The River Styx
The ancient Greeks believed that people had a soul. Like the ancient Egyptians, they did believe in life after death. Unlike the ancient Egyptians, they did not spend very much time at all preparing for their life in the afterworld.
Here’s why:
The Greeks held elaborate funerals to help the soul of the departed find his or her way to the afterworld. The underworld was sometimes called Hades in honor of the god of the underworld – Hades.
But it was not Hades who helped you reach the afterworld. They believed that the god Hermes - the messenger - acted rather like a host. Hermes led the soul to the shores of the mythical River Styx.
The River Styx supposedly separated the world of the living from the world of the dead. The deal was you had to cross the River Styx to reach life after death. The Greeks, true to form, created many a story about the perils of crossing the River Styx.
The ancient Greeks did not expect souls to swim across. Instead, they believed a ferryman named Charon would give you a ride on his boat.
The ferry to the Underworld was not free. The ferry ride cost one Greek coin. The dead person’s family usually placed a coin on the corpse so that he or she would be able to pay for the trip. Sometimes they hid the coin under his tongue so that no one would steal it.
Once souls arrived on the other side of the River Styx, they joined other souls, who were waiting around until they were reborn into a new body.
While waiting for their turn to be reborn, a soul depended on his or her living family to take care of them by offering food and wine at special times of the year. Families were glad to do this. They wanted to make sure the deceased was comfortable during the wait to be reborn, just as they counted on their family someday to make them just as comfortable.
And that's all there was to it. Unless they were punished by one of the gods to spend eternity in the afterworld, no one in ancient Greece expected to hang around very long, only long enough to be reborn. So there was no sense in packing anything except a coin to pay for the ferry ride across the River Styx.
The ancient Greeks believed that people had a soul. Like the ancient Egyptians, they did believe in life after death. Unlike the ancient Egyptians, they did not spend very much time at all preparing for their life in the afterworld.
Here’s why:
The Greeks held elaborate funerals to help the soul of the departed find his or her way to the afterworld. The underworld was sometimes called Hades in honor of the god of the underworld – Hades.
But it was not Hades who helped you reach the afterworld. They believed that the god Hermes - the messenger - acted rather like a host. Hermes led the soul to the shores of the mythical River Styx.
The River Styx supposedly separated the world of the living from the world of the dead. The deal was you had to cross the River Styx to reach life after death. The Greeks, true to form, created many a story about the perils of crossing the River Styx.
The ancient Greeks did not expect souls to swim across. Instead, they believed a ferryman named Charon would give you a ride on his boat.
The ferry to the Underworld was not free. The ferry ride cost one Greek coin. The dead person’s family usually placed a coin on the corpse so that he or she would be able to pay for the trip. Sometimes they hid the coin under his tongue so that no one would steal it.
Once souls arrived on the other side of the River Styx, they joined other souls, who were waiting around until they were reborn into a new body.
While waiting for their turn to be reborn, a soul depended on his or her living family to take care of them by offering food and wine at special times of the year. Families were glad to do this. They wanted to make sure the deceased was comfortable during the wait to be reborn, just as they counted on their family someday to make them just as comfortable.
And that's all there was to it. Unless they were punished by one of the gods to spend eternity in the afterworld, no one in ancient Greece expected to hang around very long, only long enough to be reborn. So there was no sense in packing anything except a coin to pay for the ferry ride across the River Styx.