How to greek dance at a wedding


6 Greek Wedding Dance Vids to Inspire Your Reception Moves

Speeches & Traditions

Rompi Rompi to Mavi Mavi, kick off your shoes and get ready to review classic Greek wedding dance moves.

Whitney Teal

HannaMonika Wedding Photography

If there’s one thing you can always anticipate at a Greek wedding, it’s dancing. And then, more dancing. Oh, and maybe a little more dancing to finish off the night. Whether you’re looking to add some Greek wedding dance to your otherwise modern Greek wedding or looking forward to attending your first Greek wedding as a guest, you will want to have your steps together before busting a move. It’s true that you’ll want to be prepared to hang, rhythmically, at your next Greek wedding, but we promise, none of the Greek wedding dances are too complicated that a few YouTube video tutorials can’t get you straightened out.

Hang back, this bride’s got this Greek wedding dance!

One happy couple embraced Greek wedding dance for their first dance as a couple. Instead of the Western tradition of the couple dancing as guests look on, the bride starts off the dance holding her husband’s hand. The rest of the wedding party and guests all grab hands and, pretty soon, nearly the entire room is joining in the couple’s first dance. Helping her along was the most perfect song, “Orea Pou 'ne I Nifi Mas, Simera Labi O Ouranos,” which means “The Bride Looks Beautiful, Today The Sky Is Bright” by Kostas Mentzelopoulos.

 

Not quite Zorba the Greek, but close enough.

So, “Zorbas” (or, formally, Sirtaki) isn’t a traditional Greek wedding dance song, but it’s one of the most famous Greek pop songs. Thanks to its appearance in the 1964 blockbuster movie Zorba the Greek, “Zorbas” is forever imprinted in the minds of Americans (Greek Americans included) as one of the culture’s primary celebration songs. A nod to this song and movie in My Big Fat Greek Wedding didn’t hurt the wedding association, either. All of that to say, don’t feel pressured to learn the moves to this dance before your next wedding, unless you really want to show off for your Greek friends or family.

 

Non-dancers, this is your time to shine.

You’ve got to love a Greek wedding dance that emphasizes style and enthusiasm over rigid choreography. And, thankfully, the Tsamiko is that dance. If you’ve ever been to a Greek wedding, this is probably the folk dance that stuck out most in your mind. There’s not a lot of form required, and, just about anyone can quickly get the rhythm of this jubilant Greek wedding dance that gets everyone moving. Essentially, dancers link arms at the shoulders and dance around in a huge circle, kicking one leg at a time. The next time you see the entire wedding reception descend on the dance floor at a Greek wedding, know it’s your time to boogie down.

 

This one’s for the fellas.

Grooms, best men, groomsmen and other menfolk, the Zembekiko is the Greek wedding dance for you. An enduring Greek wedding tradition, this is another dance typically performed in a circle. Instead of the jovial free-for-all of a Tsamiko or a Zorba’s, though, the Zembekiko celebrates the groom and his buddies. Led by the groom, other men are welcome to join in or kneel alongside the dancers and clap to the beat.

Now, it’s the ladies’ turn for a Greek wedding dance.

Don’t think a Greek wedding could get away with a triumphant moment for the guys and not include the women. Kalamatiano is another folk move often performed as a Greek wedding dance just for the bride and her attendants and family. Similar to the Zembekiko, the bride starts off in the middle with her MOH to the left. Soon, other women at the wedding join hands and encircle the two until the dance floor becomes one big concentric circle of dancers.

Get your dollars ready for the Greek wedding money dance.

Maybe one of the most famous (and most fun) aspects of a traditional Greek wedding, the money dance, or dollar dance, is festive and mainly adhoc. The concept is exactly what it sounds like — the couple starts a dance in the middle of the dance floor and guests circle around them to either shower them with single dollar bills or pin money on the couple. Music for this tradition varies (be sure your DJ knows a few Greek tunes!), but "Psintri Vasilija Mou," a Cypriot classic favored by Greek Americans, is a safe bet.

Traditional Greek Dancing At Your Wedding

Written by GreekBoston.com in Greek Wedding Traditions Comments Off on Traditional Greek Dancing At Your Wedding

Here in the United States, there are certain aspects of the Greek culture that have come across the ocean with our ancestors. Traditional Greek dancing is one of those traditions. They are still danced today in the United States because the steps have been passed down through the generations.

One place where Greek dancing is particularly festive is during weddings. There are several ways you can do this. First, if you decide you want a traditional Greek wedding, you should consider hiring a Greek band. Or, if you decide to have a DJ, you can ask him to play Greek songs as well as the standard wedding music to give your guests a taste of both cultures.

Dancing the Traditional Wedding Party Dance

It is the custom for the whole wedding party to dance the special song “Orea Pou Ine Nifi Mas” which means “How Beautiful Our Bride Is”. This song is played at every wedding as the entire wedding party dances the Kalamatiano while the bride leads.

Here in the United States, not everyone knows how to do these dances anymore. Also, it is possible that not everyone in the wedding party will be Greek. So, they will need to learn the Kalamatiano so they can dance to the traditional song and adhere to the tradition.

Greek Dancing at Your Wedding

Even if you don’t hire a Greek band, you can ask the DJ to play a selection of traditional Greek music so that your guests can dance. It is also a good idea to have the DJ explain that everyone is encouraged to dance even if they don’t know how to do it because the less experienced dancers will be able to join at the end.

Some of the more popular traditional dances include the Kalamatiano, Hasapiko, Zeibekiko and Tsamiko. Of these, it is the Kalamatiano, Syrto and Hasapiko that are the most common. Work with the DJ to come up with a selection of songs so you can enjoy Greek dancing at your wedding.

LEARN THE STEPS FOR THE MANY GREEK DANCES HERE!

How to Learn Greek Dancing

Since it is important for the whole wedding party to dance the Kalamatiano to the traditional song, someone needs to teach it to them in advance. Since it can be difficult getting people together, a good choice is to teach the dance during the rehearsal dinner.

If teaching the Kalamatiano proves too difficult to teach everyone this dance, you can teach the Hasapiko and have him or her dance that instead. Even though this isn’t the traditional choice, people often adopt this practice.

Also, you will want the guests at your wedding to enjoy dancing, too. The Hasapiko, for example, is one of the easiest to learn and to teach and it may be fun for an experienced Greek dancer to take the mike and explain to the guests how to do it so they can participate in at least one Greek dance.

Dancing traditional Greek dances at your wedding is a great way to celebrate the Greek culture. At the least, you should have the wedding party dance to the traditional song. However, it can be fun to include at least a few traditional Greek songs so that your guests can also dance.

LEARN THE STEPS FOR THE MANY GREEK DANCES HERE!

Categorized in: Greek Wedding Traditions

This post was written by GreekBoston.com

17 tips: How to survive at a Greek wedding

Blogger Elena Gornik shared 17 tips on what to do if you got to a Greek wedding on her facebook page. The story is so vivid and emotional that we considered it necessary to publish it on the pages of our publication.

1. Just don't go there. Do not go.
Try every decent excuse.
But if you could not figure out how not to offend this loved one (about fifty-fourth of the eighty closest relatives) by refusing, then go.

2. Watch “My Big Fat Greek Wedding” in a day.

3. Enlist the advice of experienced and wise people. I have used the advice more than once "pick up the phone, tell everyone what to call, and go out to breathe."
And it's okay that it's two o'clock in the morning. Otherwise, I would have muttered: Grandma Sophie at the table where we were seated speaks with the whistle of a steam locomotive, smokes with a pipe of a steamer and sings louder than the DJ set.

4. What to wear.
Greek Russian-speaking girl groups explode with posts-questions about what to wear to a wedding, the tape grows with a huge amount of advice and very beautiful examples.
What you wear, you wear. All beautiful, all the same.
Only grandmother Sophie, who remembers how decent Greek girls dressed fifty years ago, will say something not in the eyebrow, but in the eye.
Sophie's grandmother is ninety years old.
So cut off the instruction “how to wash and iron” from the dress so that it doesn’t look like in my photo.

https://web.facebook.com/lena.gornik/videos/10155874781397957/

5. Church.
A human wedding, with jokes and jokes.
Guests sing along in the process, because they know wedding prayers from childhood.
Father, in revenge for having to get married instead of a quiet family dinner at home, can drag out the process until the yawns of those present, and then say: “This is for you, assholes, for tearing me away from coffee.”
Everyone wakes up and laughs.
From the church itself, such a panorama opens up that it is enough for reverence.

6. How not to overeat.
None.
Hanging over you, the mother of the groom will cutely and tirelessly ask what to put you.
"I don't want, thank you" is not working
"I'm full, thank you" is not working
"I'm full, thank you" is not working
"I can't take it anymore, thanks" is not working
"I'll die now, thanks" is not working
" Dead, thanks" does not work.
The included program “well, at least a salad” forces you to remove the last stronghold (for two hours now, like underpants pressing on your stomach), so that at least something else fits.

7. Alcohol.
Greeks practically don't drink.
When they go out one by one to the dance floor to dance the traditional “zebeko” (dance of life, fate, always a story about deep and sincere), the waiters rush headlong to them with a glass of vodka, from which the dancers do not even drink, but lick.
After that, the vodka is poured somewhere.
Maybe someone, but I didn't see it.

8. Dancing.
By the way, a woman can passionately dance “zebeko” about her difficult fate. At this time, her man is kneeling in front of her, next to her on the floor.
They also bring vodka to our floor.

9. More dancing.
No, how the Greeks dance, how they dance!
You can sit for a long time, watch, kick your feet under the table to try to repeat the movements of
and still not dare to go out and shudder along with the round dance.

10. Children.
In the dead of the night, the small celebrations sausage together with adults, doze for an hour in any position in their chic little outfits, wake up from the voice of Grandma Sophie and again get up in the ranks until the morning.
Nobody turns off music, grandmother, smoking, light and roar for children's sleep.

11. Bride.
Tired of the pathos of the train, she ties the whole dress with a world-class curtain knot somewhere behind. This allows her to squat in the traditional Greek dance if need be, or swing her foot around in a circle.

12. Groom.
In our wedding tradition, you can get rice in the face when leaving the registry office.
Everything is bigger and tougher here. Rice is not sprinkled. Rice is beaten so that it would be good not to leave the church, if possible.
But that's impossible, the restaurant is waiting.
After shooting the couple with grain, the remains are put on the groom's head along with the bag in which this rice was. The suit is ruined, but that's how it should be.

13. Relatives.
In addition to Grandma Sophie, whom everyone knows, you understand that you are someone's great aunt, great daughter-in-law, half-cousin by dad and something else in terms of the number of guests. 80 guests - 80 new family relationships.
Kissing with everyone on both cheeks is a must.
Everyone smells like some good perfume, but for an introvert, kissing strangers is torture.

14. Bouquet.
Everything is somehow less dramatic. The bouquet is simply thrown and simply caught. Without shows, battles and torn dresses. But everyone is also happy.

15. Service.
Starting from one in the morning, the waiters dance along with the guests, seeming to be distracted only by the change of dishes.
At the same time, the hall is in full order and everyone has “nolitos”

16. Final.
Four o'clock in the morning and weak guests set off with a thousand apologies.
It's indecent to leave so early: usually a good wedding ends at eight in the morning.
If on the way home you tremble with a leg in the car, as if from an electric shock, hoarse from exclamations and deaf in the ear to which Sophie's grandmother was closer, then your big Greek wedding was a success.

17. Profit
The joy of having survived with little loss.
You can not eat for three days.

Photo of the author.

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refinement of tradition. Big Greek wedding

Wedding is the most magical event in the life of every person. Such an event should not only be beautiful and magnificent, but also unusual, so that it differs from a drunken feast. You can make a themed wedding, for example, in the Greek style, and in order to comply with all the canons of this wedding as much as possible, I offer you the traditions of a Greek wedding. You can, of course, watch the movie "The Big Greek Wedding", or you can follow their traditions and make the wedding original. In a Greek wedding, there are many rituals and traditions that are difficult to reproduce, but possible. So, what happens at weddings in Greece.

In Greece, immediately after the wedding ceremony or before it, it is customary to arrange a “loud concert” of honking cars, which, in principle, is akin to us. During the ceremony itself, the young couple is crowned and put on their heads crowns of flowers or precious metals. The crowns are tied together with ribbons. On this day, newlyweds are treated to the king and queen. Crowns can be removed after the wedding, or you can leave them for the whole day and remove only the ribbon. These crowns are kept for life, and sometimes they are buried in them. The godfather of the groom usually acts as the best man at the wedding, but it can also be just a friend.

The wedding venue is decorated with numerous flowers. Yellow, orange and red colors predominate. Without fail, for good luck, a dish is smashed on the floor, and coins are thrown at the musicians to make money. There is also a custom for monetary family life - a lot of money is attached to the bride, sometimes for two. The guests get the money for this.

As at any wedding, all nations have an obligatory wedding dance for the young. In Greece, the newlyweds begin to dance together, and then the guests join them and form a circle. Dancing at Greek weddings is different in that there are a lot of friendly, joint dances, in which they put their hands on each other's shoulders.

Before the Greek wedding, a stag and hen party take place a week before. But the main thing is the gifts that will be presented at these parties. They should be small and pleasant. Also, gifts are given to guests at the wedding, and to everyone without exception. It can be small bundles of white tulle, where they can put sweets, small sweets and candied almonds. Without a small present, the guest should not leave the wedding.

As a rule, the Greeks celebrate the wedding for three days, starting on Saturday and ending on Monday. On the first day, the fun of loved ones and relatives falls, on the second day, on Sunday, the marriage ceremony takes place directly, and on Monday the bride must show how she knows how to manage the household and marital devotion.

The wedding tradition and the wedding itself are very beautiful in Greece. The newlyweds go to church on foot. The people they meet along the way will surely wish them a happy and long family life, and the more people they meet, the stronger their union will be. The duration of the wedding feast and our Russian weddings differs from weddings in the UK, France, Germany, etc. They usually confine themselves to a short buffet table.

Greek brides prefer empire dresses with special cut collars. It is now especially very fashionable and popular. The color of the wedding dress is classic white, but the veil can be red, orange or yellow. It is considered protection from negativity and evil spirits. But such colors can also be used to decorate the dress itself and complement it with gloves of the same color.

The groom's suit is often chosen in a neutral shade: gray, beige or sand, but it can also be black.

Greek cuisine is equated with Mediterranean cuisine, which is dominated by vegetables, legumes, olives, olive oil, cheese and baked goods. Lemons and oranges are more prevalent among fruits on wedding tables. The famous Greek salad is indispensable at the wedding. As appetizers, mezes are served - small dishes suitable for buffet tables, and served with alcohol.

Meze is feta cheese with olives and various seafood. The hot dish is served with dolmades or dolma. An analogue of our cabbage rolls is not only in cabbage, but in grape leaves. Souvlaki - pork or lamb skewers on wooden skewers with lemon slices and white bread.

They also bake beautiful wedding bread. From alcohol, ouzo is a Greek alcoholic drink, very strong, light wines, orange liqueur and metaxu.

The sea, the sun, the beach are essential attributes of summer. And if you are lucky not only to come to the sea for a vacation, but also to arrange your wedding near its waves, you simply do not have the right to defile its azure, depth and purity with banality! What needs to be done to echo the sea on this great day? What should the bride and groom look like? How to decorate the place of the ceremony and effectively serve the famous Greek dishes to your wedding guests? And, most importantly, how much will all this luxury cost you? The whole truth about Greece in my today's research!

GREEK WEDDING PREPARATIONS

GREEK WEDDING INVITATION CARDS

The color scheme that we recommend to follow when preparing for a Greek wedding is a combination of white with blue and elements of yellow and olive (or black). To hint to guests about the colors in which they should choose outfits when they are going to your wedding, and what awaits them behind the scenes of your celebration, invitation cards should be kept in just this color range.

It will be interesting if you present your celebration as a performance of a small Greek theater by designing invitation cards in the form of an ajar backstage piece. Keeping in mind the colors, the basis for such an invitation is to take blue matte cardboard. Greece will not tolerate fake gloss, and shiny decorations for this wedding should generally be avoided, both in decoration and in the styling of invitation cards. Well, the text of the invitation itself will be enough to print on ordinary white xerox paper (although for a greater effect, you can use a fancy handwritten font). An additional element is a chic nylon (black or white, depending on the taste of the newlyweds) bow.

This invitation card can also be made at home (if you set a goal to save your wedding budget). The cost of supplies and mailing will really be quite insignificant (about 50-80 dollars, depending on the guest list). If you do not want to deal with this moment of preparation on your own, order invitations from those who provide similar services in your city. This option will cost you two or even three times more (about $ 200).

If you don't even think about saving on invitation cards, you can choose a more exclusive, sophisticated option. For example, use not just cardboard as the basis for a postcard, but thick paper with floral embossing. Such luxurious paper does not require additional decorations. A thin blue ribbon will be enough to tie up the invitation.

And postcards in the assembly, however, are not much more expensive than the "thrifty" ones. In total, their production will deduct no more than 250 conventional units from the wedding budget.

If you are more attracted to the ancient Greek style (you are in awe of Olympus, its gods and goddesses), tell your guests about your love with a suvoy invitation.

Such invitations are made only to order, you will hardly find something similar in free sale. And they are expensive, since the price takes into account the "aging" of the paper, and the bamboo base for the suvoy. For 50 pieces of such original postcards, you will shell out $ 350. But the uniqueness is worth the cost!

An important design element of wedding invitations are the envelopes in which you will send them out. For the Greek style, canvas envelopes made of natural, linen fiber are perfect. They look and are expensive. And even if you put a very simple postcard with text inside such envelopes, you won’t spoil the first impression of the guests about the high status of your wedding!

One such envelope costs almost 2.5 dollars. If you are planning a wedding for an average of 50 people, then you will pay about $ 125 for envelopes. Plus - postcards.

Let's summarize. On average (depending on the option you like), invitations for guests to a Greek wedding will lighten your pocket by 300-350 dollars. A relatively small price for the real luxury of the Olympic gods.

GREEK BRIDE DRESS

The Greek theme certainly inspires the fashion houses of the world. This is evidenced by the fact that at different times, different designers created thousands of wedding dresses in the style of the country of olives. Characteristic features of the wedding dress of the bride in the Greek style: an even silhouette (no puffy skirts and princess hems!), high waist, corset or bodice with thin straps, chiffon, flowing skirt and a lot of gold and silver jewelry and embroidery.

Colors deserve special mention. Ideal for Greece would be a white dress with a blue belt or azure embroidery. You can use olive threads and rhinestones with a silver sheen. This decoration will well emphasize the divine image of the bride.

As for the veil, it is best to choose a short version, or even abandon it altogether, replacing it with an old gold wedding dress, which is worn on loose, slightly wavy hair.

Another version of the headdress is the divine laurel crown. It can be made both from the branches of a living laurel, or replaced with a tiara stylized as a laurel.

Shoes (or sandals) of the bride must match the overall style of the outfit. It's best to opt for a sparkling silver peep-toe model (nothing ruins wedding photos like a bride suffering from the wrong shoes, remember that!). In combination with a luxurious decor of a dress and an unusual headdress, these shoes will look simply stunning!

The cost of a wedding dress in the Greek style directly depends on the cost and richness of the decorative trim of the dress, headdress and shoes. If you stop at a modest option (with a minimum of decor), the cost of the toilet will not be too much - 300-400 dollars. If you choose a more pretentious option, with a rich finish, then such an outfit will lighten the groom's pocket by 700 or more conventional units.

GREEK GROOM'S OUTFIT

As for the second main figure of the wedding ceremony, the groom, you shouldn't be too philosophic with his outfit. A completely white suit (or simply trousers and a shirt) on a Greek-tanned body looks charming and very seductive. A sophisticated bride and a macho groom will evoke a lot of positive emotions among wedding guests and just casual viewers of the ceremony.

If you want to diversify absolute white a little, you can add a couple of bright elements to the outfit. For example, a juicy orange tie, or a colorful boutonniere on the lapel of a snow-white jacket.

If you don't want to experiment with your outfit, you can wear a classic black suit. It will also look good and go well with the style of the wedding.

The groom's outfit will cost you about $300-400. And this is if you decide to buy a suit. If the suit itself is an absolutely unique item in your wardrobe, you can save money and rent an outfit. In this case, you will have to buy only shoes and a shirt with a tie. You will definitely save 100-150 dollars!

DRESS CODE FOR WEDDING GUESTS

If you don't plan to style the ancient Greek Olympus, don't burden your guests with any special dress code requirements. The only condition: for women - dresses in Greek colors, for men - a suit in the same color scheme.

As for the bride's bridesmaids, they, of course, should set off her snow-white dress with the contrasting black of their outfits.

You can also add a twist to a Greek wedding guest cocktail. For example, to make a "pass system" for a holiday. And let the entrance ticket for each guest be an interesting decoration in the Greek style (bracelet, ring, earrings, etc.).

WEDDING PROCESS

A real traditional wedding in Greece does not involve a motor vehicle at all. It is customary for newlyweds in Greece to ride on donkeys, and to the church (where, as a rule, the wedding takes place according to the Byzantine rite), they generally go on foot.

Well, if you still can't imagine yourself as a donkey rider, you can order a snow-white convertible for your summer wedding in the Greek style. It will be stylish and also, in general, in Greek!

You can ride donkeys (if you still find an organization in your city that provides such services) for 20-40 dollars per hour. If you consider that you need a pair of animals, then you will definitely meet $100. Well, if your choice fell on a convertible, then its rental (with a driver) will cost your wedding budget $60 per hour. Usually, rental organizations of this kind do not rent their cars for less than 3 hours. Because - minus another $ 180.

HONEYMOON RINGS AND CROWNS, BRIDE BOUQUET

To keep the memory of your big Greek wedding with you for many years, you can order wedding rings in the shape of a laurel wreath. Well, if you are adherents, after all, of a more traditional approach to this issue, you can exchange even and smooth white gold rings on this day.

There is another interesting version made in the spirit of Greece and its favorite colors - white and blue. You can present your beloved on your wedding day with a ring with turquoise or purple amethyst. And one more, purely Greek, traditional wedding precious accessory - golden crowns. They, connected with a ribbon, are put on the heads of the newlyweds during the wedding. According to tradition, happy relatives give such crowns to the bride and groom on the wedding day. If parents have a good family life, and they want to convey all the best to the newlyweds, then they present such a gift.

Do not forget about another important wedding gift - a bouquet for the bride. As a rule, it consists of ordinary white roses with the addition of laurel branches.

If you want to get as close as possible to Greece and its customs, you can include flowers traditional for this country, and loved by the Greeks, in the bouquet - dodecatheon, carenweisia and levkoy.

Greek style wedding bands will cut your wedding budget by $500 and up (depending on your choice). Well, the bouquet will cost the groom a maximum of 100 conventional units.

WEDDING HALL DECOR AND DECORATION

What should be the focus of attention when preparing for a Greek wedding? First of all, take into account the colors. A wedding in white and blue will look truly chic! In addition, the wedding hall needs to be airy, which means that it is advisable to use a lot of fabric in the decor. Light chiffon, flowing and shiny organza will turn your hall into a light sailboat on the sea! If you add a lot of flowers to all this splendor (it is advisable to order flower arrangements for tall vases), you will get a real, chic, Greek wedding hall.

For an open-air wedding ceremony, you can decorate the venue with fake columns in the style of Greek architecture and bulldenezh.

Let's also say a few words about the bride's bouquet. Hollywood style allows only a minimal deviation in its design from the classics. That is, the bouquet should include red or white roses, white callas, or other flowers in traditional Hollywood colors - beige, gold, red satin. You can also add a special touch - hanging flowerpots of bright colors. This decor will make it easier for your wedding photographer to highlight and create stunning photos for your wedding album.

And one more, truly Greek accent - olive branches. They can be used both in the decor of the entire hall, and they can set off the impeccable whiteness of the tablecloth of the wedding banquet table.

The work of a hall decorator will cost you 200 conventional units. Plus - materials (almost the same). The most expensive Greek-style decor items will be the rental of columns, fabric and numerous flower arrangements. Total - $ 400 will have to be set aside for decoration.

MUSIC FOR A GREEK STYLE WEDDING

The ideal musical arrangement for a Greek wedding is to hire a colorful folk group with impeccable acting skills, costumes and a rich repertoire. It will be good if the group will own native Greek musical instruments.

There is a very beautiful tradition in Greece: the newlyweds are accompanied to the place of the ceremony not by their parents, but by musicians. They go ahead of the wedding procession and "lay" with cheerful, fervent music the way for those in love with a bright, carefree family life.

You can find a colorful Greek musical group at the embassy (if we are talking about the capital) or the representation of this country in your city. Contact there for help, and you will be prompted for contacts. On average, a good musical group can be hired for the entire wedding day for $600.

WEDDING CEREMONY, PHOTO AND VIDEO

An ideal option for a Greek wedding is to hold a wedding ceremony by the sea. To do this, often the organizers of such services offer to rent a special area with an arch and a gorgeous view of the sea. As a rule, after the official ceremony in Greece, the newlyweds get married in an orthodox church.

Traditionally followed by a romantic walk with an accompanying photo and video session. Ideal landscapes for shooting are the blue sea, snow-white karst mountains, the sand of the beach, yachts on the pier, the greenery of gardens. A professional photographer will surely offer you a unique subject for a great and very personal love story.

WEDDING BANQUET

A Greek wedding in its best sense involves a large number of guests and an open-air banquet. This approach obliges you to hire a restaurant with at least an outdoor area and stunning sea views. If you couldn’t find anything suitable, ask to organize a banquet by the pool, after decorating it with chic flower arrangements.

And of course, don't forget the world-famous Greek wine and gorgeous Greek-style wedding cake!

Renting a restaurant and a Greek-style banquet for 50 people will cost about 3-5 thousand dollars on average. The exact amount depends on the city in which you are organizing the wedding, the entourage of the restaurant and the showiness of serving a custom-made treat-cake.

In addition to the chicly decorated official part, the general impression of your wedding will help your guests to form an informal, feast filled with very beautiful Greek traditions. I will tell you about some of them now.

GREEK WEDDING IDEAS

Bread separation

A very beautiful and simple tradition followed by brides in Crete. On the eve of the wedding, they bake round-shaped bread, and then they share it among all the guests at the wedding. It is believed that by sharing bread - you will increase family happiness!

Inscriptions-wishes for spouses on bride's shoes

The ritual of dressing the future wife in Greece is accompanied by an interesting tradition. On the soles of her shoes, in which she will walk down the aisle, her friends leave their wishes for the young family. It is believed that if you go to get married in these shoes, God will “see” all the good wishes through the open altar and they will certainly come true, making the young family very happy!

first dance on money

In Greece, it is customary to throw banknotes at the feet of newlyweds who are dancing their first family dance. Of course, this promises wealth to a young family!

One of the most chic Greek traditions. Almost at the end of the holiday, the groom must dance a traditional Greek dance in the fire of burning whiskey! This dance looks amazing!

Tie pieces

Well, after completing his incendiary dance, the groom must cut his tie into pieces and sell it to his single friends! They say that this happy piece will soon help bachelors to start a family. Whether this is true or not is not known. But it is clear for sure - the tradition will help replenish the family budget of the newlyweds for a good amount!

Let your Greek wedding be happy, chic, rich and generous! And the whole future family life will be the same!

Any wedding is a cycle of ancient rituals and traditions. Each sacred ceremony is filled with mystery and symbolism. In Greece, preparations for the wedding begin a year or even two before the appointed date of marriage. After all, it takes a lot of time to organize a chic solemn event. We also hold weddings in the Greek style. Consider what is needed for this.

Greek bride dress

Wedding dresses in the Greek style have a special collar cut and are most often sewn in the Empire style. This outfit is considered very elegant and sophisticated, a great option for a pregnant bride. Leading wedding designers are sure to include such outfits in their collections.

Interesting Greek wedding traditions

An integral part of almost any wedding is the dance of the newlyweds. The bride and groom begin to dance together, then guests should join them. The traditional Greek dance takes place in a circle formed by guests. Guests put their hands on each other's shoulders. After the first dance, the newlyweds cut the cake and feed each other. It looks very interesting in wedding photos.

In Greece, there is a ceremony when all the unmarried guys present rise to the stage to the bride and dance with her. Dancing, the bride drops her handkerchief. Whoever can catch him will be the next to marry. After the wedding, the newlyweds go on their honeymoon, but no one should know exactly where the groom took the bride. After the wedding, the bride should not worry for a whole year, she should not attend the funeral, she should not even try the funeral kutya, which in Greece is called “kolivo”.

Greece is quite a traditional country and the Greeks, like no other, honor the heritage of their ancestors. Any celebration or event keeps the imprints of the great traditions of Hellenic wisdom. The Greek wedding is no exception, the traditions of which have swept to us through the centuries. And, besides, the Greeks know how to enjoy life, turning any holiday into a festivity with cheerful music, songs, dances and jokes.

I believe that, just like in other countries, in Greece, numerous wedding traditions can only be seen in the villages. In the cities, of course, all weddings are more modern, but even in them, all the same, the national flavor has been preserved.

Today, Greek law allows only civil marriage, but despite this, for most Greeks, the sacrament of marriage remains a real marriage. I'll tell you about the most modern wedding traditions that are still followed at Greek weddings


At the end of the wedding, the newlyweds go to the husband's house, where they are met by his mother. The entry of a young daughter-in-law into a new home is also accompanied by a number of interesting customs, and I will tell you about some of them

  1. The bridegroom's mother meets the newlyweds with sweets or honey “for a sweet life.” She has to feed both of them before they enter the house.
  2. Before entering the house, the groom's mother gives the young a pomegranate fruit, which in ancient Greece was considered a symbol of well-being and prosperity.
  3. Stepping on the threshold of a new home, the spouses should on the right foot and at the same time, so that there would always be mutual understanding and happiness in their house.

In fact, there are a lot of wedding traditions in the Greeks and they are different in every region of the country. In ancient times, when these customs were created, people believed that by observing all the necessary rituals, they would provide the newlyweds with a happy, prosperous life. There is, of course, some truth in this - what we believe in is what we get! Nowadays, when some wedding ceremonies are still observed at the Greek wedding, it turns into a colorful and colorful event. If you are lucky enough to attend such a wedding, I am sure that you will remember it as the brightest holiday!

And I wish you that your wedding would be unusually beautiful, and that your family life would be the happiest!

Your wedding planner in Greece, Natalia Pavlichenko.

The wedding customs of ancient Greece have a rich centuries-old history, curious facts and details that have been preserved and survived to this day in the form of drawings on antique vases. These invaluable historical episodes tell how different the perception of married life was between women and men, how different were the laws for wives and husbands. To some belonged to dominion and all the pleasures of the world, others were content with the modest joys of family life.

So what was behind the big wedding with flowers and ribbons, chariots and flutes, songs and dances? What kind of life awaited men after the wedding, and what was in store for the girls? Let's take a closer look at the customs and traditions of weddings in ancient Greece and try to recreate the picture of past centuries.

Marriage in Ancient Greece - Severe Marriage Laws

In ancient Greece, girls were given in marriage before puberty, while they were young and pure. Not having time to say goodbye to children's toys, girls under the age of 12 were forced to leave their father's house and become the wives of young men or men 12-15 years older than them.

People lived to about 28-30 years old, at the age of 40 a person was already considered an old man. Rarely did anyone die a natural death: either diseases claimed human lives (medicine was at a very low level), or. The faster the girl got married, the faster and more she could raise future warriors, on whose protection the state was counting.

In ancient Greece, no abortions. Every Greek could have as many children as a wife or wife + mistress could give birth to. On average 10-12 children. However, due to high mortality, only 1-2 children survived to childbearing age.

We will talk about another reason for early marriage a little later.

The price of the bride

Marriage in ancient Greece was accompanied by the signing of a marriage contract, according to which the girl became the property of her husband for a certain payment. Before the advent of minted coins in ancient Greece, various monetary units were used that were in circulation in one century or another. It was cattle and natural products and precious metals. Depending on the appearance of the bride, her ability to work and the wealth of the family, from 1 to 20 cows or sheep, or a bag of barley or 10-30 shekels (unit of measurement in silver, 1 shekel = 11.4 grams of silver) could be given for a girl. Over time, the ransom of the bride already had a symbolic meaning. Today, among some peoples, the purchase of a bride is still a prerequisite for the wedding ritual, even if it is of a ritual and symbolic nature.

Before modern Greece this custom came down in a symbolic sense: as in Russia, the groom pays a ransom for the bride to her bridesmaids.

Engagement

Conditional wedding in ancient Greece can be divided into three stages: the engagement, the feast in the bride's house, the feast in the groom's house.

Traditionally, a wedding in ancient Greece was preceded by an engagement. As mentioned above, marriage is a contract for the sale of the bride, the details of which - the amount of payment and the date of the wedding - were discussed at the engagement. The contract was signed between the father of the bride and the groom, bride's participation was not required. According to local customs, the bride was not introduced to the groom until the day of the wedding itself.

If you look into the history of ancient Rus', you can find moments that are closely intertwined with ancient Greek history. So marriage in Rus' is a mutually beneficial deal concluded between the parents of the bride and groom. The girl's parents chose the future relative based on class and property interests. At the engagement, the young people were introduced, and then - the inevitable wedding . The opinion of the girls, of course, was not taken into account, they lived according to the old belief: they will endure, they will fall in love.

Modern engagement in Greece or betrothal takes place a few months or even a year before the wedding. As in ancient times, the main purpose of the engagement is the signing of a marriage contract between the parents of the bride and groom. On the same day, the parties exchange wedding rings, the date of the wedding is set.

Groom's and bride's outfits

On the wedding day girls dressed up long embroidered dress with snaps on the shoulders. The head was covered with a headdress or veil (today it is called a veil). Man's outfit was a rectangular piece of fabric, also fastened on the shoulders with clasps and did not differ much from the female. The clothes of the newlyweds in ancient Greece were necessarily white, as a symbol of purity and light. By the way, the tradition of wearing a white dress for a wedding originated here.

In modern Greece, in addition to the white dress of the bride, the tradition of covering the head with wreaths has been preserved: the newlyweds put on thin wreaths, connected by a silk white ribbon, symbolizing unity.

A wedding in ancient Greece

The newlyweds went to the altar on a carriage decorated with flowers, accompanied by guests, flutists, drummers and torchbearers.

On the first day, the holiday began in the bride's father's house and ended in the groom's house. Required attributes of the wedding were noisy fun, songs and dances, which, as the Greeks believed, drove out evil spirits. The creation of noise is also relevant in modern Greece: at a wedding, tin cans are tied to the car.

Custom to celebrate a wedding in a big way gradually lost its value over several days. As time passed, feasts became more and more modest and extravagance was no longer welcomed. This tradition has come down to our days

Newlyweds at the wedding were showered with coins, dates, figs, nuts, which symbolized prosperity and happiness in the family. This tradition has been preserved in many countries.

In ancient Greece, the bride and groom were not allowed to drink alcohol . Despite the fact that the Greeks made excellent wine, they used it in a diluted form. Drunkenness was considered a disgrace and punished by the public. However, the rules are made to be broken, and they were violated quite often: outside the walls of cities, a different morality and morality reigned.

Intimate life after marriage

Upon reaching puberty, young virgins, according to historians, became lustful females , devoid of restraint and self-control. They had to be looked after to keep their chastity. The most correct decision was considered to give the girl in marriage. Both before and after marriage, the girls were kept locked up for fear of adultery.

Marriage in ancient Greece is nothing but the reproduction of offspring. An unenviable fate awaited the girls after the wedding: they were practically equated with slaves, including in their sexual life.

Married woman was engaged in housekeeping and raising children, they could not be called seductive. As they said in those days - girls for business, boys - for pleasure. Husbands preferred pleasures on the side - prostitution and homosexuality flourished in the country.


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