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Daidala is a Greek festival of reconciliation that was held every four (seven?) years in honor of Hera at Plataea in Boeotia. Every fourteen cycles a Great Daidala was celebrated all over Boeotia. In the great festival, a wooden statue, referred to as a daidala, was led in procession in a wagon and then burned in a fire. This archaic custom was explained with a myth (an aition or "origin myth") about Hera and Zeus, which is related by Pausanias:
In a variant of the origin myth Zeus was advised by a hero named Alalkomeneus.
The cult of Hera in Plataea was one of the major cults of the city. The Daidala at Plataea was celebrated every four years. At the Daidala the Plataeans went to a sacred oak grove and by divination chose an oak to be carved into a statue, to which they gave the name Daidala, with the connotation that it was crafted or fashioned (compare "Daedalus").
After fourteen four-year cycles, the Great Daidala festival was celebrated, which drew together a number of cities in a reconciliation celebration of great importance. At the start of the Great Daidala one wooden figure was chosen from the many that had accumulated and designated the bride. The wooden idol was prepared as a bride for a wedding, first with a ritual bath in the River Asopus. Next the wooden bride was dressed, set in a wagon with an attendant. The wagon led a procession up to Mount Kithairon with the participants singing an epithalamion.
At the mountaintop there was an altar and a pyre, where for each community a cow was sacrificed for Hera and a bull for Zeus. The wooden bride was also placed on the altar, and all was immolated in a magnificent hecatomb.