Revision as of 11:16, 17 August 2009 view sourceLankiveil (talk | contribs)27,123 editsm Reverted edits by 222.127.80.199 to last revision by VoABot II (HG)← Previous edit | Latest revision as of 03:08, 14 January 2025 view source Paul August (talk | contribs)Autopatrolled, Administrators205,792 edits Undid revision 1269318332 by BurninButter (talk) Don't think a short description is neededTag: Undo | ||
Line 1: | Line 1: | ||
{{Short description|none}}<!-- "none" is preferred when the title is sufficiently descriptive; see ] --> | |||
] found at ] (Sala Rotonda, ], ])]] | |||
{{pp|small=yes}} | |||
] | |||
{{Use dmy dates|date=November 2020}} | |||
'''Greek mythology''' is the body of ]s and ]s belonging to the ] concerning their ] and ], ], and the origins and significance of their own ] and ] practices. They were a part of ]. Modern scholars refer to the ]s and study them in an attempt to throw light on the religious and political institutions of ], on the Ancient Greek civilization, and to gain understanding of the nature of myth-making itself.<ref name="Helios">{{cite encyclopedia|title=Volume: Hellas, Article: Greek Mythology|encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia The Helios|year=1952}}</ref> | |||
{{Greek mythology sidebar}} | |||
Greek mythology is embodied explicitly in a large collection of narratives and implicitly in representational arts, such as ] and ]. Greek myth explains the origins of the world and details the lives and adventures of a wide variety of ], and other ]. These accounts initially were disseminated in an ]; today the Greek myths are known primarily from ]. | |||
{{Mythology}} | |||
'''Greek mythology''' is the body of ]s originally told by the ], and a ] of ], today absorbed alongside ] into the broader designation of ]. These stories concern the ]'s view of the ] and ]; the lives and activities of ], ], and ]; and the origins and significance of the ancient Greeks' ] and ] practices. Modern ] study the myths to shed light on the religious and political institutions of ancient Greece, and to better understand the nature of mythmaking itself.<ref name="Helios">{{cite encyclopedia|title=Volume: Hellas, Article: Greek Mythology|encyclopedia=]|year=1952}}</ref> | |||
The oldest known Greek literary sources, the ]s '']'' and '']'', focus on events surrounding the ]. Two poems by ]'s near contemporary ], the '']'' and the '']'', contain accounts of the genesis of the world, the succession of divine rulers, the succession of human ages, the origin of human woes, and the origin of sacrificial practices. Myths also are preserved in the ], in fragments of ] of the ], in ], in the works of the ] of the fifth century BC, in writings of scholars and poets of the ] and in texts from the time of the ] by writers such as ] and ]. | |||
The Greek myths were initially propagated in an ] most likely by ] and ] singers starting in the 18th century BC;<ref>{{cite web|last1=Cartwirght|first1=Mark|title=Greek Mythology|url=https://www.worldhistory.org/Greek_Mythology/|website=World History Encyclopedia|access-date=26 March 2018|archive-date=18 April 2021|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210418165021/https://www.worldhistory.org/Greek_Mythology/|url-status=live}}</ref> eventually the myths of the heroes of the ] and its aftermath became part of the oral tradition of ]'s ], the '']'' and the '']''. Two poems by Homer's near contemporary ], the '']'' and the '']'', contain accounts of the genesis of the world, the succession of divine rulers, the succession of human ages, the origin of human woes, and the origin of ] practices. Myths are also preserved in the '']'', in fragments of epic poems of the ], in ], in the works of the ] and ] of the fifth century BC, in writings of scholars and poets of the ], and in texts from the time of the ] by writers such as ] and ]. | |||
Archaeological evidence is a principal source of detail about Greek mythology, with gods and heroes featuring prominently in the decoration of many artifacts. Geometric designs on pottery of the eighth century BC depict scenes from the Trojan cycle as well as the adventures of ]. In the succeeding ], ], and ] periods, Homeric and various other mythological scenes appear, supplementing the existing literary evidence.<ref name="Br">{{cite encyclopedia|title=Greek Mythology|encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia Britannica|year=2002}}</ref> | |||
Aside from this narrative deposit in ], pictorial representations of gods, heroes, and mythic episodes featured prominently in ancient ] and the decoration of ] and many other artifacts. Geometric designs on pottery of the eighth century BC depict scenes from the Epic Cycle as well as the adventures of ]. In the succeeding ], ], and ] periods, Homeric and various other mythological scenes appear, supplementing the existing literary evidence.<ref name="Br">{{cite encyclopedia|title=Greek Mythology|encyclopedia=]|date=2002|url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Greek-mythology|orig-year=1998|first1=A. W. H.|last1=Adkins|first2=John R. T.|last2=Pollard}}<br /></ref> | |||
Greek mythology has exerted an extensive influence on the culture, the arts, and the literature of ] and remains part of Western heritage and language. Poets and artists from ancient times to the present have derived inspiration from Greek mythology and have discovered contemporary significance and relevance in these mythological themes.<ref>J.M. Foley, ''Homer's Traditional Art'', 43</ref> | |||
Greek mythology has had an extensive influence on the culture, arts, and literature of ] and remains part of Western heritage and language. Poets and artists from ancient times to the present have derived inspiration from Greek mythology and have discovered contemporary significance and relevance in the themes.<ref>Foley, John Miles (1999). "Homeric and South Slavic Epic". ''Homer's Traditional Art''. ]. {{ISBN|978-0-271-01870-6}}.</ref>{{Rp|43}} | |||
==Sources of Greek mythology== | |||
] and ] by Exekias, {{circa|540 BC}}, ], London]] | |||
Greek mythology is known today primarily from ] and representations on visual media dating from the ] dating from c. 900-800 BC onward.<ref name="Graf200">F. Graf, ''Greek Mythology'', 200</ref> | |||
==Sources== | |||
Greek mythology is known today primarily from ] and representations on visual media dating from the ] from {{circa|900 BC|lk=on}} to {{circa|800 BC|lk=no}} onward.<ref name="Graf200">Graf, Fritz. 2009 . '']'', translated by T. Marier. Baltimore: ]. {{ISBN|9780801846571}}.</ref>{{Rp|200}} In fact, literary and archaeological sources integrate, sometimes mutually supportive and sometimes in conflict; however, in many cases, the existence of this corpus of data is an indication that many elements of Greek mythology have strong factual and historical roots.<ref>Alms, Anthony. 2007. ''Theology, Trauerspiel, and the Conceptual Foundations of Early German Opera''. ].</ref> | |||
]'' (1868 by ]). The myth of Prometheus first was attested by Hesiodus and then constituted the basis for a tragic trilogy of plays, possibly by Aeschylus, consisting of '']'', '']'', and '']'']] | |||
===Literary sources=== | ===Literary sources=== | ||
Mythical narration plays an important role in nearly every genre of Greek literature. Nevertheless, the only general mythographical handbook to survive from Greek antiquity was the '']'' of |
Mythical narration plays an important role in nearly every genre of Greek literature. Nevertheless, the only general mythographical handbook to survive from Greek antiquity was the '']'' of Pseudo-Apollodorus. This work attempts to reconcile the contradictory tales of the poets and provides a grand summary of traditional Greek mythology and heroic legends.<ref name="Hard1">Hard, Robin (2003). "Sources of Greek Myth". ''The Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology'': ''based on H. J. Rose's "A Handbook of Greek mythology''". London: Routledge. {{ISBN|978-0-415-18636-0}}.</ref>{{Rp|1}} ] lived from {{circa|180 BC}} to {{circa|125 BC|lk=no}} and wrote on many of these topics. His writings may have formed the basis for the collection; however, the "Library" discusses events that occurred long after his death, hence the name Pseudo-Apollodorus. | ||
]'' (1868 by ]). The myth of Prometheus first was attested by ] and then constituted the basis for a tragic trilogy of plays, possibly by Aeschylus, consisting of '']'', '']'', and '']''.]] | |||
Among the earliest literary sources are ]'s two epic poems, the '']'' and the '']''. Other poets completed the ], but these later and lesser poems now are lost almost entirely. Despite their traditional name, the '']'' have no direct connection with Homer. The oldest are choral hymns from the earlier part of the so-called ].<ref name="Miles7">Miles, Geoffrey (1999). "The Myth-kitty" in ''Classical Mythology in English Literature: A Critical Anthology''. Chicago: ]. {{ISBN|978-0-415-14754-5}}.</ref>{{Rp|7}} ], a possible contemporary with Homer, offers in his ''] ''(''Origin of the Gods'') the fullest account of the earliest Greek myths, dealing with the creation of the world, the origin of the gods, ], and ], as well as elaborate genealogies, folktales, and aetiological myths. Hesiod's '']'', a didactic poem about farming life, also includes the myths of ], ], and the ]. The poet advises on the best way to succeed in a dangerous world, rendered yet more dangerous by its gods.<ref name="Br" /> | |||
Lyrical poets often took their subjects from myth, but their treatment became gradually less narrative and more allusive. Greek lyric poets, including ], ] and ], and bucolic poets such as ] and ], relate individual mythological incidents.<ref name="Klatt-Brazouskixii">Klatt, Mary J., and Antoinette Brazouski. 1994. "Preface" in ''Children's Books on Ancient Greek and Roman Mythology: An Annotated Bibliography''. ]. {{ISBN|978-0-313-28973-6}}.</ref>{{Rp|xii}} Additionally, myth was central to classical ]. The ] playwrights ], ], and ] took most of their plots from myths of the age of heroes and the Trojan War. Many of the great tragic stories (e.g. ] and his children, ], ], ], etc.) took on their classic form in these tragedies. The comic playwright ] also used myths, in '']'' and '']''.<ref name="Miles7" />{{Rp|8}} | |||
Among the earliest literary sources are ]'s two epic poems, the ''Iliad'' and the ''Odyssey''. Other poets completed the "epic cycle", but these later and lesser poems now are lost almost entirely. Despite their traditional name, the Homeric Hymns have no connection with Homer. They are choral hymns from the earlier part of the so-called ].<ref name="Miles7">Miles, ''Classical Mythology in English Literature'', 7</ref> ], a possible contemporary with Homer, offers in his '' ] '' (''Origin of the Gods'') the fullest account of the earliest Greek myths, dealing with the creation of the world; the origin of the gods, ], and ]s; as well as elaborate genealogies, folktales, and etiological myths. Hesiod's ''Works and Days'', a didactic poem about farming life, also includes the myths of ], ], and the ]. The poet gives advice on the best way to succeed in a dangerous world, rendered yet more dangerous by its gods.<ref name="Br" /> | |||
Historians ] and ], and geographers ] and ], who traveled throughout the Greek world and noted the stories they heard, supplied numerous local myths and legends, often giving little-known alternative versions.<ref name="Klatt-Brazouskixii" />{{Rp|xii}} Herodotus in particular, searched the various traditions he encountered and found the historical or mythological roots in the confrontation between Greece and the East.<ref>Cartledge, Paul A. 2004. ''The Spartans'' (translated in Greek). Livanis. {{ISBN|978-960-14-0843-9}}.</ref>{{Rp|60}}<ref>Cartledge, Paul A. 2002. "Inventing the Past: History v. Myth" in ''The Greeks''. New York: ]. {{ISBN|978-0-19-280388-7}}.</ref>{{Rp|22}} Herodotus attempted to reconcile origins and the blending of differing cultural concepts. | |||
Lyrical poets sometimes take their subjects from myth, but their treatment becomes gradually less narrative and more allusive. Greek lyric poets including ], ], ] and bucolic poets such as ] and ], relate individual mythological incidents.<ref name="Klatt-Brazouskixii">Klatt-Brazouski, ''Ancient Greek nad Roman Mythology'', xii</ref> Additionally, myth was central to classical ]. The ] playwrights ], ], and ] took most of their plots from myths of the age of heroes and the Trojan War. Many of the great tragic stories (e.g. ] and his children, ], ], ], etc.) took on their classic form in these tragedies. The comic playwright ] also used myths, in '']'' and '']''.<ref name="Miles8">Miles, ''Classical Mythology in English Literature'', 8</ref> | |||
], here depicted in the fifth century manuscript, the '']'', preserved details of Greek mythology in many of his writings]] | |||
Historians ] and ], and geographers ] and ], who traveled throughout the Greek world and noted the stories they heard, supplied numerous local myths and legends, often giving little-known alternative versions.<ref name="Klatt-Brazouskixii" /> Herodotus in particular, searched the various traditions presented him and found the historical or mythological roots in the confrontation between Greece and the East.<ref>P. Cartledge, ''The Spartans'', 60, and ''The Greeks'', 22</ref> Herodotus attempted to reconcile origins and the blending of differing cultural concepts. | |||
The poetry of the ] and ] ages |
The poetry of the ] and ] ages was primarily composed as a literary rather than cultic exercise. Nevertheless, it contains many important details that would otherwise be lost. This category includes the works of: | ||
#The Roman poets ], ], ], ] |
# The Roman poets ], ], ], ] and ] with ]'s commentary. | ||
#The Greek poets of the ] period: ], ], and ]. | # The Greek poets of the ] period: ], ], and ]. | ||
#The Greek poets of the |
# The Greek poets of the Hellenistic period: ], ], Pseudo-], and ]. | ||
#The ancient novels of Greeks and Romans such as ], ], ], and ]. | |||
] killing a Trojan prisoner in front of ] on a ] ] calyx-krater, made toward the end of the fourth century-beginning of the third century BC]] | |||
Prose writers from the same periods who make reference to myths include ], ], ], and ]. Two other important non-poetical sources are the ''Fabulae'' and ''Astronomica'' of the Roman writer styled as Pseudo-], the ''Imagines'' of ] and ], and the ''Descriptions'' of ]. | |||
Finally, ] |
Finally, several ] Greek writers provide important details of myth, much derived from earlier now lost Greek works. These preservers of myth include ], ], the author of the '']'', ], and ]. They often treat mythology from a Christian moralizing perspective.<ref> {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20180515024717/http://www.theoi.com/Titan/Pasiphae.html |date=15 May 2018 }}, Encyclopedia: Greek Gods, Spirits, Monsters</ref> | ||
===Archaeological sources=== | ===Archaeological sources=== | ||
], here depicted in the fifth-century manuscript, the '']'', preserved details of Greek mythology in many of his writings.]] | |||
The discovery of the ] by the German amateur ], ], in the nineteenth century, and the discovery of the ] in ] by British archaeologist, Sir ], in the twentieth century, helped to explain many existing questions about Homer's epics and provided archaeological evidence for many of the mythological details about gods and heroes. Unfortunately, the evidence about myth and ritual at Mycenaean and Minoan sites is entirely monumental, as the ] script (an ancient form of Greek found in both Crete and Greece) was used mainly to record inventories, although the names of gods and heroes doubtfully have been revealed.<ref name="Br" /> | |||
The discovery of the ] by the German amateur ] ] in the nineteenth century, and the discovery of the ] in ] by the British archaeologist ] in the twentieth century, helped to explain many existing questions about Homer's epics and provided archaeological evidence for many of the mythological details about gods and heroes. The evidence about myths and rituals at Mycenaean and Minoan sites is entirely monumental, as the ] script (an ancient form of Greek found in both Crete and mainland Greece) was used mainly to record inventories, although certain names of gods and heroes have been tentatively identified.<ref name="Br" /> | |||
Geometric designs on pottery of the eighth |
Geometric designs on pottery of the eighth-century BC depict scenes from the Trojan cycle, as well as the adventures of Heracles.<ref>Jane Henle, ''Greek Myths: A Vase Painter's Notebook'' (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1973) {{ISBN|0-253-32636-2}}</ref> These visual representations of myths are important for two reasons. Firstly, many Greek myths are attested on vases earlier than in literary sources: of the twelve labors of Heracles, for example, only the ] adventure occurs in a contemporary literary text.<ref name="HomerIliad366-369">Homer, ''Iliad'', 8. An epic poem about the Battle of Troy. </ref> Secondly, visual sources sometimes represent myths or mythical scenes that are not attested in any extant literary source. In some cases, the first known representation of a myth in geometric art predates its first known representation in late archaic poetry, by several centuries.<ref name="Graf200" /> In the Archaic ({{circa|750|500 BC}}), Classical ({{circa|480}}–323 BC), and Hellenistic (323–146 BC) periods, Homeric and various other mythological scenes appear, supplementing the existing literary evidence.<ref name="Br" /> | ||
==Survey of mythic history== | ==Survey of mythic history== | ||
] with an attendant, probably her nurse, a fresco from ], {{circa|60|20 BC}}]] | |||
{{Ancient Greek religion}} | |||
Greek mythology has changed over time to accommodate the evolution of their culture, of which mythology, both overtly and in its unspoken assumptions, is an index of the changes. In Greek mythology's surviving literary forms, as found mostly at the end of the progressive changes, is inherently political, as Gilbert Cuthbertson has |
Greek mythology has changed over time to accommodate the evolution of their culture, of which mythology, both overtly and in its unspoken assumptions, is an index of the changes. In Greek mythology's surviving literary forms, as found mostly at the end of the progressive changes, it is inherently political, as Gilbert Cuthbertson (1975) has argued.<ref group="lower-roman">Cuthbertson (1975) selects a wider range of epic, from ] to Voltaire's '']'', but his central theme—that myths encode mechanisms of cultural dynamics structure community by the creation of moral consensus—is a familiar mainstream view that applies to Greek myth.</ref><ref>Cuthbertson, Gilbert (1975) ''Political Myth and Epic.'' Ann Arbor: ].</ref> | ||
The earlier inhabitants of the ] were an agricultural people who, using ], assigned a spirit to every aspect of nature. Eventually, these vague spirits assumed human forms and entered the local mythology as gods.<ref name="Johnson17">Albala |
The earlier inhabitants of the ] were an agricultural people who, using ], assigned a spirit to every aspect of nature. Eventually, these vague spirits assumed human forms and entered the local mythology as gods.<ref name="Johnson17">Albala, Ken G, Claudia Durst Johnson, and Vernon E. Johnson. 2000. '']''. ]. {{ISBN|978-0-486-41107-1}}.</ref>{{Rp|17}} When tribes from the north of the Balkan Peninsula invaded, they brought with them a new ] of gods, based on conquest, force, prowess in battle, and violent heroism. Other older gods of the agricultural world fused with those of the more powerful invaders or else faded into insignificance.<ref name="Johnson17" />{{Rp|18}} | ||
After the middle of the Archaic period, myths about relationships between male gods and male heroes |
After the middle of the Archaic period, myths about relationships between male gods and male heroes became more and more frequent, indicating the parallel development of ] ({{Langx|grc|παιδικὸς ἔρως|translit=eros paidikos|label=none}}), thought to have been introduced around 630 BC. By the end of the fifth-century BC, poets had assigned at least one ], an adolescent boy who was their sexual companion, to every important ] except ] and many legendary figures.<ref name="Gallimach109">Calimach, Andrew, ed. 2002. "]." Pp. 12–109 in '']''. New Rochelle, NY: Haiduk Press. {{ISBN|978-0-9714686-0-3}}.</ref> Previously existing myths, such as those of ] and ], also then were cast in a ].<ref name="Percy">Percy, William A. 1999. "The Institutionalization of Pederasty" in ''Pederasty and Pedagogy in Archaic Greece''. London: ]. {{ISBN|978-0-252-06740-2}}.</ref>{{Rp|54}} Alexandrian poets at first, then more generally literary mythographers in the early Roman Empire, often re-adapted stories of Greek mythological characters in this fashion. | ||
The achievement of epic poetry was to create story-cycles and, as a result, to develop a new sense of mythological chronology. Thus Greek mythology unfolds as a phase in the development of the world and of humans.<ref name="Dowden11"> |
The achievement of epic poetry was to create story-cycles and, as a result, to develop a new sense of mythological chronology. Thus, Greek mythology unfolds as a phase in the development of the world and of humans.<ref name="Dowden11">]. 1992. "Myth and Mythology" in ''The Uses of Greek Mythology''. London: ]. {{ISBN|978-0-415-06135-3}}.</ref>{{Rp|11}} While self-contradictions in these stories make an absolute timeline impossible, an approximate chronology may be discerned. The resulting mythological "history of the world" may be divided into three or four broader periods: | ||
#''The myths of origin'' or ''age of gods (Theogonies, "births of gods")'': myths about the origins of the world, the gods, and the human race. | # ''The myths of origin'' or ''age of gods (Theogonies, "births of gods")'': myths about the origins of the world, the gods, and the human race. | ||
# ''The age when gods and mortals mingled freely'': stories of the early interactions between gods, ]s, and mortals. | # ''The age when gods and mortals mingled freely'': stories of the early interactions between gods, ]s, and mortals. | ||
#'' The age of heroes (heroic age)'', where divine activity was more limited. The last and greatest of the heroic legends is the story of ''the Trojan War and after'' (which is regarded by some researchers as a separate fourth period).<ref name=" |
# '' The age of heroes (heroic age)'', where divine activity was more limited. The last and greatest of the heroic legends is the story of ''the Trojan War and after'' (which is regarded by some researchers as a separate, fourth period).<ref name="Miles7" />{{Rp|35}} | ||
While the age of gods often has been of more interest to contemporary students of myth, the Greek authors of the archaic and classical eras had a clear preference for the age of heroes, establishing a chronology and record of human accomplishments after the questions of how the world came into being were explained. For example, the heroic ''Iliad'' and ''Odyssey'' dwarfed the divine-focused ''Theogony'' and Homeric Hymns in both size and popularity. Under the influence of Homer the "hero cult" leads to a restructuring in spiritual life, expressed in the separation of the realm of the gods from the realm of the dead (heroes), of the ] from the Olympian.<ref name="Raffan-Barket205"> |
While the age of gods often has been of more interest to contemporary students of myth, the Greek authors of the archaic and classical eras had a clear preference for the age of heroes, establishing a chronology and record of human accomplishments after the questions of how the world came into being were explained. For example, the heroic ''Iliad'' and ''Odyssey'' dwarfed the divine-focused ''Theogony'' and Homeric Hymns in both size and popularity. Under the influence of Homer the "hero cult" leads to a restructuring in spiritual life, expressed in the separation of the realm of the gods from the realm of the dead (heroes), of the ] from the Olympian.<ref name="Raffan-Barket205">Burkert, Walter. 2002. "Prehistory and the Minoan Mycenaen Era" in ''Greek Religion: Archaic and Classical'', translated by J. Raffan. ]. {{ISBN|978-0-631-15624-6}}.</ref>{{Rp|205}} In the ''Works and Days'', Hesiod makes use of a scheme of Four ] (or Races): Golden, Silver, Bronze, and Iron. These races or ages are separate creations of the gods, the ] belonging to the reign of Cronos, the subsequent races to the creation of ]. The presence of evil was explained by the myth of ], when all of the best of human capabilities, save hope, had been spilled out of her overturned jar.<ref name="Worksanddays">Hesiod, ''Works and Days'', {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150512080002/http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/hesiod/works.htm |date=12 May 2015 }}</ref> In '']'', Ovid follows Hesiod's concept of the four ages.<ref name="Ovid89-162">Ovid, ''Metamorphoses'', I, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171023183945/http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/ovid/ovid.met1.shtml |date=23 October 2017 }}</ref> | ||
=== |
===Origins of the world and the gods=== | ||
{{Further|Greek primordial gods|Family tree of the Greek gods}} | |||
====Cosmogony and cosmology==== | |||
]'' (''Love Conquers All''), a depiction of the god of love, Eros. By ], circa 1601–1602.]] | |||
{{See also|Greek primordial gods|Family tree of the Greek gods}} | |||
"Myths of origin" or "]s" represent an attempt to explain the beginnings of the universe in human language.<ref name="Klatt-Brazouskixii" />{{Rp|10}} The most widely accepted version at the time, although a philosophical account of the beginning of things, is reported by ], in his '']''. He begins with ], a yawning nothingness. Next comes ] (Earth), "the ever-sure foundation of all", and then ], "in the depth of the wide-pathed Earth", and ] (Love), "fairest among the deathless gods".<ref name="Theogony116-138">Hesiod, ''Theogony'', ]</ref> Without male assistance, Gaia gave birth to ] (the Sky) who then fertilized her. From that union were born first the ]—six males: ], ], ], ], ], and ]; and six females: ], ], ], ], ], and ]. After Cronus was born, Gaia and Uranus decreed no more Titans were to be born. They were followed by the one-eyed ] and the ] or Hundred-Handed Ones, who were both thrown into Tartarus by Uranus. This made Gaia furious. Cronus ("the wily, youngest and most terrible of ]'s children")<ref name="Theogony116-138" /> was convinced by Gaia to castrate his father. He did this and became the ruler of the Titans with his sister-wife, Rhea, as his consort, and the other Titans became his court. | |||
]'' (''Love Conquers All''), a depiction of the god of love, Eros. By ], circa 1601–1602]] | |||
"Myths of origin" or "creation myths" represent an attempt to render the universe comprehensible in human terms and explain the origin of the world.<ref name="Klattx">Klatt-Brazouski, ''Ancient Greek and Roman Mythology'', 10</ref> The most widely accepted version at the time, although a philosophical account of the beginning of things, is reported by ], in his '']''. He begins with ], a yawning nothingness. Out of the void emerged ],{{Citation needed|date=July 2009}} ] or ] (the Earth) and some other primary divine beings: ] (Love), the ] (the ]), and the ].<ref name="Theogony116-138">Hesiod, ''Theogony'', ]</ref> Without male assistance, Gaia gave birth to ] (the Sky) who then fertilized her. From that union were born first the ]s—six males: ], ], ], ], ], and ]; and six females: ], ], ], ], ], and ]. They were followed by the one-eyed ] and the ] or Hundred-Handers. Cronus ("the wily, youngest and most terrible of children" <ref name="Theogony116-138" />) castrated his father and became the ruler of the gods with his sister-wife Rhea as his consort, and the other Titans became his court. | |||
A motif of father-against-son conflict was repeated when Cronus was confronted by his son, ]. Because Cronus had betrayed his father, he feared that his offspring would do the same, and so each time Rhea gave birth, he snatched up the child and ate it. Rhea hated this and tricked him by hiding Zeus and wrapping a stone in a baby's blanket, which Cronus ate. When Zeus was full-grown, he fed Cronus a drugged drink which caused him to vomit, throwing up Rhea's other children, including ], ], ], ], and ], and the stone, which had been sitting in Cronus's stomach all this time. Zeus then challenged Cronus to ] for the kingship of the gods. At last, with the help of the Cyclopes (whom Zeus freed from Tartarus), Zeus and his siblings were victorious, while Cronus and the Titans were hurled down to imprisonment in ].<ref name="Theogony713-735">Hesiod, ''Theogony'', ]</ref> | |||
], the goddess of childbirth, Eileithyia, on the right assists - 550–525 BC - '']'']] | |||
] depicting Athena being "reborn" from the head of Zeus, who had swallowed her mother ], on the right, Eileithyia, the goddess of childbirth, assists, circa 550–525 BC (], Paris)]] | |||
A motif of father-against-son conflict was repeated when Cronus was confronted by his son, ]. Because Cronus had betrayed his father, he feared that his offspring would do the same, and so each time Rhea gave birth, he snatched up the child and ate it. Rhea hated this and tricked him by hiding Zeus and wrapping a stone in a baby's blanket, which Cronus ate. When Zeus was grown, he fed his father a drugged drink which caused Cronus to vomit, throwing up Rhea's other children and the stone, which had been sitting in Cronus' stomach all along. Then Zeus challenged Cronus to war for the kingship of the gods. At last, with the help of the Cyclopes (whom Zeus freed from Tartarus), Zeus and his siblings were victorious, while Cronus and the Titans were hurled down to imprisonment in ].<ref name="Theogony713-735">Hesiod, ''Theogony'', ]</ref> | |||
Zeus was plagued by the same concern, and after a prophecy that the offspring of his first wife, ], would give birth to a god "greater than he", Zeus swallowed her.<ref name=":0">{{cite book|author=Guirand|first=Felix|title=New Larousse Encyclopedia of Mythology|publisher=Hamlyn|others=Translated by ] and ]|year=1987|isbn=978-0-600-02350-0|editor=Guirand|editor-first=Felix|chapter=Greek Mythology|orig-year=1959}}</ref>{{Rp|98}} She was already ] with ], however, and she burst forth from his head—fully-grown and dressed for war.<ref name=":0" />{{Rp|108}} | |||
The earliest Greek thought about poetry considered the theogonies to be the prototypical poetic genre—the prototypical ''mythos''—and imputed almost magical powers to it. ], the ] poet, also was the archetypal singer of theogonies, which he uses to calm seas and storms in Apollonius' '']'', and to move the stony hearts of the underworld gods in his descent to ]. When ] invents the ] in the ''Homeric Hymn to Hermes'', the first thing he does is sing about the birth of the gods.<ref name="Hermes">''Homeric Hymn to Hermes'', {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081025121210/http://mcllibrary.org/Hesiod/hymns.html |date=25 October 2008 }}</ref> Hesiod's ''Theogony'' is not only the fullest surviving account of the gods but also the fullest surviving account of the archaic poet's function, with its long preliminary invocation to the ]s. Theogony also was the subject of many lost poems, including those attributed to Orpheus, ], ], ], and other legendary seers, which were used in private ritual purifications and ]. There are indications that ] was familiar with some version of the Orphic theogony.<ref name="Betegh147">]. 2004. "The Interpretation of the poet" in ''The Derveni Papyrus''. Cambridge: ]. {{ISBN|978-0-521-80108-9}}.</ref>{{Rp|147}} A silence would have been expected about religious rites and beliefs, however, and that nature of the culture would not have been reported by members of the society while the beliefs were held. After they ceased to become religious beliefs, few would have known the rites and rituals. Allusions often existed, however, to aspects that were quite public. | |||
Zeus was plagued by the same concern and, after a prophecy that the offspring of his first wife, ], would give birth to a god "greater than he"—Zeus swallowed her. She was already pregnant with ], however, and they made him miserable until Athene burst forth from his head—fully-grown and dressed for war. This "rebirth" from Zeus was used as an excuse for why he was not "superseded" by a child of the next generation of gods, but accounted for the presence of Athene. It is likely that cultural changes already in progress absorbed the long-standing local cult of Athene at Athens into the changing Olympic pantheon without conflict because it could not be overcome.{{Citation needed|date=February 2009}} | |||
Images existed on pottery and religious artwork that were interpreted and more likely, misinterpreted in many diverse myths and tales. A few fragments of these works survive in quotations by ] philosophers and recently unearthed ] scraps. One of these scraps, the ] now proves that at least in the fifth-century BC a theogonic-cosmogonic poem of Orpheus was in existence.<ref name="Raffan-Barket205" />{{Rp|236}}<ref name="Betegh147" />{{Rp|147}} | |||
The earliest Greek thought about poetry considered the theogonies to be the prototypical poetic genre—the prototypical ''mythos''—and imputed almost magical powers to it. ], the ] poet, also was the archetypal singer of theogonies, which he uses to calm seas and storms in Apollonius' '']'', and to move the stony hearts of the underworld gods in his descent to ]. When ] invents the ] in the ''Homeric Hymn to Hermes'', the first thing he does is sing about the birth of the gods.<ref name="Hermes">''Homeric Hymn to Hermes'', </ref> Hesiod's ''Theogony'' is not only the fullest surviving account of the gods, but also the fullest surviving account of the archaic poet's function, with its long preliminary invocation to the ]s. Theogony also was the subject of many lost poems, including those attributed to Orpheus, ], ], ], and other legendary seers, which were used in private ritual purifications and ]. There are indications that ] was familiar with some version of the Orphic theogony.<ref name="Betegh147">G. Betegh, ''The Derveni Papyrus'', 147</ref> A silence would have been expected about religious rites and beliefs, however, and that nature of the culture would not have been reported by members of the society while the beliefs were held. After they ceased to become religious beliefs, few would have known the rites and rituals. Allusions often existed, however, to aspects that were quite public. | |||
The first philosophical cosmologists reacted against, or sometimes built upon, popular mythical conceptions that had existed in the Greek world for some time. Some of these popular conceptions can be gleaned from the poetry of Homer and Hesiod. In Homer, the Earth was viewed as a flat disk afloat on the river of ] and overlooked by a hemispherical sky with sun, moon, and stars. The Sun (]) traversed the heavens as a charioteer and sailed around the Earth in a golden bowl at night. Sun, earth, heaven, rivers, and winds could be addressed in prayers and called to witness oaths. Natural fissures were popularly regarded as entrances to the subterranean house of Hades and his predecessors, home of the dead.<ref name="BrAlga">]. 1999. "The Beginnings of Cosmology" in ''The Cambridge Companion to Early Greek Philosophy''. Cambridge: ]. {{ISBN|978-0-521-44667-9}}.</ref>{{Rp|45}} Influences from other cultures always afforded new themes. | |||
Images existed on pottery and religious artwork that were interpreted and more likely, misinterpreted in many diverse myths and tales. A few fragments of these works survive in quotations by ] philosophers and recently unearthed ] scraps. One of these scraps, the ] now proves that at least in the fifth century BC a theogonic-cosmogonic poem of Orpheus was in existence. This poem attempted to outdo Hesiod's ''Theogony'' and the genealogy of the gods was extended back to ] (Night) as an ultimate female beginning before Eurynome,{{Citation needed|date=July 2009}} Uranus, Cronus, and Zeus.<ref name="BurkertBetegh">W. Burkert, ''Greek Religion'', 236<br />* G. Betegh, ''The Derveni Papyrus'', 147</ref> Night and Darkness could equate with Chaos. | |||
The first philosophical cosmologists reacted against, or sometimes built upon, popular mythical conceptions that had existed in the Greek world for some time. Some of these popular conceptions can be gleaned from the poetry of Homer and Hesiod. In Homer, the Earth was viewed as a flat disk afloat on the river of ] and overlooked by a hemispherical sky with sun, moon, and stars. The Sun (]) traversed the heavens as a charioteer and sailed around the Earth in a golden bowl at night. Sun, earth, heaven, rivers, and winds could be addressed in prayers and called to witness oaths. Natural fissures were popularly regarded as entrances to the subterranean house of Hades and his predecessors, home of the dead.<ref name="BrAlga">{{cite encyclopedia|title=Greek Mythology|encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia Britannica|year=2002}}<br />* K. Algra, ''The Beginnings of Cosmology'', 45</ref> Influences from other cultures always afforded new themes. | |||
====Greek pantheon==== | ====Greek pantheon==== | ||
{{ |
{{Further|Ancient Greek religion|Twelve Olympians|Family Tree of the Greek Gods|List of Mycenaean gods}} | ||
], seduces ], the Queen of ]. A sixteenth-century ].]] | |||
According to Classical-era mythology, after the overthrow of the Titans, the new ] of ] and ]es was confirmed. Among the principal Greek gods were the Olympians, residing on ] under the eye of Zeus. (The limitation of their number to twelve seems to have been a comparatively modern idea.)<ref name="Stoll8">Stoll, Heinrich Wilhelm. 1852. ''Handbook of the Religion and Mythology of the Greeks'', translated by R. B. Paul. Francis & John Rivington.</ref>{{Rp|8}} Besides the Olympians, the Greeks worshipped various gods of the countryside, the satyr-god ], ]s (spirits of rivers), ]s (who dwelled in springs), ]s (who were spirits of the trees), ]s (who inhabited the sea), river gods, ]s, and others. In addition, there were the dark powers of the underworld, such as the ] (or Furies), said to pursue those guilty of crimes against blood-relatives.<ref name="BrRel">{{cite encyclopedia|title=Greek Religion|encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica|date=2 March 2020|url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Greek-religion|last1=Adkins|first1=A. W. H.|last2=Pollard|first2=John R. T.|orig-year=2002}}</ref> In order to honor the Ancient Greek pantheon, poets composed the Homeric Hymns (a group of thirty-three songs).<ref name="Cashford174">J. Cashford, ''The Homeric Hymns'', vii</ref> ] (1992) regards "the larger Homeric Hymns as simple preludes (compared with ''Theogony''), each of which invokes one god."<ref name="Nagy54">]. 1992. "The Hellenization of the Indo-European Poetics" in ''Greek Mythology and Poetics''. ]. {{ISBN|978-0-8014-8048-5}}.</ref>{{Rp|54}} | |||
The gods of Greek mythology are described as having essentially corporeal but ideal bodies. According to ], the defining characteristic of Greek anthropomorphism is that "the Greek gods are persons, not abstractions, ideas or concepts."<ref name="Raffan-Barket205" />{{Rp|182}} Regardless of their underlying forms, the Ancient Greek gods have many fantastic abilities; most significantly, the gods are not affected by disease and can be wounded only under highly unusual circumstances. The Greeks considered immortality as the distinctive characteristic of their gods; this immortality, as well as unfading youth, was insured by the constant use of ] and ], by which the divine blood was renewed in their veins.<ref name="Stoll8" />{{Rp|4}} | |||
] by ], circa late 18th century.]] | |||
Each god descends from his or her own genealogy, pursues differing interests, has a certain area of expertise, and is governed by a unique personality; however, these descriptions arise from a multiplicity of archaic local variants, which do not always agree with one another. When these gods are called upon in poetry, prayer, or cult, they are referred to by a combination of their name and ]s, that identify them by these distinctions from other manifestations of themselves (e.g., ''Apollo Musagetes'' is "], leader of the ]s"). Alternatively, the epithet may identify a particular and localized aspect of the god, sometimes thought to be already ancient during the classical epoch of Greece. | |||
According to Classical-era mythology, after the overthrow of the Titans, the new ] of ]s and ]es was confirmed. Among the principal Greek gods were the Olympians, residing atop ] under the eye of Zeus. (The limitation of their number to twelve seems to have been a comparatively modern idea.)<ref name="Stoll8">H.W. Stoll, ''Religion and Mythology of the Greeks'', 8</ref> Besides the Olympians, the Greeks worshipped various gods of the countryside, the goat-god ], ]s (spirits of rivers), ]s (who dwelled in springs), ]s (who were spirits of the trees), ]s (who inhabited the sea), river gods, ]s, and others. In addition, there were the dark powers of the underworld, such as the ] (or Furies), said to pursue those guilty of crimes against blood-relatives.<ref name="BrRel">{{cite encyclopedia|title=Greek Religion|encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia Britannica|year=2002}}</ref> In order to honor the Ancient Greek pantheon, poets composed the Homeric Hymns (a group of thirty-three songs).<ref name="Cashford174">J. Cashford, ''The Homeric Hymns'', vii</ref> ] regards "the larger Homeric Hymns as simple preludes (compared with ''Theogony''), each of which invokes one god".<ref name="Nagy54">G. Nagy, ''Greek Mythology and Poetics'', 54</ref> | |||
Most gods were associated with specific aspects of life. For example, ] was the goddess of love and beauty, ] was the god of war, ] the ruler of the underworld, and ] the goddess of wisdom and courage.<ref name="Stoll8" />{{Rp|20ff}} Some gods, such as ] and ], revealed complex personalities and mixtures of functions, while others, such as ] (literally "hearth") and ] (literally "sun"), were little more than personifications. The most impressive ] tended to be dedicated to a limited number of gods, who were the focus of large pan-Hellenic cults. It was, however, common for individual regions and villages to devote their own cults to minor gods. Many cities also honored the more well-known gods with unusual local rites and associated strange myths with them that were unknown elsewhere. During the heroic age, the cult of heroes (or demigods) supplemented that of the gods. | |||
In the wide variety of myths and legends that Greek mythology consists of, the gods that were native to the Greek peoples are described as having essentially corporeal but ideal bodies. According to ], the defining characteristic of Greek anthropomorphism is that "the Greek gods are persons, not abstractions, ideas or concepts".<ref name="Burkert182">W. Burkert, ''Greek Religion'', 182</ref> Regardless of their underlying forms, the Ancient Greek gods have many fantastic abilities; most significantly, the gods are not affected by disease, and can be wounded only under highly unusual circumstances. The Greeks considered immortality as the distinctive characteristic of their gods; this immortality, as well as unfading youth, was insured by the constant use of ] and ], by which the divine blood was renewed in their veins.<ref name="Stoll4">H.W. Stoll, ''Religion and Mythology of the Greeks'', 4</ref> | |||
] seduces ], the Queen of ]. A sixteenth century copy of the lost original by ].]] | |||
Each god descends from his or her own genealogy, pursues differing interests, has a certain area of expertise, and is governed by a unique personality; however, these descriptions arise from a multiplicity of archaic local variants, which do not always agree with one another. When these gods are called upon in poetry, prayer or cult, they are referred to by a combination of their name and ]s, that identify them by these distinctions from other manifestations of themselves (e.g. ''Apollo Musagetes'' is "], leader of the ]s"). Alternatively the epithet may identify a particular and localized aspect of the god, sometimes thought to be already ancient during the classical epoch of Greece. | |||
Most gods were associated with specific aspects of life. For example, ] was the goddess of love and beauty, ] was the god of war, ] the god of the dead, and ] the goddess of wisdom and courage.<ref name="Stoll20">H.W. Stoll, ''Religion and Mythology of the Greeks'', 20ff</ref> Some gods, such as ] and ], revealed complex personalities and mixtures of functions, while others, such as ] (literally "hearth") and ] (literally "sun"), were little more than personifications. The most impressive ] tended to be dedicated to a limited number of gods, who were the focus of large pan-Hellenic cults. It was, however, common for individual regions and villages to devote their own cults to minor gods. Many cities also honored the more well-known gods with unusual local rites and associated strange myths with them that were unknown elsewhere. During the heroic age, the cult of heroes (or demi-gods) supplemented that of the gods. | |||
===Age of gods and mortals=== | ===Age of gods and mortals=== | ||
"The origins of humanity ascribed to various figures, including Zeus and ]."<ref>{{Cite book |last=Dell |first=Christopher |title=Mythology: The Complete Guide to our Imagined Worlds |publisher=] |year=2012 |isbn=978-0-500-51615-7 |location=New York |pages=342}}</ref> | |||
]]] | |||
Bridging the age when gods lived alone and the age when divine interference in human affairs was limited was a transitional age in which gods and mortals moved together. These were the early days of the world when the groups mingled more freely than they did later. Most of these tales were later told by Ovid's '']'' and they are often divided into two thematic groups: tales of love, and tales of punishment.<ref name="Mile38">G. Mile, ''Classical Mythology in English Literature'', 38</ref> | |||
Bridging the age when gods lived alone and the age when divine interference in human affairs was limited was a transitional age in which gods and mortals moved together. These were the early days of the world when the groups mingled more freely than they did later. Most of these tales were later told by Ovid's '']'' and they are often divided into two thematic groups: tales of love, and tales of punishment.<ref name="Miles7" />{{Rp|38}} | |||
Tales of love often involve incest, or the seduction or rape of a mortal woman by a male god, resulting in heroic offspring. The stories generally suggest that relationships between gods and mortals are something to avoid; even consenting relationships rarely have happy endings.<ref name="Mile39">G. Mile, ''Classical Mythology in English Literature'', 39</ref> In a few cases, a female divinity mates with a mortal man, as in the ''Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite'', where the goddess lies with ] to produce ].<ref>''Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite'', </ref> | |||
] with ]s. Interior of a cup painted by the ], ].]] | |||
Tales of love often involve incest, or the seduction or rape of a mortal woman by a male god, resulting in heroic offspring. The stories generally suggest that relationships between gods and mortals are something to avoid; even consenting relationships rarely have happy endings.<ref name="Miles7" />{{Rp|39}} In a few cases, a female divinity mates with a mortal man, as in the ''Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite'', where the goddess lies with ] to produce ].<ref> | |||
] with ]s. Interior of a cup painted by the ], ]]] | |||
''Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite'', {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060912125408/http://courses.dce.harvard.edu/~clase116/txt_aphrodite.html |date=12 September 2006 }} | |||
The second type (tales of punishment) involves the appropriation or invention of some important cultural artifact, as when ] steals fire from the gods, when ] steals nectar and ] from Zeus' table and gives it to his own subjects—revealing to them the secrets of the gods, when ] or ] invents sacrifice, when ] teaches ] and the ] to ], or when ] invents the ] and enters into a musical contest with ]. Ian Morris considers Prometheus' adventures as "a place between the history of the gods and that of man".<ref name="Morris291">I. Morris, ''Archaeology As Cultural History'', 291</ref> An anonymous papyrus fragment, dated to the third century, vividly portrays ]' punishment of the king of ], ], whose recognition of the new god came too late, resulting in horrific penalties that extended into the afterlife.<ref name="Weaver335">J. Weaver, ''Plots of Epiphany'', 50</ref> The story of the arrival of Dionysus to establish his cult in Thrace was also the subject of an Aeschylean trilogy.<ref name="Bushnell28">R. Bushnell, ''A Companion to Tragedy'', 28</ref> In another tragedy, Euripides' '']'', the king of ], ], is punished by Dionysus, because he disrespected the god and spied on his ]s, the female ]pers of the god.<ref name="Trobe195">K. Trobe, ''Invoke the Gods'', 195</ref> | |||
</ref> | |||
The second type (tales of punishment) involves the appropriation or invention of some important cultural artifact, as when ] steals fire from the gods, when ] steals nectar and ] from Zeus' table and gives it to his subjects—revealing to them the secrets of the gods, when ] or ] invents sacrifice, when ] teaches agriculture and the ] to ], or when ] invents the ] and enters into a musical contest with ]. Ian Morris considers Prometheus' adventures as "a place between the history of the gods and that of man."<ref name="Morris291">Morris, Ian. 2000. ''Archaeology As Cultural History''. ]. {{ISBN|978-0-631-19602-0}}.</ref>{{Rp|291}} An anonymous papyrus fragment, dated to the third century, vividly portrays ]' punishment of the king of ], ], whose recognition of the new god came too late, resulting in horrific penalties that extended into the afterlife.<ref name="Weaver335">Weaver, John B. 1998. "Introduction" in ''The Plots of Epiphany.'' Berlin: ]. {{ISBN|978-3-11-018266-8}}.</ref>{{Rp|50}} The story of the arrival of Dionysus to establish his cult in Thrace was also the subject of an Aeschylean trilogy.<ref name="Bushnell28">Bushnell, Rebecca W. 2005. "Helicocentric Stoicism in the Saturnalia: The Egyptian Apollo" in ''Medieval: A Companion to Tragedy''. ]. {{ISBN|978-1-4051-0735-8}}.</ref>{{Rp|28}} In another tragedy, Euripides' '']'', the king of ], ], is punished by Dionysus, because he disrespected the god and spied on his ]s, the female ]pers of the god.<ref name="Trobe195">Trobe, Kala. 2001. "Dionysus" in '']''. ]. {{ISBN|978-0-7387-0096-0}}.</ref>{{Rp|195}} | |||
] and ] in a detail on an Apulian red-figure hydria, c. 340 BC - ''Berlin Museum'']] | |||
] and ] in a detail on an Apulian red-figure hydria, circa 340 BC (], Berlin)]] | |||
In another story, based on an old folktale-motif,<ref name="Nilsson50">M.P. Nilsson, ''Greek Popular Religion'', </ref> and echoing a similar theme, ] was searching for her daughter, ], having taken the form of an old woman called Doso, and received a hospitable welcome from ], the King of ] in ]. As a gift to Celeus, because of his hospitality, Demeter planned to make his son ] a god, but she was unable to complete the ritual because his mother ] walked in and saw her son in the fire and screamed in fright, which angered Demeter, who lamented that foolish mortals do not understand the concept and ritual.<ref name="Demeter">''Homeric Hymn to Demeter'', </ref> | |||
In another story, based on an old folktale-motif,<ref name="Nilsson50">Nilsson, Martin P. 1940. "The Religion of Eleusis" in '' {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171201053257/http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/gpr/gpr07.htm |date=1 December 2017 }}''. New York: ]. p. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171201053257/http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/gpr/gpr07.htm#fr_50 |date=1 December 2017 }}.</ref> and echoing a similar theme, ] was searching for her daughter, ], having taken the form of an old woman called Doso, and received a hospitable welcome from ], the King of ] in ]. As a gift to Celeus, because of his hospitality, Demeter planned to make his son ] a god, but she was unable to complete the ritual because his mother ] walked in and saw her son in the fire and screamed in fright, which angered Demeter, who lamented that foolish mortals do not understand the concept and ritual.<ref name="Demeter">''Homeric Hymn to Demeter'', {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20220616045252/https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=urn:cts:greekLit:tlg0013.tlg002.perseus-eng1:248-291 |date=16 June 2022 }}</ref> | |||
===Heroic age=== | ===Heroic age=== | ||
The age in which the heroes lived is known as the |
The age in which the heroes lived is known as the ].<ref name="Kelsey30">Kelsey, Francis W. (1889). ''A Handbook of Greek Mythology''. ]. p. 30.</ref> The epic and genealogical poetry created cycles of stories clustered around particular heroes or events and established the family relationships between the heroes of different stories; they thus arranged the stories in sequence. According to ] (1992), "there is even a saga effect: We can follow the fates of some families in successive generations."<ref name="Dowden11" />{{Rp|11}} | ||
After the rise of the hero cult, gods and heroes constitute the sacral sphere and are invoked together in oaths and prayers which are addressed to them.<ref name="Raffan-Barket205" /> |
After the rise of the hero cult, gods and heroes constitute the sacral sphere and are invoked together in oaths and prayers which are addressed to them.<ref name="Raffan-Barket205" />{{Rp|205}} Burkert (2002) notes that "the roster of heroes, again in contrast to the gods, is never given fixed and final form. Great gods are no longer born, but new heroes can always be raised up from the army of the dead." Another important difference between the hero cult and the cult of gods is that the hero becomes the centre of local group identity.<ref name="Raffan-Barket205" />{{Rp|206}} | ||
The monumental events of Heracles are regarded as the dawn of the age of heroes. To the Heroic Age are also ascribed three great |
The monumental events of Heracles are regarded as the dawn of the age of heroes. To the Heroic Age are also ascribed three great events: the ] expedition, the ], and the ].<ref name="Kelsey30" /><ref name=":1">]. 1991. ''A Handbook of Greek Mythology''. London: ]. {{ISBN|978-0-415-04601-5}}.</ref>{{Rp|340}} | ||
====Heracles and the Heracleidae==== | ====Heracles and the Heracleidae==== | ||
{{ |
{{Further|Heracles|Heracleidae|Hercules}} | ||
], |
] with his baby ] (], Paris)]] | ||
Some scholars believe<ref name=" |
Some scholars believe<ref name=":1" />{{Rp|10}} that behind Heracles' complicated mythology there was probably a real man, perhaps a chieftain-vassal of the kingdom of ]. Some scholars suggest the story of Heracles is an allegory for the sun's yearly passage through the twelve constellations of the zodiac.<ref name="Dupuis">Dupuis, C. F. ''The Origin of All Religious Worship''. p. 86.</ref> Others point to earlier myths from other cultures, showing the story of Heracles as a local adaptation of hero myths already well established. Traditionally, Heracles was the son of Zeus and ], granddaughter of ].<ref name="BrHer">{{cite encyclopedia|title=Heracles|encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica|date=6 February 2020|url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Heracles|orig-year=1999}}</ref> His fantastic solitary exploits, with their many ] themes, provided much material for popular legend. According to Burkert (2002), "He is portrayed as a sacrificer, mentioned as a founder of altars, and imagined as a voracious eater himself; it is in this role that he appears in comedy.<ref name="Raffan-Barket205" /> | ||
While his tragic end provided much material for tragedy—'']'' is regarded by Thalia Papadopoulou as "a play of great significance in examination of other Euripidean dramas."<ref name="PapadopoulouBurkert">Papadopoulou, Thalia. 2005. "Introduction" in ''Heracles and Euripidean Tragedy''. Cambridge: ]. {{ISBN|978-0-521-85126-8}}. p. 1.</ref><ref name="Raffan-Barket205" />{{Rp|211}} In art and literature, Heracles was represented as an enormously strong man of moderate height; his characteristic weapon was the bow but frequently also the club. Vase paintings demonstrate the unparalleled popularity of Heracles, his fight with the lion being depicted many hundreds of times.<ref name="Raffan-Barket205" />{{Rp|211}} | |||
], the messenger of Hera, who carries the winged staff (]), detail from an Apulian red-figure squat lekythos, c. 360-350 BC - ''Anzi'']] | |||
Heracles also entered Etruscan and Roman mythology and cult, and the exclamation "mehercule" became as familiar to the Romans as "Herakleis" was to the Greeks.<ref name=" |
Heracles also entered Etruscan and Roman mythology and cult, and the exclamation "mehercule" became as familiar to the Romans{{clarify|date=June 2021}} as "Herakleis" was to the Greeks.<ref name="Raffan-Barket205" />{{Rp|211}} In Italy he was worshipped as a god of merchants and traders, although others also prayed to him for his characteristic gifts of good luck or rescue from danger.<ref name="BrHer" /> | ||
Heracles attained the highest social prestige through his appointment as official ancestor of the ] kings. This probably served as a legitimation for the Dorian migrations into the ]. ], the eponymous hero of one Dorian ], became the son of Heracles and one of the ''Heracleidae'' or ''Heraclids'' (the numerous descendants of Heracles, especially the descendants of ] |
Heracles attained the highest social prestige through his appointment as official ancestor of the ] kings. This probably served as a legitimation for the Dorian migrations into the ]. ], the eponymous hero of one Dorian ], became the son of Heracles and one of the ''Heracleidae'' or ''Heraclids'' (the numerous descendants of Heracles, especially the descendants of ]—other Heracleidae included ], Lamos, ], ], ], and ]). These Heraclids conquered the ] kingdoms of ], ] and ], claiming, according to legend, a right to rule them through their ancestor. Their rise to dominance is frequently called the "]". The Lydian and later the Macedonian kings, as rulers of the same rank, also became Heracleidae.<ref name="BurkertHer">Herodotus, ''The Histories'', I, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171116190118/http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/hh/hh1000.htm |date=16 November 2017 }}.</ref><ref name="Raffan-Barket205" />{{Rp|211}} | ||
] riding ] and slaying the ], central medallion of a ] from ], ], 2nd to 3rd century AD]] | |||
Other members of this earliest generation of heroes, such as Perseus, ], ] and ], have many traits in common with Heracles. Like him, their exploits are solitary, fantastic and border on ], as they slay monsters such as the ] and ]. Bellerophon's adventures are commonplace types, similar to the adventures of Heracles and Theseus. Sending a hero to his presumed death is also a recurrent theme of this early heroic tradition, used in the cases of Perseus and Bellerophon.<ref>G.S. Kirk, ''Myth'', 183</ref> | |||
Other members of this earliest generation of heroes such as Perseus, ], ] and ], have many traits in common with Heracles. Like him, their exploits are solitary, fantastic and border on ], as they slay monsters such as the ] and ]. Bellerophon's adventures are commonplace types, similar to the adventures of Heracles and Theseus. Sending a hero to his presumed death is also a recurrent theme of this early heroic tradition, used in the cases of Perseus and Bellerophon.<ref>]. 1973. "The Thematic Simplicity of the Myths" in '' {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20221227093144/https://books.google.com/books?id=OFO_NQJh8L0C&pg=PA172&lpg=PA172&dq=%22The+Thematic+Simplicity+of+the+Myths%22+kirk |date=27 December 2022 }}''. Berkeley: ]. {{ISBN|978-0-520-02389-5}}. p. 183.</ref> | |||
====Argonauts==== | ====Argonauts==== | ||
{{ |
{{Further|Argonauts}} | ||
The only surviving Hellenistic epic, the '']'' of Apollonius of Rhodes (epic poet, scholar, and director of the ]) tells the myth of the voyage of ] and the Argonauts to retrieve the ] from the mythical land of ]. In the ''Argonautica'', Jason is impelled on his quest by king ], who receives a prophecy that a man with one sandal would be his ]. Jason loses a sandal in a river, arrives at the court of Pelias, and the epic is set in motion. Nearly every member of the next generation of heroes, as well as Heracles, went with Jason in the ship '']'' to fetch the Golden Fleece. This generation also included ], who went to ] to slay the ]; ], the female heroine |
The only surviving Hellenistic epic, the '']'' of Apollonius of Rhodes (epic poet, scholar, and director of the ]) tells the myth of the voyage of ] and the Argonauts to retrieve the ] from the mythical land of ]. In the ''Argonautica'', Jason is impelled on his quest by king ], who receives a prophecy that a man with one sandal would be his ]. Jason loses a sandal in a river, arrives at the court of Pelias, and the epic is set in motion. Nearly every member of the next generation of heroes, as well as Heracles, went with Jason in the ship '']'' to fetch the Golden Fleece. This generation also included ], who went to ] to slay the ]; ], the female heroine, and ], who once had an epic cycle of his own to rival the '']'' and '']''. ], ] and the '']'' endeavor to give full lists of the Argonauts.<ref name="ApApPin">Apollodorus, ''Library and Epitome'', 1.9. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080917053402/http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0022;query=section%3D%2363;layout=;loc=1.9.17 |date=17 September 2008 }}.</ref><ref>Apollonius, ''Argonautica'', I, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150512120923/http://sacred-texts.com/cla/argo/argo00.htm |date=12 May 2015 }}.</ref><ref>Pindar, ''Pythian Odes'', Pythian 4. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080917012320/http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?lookup=Pind%2E+P%2E+4%2E171ff%2E |date=17 September 2008 }}.</ref> | ||
Although Apollonius wrote his poem in the 3rd century |
Although Apollonius wrote his poem in the 3rd century BC, the composition of the story of the Argonauts is earlier than ''Odyssey'', which shows familiarity with the exploits of Jason (the wandering of Odysseus may have been partly founded on it).<ref name="BrArgGr">{{cite encyclopedia|title=Argonaut|encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica|date=2002|url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/Argonaut-Greek-mythology}}</ref><ref name=":2">Grimal, Pierre. 1986. "Argonauts." P. 58 in ''The Dictionary of Classical Mythology''. ]. {{ISBN|978-0-631-20102-1}}.</ref> In ancient times, the expedition was regarded as a historical fact, an incident in the opening up of the ] to Greek commerce and colonization.<ref name="BrArgGr" /> It was also extremely popular, forming a cycle to which a number of local legends became attached. The story of ], in particular, caught the imagination of the tragic poets.<ref name=":2" /> | ||
]'', by ], 1908]] | |||
====House of Atreus and Theban Cycle==== | ====House of Atreus and Theban Cycle==== | ||
{{ |
{{Further|Theban Cycle|Seven against Thebes}} | ||
In between the Argo and the Trojan War, there was a generation known chiefly for its horrific crimes. This includes the doings of ] and ] at Argos. Behind the myth of the house of Atreus (one of the two principal heroic dynasties with the house of ]) lies the problem of the devolution of power and of the mode of accession to sovereignty. The twins Atreus and Thyestes with their descendants played the leading role in the tragedy of the devolution of power in Mycenae.<ref name="Bonnefoy103"> |
In between the Argo and the Trojan War, there was a generation known chiefly for its horrific crimes. This includes the doings of ] and ] at Argos. Behind the myth of the house of Atreus (one of the two principal heroic dynasties with the house of ]) lies the problem of the devolution of power and of the mode of accession to sovereignty. The twins Atreus and Thyestes with their descendants played the leading role in the tragedy of the devolution of power in Mycenae.<ref name="Bonnefoy103">]. 1992. "Kinship Structures in Greek Heroic Dynasty" in '']''. Chicago: ]. {{ISBN|978-0-226-06454-3}}. p. 103.</ref> | ||
The Theban Cycle deals with events associated especially with ], the city's founder, and later with the doings of ] and ] at Thebes; a series of stories that lead to the eventual pillage of that city at the hands of the |
The Theban Cycle deals with events associated especially with ], the city's founder, and later with the doings of ] and ] at Thebes; a series of stories that lead to the war of the ] and the eventual pillage of that city at the hands of the ].<ref name="Hard1" />{{Rp|317}} (It is not known whether the Seven figured in early epic.) As far as Oedipus is concerned, early epic accounts seem to have him continuing to rule at Thebes after the revelation that ] was his mother, and subsequently marrying a second wife who becomes the mother of his children—markedly different from the tale known to us through tragedy (e.g. Sophocles' '']'') and later mythological accounts.<ref name="Hard1" />{{Rp|311}} | ||
====Trojan War and aftermath==== | ====Trojan War and aftermath==== | ||
{{further|Trojan War|Epic Cycle}} | |||
] (1757, Fresco, 300 x 300 cm, Villa Valmarana, ]) ] is outraged that ] would threaten to seize his warprize, ], and he draws his sword to kill Agamemnon. The sudden appearance of the goddess ], who, in this fresco, has grabbed Achilles by the hair, prevents the act of violence.]] | |||
] by ], 1904. Paris is holding the golden apple on his right hand while surveying the goddesses in a calculative manner.]] | |||
:''For more details on this topic, see ] and ]'' | |||
] (1757, Fresco, 300 x 300 cm, Villa Valmarana, ]) ] is outraged that ] would threaten to seize his warprize, ], and he draws his sword to kill Agamemnon. The sudden appearance of the goddess Athena, who, in this fresco, has grabbed Achilles by the hair, prevents the act of violence.]] | |||
Greek mythology culminates in the Trojan War, fought between |
Greek mythology culminates in the Trojan War, fought between Greece and ], and its aftermath. In Homer's works, such as the ''Iliad'', the chief stories have already taken shape and substance, and individual themes were elaborated later, especially in Greek drama. The Trojan War also elicited great interest in the ] because of the story of ], a Trojan hero whose journey from Troy led to the founding of the city that would one day become Rome, as recounted in Virgil's '']'' (Book II of Virgil's ''Aeneid'' contains the best-known account of the sack of Troy).<ref name="HeliosBr">{{cite encyclopedia|title=Trojan War|encyclopedia=]|year=1952}}</ref><ref name=":3">{{cite encyclopedia|title=Troy (Ancient City) |encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica|date=25 April 2019|orig-year=1998|url=https://www.britannica.com/place/Troy-ancient-city-Turkey}}</ref> Finally there are two pseudo-chronicles written in Latin that passed under the names of ] and ].<ref>Dunlop, John. 1842. "Romances of Chivalry" in ''The History of Fiction''. Carey and Hart. {{ISBN|978-1-149-40338-9}}. p. 355.</ref> | ||
The ], a collection of ], starts with the events leading up to the war: ] and the ] of ], the ], the abduction of ], the sacrifice of ] at ]. To recover Helen, the Greeks launched a great expedition under the overall command of ]' brother, Agamemnon, king of Argos or ], but the Trojans refused to return Helen. The ''Iliad'', which is set in the tenth year of the war, tells of the quarrel between Agamemnon and Achilles, who was the finest Greek warrior, and the consequent deaths in battle of Achilles' |
The ], a collection of ], starts with the events leading up to the war: ] and the ] of ], the ], the abduction of ], the sacrifice of ] at ]. To recover Helen, the Greeks launched a great expedition under the overall command of ]'s brother, Agamemnon, king of Argos, or ], but the Trojans refused to return Helen. The ''Iliad'', which is set in the tenth year of the war, tells of the quarrel between Agamemnon and Achilles, who was the finest Greek warrior, and the consequent deaths in battle of Achilles' beloved comrade ] and ]'s eldest son, ]. After Hector's death, the Trojans were joined by two exotic allies, ], queen of the ], and ], king of the ] and son of the dawn-goddess, ].<ref name=":3" /> Achilles killed both of these, but Paris then managed to kill Achilles with an arrow in the heel. Achilles' heel was the only part of his body which was not invulnerable to damage by human weaponry. Before they could take Troy, the Greeks had to steal from the citadel the wooden image of Pallas Athena (the ]). Finally, with Athena's help, they built the ]. Despite the warnings of Priam's daughter ], the Trojans were persuaded by ], a Greek who feigned desertion, to take the horse inside the walls of Troy as an offering to Athena; the priest Laocoon, who tried to have the horse destroyed, was killed by sea-serpents. At night the Greek fleet returned, and the Greeks from the horse opened the gates of Troy. In the total sack that followed, Priam and his remaining sons were slaughtered; the Trojan women passed into slavery in various cities of Greece. The adventurous homeward voyages of the Greek leaders (including the wanderings of ] and Aeneas (the ''Aeneid''), and the murder of Agamemnon) were told in two epics, the Returns (the lost '']'') and Homer's ''Odyssey''.<ref name="HeliosBr" /> The Trojan cycle also includes the adventures of the children of the Trojan generation (e.g., ] and ]).<ref name=":3" /> | ||
] was inspired in his ''Laocoon'' (1608–1614, oil on canvas, 142 x 193 cm, ], ]) by the famous myth of the Trojan cycle. ] was a Trojan priest who tried to have the Trojan horse destroyed, but was killed by sea-serpents.]] | |||
The Trojan War provided a variety of themes and became a main source of inspiration for Ancient Greek artists (e.g. ] |
The Trojan War provided a variety of themes and became a main source of inspiration for Ancient Greek artists (e.g. ] on the ] depicting the sack of Troy); this artistic preference for themes deriving from the Trojan Cycle indicates its importance to the Ancient Greek civilization.<ref name="HeliosBr" /> The same mythological cycle also inspired a series of posterior European literary writings. For instance, Trojan Medieval European writers, unacquainted with Homer at first hand, found in the Troy legend a rich source of heroic and romantic storytelling and a convenient framework into which to fit their own courtly and chivalric ideals. Twelfth-century authors, such as ] (''Roman de Troie'' ) and ] (''De Bello Troiano'' ) describe the war while rewriting the standard version they found in ''Dictys'' and ''Dares''. They thus follow ]'s advice and Virgil's example: they rewrite a poem of Troy instead of telling something completely new.<ref>Kelly, Douglas. ''The Conspiracy of Allusion''. p. 121.</ref> | ||
Some of the more famous heroes noted for their inclusion in the Trojan War were: | |||
''On the Trojan side:'' | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
''On the Greek side:'' | |||
* Ajax (there were two Ajaxes) | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
==Greek and Roman conceptions of myth== | ==Greek and Roman conceptions of myth== | ||
Mythology was at the heart of everyday life in Ancient Greece.<ref name=" |
Mythology was at the heart of everyday life in Ancient Greece.<ref name="Johnson17" />{{Rp|15}} Greeks regarded mythology as a part of their history. They used myth to explain natural phenomena, cultural variations, traditional enmities, and friendships. It was a source of pride to be able to trace the descent of one's leaders from a mythological hero or a god. Few ever doubted that there was truth behind the account of the Trojan War in the ''Iliad'' and ''Odyssey''. According to ], a military historian, columnist, political essayist, and former ] professor, and John Heath, a classics professor, the profound knowledge of the Homeric ] was deemed by the Greeks the basis of their acculturation. Homer was the "education of Greece" (''{{lang|grc|Ἑλλάδος παίδευσις}}''), and his poetry "the Book".<ref name="Hanson37">], and John Heath. 1999. ''Who Killed Homer'', with translations by R. Karakatsani. Kakos. {{ISBN|978-960-352-545-5}}. p. 37.</ref> | ||
===Philosophy and myth=== | ===Philosophy and myth=== | ||
]'s '']'']] | |||
After the rise of philosophy, history, prose and ] in the late 5th century BC, the fate of myth became uncertain, and mythological genealogies gave place to a conception of history which tried to exclude the supernatural (such as the ] history).<ref name="Griffin80">J. Griffin, ''Greek Myth and Hesiod'', 80</ref> While poets and dramatists were reworking the myths, Greek historians and philosophers were beginning to criticize them.<ref name="Miles7">G. Miles, ''Classical Mythology in English Literature'', 7</ref> | |||
After the rise of philosophy, history, prose and ] in the late 5th century BC, the role of myth became less certain, and mythological genealogies gave place to a conception of history which tried to exclude the supernatural (such as the ] history).<ref name="Griffin80">]. 1986. "Greek Myth and Hesiod" in ''The Oxford Illustrated History of Greece and the Hellenistic World'', edited by ], J. Griffin, and ]. New York: ]. {{ISBN|978-0-19-285438-4}}. p. 80.</ref> While poets and dramatists were reworking the myths, Greek historians and philosophers were beginning to criticize them.<ref name="Miles7" /><ref> | |||
]'s Plato in '']'' fresco (probably in the likeness of ]). The philosopher expelled the study of Homer, of the tragedies and of the related mythological traditions from his utopian ''Republic''.]] | |||
{{cite book | |||
A few radical philosophers like ] of Colophon were already beginning to label the poets' tales as blasphemous lies in the 6th century BC; Xenophanes had complained that Homer and Hesiod attributed to the gods "all that is shameful and disgraceful among men; they steal, commit adultery, and deceive one another".<ref name="Graf169-170">F. Graf, ''Greek Mythology'', 169–170</ref> This line of thought found its most sweeping expression in ]'s '']'' and '']''. Plato created his own allegorical myths (such as the vision of Er in the ''Republic''), attacked the traditional tales of the gods' tricks, thefts and adulteries as immoral, and objected to their central role in literature.<ref name="Miles7" /> Plato's criticism was the first serious challenge to the Homeric mythological tradition,<ref name="Hanson37" /> referring to the myths as "old wives' chatter".<ref name="The176b">Plato, ''Theaetetus'', </ref> For his part Aristotle criticized the Pre-socratic quasi-mythical philosophical approach and underscored that "Hesiod and the theological writers were concerned only with what seemed plausible to themselves, and had no respect for us ... But it is not worth taking seriously writers who show off in the mythical style; as for those who do proceed by proving their assertions, we must cross-examine them".<ref name="Griffin80" /> | |||
|last1 = Veyne | |||
|first1 = Paul | |||
|author-link1 = Paul Veyne | |||
|translator-last1 = Wissing | |||
|translator-first1 = Paula | |||
|date = 15 June 1988 | |||
|orig-date = 1983 | |||
|title = Did the Greeks Believe in Their Myths?: An Essay on the Constitutive Imagination | |||
|url = https://books.google.com/books?id=EpbZLRPGgBsC | |||
|publication-place = Chicago | |||
|publisher = University of Chicago Press | |||
|page = 1 | |||
|isbn = 9780226854342 | |||
|access-date = 14 November 2023 | |||
|quote = Did the Greeks believe in their mythology? The answer is difficult, for 'believe' means so many things. Not everyone believed that Minos, after his death, continued being a judge in Hell or that Theseus fought the Minotaur, and they knew that poets 'lie' n the minds of the Greeks, Theseus had, nonetheless, existed. Why did the Greeks go to the trouble of wishing to separate the wheat from the chaff in myth ? We see the extent of the problem when we realize that this attitude toward myth lasted for over two millennia. | |||
}} | |||
</ref> | |||
By the sixth century BC, a few radical philosophers were already beginning to label the poets' tales as blasphemous lies: ] complained that Homer and Hesiod attributed to the gods "all that is shameful and disgraceful among men; they steal, commit adultery, and deceive one another."<ref name="Graf200" />{{Rp|169–70}} This line of thought found its most sweeping expression in ]'s ] and ]. Plato created his own allegorical myths (such as the vision of ] in the ''Republic''), attacked the traditional tales of the gods' tricks, thefts, and adulteries as immoral, and objected to their central role in literature.<ref name="Miles7" /> Plato's criticism was the first serious challenge to the Homeric mythological tradition;<ref name="Hanson37" /> he referred to the myths as "old wives' chatter."<ref name="The176b">Plato, ''Theaetetus'', {{Webarchive|url= https://web.archive.org/web/20210308012818/http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text.jsp?doc=Plat.+Theaet.+176b&fromdoc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0170 |date= 8 March 2021 }}</ref> For his part, ] criticized the ] quasi-mythical philosophical approach and underscored that "Hesiod and the theological writers were concerned only with what seemed plausible to themselves, and had no respect for us ... But it is not worth taking seriously writers who show off in the mythical style; as for those who do proceed by proving their assertions, we must cross-examine them."<ref name="Griffin80" /> | |||
Nevertheless, even Plato did not manage to wean himself and his society from the influence of myth; his own characterization for ] is based on the traditional Homeric and tragic patterns, used by the philosopher to praise the righteous life of his teacher:<ref name="Apology28b-d">Plato, ''Apology'', </ref> | |||
Nevertheless, even Plato did not manage to wean himself and his society from the influence of myth; his own characterization of ] is based on the traditional Homeric and tragic patterns, used by the philosopher to praise the righteous life of his teacher:<ref name="Apology28b-d">Plato, ''Apology'', {{Webarchive|url= https://web.archive.org/web/20210308104247/http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text.jsp?doc=Plat.+Apol.+28b&fromdoc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0170 |date= 8 March 2021 }}</ref> | |||
{{cquote|But perhaps someone might say: "Are you then not ashamed, Socrates, of having followed such a pursuit, that you are now in danger of being put to death as a result?" But I should make to him a just reply: "You do not speak well, Sir, if you think a man in whom there is even a little merit ought to consider danger of life or death, and not rather regard this only, when he does things, whether the things he does are right or wrong and the acts of a good or a bad man. For according to your argument all the demigods would be bad who died at Troy, including the son of ], who so despised danger, in comparison with enduring any disgrace, that when his mother (and she was a goddess) said to him, as he was eager to slay ], something like this, I believe, | |||
{{blockquote|But perhaps someone might say: "Are you then not ashamed, Socrates, of having followed such a pursuit, that you are now in danger of being put to death as a result?" But I should make to him a just reply: "You do not speak well, Sir, if you think a man in whom there is even a little merit ought to consider danger of life or death, and not rather regard this only, when he does things, whether the things he does are right or wrong and the acts of a good or a bad man. For according to your argument all the demigods would be bad who died at Troy, including ], who so despised danger, in comparison with enduring any disgrace, that when ] (and she was a goddess) said to him, as he was eager to slay ], something like this, I believe, | |||
:My son, if you avenge the death of your friend ] and kill Hector, you yourself shall die; for straightway, after Hector, is death appointed unto you. (Hom. Il. 18.96) | |||
{{Blockquote|My son, if you avenge the death of your friend ] and kill Hector, you yourself shall die; for straightway, after Hector, is death appointed unto you. (Hom. Il. 18.96)}} | |||
he, when he heard this, made light of death and danger, and feared much more to live as a coward and not to avenge his friends, and said, | he, when he heard this, made light of death and danger, and feared much more to live as a coward and not to avenge his friends, and said, | ||
{{Blockquote|Straightway may I die, after doing vengeance upon the wrongdoer, that I may not stay here, jeered at beside the curved ships, a burden of the earth.}}|multiline=false}} | |||
Hanson and Heath estimate that Plato's rejection of the Homeric tradition was not favorably received by the grassroots Greek civilization.<ref name="Hanson37" /> The old myths were kept alive in local cults; they continued to influence poetry and to |
Hanson and Heath estimate that Plato's rejection of the Homeric tradition was not favorably received by the grassroots Greek civilization.<ref name="Hanson37" /> The old myths were kept alive in local cults; they continued to influence poetry and to provide the main subjects of painting and sculpture.<ref name="Griffin80" /> | ||
More sportingly, the 5th century |
More sportingly, the 5th century BC ] Euripides often played with the old traditions, mocking them, and through the voice of his characters injecting notes of doubt. Yet the subjects of his plays were taken, without exception, from myth. Many of these plays were written in answer to a predecessor's version of the same or similar myth. Euripides mainly impugns the myths about the gods and begins his critique with an objection similar to the one previously expressed by ]: the gods, as traditionally represented, are far too crassly ].<ref name="Graf200" />{{Rp|169–70}} | ||
===Hellenistic and Roman rationalism=== | ===Hellenistic and Roman rationalism=== | ||
] saw himself as the defender of the established order, despite his personal skepticism concerning myth and his inclination towards more philosophical conceptions of divinity.]] | |||
During the ], mythology took on the prestige of elite knowledge that marks its possessors as belonging to a certain class. At the same time, the skeptical turn of the Classical age became even more pronounced.<ref name="Gale89">M.R. Gale, ''Myth and Poetry in Lucretius'', 89</ref> Greek mythographer ] established the tradition of seeking an actual historical basis for mythical beings and events.<ref name="BrEuh">{{cite encyclopedia|title=Eyhemerus|encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia Britannica|year=2002}}</ref> Although his original work (''Sacred Scriptures'') is lost, much is known about it from what is recorded by Diodorus and ].<ref>R. Hard, ''The Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology'', 7</ref> | |||
During the ], mythology took on the prestige of elite knowledge that marks its possessors as belonging to a certain class. At the same time, the skeptical turn of the Classical age became even more pronounced.<ref name="Gale89">Gale, Monica R. 1994. ''Myth and Poetry in Lucretius''. Cambridge: ]. {{ISBN|978-0-521-45135-2}}.</ref>{{Rp|89}} Greek mythographer ] established the tradition of seeking an actual historical basis for mythical beings and events.<ref name="BrEuh">{{cite encyclopedia|title=Euhemerus|encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica|date=3 January 2020|url=https://www.britannica.com/biography/Euhemerus-Greek-mythographer|orig-year=1998}}</ref> Although his original work (''Sacred Scriptures'') is lost, much is known about it from what is recorded by Diodorus and ].<ref name="Hard1" />{{Rp|7}} | |||
] | |||
Rationalizing ] of myth became even more popular under the ], thanks to the physicalist theories of ] and ] philosophy. Stoics presented explanations of the gods and heroes as physical phenomena, while the Euhemerists rationalized them as historical figures. At the same time, the Stoics and the ] promoted the moral significations of the mythological tradition, often based on Greek etymologies.<ref name="Chance69">J. Chance, ''Medieval Mythography'', 69</ref> Through his Epicurean message, ] had sought to expel superstitious fears from the minds of his fellow-citizens.<ref name="Walshxxvi">P.G. Walsh, ''The Nature of Gods (Introduction), xxvi</ref> ], too, is skeptical about the mythological tradition and claims that he does not intend to pass judgement on such legends (fabulae).<ref name="Gale88">M.R. Gale, ''Myth and Poetry in Lucretius'', 88</ref> The challenge for Romans with a strong and apologetic sense of ] was to defend that tradition while conceding that it was often a breeding-ground for superstition. The antiquarian ], who regarded religion as a human institution with great importance for the preservation of good in society, devoted rigorous study to the origins of religious cults. In his ''Antiquitates Rerum Divinarum'' (which has not survived, but ]'s '']'' indicates its general approach) Varro argues that whereas the superstitious man fears the gods, the truly religious person venerates them as parents.<ref name="Walshxxvi" /> In his work he distinguished three kinds of gods: | |||
Rationalizing ] of myth became even more popular under the ], thanks to the physicalist theories of ] and ] philosophy. Stoics presented explanations of the gods and heroes as physical phenomena, while the Euhemerists rationalized them as historical figures. At the same time, the Stoics and the ] promoted the moral significations of the mythological tradition, often based on Greek etymologies.<ref name="Chance69">Chance, Jane. 1994. ''Medieval Mythography''. ]. {{ISBN|978-0-8130-1256-8}}. p. 69.</ref> Through his Epicurean message, ] had sought to expel superstitious fears from the minds of his fellow-citizens.<ref name="Walshxxvi">Walsh, Patrick Gerald. 1998. ''The Nature of the Gods''. New York: ]. {{ISBN|978-0-19-282511-7}}.</ref>{{Rp|xxvi}} ], too, is skeptical about the mythological tradition and claims that he does not intend to pass judgement on such legends (fabulae).<ref name="Gale89" />{{Rp|88}} The challenge for Romans with a strong and apologetic sense of ] was to defend that tradition while conceding that it was often a breeding-ground for superstition. The antiquarian ], who regarded religion as a human institution with great importance for the preservation of good in society, devoted rigorous study to the origins of religious cults. In his ''Antiquitates Rerum Divinarum'' (which has not survived, but ]'s '']'' indicates its general approach) Varro argues that whereas the superstitious man fears the gods, the truly religious person venerates them as parents.<ref name="Walshxxvi" />{{Rp|xxvi}} According to Varro, there have been three accounts of deities in the Roman society: the mythical account created by poets for theatre and entertainment, the civil account used by people for veneration as well as by the city, and the natural account created by the philosophers.<ref name="Barfield2011p76" /> The best state is, adds Varro, where the civil theology combines the poetic mythical account with the philosopher's.<ref name="Barfield2011p76">{{cite book|author=Barfield|first=Raymond|url=https://archive.org/details/ancientquarrelbe0000barf|title=The Ancient Quarrel Between Philosophy and Poetry|publisher=Cambridge University Press|year=2011|isbn=978-1-139-49709-1|location=Cambridge|pages=–76|url-access=registration}}</ref> | |||
# The gods of nature: personifications of phenomena like rain and fire. | |||
# The gods of the poets: invented by unscrupulous bards to stir the passions. | |||
# The gods of the city: invented by wise legislators to soothe and enlighten the populace. | |||
Roman Academic Cotta ridicules both literal and allegorical acceptance of myth, declaring roundly that myths have no place in philosophy.<ref name=" |
Roman Academic Cotta ridicules both literal and allegorical acceptance of myth, declaring roundly that myths have no place in philosophy.<ref name="Gale89" />{{Rp|87}} ] is also generally disdainful of myth, but, like Varro, he is emphatic in his support for the state religion and its institutions. It is difficult to know how far down the social scale this rationalism extended.<ref name="Gale89" />{{Rp|88}} Cicero asserts that no one (not even old women and boys) is so foolish as to believe in the terrors of Hades or the existence of ]s, ]s or other composite creatures,<ref name="CiceroTusc">Cicero, ''Tusculanae Disputationes'', 1. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171015010833/http://thelatinlibrary.com/cicero/tusc1.shtml |date=15 October 2017 }}</ref> but, on the other hand, the orator elsewhere complains of the superstitious and credulous character of the people.<ref name="CiceroDiv">Cicero, ''De Divinatione'', 2. {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171010121359/http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/cicero/divinatione2.shtml#81 |date=10 October 2017 }}</ref> ''De Natura Deorum'' is the most comprehensive summary of Cicero's line of thought.<ref name="Walshxxvi" />{{Rp|xxvii}} | ||
===Syncretizing trends=== | ===Syncretizing trends=== | ||
{{See also|Roman mythology}} | {{See also|Roman mythology}} | ||
] Museum) was combined with the cult of Sol Invictus. The worship of Sol as special protector of the emperors and of the empire remained the chief imperial religion until it was replaced by ].]] | |||
In ] times, a new Roman mythology was born through syncretization of numerous Greek and other foreign gods. This occurred because the Romans had little ] of their own and inheritance of the Greek mythological tradition caused the major Roman gods to adopt characteristics of their Greek equivalents.<ref name="Gale88" /> The gods ] and ] are an example of this mythological overlap. In addition to the combination of the two mythological traditions, the association of the Romans with eastern religions led to further syncretizations.<ref>North-Beard-Price, ''Religions of Rome'', 259</ref> For instance, the cult of Sun was introduced in Rome after ]'s successful campaigns in ]. The Asiatic divinities ] (that is to say, the Sun) and Ba'al were combined with Apollo and Helios into one ], with conglomerated rites and compound attributes.<ref>J. Hacklin, ''Asiatic Mythology'', 38</ref> Apollo might be increasingly identified in religion with Helios or even Dionysus, but texts retelling his myths seldom reflected such developments. The traditional literary mythology was increasingly dissociated from actual religious practice. | |||
] Museum)]] | |||
The surviving 2nd century collection of ] and ]'s ''Saturnalia'' are influenced by the theories of rationalism and the syncretizing trends as well. The Orphic Hymns are a set of pre-classical poetic compositions, attributed to Orpheus, himself the subject of a renowned myth. In reality, these poems were probably composed by several different poets, and contain a rich set of clues about prehistoric European mythology.<ref>Sacred Texts, </ref> The stated purpose of the ''Saturnalia'' is to transmit the Hellenic culture Macrobius has derived from his reading, even though much of his treatment of gods is colored by Egyptian and North African mythology and theology (which also affect the interpretation of Virgil). In Saturnalia reappear mythographical comments influenced by the Euhemerists, the Stoics and the Neoplatonists.<ref name="Chance69" /> | |||
Ancient Greek myths took inspiration from ] portrayals of the ], as well as ] and ] deities and their associated folk tales.<ref>{{Cite book |last=Janson |first=Horst Woldemar |title=History of Art: The Western Tradition |last2=Janson |first2=Anthony F. |publisher=] |year=2004 |isbn=0-13-182622-0 |editor-last=Touborg |editor-first=Sarah |edition=Revised 6th |volume=1 |location=Upper Saddle River, New Jersey |page=111 |author-link=Horst Woldemar Janson |editor-last2=Moore |editor-first2=Julia |editor-last3=Oppenheimer |editor-first3=Margaret |editor-last4=Castro |editor-first4=Anita}}</ref> | |||
In ] times, a new Roman mythology was born through syncretization of numerous Greek and other foreign gods. This occurred because the Romans had little ] of their own, and inheritance of the Greek mythological tradition caused the major Roman gods to adopt characteristics of their Greek equivalents.<ref name="Gale89" />{{Rp|88}} The gods ] and ] are an example of this mythological overlap. In addition to the combination of the two mythological traditions, the association of the Romans with eastern religions led to further syncretizations.<ref>North John A., Mary Beard, and Simon R. F. Price. 1998. "The Religions of Imperial Rome" in ''Classical Mythology in English Literature: A Critical Anthology''. Cambridge: ]. {{ISBN|978-0-521-31682-8}}. p. 259.</ref> For instance, the cult of Sun was introduced in Rome after ]'s successful campaigns in ]. The Asiatic divinities ] (that is to say, the Sun) and Ba'al were combined with Apollo and Helios into one ], with conglomerated rites and compound attributes.<ref>Hacklin, Joseph. 1994. "The Mythology of Persia" in ''Asiatic Mythology''. ]. {{ISBN|978-81-206-0920-4}}. p. 38.</ref> Apollo might be increasingly identified in religion with Helios or even Dionysus, but texts retelling his myths seldom reflected such developments. The traditional literary mythology was increasingly dissociated from actual religious practice. The worship of Sol as special protector of the emperors and the empire remained the chief imperial religion until it was replaced by Christianity. | |||
The surviving 2nd-century collection of '']'' (second century AD) and the ''Saturnalia'' of ] (fifth century) are influenced by the theories of rationalism and the syncretizing trends as well. The ''Orphic Hymns'' are a set of pre-classical poetic compositions, attributed to Orpheus, himself the subject of a renowned myth.<ref>Sacred Texts, {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171118190156/http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/hoo/index.htm |date=18 November 2017 }}</ref> The stated purpose of the ''Saturnalia'' is to transmit the Hellenic culture Macrobius has derived from his reading, even though much of his treatment of gods is colored by Egyptian and North African mythology and theology (which also affect the interpretation of Virgil). In Saturnalia reappear mythographical comments influenced by the Euhemerists, the Stoics and the Neoplatonists.<ref name="Chance69" /> | |||
==Modern interpretations== | ==Modern interpretations== | ||
{{ |
{{Further|Modern understanding of Greek mythology}} | ||
The genesis of modern understanding of Greek mythology is regarded by some scholars as a double reaction at the end of the eighteenth century against "the traditional attitude of Christian animosity", in which the Christian reinterpretation of myth as a "lie" or ] had been retained.<ref> |
The genesis of modern understanding of Greek mythology is regarded by some scholars as a double reaction at the end of the eighteenth century against "the traditional attitude of Christian animosity", in which the Christian reinterpretation of myth as a "lie" or ] had been retained.<ref>Ackerman, Robert. 1991. ''Introduction to ]'s 'A Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion'.'' p. xv.</ref> In Germany, by about 1795, there was a growing interest in Homer and Greek mythology. In ], ] began to revive Greek studies, while his successor, ], worked with ], and laid the foundations for mythological research both in Germany and elsewhere.<ref name="Graf200" />{{Rp|9}} About 100 years later the interest for Greek mythology was still alive when Hermann Steuding published his book '']'' in 1897.<ref>{{Cite web |title=Griechische und römische götter- und heldensage; von dr. Hermann Steuding ... |url=https://hdl.handle.net/2027/nnc1.cu01992929?urlappend=%3Bseq=5 |access-date=2023-08-25 |website=HathiTrust | hdl=2027/nnc1.cu01992929?urlappend=%3Bseq=5 |language=en}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=OGND - results/titledata |url=https://swb.bsz-bw.de/DB=2.104/DB=2.104/SET=1/TTL=1//CMD?ACT=SRCHA&IKT=2999&TRM=174070918&COOKIE=Us998,Pbszgast,I2017,B20728+,SY,NRecherche-DB,D2.104,E01e73d97-e1d,A,H,R102.182.132.112,FY |access-date=2023-08-25 |website=swb.bsz-bw.de}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek |url=https://portal.dnb.de/opac.htm?method=simpleSearch&cqlMode=true&query=nid%3D174070918 |access-date=2023-08-25 |website=portal.dnb.de}}</ref><ref>{{Cite web |title=Theologische Literaturzeitung, 37 - OpenDigi |url=https://idb.ub.uni-tuebingen.de/opendigi/thlz_037_1912#p=346 |access-date=2023-09-05 |website=idb.ub.uni-tuebingen.de}}</ref><ref name=":4">{{Cite book |last=Steuding |first=Hermann |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=YGDd7pwYq2MC&dq=hermann+steuding&pg=PR9 |title=Greek and Roman Mythology & Heroic Legend, by Prof. H. Steuding |date=1903 |publisher=J.M. Dent & Company |language=en}}</ref> | ||
===Comparative and psychoanalytic approaches=== | ===Comparative and psychoanalytic approaches=== | ||
] | |||
{{See also|Comparative mythology}} | {{See also|Comparative mythology}} | ||
] is regarded as one of the founders of comparative mythology. In his ''Comparative Mythology'' (1867) Müller analysed the "disturbing" similarity between the mythologies of "savage races" with those of the early Europeans.]] | |||
The development of comparative philology in the 19th century, together with ethnological discoveries in the 20th century, established the science of myth. Since the Romantics, all study of myth has been comparative. ], ], and ] employed the comparative approach to collect and classify the themes of folklore and mythology.<ref name="Brmyth">{{cite encyclopedia|title=myth|encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia Britannica|year=2002}}</ref> In 1871 ] published his ''Primitive Culture'', in which he applied the comparative method and tried to explain the origin and evolution of religion.<ref name="AllenSegal">D. Allen, ''Structure and Creativity in Religion'', 9<br />* R.A. Segal, ''Theorizing about Myth'', 16</ref> Tylor's procedure of drawing together material culture, ritual and myth of widely separated cultures influenced both ] and ]. ] applied the new science of comparative mythology to the study of myth, in which he detected the distorted remains of ] ]. ] emphasized the ways myth fulfills common social functions. ] and other ] have compared the formal relations and patterns in myths throughout the world.<ref name="Brmyth" /> | |||
The development of comparative philology in the 19th century, together with ethnological discoveries in the 20th century, established the science of myth. Since the Romantics, all study of myth has been comparative. ], ], and ] employed the comparative approach to collect and classify the themes of folklore and mythology.<ref name="Brmyth">{{cite encyclopedia|title=myth|encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica|date=2002|url=https://www.britannica.com/topic/myth|last1=Buxton|first1=Richard G. A.|last2=Bolle|first2=Kees W.|author-link2=Kees W. Bolle|last3=Smith|first3=Jonathan Z.}}</ref> In 1871 ] published his ''Primitive Culture'', in which he applied the comparative method and tried to explain the origin and evolution of religion.<ref>Segal, Robert A. 1999. ''Theorizing about Myth''. ]. {{ISBN|978-1-55849-191-5}}. p. 16.</ref><ref name="AllenSegal">Allen, Douglas. 1978. ''Structure & Creativity in Religion: Hermeneutics in Mircea Eliade's Phenomenology and New Directions''. Berlin: ]. {{ISBN|978-90-279-7594-2}}.</ref>{{Rp|9}} Tylor's procedure of drawing together material culture, ritual and myth of widely separated cultures influenced both ] and ]. ] applied the new science of comparative mythology to the study of myth, in which he detected the distorted remains of ] ]. ] emphasized the ways myth fulfills common social functions. ] and other ] have compared the formal relations and patterns in myths throughout the world.<ref name="Brmyth" /> | |||
] introduced a transhistorical and biological conception of man and a view of myth as an expression of repressed ideas. Dream interpretation is the basis of Freudian myth interpretation and Freud's concept of dreamwork recognizes the importance of contextual relationships for the interpretation of any individual element in a dream. This suggestion would find an important point of rapprochement between the structuralist and psychoanalytic approaches to myth in Freud's thought.<ref>Caldwell, Richard. 1990. "The Psychoanalytic Interpretation of Greek Myth" in ''Approaches to Greek Myth''. Baltimore: ]. {{ISBN|978-0-8018-3864-4}}. p. 344.</ref> ] extended the transhistorical, psychological approach with his theory of the "collective unconscious" and the archetypes (inherited "archaic" patterns), often encoded in myth, that arise out of it.<ref name="Br" /> According to Jung, "myth-forming structural elements must be present in the unconscious psyche."<ref>Jung, Carl. ''The Psychology of the Child Archetype.'' p. 85.<br /></ref> Comparing Jung's methodology with ]'s theory, Robert A. Segal (1990) concludes that "to interpret a myth Campbell simply identifies the archetypes in it. An interpretation of the ''Odyssey'', for example, would show how Odysseus's life conforms to a heroic pattern. Jung, by contrast, considers the identification of archetypes merely the first step in the interpretation of a myth."<ref name="Segal">Segal, Robert A. (1990). "." ] (April 1990):332–5. Archived from the on 7 January 2007.</ref> ], one of the founders of modern studies in Greek mythology, gave up his early views of myth, in order to apply Jung's theories of archetypes to Greek myth.<ref name="Graf200" />{{Rp|38}} | |||
] | |||
] introduced a transhistorical and biological conception of man and a view of myth as an expression of repressed ideas. Dream interpretation is the basis of Freudian myth interpretation and Freud's concept of dreamwork recognizes the importance of contextual relationships for the interpretation of any individual element in a dream. This suggestion would find an important point of rapprochment between the structuralist and psychoanalytic approaches to myth in Freud's thought.<ref>R. Caldwell, ''The Psychoanalytic Interpretation of Greek Myth'', 344</ref> ] extended the transhistorical, psychological approach with his theory of the "collective unconscious" and the archetypes (inherited "archaic" patterns), often encoded in myth, that arise out of it.<ref name="Br" /> According to Jung, "myth-forming structural elements must be present in the unconscious psyche".<ref>C. Jung, ''The Psychology of the Child Archetype'', 85</ref> Comparing Jung's methodology with ]'s theory, Robert A. Segal concludes that "to interpret a myth Campbell simply identifies the archetypes in it. An interpretation of the ''Odyssey'', for example, would show how Odysseus’s life conforms to a heroic pattern. Jung, by contrast, considers the identification of archetypes merely the first step in the interpretation of a myth".<ref name="Segal">R. Segal, ''The Romantic Appeal of Joseph Campbell'', 332–335</ref> ], one of the founders of modern studies in Greek mythology, gave up his early views of myth, in order to apply Jung's theories of archetypes to Greek myth.<ref name="Graf38">F. Graf, ''Greek Mythology'', 38</ref> | |||
===Origin theories=== | ===Origin theories=== | ||
{{See also|Similarities between Roman, Greek and Etruscan mythologies}} | {{See also|Mycenaean religion|Mycenaean deities|Similarities between Roman, Greek and Etruscan mythologies}} | ||
{{Mythology}} | |||
], 1811.]] | |||
] attempted to understand an ] religious form by tracing it back to its Indo-European (or, in Müller's time, "]") "original" manifestation. In 1891, he claimed that "the most important discovery which has been made during the nineteenth century concerning the ancient history of mankind ... was this sample equation: ] ] = Greek Zeus = Latin ] = Old Norse ]".<ref name="AllenSegal" />{{Rp|12}} The question of Greek mythology's place in ] has generated much scholarship since Müller's time. For example, philologist ] draws a comparison between the Greek ] and the Sanskrit ], although there is no hint that he believes them to be originally connected.<ref name="Poleman">H.I. Poleman, ''Review'', 78–79</ref> In other cases, close parallels in character and function suggest a common heritage, yet lack of linguistic evidence makes it difficult to prove, as in the case of the Greek ] and the ] of ].<ref>A. Winterbourne, ''When the Norns Have Spoken'', 87</ref> | |||
] and Adonis, Attic red-figure ]-shaped ] by Aison (c. 410 BC, Louvre, Paris).]] | |||
It appears that the ] was the mother of the ]<ref>Nilsson, Martin Persson. 1967. ''Geschichte der Griechischen Religion'' (3rd ed.). Munich: ]. Volume I, p. 339.</ref> and its pantheon already included many divinities that can be found in classical Greece.<ref>{{cite web|last=Paul|first=Adams John|title=Mycenaean Divinities|location=Northridge, CA|publisher=California State University|date=10 January 2010|access-date=25 September 2013|url=http://www.csun.edu/~hcfll004/mycen.html|archive-date=1 October 2018|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20181001091024/http://www.csun.edu/~hcfll004/mycen.html|url-status=live}}</ref> However, Greek mythology is generally seen as having heavy influence of ] and Near Eastern cultures, and as such contains few important elements for the reconstruction of the Proto-Indo-European religion.<ref>]. 1987. ''Comparative Mythology.'' Baltimore: ]. p. 138, 143.</ref> Consequently, Greek mythology received minimal scholarly attention in the context of Indo-European ] until the mid-2000s.<ref>], and ]. 2006. ''Oxford Introduction to Proto-Indo-European and the Proto-Indo-European World.'' London: ]. p. 440.</ref> | |||
Archaeology and mythography, on the other hand, have revealed that the Greeks were inspired by some of the civilizations of Asia Minor and the Near East. ] seems to be the Greek counterpart — more clearly in cult than in myth — of a Near Eastern "dying god". ] is rooted in ]n culture while much of Aphrodite's ] springs from Semitic goddesses. There are also possible parallels between the earliest divine generations (Chaos and its children) and ] in the '']''.<ref name="SegaEdmunds">L. Edmunds, ''Approaches to Greek Myth'', 184<br />* R.A. Segal, ''A Greek Eternal Child'', 64</ref> According to Meyer Reinhold, "near Eastern theogonic concepts, involving divine succession through violence and generational conflicts for power, found their way ... into Greek mythology".<ref>M. Reinhold, ''The Generation Gap in Antiquity'', 349</ref> In addition to Indo-European and Near Eastern origins, some scholars have speculated on the debts of Greek mythology to the pre-Hellenic societies: Crete, Mycenae, ], Thebes and ].<ref name="Burkert23">W. Burkert, ''Greek Religion'', 23</ref> Historians of religion were fascinated by a number of apparently ancient configurations of myth connected with Crete (the god as bull, Zeus and Europa, ] who yields to the bull and gives birth to the ] etc.) Professor Martin P. Nilsson concluded that all great classical Greek myths were tied to Mycenaen centres and were anchored in prehistoric times.<ref>M. Wood, ''In Search of the Trojan War'', 112</ref> Nevertheless, according to Burkert, the iconography of the Cretan Palace Period has provided almost no confirmation for these theories.<ref name="Burkert24">W. Burkert, ''Greek Religion'', 24</ref> | |||
Archaeology and mythography have revealed influence from Asia Minor and the Near East. ] seems to be the Greek counterpart—more clearly in cult than in myth—of a Near Eastern "dying god". ] is rooted in ]n culture while much of Aphrodite's ] may spring from Semitic goddesses. There are also possible parallels between the earliest divine generations (Chaos and its children) and ] in the '']''.<ref name="SegaEdmunds">L. Edmunds, ''Approaches to Greek Myth'', 184</ref><ref>Segal, Robert A. 1991. "A Greek Eternal Child" in ''Myth and the Polis'', edited by D. C. Pozzi and J. M. Wickersham. ]. {{ISBN|978-0-8014-2473-1}}. p. 64.</ref> According to Meyer Reinhold, "near Eastern theogonic concepts, involving divine succession through violence and generational conflicts for power, found their way…into Greek mythology."<ref>M. Reinhold, ''The Generation Gap in Antiquity'', 349</ref> | |||
In addition to Indo-European and Near Eastern origins, some scholars have speculated on the debts of Greek mythology to the indigenous pre-Greek societies: ], Mycenae, ], ] and ].<ref name="Raffan-Barket205" />{{Rp|23}} Historians of religion were fascinated by a number of apparently ancient configurations of myth connected with Crete (the god as bull, Zeus and ], ] who yields to the bull and gives birth to the ], etc.). Martin P. Nilsson asserts, based on the representations and general function of the gods, that a lot of ] were fused in the Mycenaean religion.<ref>Martin P. Nilsson (1927) ''The Minoan-Mycenaean Religion and Its Survival in Greek Religion''</ref> and concluded that all great classical Greek myths were tied to Mycenaean centres and anchored in prehistoric times.<ref>M. Wood, ''In Search of the Trojan War'', 112</ref> Nevertheless, according to Burkert, the iconography of the Cretan Palace Period has provided almost no confirmation for these theories.<ref name="Raffan-Barket205" />{{Rp|24}} | |||
==Motifs in Western art and literature== | ==Motifs in Western art and literature== | ||
{{ |
{{Further|Greek mythology in western art and literature}} | ||
{{See also|List of films based on Greco-Roman mythology}} | {{See also|List of films based on Greco-Roman mythology|Greek mythology in popular culture}} | ||
]'' |
]'' c. 1485–1486, oil on canvas, ], ])—a revived ''Venus Pudica'' for a new view of pagan ]—is often said to epitomize for modern viewers the spirit of the Renaissance.<ref name="Br" />]] | ||
The widespread adoption of ] did not curb the popularity of the myths. With the rediscovery of classical antiquity in the ], the poetry of Ovid became a major influence on the imagination of poets, dramatists, musicians and artists.<ref name="BrBurn">{{cite encyclopedia|title=Greek mythology|encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia Britannica|year=2002}}<br />* L. Burn, ''Greek Myths'', 75</ref> From the early years of Renaissance, artists such as ], ], and ], portrayed the ] subjects of Greek mythology alongside more conventional Christian themes.<ref name="BrBurn" /> Through the medium of Latin and the works of Ovid, Greek myth influenced medieval and Renaissance poets such as ], ] and ] in Italy.<ref name="Br" /> | |||
The widespread adoption of ] did not curb the popularity of the myths. With the rediscovery of classical antiquity in the ], the poetry of Ovid became a major influence on the imagination of poets, dramatists, musicians and artists.<ref name="Br" /><ref name="BrBurn">L. Burn, ''Greek Myths'', 75</ref> From the early years of Renaissance, artists such as ], ], and ], portrayed the ] subjects of Greek mythology alongside more conventional Christian themes.<ref name="Br" /><ref name="BrBurn" /> Through the medium of Latin and the works of Ovid, Greek myth influenced medieval and Renaissance poets such as ], ] and ] in Italy.<ref name="Br" /> | |||
In Northern Europe, Greek mythology never took the same hold of the visual arts, but its effect was very obvious on literature. The English imagination was fired by Greek mythology starting with ] and ] and continuing through ] to ] in the 20th century. ] in ] and ] in ] revived Greek drama, reworking the ancient myths.<ref name="BrBurn" /> Although during the ] of the 18th century reaction against Greek myth spread throughout Europe, the myths continued to provide an important source of raw material for dramatists, including those who wrote the ] for many of ]'s and ]'s operas.<ref name="Burn75">l. Burn, ''Greek Myths'', 75</ref> By the end of the 18th century, ] initiated a surge of enthusiasm for all things Greek, including Greek mythology. In Britain, new translations of Greek tragedies and Homer inspired contemporary poets (such as ], ], ] and ]) and painters (such as ] and ]).<ref name="Burn75-76">l. Burn, ''Greek Myths'', 75–76</ref> ], ], ] and many others set Greek mythological themes to music.<ref name="Br" /> American authors of the 19th century, such as ] and ], held that the study of the classical myths was essential to the understanding of English and American literature.<ref name="Klatt">Klatt-Brazouski, ''Ancient Greek and Roman Mythology'', 4</ref> In more recent times, classical themes have been reinterpreted by dramatists ], ], and ] in France, ] in America, and ] in Britain and by novelists such as ] and ].<ref name="Br" /> ] set in the contemporary United States, the series is based prominently on Greek mythology. | |||
]'' (1898) by ]]] | |||
==Notes== | |||
{{reflist|2}} | |||
In Northern Europe, Greek mythology never took the same hold of the visual arts, but its effect was very obvious on literature.<ref>{{Cite book|title=Classical Mythology in English literature: A Critical Anthology|date=2006|publisher=Routledge|isbn=0415147557|editor=Miles, Geoffrey|oclc=912455670}}</ref> The English imagination was fired by Greek mythology starting with ] and ] and continuing through ] to ] in the 20th century. ] in France and ] in Germany revived Greek drama, reworking the ancient myths.<ref name="Br" /><ref name="BrBurn" /> Although during the ] of the 18th century reaction against Greek myth spread throughout Europe, the myths continued to provide an important source of raw material for dramatists, including those who wrote the ] for many of ]'s and ]'s operas.<ref name="Burn75">l. Burn, ''Greek Myths'', 75</ref> | |||
By the end of the 18th century, ] initiated a surge of enthusiasm for all things Greek, including Greek mythology. In Britain, new translations of Greek tragedies and Homer inspired contemporary poets (such as ], ], ] and ]) and painters (such as ] and ]).<ref name="Burn75-76">l. Burn, ''Greek Myths'', 75–76</ref> ], ], ] and many others set Greek mythological themes to music.<ref name="Br" /> American authors of the 19th century, such as ] and ], held that the study of the classical myths was essential to the understanding of English and American literature.<ref name="Klatt-Brazouskixii" />{{Rp|4}} In more recent times, classical themes have been reinterpreted by dramatists ], ], and ] in France, ] in America, and ] in Britain and by novelists such as ] and ].<ref name="Br" /> | |||
{{clear}} | |||
==References== | ==References== | ||
{{Spoken Misplaced Pages|Greek_mythology.ogg|2009-01-19}} | |||
=== Notes === | |||
{{Commons category|Greek mythology}} | |||
{{Reflist|group=lower-roman}} | |||
=== Citations === | |||
{{Reflist}} | |||
===Primary sources (Greek and Roman)=== | ===Primary sources (Greek and Roman)=== | ||
{{refbegin|40em}} | |||
<div class="references-small"> | |||
*Aeschylus, '']''. ''See original text in ''. | * Aeschylus, '']''. ''See original text in {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080917053355/http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus:text:1999.01.0011:line=1 |date=17 September 2008 }}''. | ||
*Aeschylus, '']''. ''See original text in ''. | * Aeschylus, '']''. ''See original text in {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080502190012/http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0009 |date=2 May 2008 }}''. | ||
*Apollodorus, ''Library and Epitome''. ''See original text in ''. | * Apollodorus, ''Library and Epitome''. ''See original text in {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080502122743/http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0022 |date=2 May 2008 }}''. | ||
*Apollonius of Rhodes, ''Argonautica'', Book I. ''See original text in ''. | * Apollonius of Rhodes, ''Argonautica'', Book I. ''See original text in {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150512120923/http://sacred-texts.com/cla/argo/argo00.htm |date=12 May 2015 }}''. | ||
*Cicero, '']''. ''See original text in the ''. | * Cicero, '']''. ''See original text in the {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171010121359/http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/cicero/divinatione2.shtml |date=10 October 2017 }}''. | ||
*Cicero, ''Tusculanae resons''. ''See original text in the ''. |
* Cicero, ''Tusculanae resons''. ''See original text in the {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171015010833/http://thelatinlibrary.com/cicero/tusc1.shtml |date=15 October 2017 }}''. | ||
*Herodotus, '']'', I. ''See original text in the ''. | * Herodotus, '']'', I. ''See original text in the {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171116190118/http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/hh/hh1000.htm |date=16 November 2017 }}''. | ||
*Hesiod, ''Works and Days''. '' by Hugh G. Evelyn-White''. | * Hesiod, ''Works and Days''. '' {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20150512080002/http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/hesiod/works.htm |date=12 May 2015 }} by Hugh G. Evelyn-White''. | ||
*{{ |
* {{cite wikisource |title=Theogony |author=Hesiod |authorlink=Hesiod |translator=] |year=1914}} | ||
*Homer, ''Iliad''. ''See original text in ''. | * Homer, ''Iliad''. ''See original text in {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080327214945/http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus:text:1999.01.0133:book=1:card=1 |date=27 March 2008 }}''. | ||
*''Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite''. '' by ]''. | * ''Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite''. '' by ]''. | ||
*''Homeric Hymn to Demeter''. ''See original text in ''. | * ''Homeric Hymn to Demeter''. ''See original text in {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210211172708/http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0138%3Ahymn%3D2 |date=11 February 2021 }}''. | ||
*''Homeric Hymn to Hermes''. ''See the English translation in the ''. | * ''Homeric Hymn to Hermes''. ''See the English translation in the {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20081025121210/http://mcllibrary.org/Hesiod/hymns.html |date=25 October 2008 }}''. | ||
*Ovid, ''Metamorphoses''. ''See original text in the ''. | * Ovid, ''Metamorphoses''. ''See original text in the {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171023183945/http://www.thelatinlibrary.com/ovid/ovid.met1.shtml |date=23 October 2017 }}''. | ||
* Pausanias, '']'' ''See original text in {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20210720174623/http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3atext%3a1999.01.0159 |date=20 July 2021 }}''. | |||
*Pausanias. | |||
*Pindar, ''Pythian Odes'', Pythian 4: For Arcesilas of Cyrene Chariot Race 462 |
* Pindar, ''Pythian Odes'', Pythian 4: For Arcesilas of Cyrene Chariot Race 462 BC. ''See original text in the {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080917012320/http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?lookup=Pind%2E+P%2E+4%2E171ff%2E |date=17 September 2008 }}''. | ||
*Plato, '']''. ''See original text in ''. | * Plato, '']''. ''See original text in {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080917053501/http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus:text:1999.01.0169:text=Apol.:section=17a |date=17 September 2008 }}''. | ||
*Plato, '']''. ''See original text in ''. | * Plato, '']''. ''See original text in {{Webarchive|url=https://web.archive.org/web/20080329065954/http://www.perseus.tufts.edu/cgi-bin/ptext?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.01.0172%3Adiv1%3DTheaet. |date=29 March 2008 }}''. | ||
{{refend}} | |||
</div> | |||
===Secondary sources=== | ===Secondary sources=== | ||
{{refbegin|40em}} | |||
<div class="references-small"> | |||
* {{cite book | last=Ackerman | first=Robert | title=Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion by Jane Ellen Harrison | publisher=Princeton University Press | year=1991|edition=Reprint | isbn=978-0-691-01514-9 | chapter=Introduction}} | |||
{{top}} | |||
*{{cite book | |
* {{cite book | author1=Albala Ken G | author2=Johnson Claudia Durst | author3=Johnson Vernon E. | title=Understanding the Odyssey | publisher=Courier Dover Publications | year=2000 | isbn=978-0-486-41107-1 | chapter=Origin of Mythology | url=https://archive.org/details/bulfinchsgreekro00bulf }} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Algra | first=Keimpe | title=The Cambridge Companion to Early Greek Philosophy | publisher=Cambridge University Press | year=1999 | isbn=978-0-521-44667-9 | chapter=The Beginnings of Cosmology}} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Allen | first=Douglas | title=Structure & Creativity in Religion: Hermeneutics in Mircea Eliade's Phenomenology and New Directions | publisher=Walter de Gruyter | year=1978 | isbn=978-90-279-7594-2 | chapter=Early Methological Approaches | url-access=registration | url=https://archive.org/details/structurecreativ0000alle }} | ||
* {{cite encyclopedia|title=Argonaut|encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica|year=2002}} | |||
*{{cite book | last=Allen | first=Douglas | title=Structure & Creativity in Religion: Hermeneutics in Mircea Eliade's Phenomenology and New Directions | publisher=Walter de Gruyter | year=1978 | isbn=90-279-7594-9 | chapter=Early Methological Approaches}} | |||
* {{cite book | last=Betegh | first=Gábor | title=The Derveni Papyrus | publisher=Cambridge University Press | year=2004 | isbn=978-0-521-80108-9 | chapter=The Interpretation of the poet}} | |||
*{{cite encyclopedia|title=Argonaut|encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia Britannica|year=2002}} | |||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Bonnefoy | first=Yves | title=Greek and Egyptian Mythologies | publisher=University of Chicago Press | year=1992 | isbn=978-0-226-06454-3 | chapter=Kinship Structures in Greek Heroic Dynasty | url=https://archive.org/details/greekegyptianmyt00bonn }} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Bulfinch | first=Thomas | title=Bulfinch's Greek and Roman Mythology | publisher=Greenwood Press | year=2003 | isbn=978-0-313-30881-9 | chapter=Greek Mythology and Homer | url-access=registration | url=https://archive.org/details/understandingody0000john }} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Burkert | first=Walter | title=Greek Religion: Archaic and Classical (translated by John Raffan) | publisher=Blackwell Publishing | year=2002 | isbn=978-0-631-15624-6 | chapter=Prehistory and the Minoan Mycenaen Era | url=https://archive.org/details/greekreligion0000burk/page/n3/mode/2up | url-access=registration }} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Burn | first=Lucilla | title=Greek Myths | publisher=University of Texas Press | year=1990 | isbn=978-0-292-72748-9 | url=https://archive.org/details/greekmyths00burn | url-access=registration }} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Bushnell | first=Rebecca W. | title=Medieval A Companion to Tragedy | publisher=Blackwell Publishing| year=2005 | isbn=978-1-4051-0735-8 | chapter=Helicocentric Stoicism in the Saturnalia: The Egyptian Apollo}} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Chance | first=Jane | title=Medieval Mythography | publisher=University Press of Florida | year=1994 | isbn=978-0-8130-1256-8 | chapter=Helicocentric Stoicism in the Saturnalia: The Egyptian Apollo}} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Caldwell | first=Richard | title=Approaches to Greek Myth | publisher=] | year=1990 | isbn=978-0-8018-3864-4 | chapter=The Psychoanalytic Interpretation of Greek Myth}} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Calimach | first=Andrew | title=Lovers' Legends: The Gay Greek Myths | publisher=Haiduk Press | year=2002 | isbn=978-0-9714686-0-3 | chapter=The Cultural Background | url=https://archive.org/details/loverslegends00cali }} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Cartledge | first=Paul A. | title=The Greeks | publisher=] | year=2002 | isbn=978-0-19-280388-7 | chapter=Inventing the Past: History v. Myth}} | ||
*{{cite book | last=Cartledge | first=Paul A. | title=The |
* {{cite book | last=Cartledge | first=Paul A. | title=The Spartans (translated in Greek) | publisher=Livanis | year=2004 | isbn=978-960-14-0843-9}} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Cashford | first=Jules | title=The Homeric Hymns | publisher=Penguin Classics | year=2003 | isbn=978-0-14-043782-9 | chapter=Introduction}} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Dowden | first=Ken | title=The Uses of Greek Mythology | publisher=Routledge (UK) | year=1992 | isbn=978-0-415-06135-3| chapter=Myth and Mythology}} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Dunlop | first=John | title=The History of Fiction | publisher=Carey and Hart | year=1842 | chapter=Romances of Chivalry | isbn=978-1-149-40338-9}} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Edmunds | first=Lowell | title=Approaches to Greek Myth | publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press | year=1980 | isbn=978-0-8018-3864-4 | chapter=Comparative Approaches}} | ||
* {{cite encyclopedia|title=Euhemerus|encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica|year=2002}} | |||
*{{cite book | last=Edmunds | first=Lowell | title=Approaches to Greek Myth | publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press | year=1980 | isbn=0-8018-3864-9 | chapter=Comparative Approaches}} | |||
* {{cite book | last=Foley | first=John Miles | title=Homer's Traditional Art | publisher=] | year=1999 | isbn=978-0-271-01870-6 | chapter=Homeric and South Slavic Epic}} | |||
*{{cite encyclopedia|title=Euhemerus|encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia Britannica|year=2002}} | |||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Gale | first=Monica R. | title=Myth and Poetry in Lucretius | publisher=Cambridge University Press| year=1994 | isbn=978-0-521-45135-2 | chapter=The Cultural Background}} | ||
* {{cite encyclopedia|title=Greek Mythology|encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica|year=2002}} | |||
*{{cite book | last=Gale | first=Monica R. | title=Myth and Poetry in Lucretius | publisher=Cambridge University Press| year=1994 | isbn=0-521-45135-3 | chapter=The Cultural Background}} | |||
*{{cite encyclopedia|title=Greek |
* {{cite encyclopedia|title=Greek Religion|encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica|year=2002}} | ||
* {{cite book | last=Griffin | first=Jasper | title=The Oxford Illustrated History of Greece and the Hellenistic World edited by John Boardman, Jasper Griffin and Oswyn Murray | publisher=Oxford University Press | year=1986 | isbn=978-0-19-285438-4 | chapter=Greek Myth and Hesiod}} | |||
*{{cite encyclopedia|title=Greek Religion|encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia Britannica|year=2002}} | |||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Grimal | first=Pierre | title=The Dictionary of Classical Mythology | publisher=Blackwell Publishing | year=1986 | isbn=978-0-631-20102-1 | chapter=Argonauts}} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Hacklin | first=Joseph | title=Asiatic Mythology | publisher=Asian Educational Services | year=1994 | isbn=978-81-206-0920-4 | chapter=The Mythology of Persia}} | ||
*{{cite book | |
* {{cite book | last1=Hanson | first1=Victor Davis | last2=Heath | first2=John | title=Who Killed Homer (translated in Greek by Rena Karakatsani) | publisher=Kakos | year=1999 | isbn=978-960-352-545-5}} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Hard | first=Robin | title=The Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology: based on H. J. Rose's "A Handbook of Greek mythology" | publisher=Routledge (UK) | year=2003 | isbn=978-0-415-18636-0 | chapter=Sources of Greek Myth}} | ||
* {{cite encyclopedia|title=Heracles|encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica|year=2002}} | |||
*{{cite book | last=Hard | first=Robin | title=The Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology: based on H.J. Rose's "Handbook of Greek mythology" | publisher=Routledge (UK) | year=2003 | isbn=0-415-18636-6 | chapter=Sources of Greek Myth}} | |||
* {{cite book | last=Jung Carl Gustav | first=Kerényi Karl | title=Essays on a Science of Mythology | publisher=Princeton University Press | year=2001 | edition=Reprint | isbn=978-0-691-01756-3 | chapter=Prolegomena | url-access=registration | url=https://archive.org/details/essaysonscienceo00jung }} | |||
{{middle}} | |||
* {{cite book | last=Jung | first=C.J. | title=Science of Mythology | publisher=Routledge (UK) | year=2002 | isbn=978-0-415-26742-7 | chapter=Troy in Latin and French Joseph of Exeter's "Ylias" and Benoît de Sainte-Maure's "Roman de Troie"}} | |||
*{{cite encyclopedia|title=Heracles|encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia Britannica|year=2002}} | |||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Kelly | first=Douglas | title=An Outline of Greek and Roman Mythology | publisher=Douglas Kelly | year=2003 | isbn=978-0-415-18636-0 | chapter=Sources of Greek Myth}} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Kelsey| first=Francis W. | title=A Handbook of Greek Mythology | publisher=Allyn and Bacon | year=1889}} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Kirk | first=Geoffrey Stephen | author-link=Geoffrey Kirk | title=Myth: Its Meaning and Functions in Ancient and Other Cultures | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OFO_NQJh8L0C | publisher=University of California Press | year=1973 | isbn=978-0-520-02389-5 | chapter=The Thematic Simplicity of the Myths | chapter-url=https://books.google.com/books?id=OFO_NQJh8L0C&q=%22The+Thematic+Simplicity+of+the+Myths%22+kirk&pg=PA172 }} | ||
*{{cite book |
* {{cite book| last=Kirk| first=Geoffrey Stephen| title=The Nature of Greek Myths| url=https://archive.org/details/natureofgreekmyt00kirk| url-access=registration| publisher=Penguin| location=Harmondsworth| year=1974| isbn=978-0-14-021783-4}} | ||
* {{cite book | last=Klatt J. Mary | first=Brazouski Antoinette | title=Children's Books on Ancient Greek and Roman Mythology: An Annotated Bibliography | publisher=Greenwood Press | year=1994 | isbn=978-0-313-28973-6 | chapter=Preface}} | |||
*{{cite book | last=Kirk| first=Geoffrey Stephen | authorlink = Geoffrey Kirk | title = Myth: Its Meaning and Functions in Ancient and Other Cultures | url = http://books.google.com/books?id=OFO_NQJh8L0C&printsec=frontcover | publisher=University of California Press | year=1973 | isbn=0-520-02389-7 | chapter= The Thematic Simplicity of the Myths | chapterurl = http://books.google.com/books?id=OFO_NQJh8L0C&pg=PA172&lpg=PA172&dq=%22The+Thematic+Simplicity+of+the+Myths%22+kirk&source=web&ots=2PPW9EpmhU&sig=OjCPntKPCXDFSIV-89lnH-nnwkE&hl=en&ei=4X2XSaqsCJC28ASt9e3RAw&sa=X&oi=book_result&resnum=1&ct=result}} | |||
* {{citation|title=]|publisher=Artemis-Verlag|date=1981–1999}} | |||
*{{cite book | last=Kirk| first=Geoffrey Stephen | title = The Nature of Greek Myths | publisher = Penguin | location = Harmondsworth | year=1974 | isbn = 0140217835}} | |||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Miles | first=Geoffrey | title=Classical Mythology in English Literature: A Critical Anthology | publisher=University of Illinois Press | year=1999 | isbn=978-0-415-14754-5 | chapter=The Myth-kitty}} | ||
* {{cite book | last=Morris | first=Ian | title=Archaeology As Cultural History | publisher=Blackwell Publishing | year=2000 | isbn=978-0-631-19602-0}} | |||
*{{cite encyclopedia|encyclopedia=Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae|publisher=Artemis-Verlag|date=1981–1999}} | |||
* {{cite encyclopedia|title=myth|encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica|year=2002}} | |||
*{{cite book | last=Miles | first=Geoffrey | title=Classical Mythology in English Literature: A Critical Anthology | publisher=University of Illinois Press | year=1999 | isbn=0-415-14754-9 | chapter=The Myth-kitty}} | |||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Nagy | first=Gregory | title=Greek Mythology and Poetics | publisher=] | year=1992 | isbn=978-0-8014-8048-5 | chapter=The Hellenization of the Indo-European Poetics}} | ||
* {{cite book | last=Nilsson | first=Martin P. | title=Greek Popular Religion | publisher=Columbia University Press | year=1940 | chapter=The Religion of Eleusis | chapter-url=http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/gpr/gpr07.htm | access-date=20 November 2006 | archive-date=1 December 2017 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20171201053257/http://www.sacred-texts.com/cla/gpr/gpr07.htm | url-status=live }} | |||
*{{cite encyclopedia|title=myth|encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia Britannica|year=2002}} | |||
*{{cite book | |
* {{cite book |author1=North John A. |author2=Beard Mary |author3=Price Simon R.F. | title=Classical Mythology in English Literature: A Critical Anthology | publisher=Cambridge University Press | year=1998 | isbn=978-0-521-31682-8 | chapter=The Religions of Imperial Rome}} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Papadopoulou | first=Thalia | title=Heracles and Euripidean Tragedy | publisher=Cambridge University Press | year=2005 | isbn=978-0-521-85126-8 | chapter=Introduction}} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Percy | first=William Armostrong III | title=Pederasty and Pedagogy in Archaic Greece | publisher=Routledge (UK) | year=1999 | isbn=978-0-252-06740-2 | chapter=The Institutionalization of Pederasty | url-access=registration | url=https://archive.org/details/pederastypedagog00perc }} | ||
* {{cite journal|last=Poleman|first=Horace I.|title=Review of "Ouranos-Varuna. Etude de mythologie comparee indo-europeenne by Georges Dumezil" |journal=Journal of the American Oriental Society|volume=63|issue=1|pages=78–79|date=March 1943|doi=10.2307/594160|jstor=594160 |issn = 0003-0279 }} | |||
*{{cite book | last=Papadopoulou | first=Thalia | title=Heracles and Euripidean Tragedy | publisher=Cambridge University Press | year=2005 | isbn=0-521-85126-2 | chapter=Introduction}} | |||
* {{cite journal|last=Reinhold|first=Meyer|title=The Generation Gap in Antiquity |journal=Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society|volume=114|issue=5|pages=347–65|date=20 October 1970|jstor=985800}} | |||
*{{cite book | last=Percy | first=William Armostrong III | title=Pederasty and Pedagogy in Archaic Greece | publisher=Routledge (UK) | year=1999 | isbn=0-252-06740-1 | chapter=The Institutionalization of Pederasty}} | |||
* {{cite book | last=Rose | first=Herbert Jennings | title=A Handbook of Greek Mythology | publisher=Routledge (UK) | year=1991 | isbn=978-0-415-04601-5}} | |||
*{{cite journal|last=Poleman|first=Horace I.|title=Review of "Ouranos-Varuna. Etude de mythologie comparee indo-europeenne by Georges Dumezil" |journal="Journal of the American Oriental Society"|volume=63|issue=No.1|pages=78–79| url=http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0003-0279(194303)63%3A1%3C78%3AOEDMCI%3E2.0.CO%3B2-T|publisher=American Oriental Society|month=March|year=1943}} | |||
* {{cite book | last=Segal | first=Robert A. | title=Myth and the Polis edited by Dora Carlisky Pozzi, John Moore Wickersham| publisher=Cornell University Press | year=1991 | isbn=978-0-8014-2473-1 | chapter=A Greek Eternal Child}} | |||
*{{cite journal|last=Reinhold|first=Meyer|title=The Generation Gap in Antiquity |journal="Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society"|volume=114|issue=No.5|pages=347–365|date=October 20, 1970|url=http://links.jstor.org/sici?sici=0003-049X(19701020)114%3A5%3C347%3ATGGIA%3E2.0.CO%3B2-I|publisher=American Philosophical Society}} | |||
* {{cite journal|last=Segal|first=Robert A.|title=The Romantic Appeal of Joseph Campbell|journal=Christian Century|date=4 April 1990|url=http://www.religion-online.org/showarticle.asp?title=766|url-status=dead|archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20070107075423/http://www.religion-online.org/showarticle.asp?title=766|archive-date=7 January 2007}} | |||
*{{cite book | last=Rose | first=Herbert Jennings | title=A Handbook of Greek Mythology | publisher=Routledge (UK) | year=1991 | isbn=0-415-04601-7}} | |||
*{{cite book | last=Segal | first=Robert A. | title= |
* {{cite book | last=Segal | first=Robert A. | title=Theorizing about Myth| publisher=Univ of Massachusetts Press | year=1999 | isbn=978-1-55849-191-5 | chapter=Jung on Mythology}} | ||
* {{cite book | last=Stoll | first=Heinrich Wilhelm (translated by R. B. Paul) | title=Handbook of the religion and mythology of the Greeks| publisher=Francis and John Rivington | year=1852}} | |||
*{{cite journal|last=Segal|first=Robert A.|title=The Romantic Appeal of Joseph Campbell |journal="Christian Century"|date=April 4 1990|url=http://www.religion-online.org/showarticle.asp?title=766|publisher=Christian Century Foundation}} | |||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Trobe | first=Kala | title=Invoke the Gods | publisher=Llewellyn Worldwide | year=2001 | isbn=978-0-7387-0096-0 | chapter=Dionysus | url=https://archive.org/details/invokegods00kala }} | ||
* {{cite encyclopedia|title=Trojan War|encyclopedia=]|year=1952}} | |||
*{{cite book | last=Stoll | first=Heinrich Wilhelm (translated by R. B. Paul) | title=Handbook of the religion and mythology of the Greeks| publisher=Francis and John Rivington | year=1852}} | |||
* {{cite encyclopedia|title=Troy|encyclopedia=Encyclopædia Britannica|year=2002}} | |||
*{{cite book | last=Trobe | first=Kala | title=Invoke the Gods| publisher=Llewellyn Worldwide | year=2001 | isbn=0-7387-0096-7 | chapter=Dionysus}} | |||
*{{cite encyclopedia|title= |
* {{cite encyclopedia|title=Volume: Hellas, Article: Greek Mythology|encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia The Helios|year=1952}} | ||
* {{cite book | last=Walsh | first=Patrick Gerald | title=The Nature of the Gods | publisher=Oxford University Press | year=1998 | isbn=978-0-19-282511-7 | chapter=Liberating Appearance in Mythic Content}} | |||
*{{cite encyclopedia|title=Troy|encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia Britannica|year=2002}} | |||
* {{cite book | last=Weaver | first=John B. | title=The Plots of Epiphany | publisher=Walter de Gruyter | year=1998 | isbn=978-3-11-018266-8| chapter=Introduction}} | |||
*{{cite encyclopedia|title=Volume: Hellas, Article: Greek Mythology|encyclopedia=Encyclopaedia The Helios|year=1952}} | |||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Winterbourne | first=Anthony | title=When the Norns Have Spoken | publisher=] | year=2004 | isbn=978-0-8386-4048-7 | chapter=Spinning and Weaving Fate}} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Wood | first=Michael | title=In Search of the Trojan War | publisher=University of California Press | year=1998 | isbn=978-0-520-21599-3 | chapter=The Coming of the Greeks}} | ||
{{refend}} | |||
*{{cite book | last=Winterbourne | first=Anthony | title=When the Norns Have Spoken | publisher=Fairleigh Dickinson Univ Press | year=2004 | isbn=0-8386-4048-6 | chapter=Spinning and Weaving Fate}} | |||
*{{cite book | last=Wood | first=Michael | title=In Search of the Trojan War | publisher=University of California Press | year=1998 | isbn=0-520-21599-0 | chapter=The Coming of the Greeks}} | |||
{{bottom}} | |||
</div> | |||
==Further reading== | ==Further reading== | ||
{{Portal|Ancient Greece|Myths|Religion|Mythology|History}} | |||
<div class="references-small"> | |||
{{refbegin|40em}} | |||
*{{cite book | last=Gantz | first=Timothy | authorlink = Timothy Gantz | title=Early Greek Myth: A Guide to Literary and Artistic Sources | publisher=John Hopkins University Press | year=1993 | id=ISBN 080184410X}} | |||
* {{cite book | last=Gantz | first=Timothy | author-link=Timothy Gantz | title=Early Greek Myth: A Guide to Literary and Artistic Sources | url=https://www.academia.edu/29883249 | publisher=Johns Hopkins University Press | year=1993 | isbn=978-0-8018-4410-2 | access-date=6 November 2021 | archive-date=30 May 2023 | archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20230530153137/https://www.academia.edu/29883249 | url-status=live }} | |||
*{{cite book | last=Graves | first=Robert | authorlink=Robert Graves | title=The Greek Myths| publisher= Penguin (Non-Classics) | year=1955—Cmb/Rep edition 1993 | isbn=0-14-017199-1}} | |||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Graves | first=Robert | author-link=Robert Graves | title=The Greek Myths| publisher= Penguin (Non-Classics) | orig-year=1955|edition=Cmb/Rep|year=1993 | isbn=978-0-14-017199-0}} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Hamilton | first=Edith | author-link=Edith Hamilton | title=Mythology| publisher= Back Bay Books | orig-year=1942|edition=New|year=1998 | isbn=978-0-316-34151-6}} | ||
*{{cite book | last=Kerenyi | first=Karl | title=The |
* {{cite book | last=Kerenyi | first=Karl | title=The Gods of the Greeks | publisher=Thames & Hudson | orig-year=1951 | edition=Reissue | year=1980 | isbn=978-0-500-27048-6 | url=https://archive.org/details/godsofgreeks00kerrich }} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Kerenyi | first=Karl | title=The Heroes of the Greeks | publisher=Thames & Hudson | orig-year=1959 | edition=Reissue | year=1978 | isbn=978-0-500-27049-3 | url=https://archive.org/details/heroesofgreeks00kerrich }} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Luchte | first=James | title=Early Greek Thought: Before the Dawn | publisher= Bloomsbury| year=2011| isbn=978-0-567-35331-3}} | ||
* {{cite book | last=Morford M.P.O. | first=Lenardon L.J. | title=Classical Mythology | publisher= Oxford University Press| year=2006| isbn=978-0-19-530805-1}} | |||
* ] (1870), ''''. | |||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Pinsent | first=John | author-link=John Pinsent | title=Greek Mythology | publisher=] | year=1972 | isbn=978-0-448-00848-6 }} | ||
*{{cite book | last= |
* {{cite book | last=Pinsent | first=John | title=Myths and Legends of Ancient Greece | publisher=Peter Bedrick Books | year=1991 | isbn=978-0-87226-250-8 | series=Library of the World's Myths and Legends }} | ||
* {{cite book | last=Powell | first=Barry | author-link=Barry B. Powell | title=Classical Myth | publisher=Prentice-Hall | year=2008 | edition=6th| isbn=978-0-13-606171-7}} | |||
</div> | |||
* {{cite book | last=Powell | first=Barry | title=A Short Introduction to Classical Myth | url=https://archive.org/details/shortintroductio0000powe | url-access=registration | publisher=Prentice-Hall | year=2001 | isbn=978-0-13-025839-7 }} | |||
* {{cite book | last=Ruck Carl| first=Staples Blaise Daniel | title=The World of Classical Myth| publisher= Carolina Academic Press | year=1994| isbn=978-0-89089-575-7}} | |||
* ] (1870), ''''. | |||
* {{cite book | last=Veyne | first=Paul | author-link=Paul Veyne | others=(translated by Paula Wissing) | title=Did the Greeks Believe in Their Myths? An Essay on Constitutive Imagination | publisher=University of Chicago | year=1988 | isbn=978-0-226-85434-2 | url=https://books.google.com/books?id=EpbZLRPGgBsC }} | |||
* {{cite book | editor-last = Woodward | editor-first = Roger D. | title = The Cambridge Companion to Greek Mythology | publisher = Cambridge University Press | location = Cambridge; New York | year = 2007 | isbn = 978-0-521-84520-5 | url = https://books.google.com/books?id=TQyRX6WmMUMC }} | |||
{{refend}} | |||
==External links== | ==External links== | ||
{{Library resources box |by=no |onlinebooks=yes |others=yes |about=yes |label=Greek mythology | |||
{{portal|Mythology|Ddraig.svg}} | |||
|viaf= |lccn= |lcheading= |wikititle= }} | |||
{{portalpar|Classical Civilisation|2006 01 21 Athènes Parthénon.JPG}} | |||
{{Spoken Misplaced Pages|En-Greek mythology-article.oga|date=2009-01-19}} | |||
* A collection of Greek mythological stories. | |||
* {{Commons category-inline|Greek mythology}} | |||
* translations of works of classical literature | |||
* {{In Our Time|Greek Myths|b0093z1k|Greek_Myths}} | |||
* provides information and tales from classical literature. | |||
* translations of works of classical literature | |||
* provides databases dedicated to graeco-roman mythology and its iconography. | |||
* provides databases dedicated to Graeco-Roman mythology and its iconography. | |||
* biographies of characters from myth with quotes from original sources and images from classical art | |||
* Martin P. Nilsson, , on Google books | |||
{{featured article}} | |||
* , Hellenism.Net | |||
{{Greek religion}} | {{Greek religion}} | ||
{{Greek mythology (deities)}} | |||
{{Europe topic|Mythology of}} | |||
{{Authority control}} | |||
{{DEFAULTSORT:Greek Mythology}} | |||
] | ] | ||
{{Link FA|es}} | |||
{{Link FA|pt}} | |||
<!-- interwiki --> | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] | |||
] |
Latest revision as of 03:08, 14 January 2025
Part of a series on |
Greek mythology |
---|
Theseus slays the Minotaur under the gaze of Athena |
Deities |
Heroes and heroism |
Related |
Ancient Greece portal Myths portal |
Greek mythology is the body of myths originally told by the ancient Greeks, and a genre of ancient Greek folklore, today absorbed alongside Roman mythology into the broader designation of classical mythology. These stories concern the ancient Greek religion's view of the origin and nature of the world; the lives and activities of deities, heroes, and mythological creatures; and the origins and significance of the ancient Greeks' cult and ritual practices. Modern scholars study the myths to shed light on the religious and political institutions of ancient Greece, and to better understand the nature of mythmaking itself.
The Greek myths were initially propagated in an oral-poetic tradition most likely by Minoan and Mycenaean singers starting in the 18th century BC; eventually the myths of the heroes of the Trojan War and its aftermath became part of the oral tradition of Homer's epic poems, the Iliad and the Odyssey. Two poems by Homer's near contemporary Hesiod, the Theogony and the Works and Days, contain accounts of the genesis of the world, the succession of divine rulers, the succession of human ages, the origin of human woes, and the origin of sacrificial practices. Myths are also preserved in the Homeric Hymns, in fragments of epic poems of the Epic Cycle, in lyric poems, in the works of the tragedians and comedians of the fifth century BC, in writings of scholars and poets of the Hellenistic Age, and in texts from the time of the Roman Empire by writers such as Plutarch and Pausanias.
Aside from this narrative deposit in ancient Greek literature, pictorial representations of gods, heroes, and mythic episodes featured prominently in ancient vase paintings and the decoration of votive gifts and many other artifacts. Geometric designs on pottery of the eighth century BC depict scenes from the Epic Cycle as well as the adventures of Heracles. In the succeeding Archaic, Classical, and Hellenistic periods, Homeric and various other mythological scenes appear, supplementing the existing literary evidence.
Greek mythology has had an extensive influence on the culture, arts, and literature of Western civilization and remains part of Western heritage and language. Poets and artists from ancient times to the present have derived inspiration from Greek mythology and have discovered contemporary significance and relevance in the themes.
Sources
Greek mythology is known today primarily from Greek literature and representations on visual media dating from the Geometric period from c. 900 BC to c. 800 BC onward. In fact, literary and archaeological sources integrate, sometimes mutually supportive and sometimes in conflict; however, in many cases, the existence of this corpus of data is an indication that many elements of Greek mythology have strong factual and historical roots.
Literary sources
Mythical narration plays an important role in nearly every genre of Greek literature. Nevertheless, the only general mythographical handbook to survive from Greek antiquity was the Library of Pseudo-Apollodorus. This work attempts to reconcile the contradictory tales of the poets and provides a grand summary of traditional Greek mythology and heroic legends. Apollodorus of Athens lived from c. 180 BC to c. 125 BC and wrote on many of these topics. His writings may have formed the basis for the collection; however, the "Library" discusses events that occurred long after his death, hence the name Pseudo-Apollodorus.
Among the earliest literary sources are Homer's two epic poems, the Iliad and the Odyssey. Other poets completed the Epic Cycle, but these later and lesser poems now are lost almost entirely. Despite their traditional name, the Homeric Hymns have no direct connection with Homer. The oldest are choral hymns from the earlier part of the so-called Lyric age. Hesiod, a possible contemporary with Homer, offers in his Theogony (Origin of the Gods) the fullest account of the earliest Greek myths, dealing with the creation of the world, the origin of the gods, Titans, and Giants, as well as elaborate genealogies, folktales, and aetiological myths. Hesiod's Works and Days, a didactic poem about farming life, also includes the myths of Prometheus, Pandora, and the Five Ages. The poet advises on the best way to succeed in a dangerous world, rendered yet more dangerous by its gods.
Lyrical poets often took their subjects from myth, but their treatment became gradually less narrative and more allusive. Greek lyric poets, including Pindar, Bacchylides and Simonides, and bucolic poets such as Theocritus and Bion, relate individual mythological incidents. Additionally, myth was central to classical Athenian drama. The tragic playwrights Aeschylus, Sophocles, and Euripides took most of their plots from myths of the age of heroes and the Trojan War. Many of the great tragic stories (e.g. Agamemnon and his children, Oedipus, Jason, Medea, etc.) took on their classic form in these tragedies. The comic playwright Aristophanes also used myths, in The Birds and The Frogs.
Historians Herodotus and Diodorus Siculus, and geographers Pausanias and Strabo, who traveled throughout the Greek world and noted the stories they heard, supplied numerous local myths and legends, often giving little-known alternative versions. Herodotus in particular, searched the various traditions he encountered and found the historical or mythological roots in the confrontation between Greece and the East. Herodotus attempted to reconcile origins and the blending of differing cultural concepts.
The poetry of the Hellenistic and Roman ages was primarily composed as a literary rather than cultic exercise. Nevertheless, it contains many important details that would otherwise be lost. This category includes the works of:
- The Roman poets Ovid, Statius, Valerius Flaccus, Seneca and Virgil with Servius's commentary.
- The Greek poets of the Late Antique period: Nonnus, Antoninus Liberalis, and Quintus Smyrnaeus.
- The Greek poets of the Hellenistic period: Apollonius of Rhodes, Callimachus, Pseudo-Eratosthenes, and Parthenius.
Prose writers from the same periods who make reference to myths include Apuleius, Petronius, Lollianus, and Heliodorus. Two other important non-poetical sources are the Fabulae and Astronomica of the Roman writer styled as Pseudo-Hyginus, the Imagines of Philostratus the Elder and Philostratus the Younger, and the Descriptions of Callistratus.
Finally, several Byzantine Greek writers provide important details of myth, much derived from earlier now lost Greek works. These preservers of myth include Arnobius, Hesychius, the author of the Suda, John Tzetzes, and Eustathius. They often treat mythology from a Christian moralizing perspective.
Archaeological sources
The discovery of the Mycenaean civilization by the German amateur archaeologist Heinrich Schliemann in the nineteenth century, and the discovery of the Minoan civilization in Crete by the British archaeologist Arthur Evans in the twentieth century, helped to explain many existing questions about Homer's epics and provided archaeological evidence for many of the mythological details about gods and heroes. The evidence about myths and rituals at Mycenaean and Minoan sites is entirely monumental, as the Linear B script (an ancient form of Greek found in both Crete and mainland Greece) was used mainly to record inventories, although certain names of gods and heroes have been tentatively identified.
Geometric designs on pottery of the eighth-century BC depict scenes from the Trojan cycle, as well as the adventures of Heracles. These visual representations of myths are important for two reasons. Firstly, many Greek myths are attested on vases earlier than in literary sources: of the twelve labors of Heracles, for example, only the Cerberus adventure occurs in a contemporary literary text. Secondly, visual sources sometimes represent myths or mythical scenes that are not attested in any extant literary source. In some cases, the first known representation of a myth in geometric art predates its first known representation in late archaic poetry, by several centuries. In the Archaic (c. 750 – c. 500 BC), Classical (c. 480–323 BC), and Hellenistic (323–146 BC) periods, Homeric and various other mythological scenes appear, supplementing the existing literary evidence.
Survey of mythic history
Greek mythology has changed over time to accommodate the evolution of their culture, of which mythology, both overtly and in its unspoken assumptions, is an index of the changes. In Greek mythology's surviving literary forms, as found mostly at the end of the progressive changes, it is inherently political, as Gilbert Cuthbertson (1975) has argued.
The earlier inhabitants of the Balkan Peninsula were an agricultural people who, using animism, assigned a spirit to every aspect of nature. Eventually, these vague spirits assumed human forms and entered the local mythology as gods. When tribes from the north of the Balkan Peninsula invaded, they brought with them a new pantheon of gods, based on conquest, force, prowess in battle, and violent heroism. Other older gods of the agricultural world fused with those of the more powerful invaders or else faded into insignificance.
After the middle of the Archaic period, myths about relationships between male gods and male heroes became more and more frequent, indicating the parallel development of pedagogic pederasty (παιδικὸς ἔρως, eros paidikos), thought to have been introduced around 630 BC. By the end of the fifth-century BC, poets had assigned at least one eromenos, an adolescent boy who was their sexual companion, to every important god except Ares and many legendary figures. Previously existing myths, such as those of Achilles and Patroclus, also then were cast in a pederastic light. Alexandrian poets at first, then more generally literary mythographers in the early Roman Empire, often re-adapted stories of Greek mythological characters in this fashion.
The achievement of epic poetry was to create story-cycles and, as a result, to develop a new sense of mythological chronology. Thus, Greek mythology unfolds as a phase in the development of the world and of humans. While self-contradictions in these stories make an absolute timeline impossible, an approximate chronology may be discerned. The resulting mythological "history of the world" may be divided into three or four broader periods:
- The myths of origin or age of gods (Theogonies, "births of gods"): myths about the origins of the world, the gods, and the human race.
- The age when gods and mortals mingled freely: stories of the early interactions between gods, demigods, and mortals.
- The age of heroes (heroic age), where divine activity was more limited. The last and greatest of the heroic legends is the story of the Trojan War and after (which is regarded by some researchers as a separate, fourth period).
While the age of gods often has been of more interest to contemporary students of myth, the Greek authors of the archaic and classical eras had a clear preference for the age of heroes, establishing a chronology and record of human accomplishments after the questions of how the world came into being were explained. For example, the heroic Iliad and Odyssey dwarfed the divine-focused Theogony and Homeric Hymns in both size and popularity. Under the influence of Homer the "hero cult" leads to a restructuring in spiritual life, expressed in the separation of the realm of the gods from the realm of the dead (heroes), of the Chthonic from the Olympian. In the Works and Days, Hesiod makes use of a scheme of Four Ages of Man (or Races): Golden, Silver, Bronze, and Iron. These races or ages are separate creations of the gods, the Golden Age belonging to the reign of Cronos, the subsequent races to the creation of Zeus. The presence of evil was explained by the myth of Pandora, when all of the best of human capabilities, save hope, had been spilled out of her overturned jar. In Metamorphoses, Ovid follows Hesiod's concept of the four ages.
Origins of the world and the gods
Further information: Greek primordial gods and Family tree of the Greek gods"Myths of origin" or "creation myths" represent an attempt to explain the beginnings of the universe in human language. The most widely accepted version at the time, although a philosophical account of the beginning of things, is reported by Hesiod, in his Theogony. He begins with Chaos, a yawning nothingness. Next comes Gaia (Earth), "the ever-sure foundation of all", and then Tartarus, "in the depth of the wide-pathed Earth", and Eros (Love), "fairest among the deathless gods". Without male assistance, Gaia gave birth to Uranus (the Sky) who then fertilized her. From that union were born first the Titans—six males: Coeus, Crius, Cronus, Hyperion, Iapetus, and Oceanus; and six females: Mnemosyne, Phoebe, Rhea, Theia, Themis, and Tethys. After Cronus was born, Gaia and Uranus decreed no more Titans were to be born. They were followed by the one-eyed Cyclopes and the Hecatoncheires or Hundred-Handed Ones, who were both thrown into Tartarus by Uranus. This made Gaia furious. Cronus ("the wily, youngest and most terrible of Gaia's children") was convinced by Gaia to castrate his father. He did this and became the ruler of the Titans with his sister-wife, Rhea, as his consort, and the other Titans became his court.
A motif of father-against-son conflict was repeated when Cronus was confronted by his son, Zeus. Because Cronus had betrayed his father, he feared that his offspring would do the same, and so each time Rhea gave birth, he snatched up the child and ate it. Rhea hated this and tricked him by hiding Zeus and wrapping a stone in a baby's blanket, which Cronus ate. When Zeus was full-grown, he fed Cronus a drugged drink which caused him to vomit, throwing up Rhea's other children, including Poseidon, Hades, Hestia, Demeter, and Hera, and the stone, which had been sitting in Cronus's stomach all this time. Zeus then challenged Cronus to war for the kingship of the gods. At last, with the help of the Cyclopes (whom Zeus freed from Tartarus), Zeus and his siblings were victorious, while Cronus and the Titans were hurled down to imprisonment in Tartarus.
Zeus was plagued by the same concern, and after a prophecy that the offspring of his first wife, Metis, would give birth to a god "greater than he", Zeus swallowed her. She was already pregnant with Athena, however, and she burst forth from his head—fully-grown and dressed for war.
The earliest Greek thought about poetry considered the theogonies to be the prototypical poetic genre—the prototypical mythos—and imputed almost magical powers to it. Orpheus, the archetypal poet, also was the archetypal singer of theogonies, which he uses to calm seas and storms in Apollonius' Argonautica, and to move the stony hearts of the underworld gods in his descent to Hades. When Hermes invents the lyre in the Homeric Hymn to Hermes, the first thing he does is sing about the birth of the gods. Hesiod's Theogony is not only the fullest surviving account of the gods but also the fullest surviving account of the archaic poet's function, with its long preliminary invocation to the Muses. Theogony also was the subject of many lost poems, including those attributed to Orpheus, Musaeus, Epimenides, Abaris, and other legendary seers, which were used in private ritual purifications and mystery-rites. There are indications that Plato was familiar with some version of the Orphic theogony. A silence would have been expected about religious rites and beliefs, however, and that nature of the culture would not have been reported by members of the society while the beliefs were held. After they ceased to become religious beliefs, few would have known the rites and rituals. Allusions often existed, however, to aspects that were quite public.
Images existed on pottery and religious artwork that were interpreted and more likely, misinterpreted in many diverse myths and tales. A few fragments of these works survive in quotations by Neoplatonist philosophers and recently unearthed papyrus scraps. One of these scraps, the Derveni Papyrus now proves that at least in the fifth-century BC a theogonic-cosmogonic poem of Orpheus was in existence.
The first philosophical cosmologists reacted against, or sometimes built upon, popular mythical conceptions that had existed in the Greek world for some time. Some of these popular conceptions can be gleaned from the poetry of Homer and Hesiod. In Homer, the Earth was viewed as a flat disk afloat on the river of Oceanus and overlooked by a hemispherical sky with sun, moon, and stars. The Sun (Helios) traversed the heavens as a charioteer and sailed around the Earth in a golden bowl at night. Sun, earth, heaven, rivers, and winds could be addressed in prayers and called to witness oaths. Natural fissures were popularly regarded as entrances to the subterranean house of Hades and his predecessors, home of the dead. Influences from other cultures always afforded new themes.
Greek pantheon
Further information: Ancient Greek religion, Twelve Olympians, Family Tree of the Greek Gods, and List of Mycenaean godsAccording to Classical-era mythology, after the overthrow of the Titans, the new pantheon of gods and goddesses was confirmed. Among the principal Greek gods were the Olympians, residing on Mount Olympus under the eye of Zeus. (The limitation of their number to twelve seems to have been a comparatively modern idea.) Besides the Olympians, the Greeks worshipped various gods of the countryside, the satyr-god Pan, Nymphs (spirits of rivers), Naiads (who dwelled in springs), Dryads (who were spirits of the trees), Nereids (who inhabited the sea), river gods, Satyrs, and others. In addition, there were the dark powers of the underworld, such as the Erinyes (or Furies), said to pursue those guilty of crimes against blood-relatives. In order to honor the Ancient Greek pantheon, poets composed the Homeric Hymns (a group of thirty-three songs). Gregory Nagy (1992) regards "the larger Homeric Hymns as simple preludes (compared with Theogony), each of which invokes one god."
The gods of Greek mythology are described as having essentially corporeal but ideal bodies. According to Walter Burkert, the defining characteristic of Greek anthropomorphism is that "the Greek gods are persons, not abstractions, ideas or concepts." Regardless of their underlying forms, the Ancient Greek gods have many fantastic abilities; most significantly, the gods are not affected by disease and can be wounded only under highly unusual circumstances. The Greeks considered immortality as the distinctive characteristic of their gods; this immortality, as well as unfading youth, was insured by the constant use of nectar and ambrosia, by which the divine blood was renewed in their veins.
Each god descends from his or her own genealogy, pursues differing interests, has a certain area of expertise, and is governed by a unique personality; however, these descriptions arise from a multiplicity of archaic local variants, which do not always agree with one another. When these gods are called upon in poetry, prayer, or cult, they are referred to by a combination of their name and epithets, that identify them by these distinctions from other manifestations of themselves (e.g., Apollo Musagetes is "Apollo, leader of the Muses"). Alternatively, the epithet may identify a particular and localized aspect of the god, sometimes thought to be already ancient during the classical epoch of Greece.
Most gods were associated with specific aspects of life. For example, Aphrodite was the goddess of love and beauty, Ares was the god of war, Hades the ruler of the underworld, and Athena the goddess of wisdom and courage. Some gods, such as Apollo and Dionysus, revealed complex personalities and mixtures of functions, while others, such as Hestia (literally "hearth") and Helios (literally "sun"), were little more than personifications. The most impressive temples tended to be dedicated to a limited number of gods, who were the focus of large pan-Hellenic cults. It was, however, common for individual regions and villages to devote their own cults to minor gods. Many cities also honored the more well-known gods with unusual local rites and associated strange myths with them that were unknown elsewhere. During the heroic age, the cult of heroes (or demigods) supplemented that of the gods.
Age of gods and mortals
"The origins of humanity ascribed to various figures, including Zeus and Prometheus."
Bridging the age when gods lived alone and the age when divine interference in human affairs was limited was a transitional age in which gods and mortals moved together. These were the early days of the world when the groups mingled more freely than they did later. Most of these tales were later told by Ovid's Metamorphoses and they are often divided into two thematic groups: tales of love, and tales of punishment.
Tales of love often involve incest, or the seduction or rape of a mortal woman by a male god, resulting in heroic offspring. The stories generally suggest that relationships between gods and mortals are something to avoid; even consenting relationships rarely have happy endings. In a few cases, a female divinity mates with a mortal man, as in the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite, where the goddess lies with Anchises to produce Aeneas.
The second type (tales of punishment) involves the appropriation or invention of some important cultural artifact, as when Prometheus steals fire from the gods, when Tantalus steals nectar and ambrosia from Zeus' table and gives it to his subjects—revealing to them the secrets of the gods, when Prometheus or Lycaon invents sacrifice, when Demeter teaches agriculture and the Mysteries to Triptolemus, or when Marsyas invents the aulos and enters into a musical contest with Apollo. Ian Morris considers Prometheus' adventures as "a place between the history of the gods and that of man." An anonymous papyrus fragment, dated to the third century, vividly portrays Dionysus' punishment of the king of Thrace, Lycurgus, whose recognition of the new god came too late, resulting in horrific penalties that extended into the afterlife. The story of the arrival of Dionysus to establish his cult in Thrace was also the subject of an Aeschylean trilogy. In another tragedy, Euripides' The Bacchae, the king of Thebes, Pentheus, is punished by Dionysus, because he disrespected the god and spied on his Maenads, the female worshippers of the god.
In another story, based on an old folktale-motif, and echoing a similar theme, Demeter was searching for her daughter, Persephone, having taken the form of an old woman called Doso, and received a hospitable welcome from Celeus, the King of Eleusis in Attica. As a gift to Celeus, because of his hospitality, Demeter planned to make his son Demophon a god, but she was unable to complete the ritual because his mother Metanira walked in and saw her son in the fire and screamed in fright, which angered Demeter, who lamented that foolish mortals do not understand the concept and ritual.
Heroic age
The age in which the heroes lived is known as the Heroic age. The epic and genealogical poetry created cycles of stories clustered around particular heroes or events and established the family relationships between the heroes of different stories; they thus arranged the stories in sequence. According to Ken Dowden (1992), "there is even a saga effect: We can follow the fates of some families in successive generations."
After the rise of the hero cult, gods and heroes constitute the sacral sphere and are invoked together in oaths and prayers which are addressed to them. Burkert (2002) notes that "the roster of heroes, again in contrast to the gods, is never given fixed and final form. Great gods are no longer born, but new heroes can always be raised up from the army of the dead." Another important difference between the hero cult and the cult of gods is that the hero becomes the centre of local group identity.
The monumental events of Heracles are regarded as the dawn of the age of heroes. To the Heroic Age are also ascribed three great events: the Argonautic expedition, the Theban Cycle, and the Trojan War.
Heracles and the Heracleidae
Further information: Heracles, Heracleidae, and HerculesSome scholars believe that behind Heracles' complicated mythology there was probably a real man, perhaps a chieftain-vassal of the kingdom of Argos. Some scholars suggest the story of Heracles is an allegory for the sun's yearly passage through the twelve constellations of the zodiac. Others point to earlier myths from other cultures, showing the story of Heracles as a local adaptation of hero myths already well established. Traditionally, Heracles was the son of Zeus and Alcmene, granddaughter of Perseus. His fantastic solitary exploits, with their many folk-tale themes, provided much material for popular legend. According to Burkert (2002), "He is portrayed as a sacrificer, mentioned as a founder of altars, and imagined as a voracious eater himself; it is in this role that he appears in comedy.
While his tragic end provided much material for tragedy—Heracles is regarded by Thalia Papadopoulou as "a play of great significance in examination of other Euripidean dramas." In art and literature, Heracles was represented as an enormously strong man of moderate height; his characteristic weapon was the bow but frequently also the club. Vase paintings demonstrate the unparalleled popularity of Heracles, his fight with the lion being depicted many hundreds of times.
Heracles also entered Etruscan and Roman mythology and cult, and the exclamation "mehercule" became as familiar to the Romans as "Herakleis" was to the Greeks. In Italy he was worshipped as a god of merchants and traders, although others also prayed to him for his characteristic gifts of good luck or rescue from danger.
Heracles attained the highest social prestige through his appointment as official ancestor of the Dorian kings. This probably served as a legitimation for the Dorian migrations into the Peloponnese. Hyllus, the eponymous hero of one Dorian phyle, became the son of Heracles and one of the Heracleidae or Heraclids (the numerous descendants of Heracles, especially the descendants of Hyllus—other Heracleidae included Macaria, Lamos, Manto, Bianor, Tlepolemus, and Telephus). These Heraclids conquered the Peloponnesian kingdoms of Mycenae, Sparta and Argos, claiming, according to legend, a right to rule them through their ancestor. Their rise to dominance is frequently called the "Dorian invasion". The Lydian and later the Macedonian kings, as rulers of the same rank, also became Heracleidae.
Other members of this earliest generation of heroes such as Perseus, Deucalion, Theseus and Bellerophon, have many traits in common with Heracles. Like him, their exploits are solitary, fantastic and border on fairy tale, as they slay monsters such as the Chimera and Medusa. Bellerophon's adventures are commonplace types, similar to the adventures of Heracles and Theseus. Sending a hero to his presumed death is also a recurrent theme of this early heroic tradition, used in the cases of Perseus and Bellerophon.
Argonauts
Further information: ArgonautsThe only surviving Hellenistic epic, the Argonautica of Apollonius of Rhodes (epic poet, scholar, and director of the Library of Alexandria) tells the myth of the voyage of Jason and the Argonauts to retrieve the Golden Fleece from the mythical land of Colchis. In the Argonautica, Jason is impelled on his quest by king Pelias, who receives a prophecy that a man with one sandal would be his nemesis. Jason loses a sandal in a river, arrives at the court of Pelias, and the epic is set in motion. Nearly every member of the next generation of heroes, as well as Heracles, went with Jason in the ship Argo to fetch the Golden Fleece. This generation also included Theseus, who went to Crete to slay the Minotaur; Atalanta, the female heroine, and Meleager, who once had an epic cycle of his own to rival the Iliad and Odyssey. Pindar, Apollonius and the Bibliotheca endeavor to give full lists of the Argonauts.
Although Apollonius wrote his poem in the 3rd century BC, the composition of the story of the Argonauts is earlier than Odyssey, which shows familiarity with the exploits of Jason (the wandering of Odysseus may have been partly founded on it). In ancient times, the expedition was regarded as a historical fact, an incident in the opening up of the Black Sea to Greek commerce and colonization. It was also extremely popular, forming a cycle to which a number of local legends became attached. The story of Medea, in particular, caught the imagination of the tragic poets.
House of Atreus and Theban Cycle
Further information: Theban Cycle and Seven against ThebesIn between the Argo and the Trojan War, there was a generation known chiefly for its horrific crimes. This includes the doings of Atreus and Thyestes at Argos. Behind the myth of the house of Atreus (one of the two principal heroic dynasties with the house of Labdacus) lies the problem of the devolution of power and of the mode of accession to sovereignty. The twins Atreus and Thyestes with their descendants played the leading role in the tragedy of the devolution of power in Mycenae.
The Theban Cycle deals with events associated especially with Cadmus, the city's founder, and later with the doings of Laius and Oedipus at Thebes; a series of stories that lead to the war of the Seven against Thebes and the eventual pillage of that city at the hands of the Epigoni. (It is not known whether the Seven figured in early epic.) As far as Oedipus is concerned, early epic accounts seem to have him continuing to rule at Thebes after the revelation that Iokaste was his mother, and subsequently marrying a second wife who becomes the mother of his children—markedly different from the tale known to us through tragedy (e.g. Sophocles' Oedipus Rex) and later mythological accounts.
Trojan War and aftermath
Further information: Trojan War and Epic CycleGreek mythology culminates in the Trojan War, fought between Greece and Troy, and its aftermath. In Homer's works, such as the Iliad, the chief stories have already taken shape and substance, and individual themes were elaborated later, especially in Greek drama. The Trojan War also elicited great interest in the Roman culture because of the story of Aeneas, a Trojan hero whose journey from Troy led to the founding of the city that would one day become Rome, as recounted in Virgil's Aeneid (Book II of Virgil's Aeneid contains the best-known account of the sack of Troy). Finally there are two pseudo-chronicles written in Latin that passed under the names of Dictys Cretensis and Dares Phrygius.
The Trojan War cycle, a collection of epic poems, starts with the events leading up to the war: Eris and the golden apple of Kallisti, the Judgement of Paris, the abduction of Helen, the sacrifice of Iphigenia at Aulis. To recover Helen, the Greeks launched a great expedition under the overall command of Menelaus's brother, Agamemnon, king of Argos, or Mycenae, but the Trojans refused to return Helen. The Iliad, which is set in the tenth year of the war, tells of the quarrel between Agamemnon and Achilles, who was the finest Greek warrior, and the consequent deaths in battle of Achilles' beloved comrade Patroclus and Priam's eldest son, Hector. After Hector's death, the Trojans were joined by two exotic allies, Penthesilea, queen of the Amazons, and Memnon, king of the Ethiopians and son of the dawn-goddess, Eos. Achilles killed both of these, but Paris then managed to kill Achilles with an arrow in the heel. Achilles' heel was the only part of his body which was not invulnerable to damage by human weaponry. Before they could take Troy, the Greeks had to steal from the citadel the wooden image of Pallas Athena (the Palladium). Finally, with Athena's help, they built the Trojan Horse. Despite the warnings of Priam's daughter Cassandra, the Trojans were persuaded by Sinon, a Greek who feigned desertion, to take the horse inside the walls of Troy as an offering to Athena; the priest Laocoon, who tried to have the horse destroyed, was killed by sea-serpents. At night the Greek fleet returned, and the Greeks from the horse opened the gates of Troy. In the total sack that followed, Priam and his remaining sons were slaughtered; the Trojan women passed into slavery in various cities of Greece. The adventurous homeward voyages of the Greek leaders (including the wanderings of Odysseus and Aeneas (the Aeneid), and the murder of Agamemnon) were told in two epics, the Returns (the lost Nostoi) and Homer's Odyssey. The Trojan cycle also includes the adventures of the children of the Trojan generation (e.g., Orestes and Telemachus).
The Trojan War provided a variety of themes and became a main source of inspiration for Ancient Greek artists (e.g. metopes on the Parthenon depicting the sack of Troy); this artistic preference for themes deriving from the Trojan Cycle indicates its importance to the Ancient Greek civilization. The same mythological cycle also inspired a series of posterior European literary writings. For instance, Trojan Medieval European writers, unacquainted with Homer at first hand, found in the Troy legend a rich source of heroic and romantic storytelling and a convenient framework into which to fit their own courtly and chivalric ideals. Twelfth-century authors, such as Benoît de Sainte-Maure (Roman de Troie ) and Joseph of Exeter (De Bello Troiano ) describe the war while rewriting the standard version they found in Dictys and Dares. They thus follow Horace's advice and Virgil's example: they rewrite a poem of Troy instead of telling something completely new.
Some of the more famous heroes noted for their inclusion in the Trojan War were:
On the Trojan side:
On the Greek side:
- Ajax (there were two Ajaxes)
- Achilles
- King Agamemnon
- Menelaus
- Odysseus
- Diomedes
Greek and Roman conceptions of myth
Mythology was at the heart of everyday life in Ancient Greece. Greeks regarded mythology as a part of their history. They used myth to explain natural phenomena, cultural variations, traditional enmities, and friendships. It was a source of pride to be able to trace the descent of one's leaders from a mythological hero or a god. Few ever doubted that there was truth behind the account of the Trojan War in the Iliad and Odyssey. According to Victor Davis Hanson, a military historian, columnist, political essayist, and former classics professor, and John Heath, a classics professor, the profound knowledge of the Homeric epos was deemed by the Greeks the basis of their acculturation. Homer was the "education of Greece" (Ἑλλάδος παίδευσις), and his poetry "the Book".
Philosophy and myth
After the rise of philosophy, history, prose and rationalism in the late 5th century BC, the role of myth became less certain, and mythological genealogies gave place to a conception of history which tried to exclude the supernatural (such as the Thucydidean history). While poets and dramatists were reworking the myths, Greek historians and philosophers were beginning to criticize them.
By the sixth century BC, a few radical philosophers were already beginning to label the poets' tales as blasphemous lies: Xenophanes of Colophon complained that Homer and Hesiod attributed to the gods "all that is shameful and disgraceful among men; they steal, commit adultery, and deceive one another." This line of thought found its most sweeping expression in Plato's Republic and Laws. Plato created his own allegorical myths (such as the vision of Er in the Republic), attacked the traditional tales of the gods' tricks, thefts, and adulteries as immoral, and objected to their central role in literature. Plato's criticism was the first serious challenge to the Homeric mythological tradition; he referred to the myths as "old wives' chatter." For his part, Aristotle criticized the pre-Socratic quasi-mythical philosophical approach and underscored that "Hesiod and the theological writers were concerned only with what seemed plausible to themselves, and had no respect for us ... But it is not worth taking seriously writers who show off in the mythical style; as for those who do proceed by proving their assertions, we must cross-examine them."
Nevertheless, even Plato did not manage to wean himself and his society from the influence of myth; his own characterization of Socrates is based on the traditional Homeric and tragic patterns, used by the philosopher to praise the righteous life of his teacher:
But perhaps someone might say: "Are you then not ashamed, Socrates, of having followed such a pursuit, that you are now in danger of being put to death as a result?" But I should make to him a just reply: "You do not speak well, Sir, if you think a man in whom there is even a little merit ought to consider danger of life or death, and not rather regard this only, when he does things, whether the things he does are right or wrong and the acts of a good or a bad man. For according to your argument all the demigods would be bad who died at Troy, including the son of Thetis, who so despised danger, in comparison with enduring any disgrace, that when his mother (and she was a goddess) said to him, as he was eager to slay Hector, something like this, I believe,
My son, if you avenge the death of your friend Patroclus and kill Hector, you yourself shall die; for straightway, after Hector, is death appointed unto you. (Hom. Il. 18.96)
he, when he heard this, made light of death and danger, and feared much more to live as a coward and not to avenge his friends, and said,
Straightway may I die, after doing vengeance upon the wrongdoer, that I may not stay here, jeered at beside the curved ships, a burden of the earth.
Hanson and Heath estimate that Plato's rejection of the Homeric tradition was not favorably received by the grassroots Greek civilization. The old myths were kept alive in local cults; they continued to influence poetry and to provide the main subjects of painting and sculpture.
More sportingly, the 5th century BC tragedian Euripides often played with the old traditions, mocking them, and through the voice of his characters injecting notes of doubt. Yet the subjects of his plays were taken, without exception, from myth. Many of these plays were written in answer to a predecessor's version of the same or similar myth. Euripides mainly impugns the myths about the gods and begins his critique with an objection similar to the one previously expressed by Xenocrates: the gods, as traditionally represented, are far too crassly anthropomorphic.
Hellenistic and Roman rationalism
During the Hellenistic period, mythology took on the prestige of elite knowledge that marks its possessors as belonging to a certain class. At the same time, the skeptical turn of the Classical age became even more pronounced. Greek mythographer Euhemerus established the tradition of seeking an actual historical basis for mythical beings and events. Although his original work (Sacred Scriptures) is lost, much is known about it from what is recorded by Diodorus and Lactantius.
Rationalizing hermeneutics of myth became even more popular under the Roman Empire, thanks to the physicalist theories of Stoic and Epicurean philosophy. Stoics presented explanations of the gods and heroes as physical phenomena, while the Euhemerists rationalized them as historical figures. At the same time, the Stoics and the Neoplatonists promoted the moral significations of the mythological tradition, often based on Greek etymologies. Through his Epicurean message, Lucretius had sought to expel superstitious fears from the minds of his fellow-citizens. Livy, too, is skeptical about the mythological tradition and claims that he does not intend to pass judgement on such legends (fabulae). The challenge for Romans with a strong and apologetic sense of religious tradition was to defend that tradition while conceding that it was often a breeding-ground for superstition. The antiquarian Varro, who regarded religion as a human institution with great importance for the preservation of good in society, devoted rigorous study to the origins of religious cults. In his Antiquitates Rerum Divinarum (which has not survived, but Augustine's City of God indicates its general approach) Varro argues that whereas the superstitious man fears the gods, the truly religious person venerates them as parents. According to Varro, there have been three accounts of deities in the Roman society: the mythical account created by poets for theatre and entertainment, the civil account used by people for veneration as well as by the city, and the natural account created by the philosophers. The best state is, adds Varro, where the civil theology combines the poetic mythical account with the philosopher's.
Roman Academic Cotta ridicules both literal and allegorical acceptance of myth, declaring roundly that myths have no place in philosophy. Cicero is also generally disdainful of myth, but, like Varro, he is emphatic in his support for the state religion and its institutions. It is difficult to know how far down the social scale this rationalism extended. Cicero asserts that no one (not even old women and boys) is so foolish as to believe in the terrors of Hades or the existence of Scyllas, centaurs or other composite creatures, but, on the other hand, the orator elsewhere complains of the superstitious and credulous character of the people. De Natura Deorum is the most comprehensive summary of Cicero's line of thought.
Syncretizing trends
See also: Roman mythologyAncient Greek myths took inspiration from folkloric portrayals of the Olympian gods, as well as Dorian and Ionian deities and their associated folk tales.
In Ancient Roman times, a new Roman mythology was born through syncretization of numerous Greek and other foreign gods. This occurred because the Romans had little mythology of their own, and inheritance of the Greek mythological tradition caused the major Roman gods to adopt characteristics of their Greek equivalents. The gods Zeus and Jupiter are an example of this mythological overlap. In addition to the combination of the two mythological traditions, the association of the Romans with eastern religions led to further syncretizations. For instance, the cult of Sun was introduced in Rome after Aurelian's successful campaigns in Syria. The Asiatic divinities Mithras (that is to say, the Sun) and Ba'al were combined with Apollo and Helios into one Sol Invictus, with conglomerated rites and compound attributes. Apollo might be increasingly identified in religion with Helios or even Dionysus, but texts retelling his myths seldom reflected such developments. The traditional literary mythology was increasingly dissociated from actual religious practice. The worship of Sol as special protector of the emperors and the empire remained the chief imperial religion until it was replaced by Christianity.
The surviving 2nd-century collection of Orphic Hymns (second century AD) and the Saturnalia of Macrobius Ambrosius Theodosius (fifth century) are influenced by the theories of rationalism and the syncretizing trends as well. The Orphic Hymns are a set of pre-classical poetic compositions, attributed to Orpheus, himself the subject of a renowned myth. The stated purpose of the Saturnalia is to transmit the Hellenic culture Macrobius has derived from his reading, even though much of his treatment of gods is colored by Egyptian and North African mythology and theology (which also affect the interpretation of Virgil). In Saturnalia reappear mythographical comments influenced by the Euhemerists, the Stoics and the Neoplatonists.
Modern interpretations
Further information: Modern understanding of Greek mythologyThe genesis of modern understanding of Greek mythology is regarded by some scholars as a double reaction at the end of the eighteenth century against "the traditional attitude of Christian animosity", in which the Christian reinterpretation of myth as a "lie" or fable had been retained. In Germany, by about 1795, there was a growing interest in Homer and Greek mythology. In Göttingen, Johann Matthias Gesner began to revive Greek studies, while his successor, Christian Gottlob Heyne, worked with Johann Joachim Winckelmann, and laid the foundations for mythological research both in Germany and elsewhere. About 100 years later the interest for Greek mythology was still alive when Hermann Steuding published his book Griechische und römische Götter- und Heldensage in 1897.
Comparative and psychoanalytic approaches
See also: Comparative mythologyThe development of comparative philology in the 19th century, together with ethnological discoveries in the 20th century, established the science of myth. Since the Romantics, all study of myth has been comparative. Wilhelm Mannhardt, James Frazer, and Stith Thompson employed the comparative approach to collect and classify the themes of folklore and mythology. In 1871 Edward Burnett Tylor published his Primitive Culture, in which he applied the comparative method and tried to explain the origin and evolution of religion. Tylor's procedure of drawing together material culture, ritual and myth of widely separated cultures influenced both Carl Jung and Joseph Campbell. Max Müller applied the new science of comparative mythology to the study of myth, in which he detected the distorted remains of Aryan nature worship. Bronisław Malinowski emphasized the ways myth fulfills common social functions. Claude Lévi-Strauss and other structuralists have compared the formal relations and patterns in myths throughout the world.
Sigmund Freud introduced a transhistorical and biological conception of man and a view of myth as an expression of repressed ideas. Dream interpretation is the basis of Freudian myth interpretation and Freud's concept of dreamwork recognizes the importance of contextual relationships for the interpretation of any individual element in a dream. This suggestion would find an important point of rapprochement between the structuralist and psychoanalytic approaches to myth in Freud's thought. Carl Jung extended the transhistorical, psychological approach with his theory of the "collective unconscious" and the archetypes (inherited "archaic" patterns), often encoded in myth, that arise out of it. According to Jung, "myth-forming structural elements must be present in the unconscious psyche." Comparing Jung's methodology with Joseph Campbell's theory, Robert A. Segal (1990) concludes that "to interpret a myth Campbell simply identifies the archetypes in it. An interpretation of the Odyssey, for example, would show how Odysseus's life conforms to a heroic pattern. Jung, by contrast, considers the identification of archetypes merely the first step in the interpretation of a myth." Karl Kerényi, one of the founders of modern studies in Greek mythology, gave up his early views of myth, in order to apply Jung's theories of archetypes to Greek myth.
Origin theories
See also: Mycenaean religion; Mycenaean deities; and Similarities between Roman, Greek and Etruscan mythologiesMax Müller attempted to understand an Indo-European religious form by tracing it back to its Indo-European (or, in Müller's time, "Aryan") "original" manifestation. In 1891, he claimed that "the most important discovery which has been made during the nineteenth century concerning the ancient history of mankind ... was this sample equation: Sanskrit Dyaus-pitar = Greek Zeus = Latin Jupiter = Old Norse Tyr". The question of Greek mythology's place in Indo-European studies has generated much scholarship since Müller's time. For example, philologist Georges Dumézil draws a comparison between the Greek Uranus and the Sanskrit Varuna, although there is no hint that he believes them to be originally connected. In other cases, close parallels in character and function suggest a common heritage, yet lack of linguistic evidence makes it difficult to prove, as in the case of the Greek Moirai and the Norns of Norse mythology.
It appears that the Mycenaean religion was the mother of the Greek religion and its pantheon already included many divinities that can be found in classical Greece. However, Greek mythology is generally seen as having heavy influence of Pre-Greek and Near Eastern cultures, and as such contains few important elements for the reconstruction of the Proto-Indo-European religion. Consequently, Greek mythology received minimal scholarly attention in the context of Indo-European comparative mythology until the mid-2000s.
Archaeology and mythography have revealed influence from Asia Minor and the Near East. Adonis seems to be the Greek counterpart—more clearly in cult than in myth—of a Near Eastern "dying god". Cybele is rooted in Anatolian culture while much of Aphrodite's iconography may spring from Semitic goddesses. There are also possible parallels between the earliest divine generations (Chaos and its children) and Tiamat in the Enuma Elish. According to Meyer Reinhold, "near Eastern theogonic concepts, involving divine succession through violence and generational conflicts for power, found their way…into Greek mythology."
In addition to Indo-European and Near Eastern origins, some scholars have speculated on the debts of Greek mythology to the indigenous pre-Greek societies: Crete, Mycenae, Pylos, Thebes and Orchomenus. Historians of religion were fascinated by a number of apparently ancient configurations of myth connected with Crete (the god as bull, Zeus and Europa, Pasiphaë who yields to the bull and gives birth to the Minotaur, etc.). Martin P. Nilsson asserts, based on the representations and general function of the gods, that a lot of Minoan gods and religious conceptions were fused in the Mycenaean religion. and concluded that all great classical Greek myths were tied to Mycenaean centres and anchored in prehistoric times. Nevertheless, according to Burkert, the iconography of the Cretan Palace Period has provided almost no confirmation for these theories.
Motifs in Western art and literature
Further information: Greek mythology in western art and literature See also: List of films based on Greco-Roman mythology and Greek mythology in popular cultureThe widespread adoption of Christianity did not curb the popularity of the myths. With the rediscovery of classical antiquity in the Renaissance, the poetry of Ovid became a major influence on the imagination of poets, dramatists, musicians and artists. From the early years of Renaissance, artists such as Leonardo da Vinci, Michelangelo, and Raphael, portrayed the Pagan subjects of Greek mythology alongside more conventional Christian themes. Through the medium of Latin and the works of Ovid, Greek myth influenced medieval and Renaissance poets such as Petrarch, Boccaccio and Dante in Italy.
In Northern Europe, Greek mythology never took the same hold of the visual arts, but its effect was very obvious on literature. The English imagination was fired by Greek mythology starting with Chaucer and John Milton and continuing through Shakespeare to Robert Bridges in the 20th century. Racine in France and Goethe in Germany revived Greek drama, reworking the ancient myths. Although during the Enlightenment of the 18th century reaction against Greek myth spread throughout Europe, the myths continued to provide an important source of raw material for dramatists, including those who wrote the libretti for many of Handel's and Mozart's operas.
By the end of the 18th century, Romanticism initiated a surge of enthusiasm for all things Greek, including Greek mythology. In Britain, new translations of Greek tragedies and Homer inspired contemporary poets (such as Alfred Tennyson, Keats, Byron and Shelley) and painters (such as Lord Leighton and Lawrence Alma-Tadema). Christoph Gluck, Richard Strauss, Jacques Offenbach and many others set Greek mythological themes to music. American authors of the 19th century, such as Thomas Bulfinch and Nathaniel Hawthorne, held that the study of the classical myths was essential to the understanding of English and American literature. In more recent times, classical themes have been reinterpreted by dramatists Jean Anouilh, Jean Cocteau, and Jean Giraudoux in France, Eugene O'Neill in America, and T. S. Eliot in Britain and by novelists such as James Joyce and André Gide.
References
Notes
- Cuthbertson (1975) selects a wider range of epic, from Gilgamesh to Voltaire's Henriade, but his central theme—that myths encode mechanisms of cultural dynamics structure community by the creation of moral consensus—is a familiar mainstream view that applies to Greek myth.
Citations
- "Volume: Hellas, Article: Greek Mythology". Encyclopaedia The Helios. 1952.
- Cartwirght, Mark. "Greek Mythology". World History Encyclopedia. Archived from the original on 18 April 2021. Retrieved 26 March 2018.
- ^ Adkins, A. W. H.; Pollard, John R. T. (2002) . "Greek Mythology". Encyclopædia Britannica.
- Foley, John Miles (1999). "Homeric and South Slavic Epic". Homer's Traditional Art. Penn State Press. ISBN 978-0-271-01870-6.
- ^ Graf, Fritz. 2009 . Greek Mythology: An Introduction, translated by T. Marier. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 9780801846571.
- Alms, Anthony. 2007. Theology, Trauerspiel, and the Conceptual Foundations of Early German Opera. City University of New York.
- ^ Hard, Robin (2003). "Sources of Greek Myth". The Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology: based on H. J. Rose's "A Handbook of Greek mythology". London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-18636-0.
- ^ Miles, Geoffrey (1999). "The Myth-kitty" in Classical Mythology in English Literature: A Critical Anthology. Chicago: University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-415-14754-5.
- ^ Klatt, Mary J., and Antoinette Brazouski. 1994. "Preface" in Children's Books on Ancient Greek and Roman Mythology: An Annotated Bibliography. Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-28973-6.
- Cartledge, Paul A. 2004. The Spartans (translated in Greek). Livanis. ISBN 978-960-14-0843-9.
- Cartledge, Paul A. 2002. "Inventing the Past: History v. Myth" in The Greeks. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-280388-7.
- Pasiphae Archived 15 May 2018 at the Wayback Machine, Encyclopedia: Greek Gods, Spirits, Monsters
- Jane Henle, Greek Myths: A Vase Painter's Notebook (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 1973) ISBN 0-253-32636-2
- Homer, Iliad, 8. An epic poem about the Battle of Troy. 366–369
- Cuthbertson, Gilbert (1975) Political Myth and Epic. Ann Arbor: Michigan State University Press.
- ^ Albala, Ken G, Claudia Durst Johnson, and Vernon E. Johnson. 2000. Understanding the Odyssey. Courier Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-41107-1.
- Calimach, Andrew, ed. 2002. "The Cultural Background." Pp. 12–109 in Lovers' Legends: The Gay Greek Myths. New Rochelle, NY: Haiduk Press. ISBN 978-0-9714686-0-3.
- Percy, William A. 1999. "The Institutionalization of Pederasty" in Pederasty and Pedagogy in Archaic Greece. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-252-06740-2.
- ^ Dowden, Ken. 1992. "Myth and Mythology" in The Uses of Greek Mythology. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-06135-3.
- ^ Burkert, Walter. 2002. "Prehistory and the Minoan Mycenaen Era" in Greek Religion: Archaic and Classical, translated by J. Raffan. Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 978-0-631-15624-6.
- Hesiod, Works and Days, 90–105 Archived 12 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine
- Ovid, Metamorphoses, I, 89–162 Archived 23 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Hesiod, Theogony, 116–138
- Hesiod, Theogony, 713–735
- ^ Guirand, Felix (1987) . "Greek Mythology". In Guirand, Felix (ed.). New Larousse Encyclopedia of Mythology. Translated by R. Aldington and D. Ames. Hamlyn. ISBN 978-0-600-02350-0.
- Homeric Hymn to Hermes, 414–435 Archived 25 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Betegh, Gábor. 2004. "The Interpretation of the poet" in The Derveni Papyrus. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-80108-9.
- Algra, Keimpe. 1999. "The Beginnings of Cosmology" in The Cambridge Companion to Early Greek Philosophy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-44667-9.
- ^ Stoll, Heinrich Wilhelm. 1852. Handbook of the Religion and Mythology of the Greeks, translated by R. B. Paul. Francis & John Rivington.
- Adkins, A. W. H.; Pollard, John R. T. (2 March 2020) . "Greek Religion". Encyclopædia Britannica.
- J. Cashford, The Homeric Hymns, vii
- Nagy, Gregory. 1992. "The Hellenization of the Indo-European Poetics" in Greek Mythology and Poetics. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-8048-5.
- Dell, Christopher (2012). Mythology: The Complete Guide to our Imagined Worlds. New York: Thames & Hudson. p. 342. ISBN 978-0-500-51615-7.
- Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite, 75–109 Archived 12 September 2006 at the Wayback Machine
- Morris, Ian. 2000. Archaeology As Cultural History. Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 978-0-631-19602-0.
- Weaver, John B. 1998. "Introduction" in The Plots of Epiphany. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-018266-8.
- Bushnell, Rebecca W. 2005. "Helicocentric Stoicism in the Saturnalia: The Egyptian Apollo" in Medieval: A Companion to Tragedy. Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4051-0735-8.
- Trobe, Kala. 2001. "Dionysus" in Invoke the Gods. Llewellyn Worldwide. ISBN 978-0-7387-0096-0.
- Nilsson, Martin P. 1940. "The Religion of Eleusis" in Greek Popular Religion Archived 1 December 2017 at the Wayback Machine. New York: Columbia University Press. p. 50 Archived 1 December 2017 at the Wayback Machine.
- Homeric Hymn to Demeter, 255–274 Archived 16 June 2022 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Kelsey, Francis W. (1889). A Handbook of Greek Mythology. Allyn and Bacon. p. 30.
- ^ Rose, Herbert Jennings. 1991. A Handbook of Greek Mythology. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-04601-5.
- Dupuis, C. F. The Origin of All Religious Worship. p. 86.
- ^ "Heracles". Encyclopædia Britannica. 6 February 2020 .
- Papadopoulou, Thalia. 2005. "Introduction" in Heracles and Euripidean Tragedy. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-85126-8. p. 1.
- Herodotus, The Histories, I, 6–7 Archived 16 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine.
- Kirk, Geoffrey Stephen. 1973. "The Thematic Simplicity of the Myths" in Myth: Its Meaning and Functions in Ancient and Other Cultures Archived 27 December 2022 at the Wayback Machine. Berkeley: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-02389-5. p. 183.
- Apollodorus, Library and Epitome, 1.9.16 Archived 17 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
- Apollonius, Argonautica, I, 20ff Archived 12 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine.
- Pindar, Pythian Odes, Pythian 4.1 Archived 17 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
- ^ "Argonaut". Encyclopædia Britannica. 2002.
- ^ Grimal, Pierre. 1986. "Argonauts." P. 58 in The Dictionary of Classical Mythology. Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 978-0-631-20102-1.
- Bonnefoy, Yves. 1992. "Kinship Structures in Greek Heroic Dynasty" in Greek and Egyptian Mythologies. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-06454-3. p. 103.
- ^ "Trojan War". Encyclopaedia The Helios. 1952.
- ^ "Troy (Ancient City)". Encyclopædia Britannica. 25 April 2019 .
- Dunlop, John. 1842. "Romances of Chivalry" in The History of Fiction. Carey and Hart. ISBN 978-1-149-40338-9. p. 355.
- Kelly, Douglas. The Conspiracy of Allusion. p. 121.
- ^ Hanson, Victor Davis, and John Heath. 1999. Who Killed Homer, with translations by R. Karakatsani. Kakos. ISBN 978-960-352-545-5. p. 37.
- ^ Griffin, Jasper. 1986. "Greek Myth and Hesiod" in The Oxford Illustrated History of Greece and the Hellenistic World, edited by J. Boardman, J. Griffin, and O. Murray. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-285438-4. p. 80.
-
Veyne, Paul (15 June 1988) . Did the Greeks Believe in Their Myths?: An Essay on the Constitutive Imagination. Translated by Wissing, Paula. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. p. 1. ISBN 9780226854342. Retrieved 14 November 2023.
Did the Greeks believe in their mythology? The answer is difficult, for 'believe' means so many things. Not everyone believed that Minos, after his death, continued being a judge in Hell or that Theseus fought the Minotaur, and they knew that poets 'lie' n the minds of the Greeks, Theseus had, nonetheless, existed. Why did the Greeks go to the trouble of wishing to separate the wheat from the chaff in myth ? We see the extent of the problem when we realize that this attitude toward myth lasted for over two millennia.
- Plato, Theaetetus, 176b Archived 8 March 2021 at the Wayback Machine
- Plato, Apology, 28b-d Archived 8 March 2021 at the Wayback Machine
- ^ Gale, Monica R. 1994. Myth and Poetry in Lucretius. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-45135-2.
- "Euhemerus". Encyclopædia Britannica. 3 January 2020 .
- ^ Chance, Jane. 1994. Medieval Mythography. University Press of Florida. ISBN 978-0-8130-1256-8. p. 69.
- ^ Walsh, Patrick Gerald. 1998. The Nature of the Gods. New York: Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-282511-7.
- ^ Barfield, Raymond (2011). The Ancient Quarrel Between Philosophy and Poetry. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. pp. 75–76. ISBN 978-1-139-49709-1.
- Cicero, Tusculanae Disputationes, 1.11 Archived 15 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine
- Cicero, De Divinatione, 2.81 Archived 10 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine
- Janson, Horst Woldemar; Janson, Anthony F. (2004). Touborg, Sarah; Moore, Julia; Oppenheimer, Margaret; Castro, Anita (eds.). History of Art: The Western Tradition. Vol. 1 (Revised 6th ed.). Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Pearson Education. p. 111. ISBN 0-13-182622-0.
- North John A., Mary Beard, and Simon R. F. Price. 1998. "The Religions of Imperial Rome" in Classical Mythology in English Literature: A Critical Anthology. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-31682-8. p. 259.
- Hacklin, Joseph. 1994. "The Mythology of Persia" in Asiatic Mythology. Asian Educational Services. ISBN 978-81-206-0920-4. p. 38.
- Sacred Texts, Orphic Hymns Archived 18 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine
- Ackerman, Robert. 1991. Introduction to Jane Ellen Harrison's 'A Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion'. p. xv.
- "Griechische und römische götter- und heldensage; von dr. Hermann Steuding ..." HathiTrust. hdl:2027/nnc1.cu01992929. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
- "OGND - results/titledata". swb.bsz-bw.de. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
- "Katalog der Deutschen Nationalbibliothek". portal.dnb.de. Retrieved 25 August 2023.
- "Theologische Literaturzeitung, 37 - OpenDigi". idb.ub.uni-tuebingen.de. Retrieved 5 September 2023.
- Steuding, Hermann (1903). Greek and Roman Mythology & Heroic Legend, by Prof. H. Steuding. J.M. Dent & Company.
- ^ Buxton, Richard G. A.; Bolle, Kees W.; Smith, Jonathan Z. (2002). "myth". Encyclopædia Britannica.
- Segal, Robert A. 1999. Theorizing about Myth. University of Massachusetts Press. ISBN 978-1-55849-191-5. p. 16.
- ^ Allen, Douglas. 1978. Structure & Creativity in Religion: Hermeneutics in Mircea Eliade's Phenomenology and New Directions. Berlin: Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 978-90-279-7594-2.
- Caldwell, Richard. 1990. "The Psychoanalytic Interpretation of Greek Myth" in Approaches to Greek Myth. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-3864-4. p. 344.
- Jung, Carl. The Psychology of the Child Archetype. p. 85.
- Segal, Robert A. (1990). "The Romantic Appeal of Joseph Campbell." Christian Century (April 1990):332–5. Archived from the original on 7 January 2007.
- H.I. Poleman, Review, 78–79
- A. Winterbourne, When the Norns Have Spoken, 87
- Nilsson, Martin Persson. 1967. Geschichte der Griechischen Religion (3rd ed.). Munich: C.H. Beck Verlag. Volume I, p. 339.
- Paul, Adams John (10 January 2010). "Mycenaean Divinities". Northridge, CA: California State University. Archived from the original on 1 October 2018. Retrieved 25 September 2013.
- Puhvel, Jaan. 1987. Comparative Mythology. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. p. 138, 143.
- Mallory, J.P., and Douglas Q. Adams. 2006. Oxford Introduction to Proto-Indo-European and the Proto-Indo-European World. London: Oxford University Press. p. 440.
- L. Edmunds, Approaches to Greek Myth, 184
- Segal, Robert A. 1991. "A Greek Eternal Child" in Myth and the Polis, edited by D. C. Pozzi and J. M. Wickersham. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-2473-1. p. 64.
- M. Reinhold, The Generation Gap in Antiquity, 349
- Martin P. Nilsson (1927) The Minoan-Mycenaean Religion and Its Survival in Greek Religion
- M. Wood, In Search of the Trojan War, 112
- ^ L. Burn, Greek Myths, 75
- Miles, Geoffrey, ed. (2006). Classical Mythology in English literature: A Critical Anthology. Routledge. ISBN 0415147557. OCLC 912455670.
- l. Burn, Greek Myths, 75
- l. Burn, Greek Myths, 75–76
Primary sources (Greek and Roman)
- Aeschylus, The Persians. See original text in Perseus program Archived 17 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
- Aeschylus, Prometheus Bound. See original text in Perseus program Archived 2 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
- Apollodorus, Library and Epitome. See original text in Perseus program Archived 2 May 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
- Apollonius of Rhodes, Argonautica, Book I. See original text in Sacred Texts Archived 12 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine.
- Cicero, De Divinatione. See original text in the Latin Library Archived 10 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine.
- Cicero, Tusculanae resons. See original text in the Latin Library Archived 15 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine.
- Herodotus, The Histories, I. See original text in the Sacred Texts Archived 16 November 2017 at the Wayback Machine.
- Hesiod, Works and Days. Translated into English Archived 12 May 2015 at the Wayback Machine by Hugh G. Evelyn-White.
- Hesiod (1914). Theogony . Translated by Hugh Gerard Evelyn-White – via Wikisource.
- Homer, Iliad. See original text in Perseus program Archived 27 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
- Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite. Translated into English by Gregory Nagy.
- Homeric Hymn to Demeter. See original text in Perseus project Archived 11 February 2021 at the Wayback Machine.
- Homeric Hymn to Hermes. See the English translation in the Medieval and Classical Literature Library Archived 25 October 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
- Ovid, Metamorphoses. See original text in the Latin Library Archived 23 October 2017 at the Wayback Machine.
- Pausanias, Description of Greece See original text in Perseus program Archived 20 July 2021 at the Wayback Machine.
- Pindar, Pythian Odes, Pythian 4: For Arcesilas of Cyrene Chariot Race 462 BC. See original text in the Perseus program Archived 17 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
- Plato, Apology. See original text in Perseus program Archived 17 September 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
- Plato, Theaetetus. See original text in Perseus program Archived 29 March 2008 at the Wayback Machine.
Secondary sources
- Ackerman, Robert (1991). "Introduction". Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion by Jane Ellen Harrison (Reprint ed.). Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-01514-9.
- Albala Ken G; Johnson Claudia Durst; Johnson Vernon E. (2000). "Origin of Mythology". Understanding the Odyssey. Courier Dover Publications. ISBN 978-0-486-41107-1.
- Algra, Keimpe (1999). "The Beginnings of Cosmology". The Cambridge Companion to Early Greek Philosophy. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-44667-9.
- Allen, Douglas (1978). "Early Methological Approaches". Structure & Creativity in Religion: Hermeneutics in Mircea Eliade's Phenomenology and New Directions. Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 978-90-279-7594-2.
- "Argonaut". Encyclopædia Britannica. 2002.
- Betegh, Gábor (2004). "The Interpretation of the poet". The Derveni Papyrus. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-80108-9.
- Bonnefoy, Yves (1992). "Kinship Structures in Greek Heroic Dynasty". Greek and Egyptian Mythologies. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-06454-3.
- Bulfinch, Thomas (2003). "Greek Mythology and Homer". Bulfinch's Greek and Roman Mythology. Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-30881-9.
- Burkert, Walter (2002). "Prehistory and the Minoan Mycenaen Era". Greek Religion: Archaic and Classical (translated by John Raffan). Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 978-0-631-15624-6.
- Burn, Lucilla (1990). Greek Myths. University of Texas Press. ISBN 978-0-292-72748-9.
- Bushnell, Rebecca W. (2005). "Helicocentric Stoicism in the Saturnalia: The Egyptian Apollo". Medieval A Companion to Tragedy. Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 978-1-4051-0735-8.
- Chance, Jane (1994). "Helicocentric Stoicism in the Saturnalia: The Egyptian Apollo". Medieval Mythography. University Press of Florida. ISBN 978-0-8130-1256-8.
- Caldwell, Richard (1990). "The Psychoanalytic Interpretation of Greek Myth". Approaches to Greek Myth. Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-3864-4.
- Calimach, Andrew (2002). "The Cultural Background". Lovers' Legends: The Gay Greek Myths. Haiduk Press. ISBN 978-0-9714686-0-3.
- Cartledge, Paul A. (2002). "Inventing the Past: History v. Myth". The Greeks. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-280388-7.
- Cartledge, Paul A. (2004). The Spartans (translated in Greek). Livanis. ISBN 978-960-14-0843-9.
- Cashford, Jules (2003). "Introduction". The Homeric Hymns. Penguin Classics. ISBN 978-0-14-043782-9.
- Dowden, Ken (1992). "Myth and Mythology". The Uses of Greek Mythology. Routledge (UK). ISBN 978-0-415-06135-3.
- Dunlop, John (1842). "Romances of Chivalry". The History of Fiction. Carey and Hart. ISBN 978-1-149-40338-9.
- Edmunds, Lowell (1980). "Comparative Approaches". Approaches to Greek Myth. Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-3864-4.
- "Euhemerus". Encyclopædia Britannica. 2002.
- Foley, John Miles (1999). "Homeric and South Slavic Epic". Homer's Traditional Art. Penn State Press. ISBN 978-0-271-01870-6.
- Gale, Monica R. (1994). "The Cultural Background". Myth and Poetry in Lucretius. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-45135-2.
- "Greek Mythology". Encyclopædia Britannica. 2002.
- "Greek Religion". Encyclopædia Britannica. 2002.
- Griffin, Jasper (1986). "Greek Myth and Hesiod". The Oxford Illustrated History of Greece and the Hellenistic World edited by John Boardman, Jasper Griffin and Oswyn Murray. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-285438-4.
- Grimal, Pierre (1986). "Argonauts". The Dictionary of Classical Mythology. Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 978-0-631-20102-1.
- Hacklin, Joseph (1994). "The Mythology of Persia". Asiatic Mythology. Asian Educational Services. ISBN 978-81-206-0920-4.
- Hanson, Victor Davis; Heath, John (1999). Who Killed Homer (translated in Greek by Rena Karakatsani). Kakos. ISBN 978-960-352-545-5.
- Hard, Robin (2003). "Sources of Greek Myth". The Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology: based on H. J. Rose's "A Handbook of Greek mythology". Routledge (UK). ISBN 978-0-415-18636-0.
- "Heracles". Encyclopædia Britannica. 2002.
- Jung Carl Gustav, Kerényi Karl (2001). "Prolegomena". Essays on a Science of Mythology (Reprint ed.). Princeton University Press. ISBN 978-0-691-01756-3.
- Jung, C.J. (2002). "Troy in Latin and French Joseph of Exeter's "Ylias" and Benoît de Sainte-Maure's "Roman de Troie"". Science of Mythology. Routledge (UK). ISBN 978-0-415-26742-7.
- Kelly, Douglas (2003). "Sources of Greek Myth". An Outline of Greek and Roman Mythology. Douglas Kelly. ISBN 978-0-415-18636-0.
- Kelsey, Francis W. (1889). A Handbook of Greek Mythology. Allyn and Bacon.
- Kirk, Geoffrey Stephen (1973). "The Thematic Simplicity of the Myths". Myth: Its Meaning and Functions in Ancient and Other Cultures. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-02389-5.
- Kirk, Geoffrey Stephen (1974). The Nature of Greek Myths. Harmondsworth: Penguin. ISBN 978-0-14-021783-4.
- Klatt J. Mary, Brazouski Antoinette (1994). "Preface". Children's Books on Ancient Greek and Roman Mythology: An Annotated Bibliography. Greenwood Press. ISBN 978-0-313-28973-6.
- Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae, Artemis-Verlag, 1981–1999
- Miles, Geoffrey (1999). "The Myth-kitty". Classical Mythology in English Literature: A Critical Anthology. University of Illinois Press. ISBN 978-0-415-14754-5.
- Morris, Ian (2000). Archaeology As Cultural History. Blackwell Publishing. ISBN 978-0-631-19602-0.
- "myth". Encyclopædia Britannica. 2002.
- Nagy, Gregory (1992). "The Hellenization of the Indo-European Poetics". Greek Mythology and Poetics. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-8048-5.
- Nilsson, Martin P. (1940). "The Religion of Eleusis". Greek Popular Religion. Columbia University Press. Archived from the original on 1 December 2017. Retrieved 20 November 2006.
- North John A.; Beard Mary; Price Simon R.F. (1998). "The Religions of Imperial Rome". Classical Mythology in English Literature: A Critical Anthology. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-31682-8.
- Papadopoulou, Thalia (2005). "Introduction". Heracles and Euripidean Tragedy. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-85126-8.
- Percy, William Armostrong III (1999). "The Institutionalization of Pederasty". Pederasty and Pedagogy in Archaic Greece. Routledge (UK). ISBN 978-0-252-06740-2.
- Poleman, Horace I. (March 1943). "Review of "Ouranos-Varuna. Etude de mythologie comparee indo-europeenne by Georges Dumezil"". Journal of the American Oriental Society. 63 (1): 78–79. doi:10.2307/594160. ISSN 0003-0279. JSTOR 594160.
- Reinhold, Meyer (20 October 1970). "The Generation Gap in Antiquity". Proceedings of the American Philosophical Society. 114 (5): 347–65. JSTOR 985800.
- Rose, Herbert Jennings (1991). A Handbook of Greek Mythology. Routledge (UK). ISBN 978-0-415-04601-5.
- Segal, Robert A. (1991). "A Greek Eternal Child". Myth and the Polis edited by Dora Carlisky Pozzi, John Moore Wickersham. Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-2473-1.
- Segal, Robert A. (4 April 1990). "The Romantic Appeal of Joseph Campbell". Christian Century. Archived from the original on 7 January 2007.
- Segal, Robert A. (1999). "Jung on Mythology". Theorizing about Myth. Univ of Massachusetts Press. ISBN 978-1-55849-191-5.
- Stoll, Heinrich Wilhelm (translated by R. B. Paul) (1852). Handbook of the religion and mythology of the Greeks. Francis and John Rivington.
- Trobe, Kala (2001). "Dionysus". Invoke the Gods. Llewellyn Worldwide. ISBN 978-0-7387-0096-0.
- "Trojan War". Encyclopaedia The Helios. 1952.
- "Troy". Encyclopædia Britannica. 2002.
- "Volume: Hellas, Article: Greek Mythology". Encyclopaedia The Helios. 1952.
- Walsh, Patrick Gerald (1998). "Liberating Appearance in Mythic Content". The Nature of the Gods. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-282511-7.
- Weaver, John B. (1998). "Introduction". The Plots of Epiphany. Walter de Gruyter. ISBN 978-3-11-018266-8.
- Winterbourne, Anthony (2004). "Spinning and Weaving Fate". When the Norns Have Spoken. Fairleigh Dickinson University Press. ISBN 978-0-8386-4048-7.
- Wood, Michael (1998). "The Coming of the Greeks". In Search of the Trojan War. University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-21599-3.
Further reading
- Gantz, Timothy (1993). Early Greek Myth: A Guide to Literary and Artistic Sources. Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 978-0-8018-4410-2. Archived from the original on 30 May 2023. Retrieved 6 November 2021.
- Graves, Robert (1993) . The Greek Myths (Cmb/Rep ed.). Penguin (Non-Classics). ISBN 978-0-14-017199-0.
- Hamilton, Edith (1998) . Mythology (New ed.). Back Bay Books. ISBN 978-0-316-34151-6.
- Kerenyi, Karl (1980) . The Gods of the Greeks (Reissue ed.). Thames & Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-27048-6.
- Kerenyi, Karl (1978) . The Heroes of the Greeks (Reissue ed.). Thames & Hudson. ISBN 978-0-500-27049-3.
- Luchte, James (2011). Early Greek Thought: Before the Dawn. Bloomsbury. ISBN 978-0-567-35331-3.
- Morford M.P.O., Lenardon L.J. (2006). Classical Mythology. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-530805-1.
- Pinsent, John (1972). Greek Mythology. Bantam. ISBN 978-0-448-00848-6.
- Pinsent, John (1991). Myths and Legends of Ancient Greece. Library of the World's Myths and Legends. Peter Bedrick Books. ISBN 978-0-87226-250-8.
- Powell, Barry (2008). Classical Myth (6th ed.). Prentice-Hall. ISBN 978-0-13-606171-7.
- Powell, Barry (2001). A Short Introduction to Classical Myth. Prentice-Hall. ISBN 978-0-13-025839-7.
- Ruck Carl, Staples Blaise Daniel (1994). The World of Classical Myth. Carolina Academic Press. ISBN 978-0-89089-575-7.
- Smith, William (1870), Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology.
- Veyne, Paul (1988). Did the Greeks Believe in Their Myths? An Essay on Constitutive Imagination. (translated by Paula Wissing). University of Chicago. ISBN 978-0-226-85434-2.
- Woodward, Roger D., ed. (2007). The Cambridge Companion to Greek Mythology. Cambridge; New York: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-84520-5.
External links
Library resources aboutGreek mythology
Listen to this article (1 hour and 8 minutes) This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 19 January 2009 (2009-01-19), and does not reflect subsequent edits.(Audio help · More spoken articles)
- Media related to Greek mythology at Wikimedia Commons
- Greek Myths on In Our Time at the BBC
- Library of Classical Mythology Texts translations of works of classical literature
- LIMC-France provides databases dedicated to Graeco-Roman mythology and its iconography.
- Martin P. Nilsson, The Mycenaean Origin of Greek Mythology, on Google books
- Greek mythology, the age of gods, myths and heroes, Hellenism.Net
Ancient Greek deities | |||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Early deities | |||||||||||||
Titans |
| ||||||||||||
Olympian deities |
| ||||||||||||
Water deities |
| ||||||||||||
Personifications |
| ||||||||||||
Other deities |
|
Mythology of Europe | |
---|---|
Sovereign states |
|
States with limited recognition | |
Dependencies and other entities |