in antiquity, a solemn feast celebrated by the Athenians in honour of Bacchus. The word is usually derived from amar, friend. It is said to have been instituted in memory of a fraudulent victory obtained by Melanthus, king of Athens, over Xanthus, king of Boeotia, in a single combat, which they agreed upon, to put an end to a debate between them relating to the frontiers of their countries. Hence Budaeus calls it featum deceptionis, "the feast of deceit."
Other authors give a different etymology of this feast: They tell us, that the young Athenians were not admitted into the tribes on the third day of the apaturia, till their fathers had first sworn that they were their own children; and that, till that time, they were supposed, in some measure, to be without fathers, amaros; whence the feast, say they, took its name. Xenophon, on the other hand, informs us, that the relations and friends met on this occasion, and joined with the fathers of the young people who were to be received into the tribes; and that from this assembly the feast took its name: that in amaros, the a, far from being a privative, being here a conjunctive, signifies the same thing with opos, together. This feast lasted four days: the first day, those of the same tribe made merry together; and this they called thoria. The second day, which they called amaros, they sacrificed to Jupiter and Minerva. The third day, which they called amaros, such of their young men and maids as were of age were admitted into their tribes. The fourth day they called thoria.