Greek Mythology
Greek Mythology
Greek Mythology
Greek mythology
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Scenes from Greek mythology depicted in ancient art. Left-to-right, top-to-bottom: the birth
of Aphrodite, a revel with Dionysus and Silenus, Adonis playing the kithara for
Aphrodite, Heracles slaying the Lernaean Hydra, the Colchian dragon regurgitating Jason in the
presence of Athena, Hermes with his mother Maia, the Trojan Horse, and Odysseus's ship sailing
past the island of the sirens
Greek mythology
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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.[4]:43
Achilles and Penthesileia by Exekias, c. 540 BC, British Museum, London
Contents
1Sources
o 1.1Literary sources
o 1.2Archaeological sources
2Survey of mythic history
o 2.1Origins of the world and the gods
2.1.1Greek pantheon
o 2.2Age of gods and mortals
o 2.3Heroic age
2.3.1Heracles and the Heracleidae
2.3.2Argonauts
2.3.3House of Atreus and Theban Cycle
2.3.4Trojan War and aftermath
3Greek and Roman conceptions of myth
o 3.1Philosophy and myth
o 3.2Hellenistic and Roman rationalism
o 3.3Syncretizing trends
4Modern interpretations
o 4.1Comparative and psychoanalytic approaches
o 4.2Origin theories
5Motifs in Western art and literature
6References
o 6.1Notes
o 6.2Citations
o 6.3Primary sources (Greek and Roman)
o 6.4Secondary sources
7Further reading
8External links
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.[5]: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 a strong indication that many
elements of Greek mythology have strong factual and historical roots.[6]
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.[7]:1 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.
Prometheus (1868 by Gustave Moreau). The myth of Prometheus first was attested by Hesiod and
then constituted the basis for a tragic trilogy of plays, possibly by Aeschylus, consisting
of Prometheus Bound, Prometheus Unbound, and Prometheus Pyrphoros.
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.[8]:7 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 etiological 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 gives advice on the best
way to succeed in a dangerous world, rendered yet more dangerous by its
gods.[3]
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.[9]:xii 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.[8]:8
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.[9]:xii Herodotus in particular,
searched the various traditions presented him and found the historical or
mythological roots in the confrontation between Greece and the East.
[10]:60[11]:22
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:
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.[i][14]
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.
[15]:17
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.[15]:18
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 to many legendary figures.
[16]
Previously existing myths, such as those of Achilles and Patroclus, also then
were cast in a pederastic light.[17]: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.[18]: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:
Amor Vincit Omnia (Love Conquers All), a depiction of the god of love, Eros. By Michelangelo Merisi
da Caravaggio, circa 1601–1602.
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.[24]:98 She was already pregnant with Athena, however, and she
burst forth from his head—fully-grown and dressed for war.[24]: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. 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.
[25]
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.[26]: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.
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.[19]:236[26]:147
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.[3][27]:45 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 gods
Zeus, disguised as a swan, seduces Leda, the Queen of Sparta. A sixteenth-century copy of the lost
original by Michelangelo.
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.[8]: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 Anchises to produce Aeneas.[32]
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
own 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."[33]:291 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.[34]:50 The story of the arrival of Dionysus to establish his
cult in Thrace was also the subject of an Aeschylean trilogy.[35]:28 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.[36]:195
El Juicio de Paris by Enrique Simonet, 1904. Paris is holding the golden apple on his right hand while
surveying the goddesses in a calculative manner.
Aeneas
Hector
Paris
On the Greek side:
Raphael's Plato in The School of Athens fresco (probably in the likeness of Leonardo da Vinci). The
philosopher expelled the study of Homer, of the tragedies and of the related mythological traditions
from his utopian Republic.
After the rise of philosophy, history, prose and rationalism 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 Thucydidean history).[57] While poets and dramatists were reworking
the myths, Greek historians and philosophers were beginning to criticize them.[8]
A few radical philosophers like Xenophanes 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."[5]:169-70 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.[8] Plato's criticism was the first serious challenge to the Homeric
mythological tradition,[56] referring to the myths as "old wives' chatter."[58] 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."[57]
Nevertheless, even Plato did not manage to wean himself and his society from
the influence of myth; his own characterization for Socrates is based on the
traditional Homeric and tragic patterns, used by the philosopher to praise the
righteous life of his teacher:[59]
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.[56] The old myths were kept alive in
local cults; they continued to influence poetry
and to form the main subject of painting and
sculpture.[57]
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.[5]:169-70
Hellenistic and Roman rationalism
Modern interpretations
Further information: 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 fable had
been retained.[70] 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.[5]:9
Comparative and psychoanalytic
approaches
References
Notes
1. ^ 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 creation
of moral consensus—is a familiar mainstream view
that applies to Greek myth.
Citations
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John R. T. (2002) [1998]. "Greek
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4. ^ Foley, John Miles (1999). "Homeric and South
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12. ^ Pasiphae, Encyclopedia: Greek Gods, Spirits,
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14. ^ Cuthbertson, Gilbert (1975) Political Myth and
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20. ^ Hesiod, Works and Days, 90–105
21. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses, I, 89–162
22. ^ Jump up to:a b Hesiod, Theogony, 116–138
23. ^ Hesiod, Theogony, 713–735
24. ^ Jump up to:a b Guirand, Felix (1987) [1959]. "Greek
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a b
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50. ^ Jump up to: Grimal, Pierre. 1986. "Argonauts." P.
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