Article · Wikipedia archive · Last revised Jun 26, 2026

Telete

In Greek mythology, Telete is the daughter of the wine-god Dionysus and Nicaea, a Naiad daughter of the river-god Sangarius and Cybele, a mother goddess.

Last revised
Jun 26, 2026
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≈ 1 min
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Source
Telete
Goddess of festivity and rituals
Telete and Dionysus in a mosaic from Zeugma Mosaic Museum
Major cult centerBoeotia
AbodeEarth
SymbolsThyrsus
Genealogy
ParentsDionysus and Nicaea
SiblingsSatyrus, several paternal half-siblings

In Greek mythology, Telete (/ˈtɛlɪt/; Ancient Greek: Τελετή, romanizedTeletḗ, lit.'consecration') is the daughter of the wine-god Dionysus and Nicaea, a Naiad daughter of the river-god Sangarius and Cybele, a mother goddess.

Mythology

Concerning Telete's birth, it is related that Nicaea was ashamed of having been made pregnant by Dionysus, and even attempted to hang herself; nevertheless, in due time a daughter was born to her. The Horae were said to have served as midwives at Telete's birth.1 Telete was destined by Dionysus to become a follower of himself and his son Iacchus, her half-brother.2

Pausanias mentions a statue of Telete in the sanctuary of the Heliconian Muses in Boeotia. Her image was next to that of Orpheus.3

Telete was associated with nighttime festivities and ritual dances in honor of Dionysus,4 and has been interpreted as a goddess of initiation into the Bacchic rites.5

Notes

Notes

  1. Nonnus, 16.392-400
  2. Nonnus, 48.884-885
  3. Pausanias, 9.30.4
  4. Nonnus, 16.400-402
  5. "TELETE - Greek Goddess of Initiation Rites of the Bacchic Orgies". www.theoi.com. Retrieved 2021-04-15.
References

References