Redirected from Bacchantes
In Euripides' play, "The Bacchae", Theban Maenads murdered King Pentheus after he banned the worship of Bacchus because the Maenads denied Pentheus' divinity. Bacchus, Pentheus' cousin, himself lured Pentheus to the woods, where the Maenads tore him apart and his corpse was mutilated by his own mother, Agave.
A group of Maenads also killed Orpheus because they hated his music.
See also Icarius, Butes and Minyades for another example of Dionysus inflicting insanity upon women as a curse.
The Maenads were also known as Bassarids after the penchant for Bacchus to wear a fox-skin, a bassaris.
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