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Panigiria in Heraklion

47 Panigiria on August 15, the Lyra & the Pentozali

Heraklion
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Panigiria in Heraklion

The music at a Cretan panigiri is built around two instruments: the lyra (a 3-string bowed fiddle played vertically on the knee with fingernails stopping the strings - players keep long fingernails on the left hand as a visible identifier) and the laouto (8-string lute with a plectrum technique where downstrokes rhythmically slap the soundboard). The bouzouki, standard at mainland panigiria, is absent from Cretan celebrations - explicitly identified as a mainland instrument by Cretan musicians. The mantinades tradition accompanies the lyra: 15-syllable rhyming couplets improvised spontaneously, with singers trading verses over a repeated melodic pattern (kontilia). At a panigiri, a skilled improviser draws audible response from the crowd; a poor one draws silence.

The pentozali is the dance most identified with Crete. It has 10 steps total (the name refers to the etymology, not the step count), is performed in an incomplete counterclockwise circle, and the lead dancer improvises acrobatic figures - jumping, kicking, spinning - while the second dancer holds rigid as a structural base. After improvising, the leader passes to the back and the next person leads; the rotation symbolizes battlefield succession of command. A great lead improvisation draws shouts of 'Άξιος!' - the liturgical word for 'worthy.' The siganos opens proceedings before the pentozali (8 steps in the Rethymno version, 6 in the Heraklion one). On August 15 alone, Greek media counted 47 simultaneous panigyria across Crete. August 25 is Agios Titos - patron saint of all Crete, ordained by the Apostle Paul himself; November 11 is Agios Minas, Heraklion's patron, who according to local tradition appeared to Ottoman soldiers in 1826 to prevent a massacre.

Common questions

What instruments are used at Cretan panigiria?

Cretan panigiria use the lyra (3-string bowed fiddle played vertically, stopped with fingernails - players keep long left-hand nails as a visible mark) and laouto (8-string lute). The bouzouki is not part of the tradition. A separate a cappella tradition - the rizitika of the Lefka Ori foothills in western Crete - uses no instruments at all: 32 distinct melodies, in strict call-and-response, performed by groups of men at long tables.

What is the pentozali dance?

The pentozali is the defining Cretan dance performed in an incomplete counterclockwise circle. It has 10 steps. The lead dancer improvises acrobatic figures (jumps, kicks, spins) while the second dancer holds the structure; after improvising, the leader passes to the back. The dance has origins in Cretan resistance. A great lead improvisation draws shouts of 'Άξιος!' from the crowd.

Panigiria in other cities

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