedia

  • Xenia — f English: comparatively rare given name, coined from the Greek vocabulary word xenia hospitality, from xenos stranger, foreigner …   First names dictionary

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  • Xenia (name) — Infobox Given Name Revised name = Xenia imagesize= caption= pronunciation= gender = female meaning = hospitality region = nickname = origin = Greek related names = Ksenia, Kseniya, Oksana, Senja Xena, Xeniya footnotes = Xenia (also Xeniya, Ksenia …   Wikipedia

  • Xenia motif — The xenia motif in Roman mosaic is a still life motif consisting of a grouping of various items, mostly edible, representing a generous offering (a xenia ) from a wealthy host to his guests.Typical elements of a xenia motif include game hanging… …   Wikipedia

  • Xenia (Hotel) — Das erste Logo (ca. bis 1975) Das zweite Logo (ca. ab 1975) Die Xenia …   Deutsch Wikipedia

  • xenia — xenial, adj. /zee nee euh, zeen yeuh/, n. Bot. the influence or effect of pollen on a structure other than the embryo, as the seed or fruit. [1895 1900; < NL < Gk xenía hospitality. See XEN , IA] * * * ▪ Ohio, United States  city, seat (1804) of… …   Universalium

  • Xenia — /zee nee euh, zeen yeuh/, n. 1. a city in W Ohio. 24,653. 2. a female given name. * * * ▪ Ohio, United States  city, seat (1804) of Greene county, southwestern Ohio, U.S., near the Little Miami River, about 15 miles (25 km) east southeast of… …   Universalium

  • xenia — noun Etymology: New Latin, from Greek, hospitality, from xenos host Date: 1899 the effect of genes introduced by pollen especially on endosperm and embryo development …   New Collegiate Dictionary

  • xenia — /ˈziniə/ (say zeeneeuh) noun the immediate influence or effect on the seed or fruit by the pollen other than on the embryo. {New Latin, from Greek, from xenos guest} …  

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