Greek Mythology.
Publié le 10/05/2013
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world in search of her; as a result, fertility left the earth.
Zeus commanded Hades to release Persephone, but Hades had cunningly given her a pomegranate seed toeat.
Having consumed food from the underworld, Persephone was obliged to return below the earth for part of each year.
Her return from the underworld each yearmeant the revival of nature and the beginning of spring.
This myth was told especially in connection with the Eleusinian Mysteries, sacred rituals observed in the Greektown of Elevsís near Athens.
The rituals offered initiates in the mysteries the hope of rebirth, just as Persephone had been reborn after her journey to the underworld.
Many Greek myths report the exploits of the principal Olympians, but Greek myths also refer to a variety of other divinities, each with their particular sphere ofinfluence.
Many of these divinities were children of Zeus, symbolizing the fact that they belonged to the new Olympian order of Zeus’s regime.
The Muses, ninedaughters of Zeus and the goddess of memory, Mnemosyne, presided over song, dance, and music.
The Fates, three goddesses who controlled human life and destiny,and the Horae, goddesses who controlled the seasons, were appropriately the children of Zeus and Themis, the goddess of divine justice and law.
Far different intemperament were the Erinyes (Furies), ancient and repellent goddesses who had sprung from the earth after it had been impregnated with the blood of Uranus’ssevered genitals.
Terrible though they were, the Erinyes also had a legitimate role in the world: to pursue those who had murdered their own kin.
A5 Disruptive Deities
Human existence is characterized by disorder as well as order, and many of the most characteristic figures in Greek mythology exert a powerfully disruptive effect.Satyrs, whom the Greeks imagined as part human and part horse (or part goat), led lives dominated by wine and lust.
Myths depicted them as companions of Dionysuswho drunkenly pursued nymphs, spirits of nature represented as young and beautiful maidens.
Many of the jugs used at Greek symposia (drinking parties) carry images of satyrs.
Equally wild, but more threatening than the satyrs, were the savage centaurs.
These monsters, depicted as half-man and half-horse, tended toward uncontrolledaggression.
The centaurs are known for combat with their neighbors, the Lapiths, which resulted from an attempt to carry off the Lapith women at a wedding feast.
Thiscombat was depicted in sculpture on the Parthenon, a temple dedicated to Athena in Athens.
The Sirens, usually portrayed as birds with women’s heads, posed a different sort of threat.
These island-dwelling enchantresses lured mariners to their deaths by theirresistible beauty of their song.
The seafaring Greek hero Odysseus alone survived this temptation by ordering his companions to block their own ears, to bind him tothe mast of his ship, and to ignore all his entreaties to be allowed to follow the lure of the Sirens’ song.
B Mortals
The Greeks had several myths to account for the origins of humanity.
According to one version, human beings sprang from the ground, and this origin explained theirdevotion to the land.
According to another myth, a Titan molded the first human beings from clay.
The Greeks also had a story about the destruction of humanity,similar to the biblical deluge.
B1 The Creation of Human Beings
Conflicting Greek myths tell about the creation of humanity.
Some myths recount how the populations of particular localities sprang directly from the earth.
TheArcadians, residents of a region of Greece known as Arcadia, claimed this distinction for their original inhabitant, Pelasgus ( see Pelasgians).
The Thebans boasted descent from earthborn men who had sprung from the spot where Cadmus, the founder of Thebes, had sown the ground with the teeth of a sacred dragon.
Accordingto another tale, one of the Titans, Prometheus, fashioned the first human being from water and earth.
In the more usual version of the story Prometheus did notactually create humanity but simply lent it assistance through the gift of fire.
Another tale dealt with humanity’s re-creation.
When Zeus planned to destroy an ancient race living on Earth, he sent a deluge.
However, Deucalion, a son ofPrometheus, and his wife Pyrrha—the Greek equivalents of the biblical Noah and his wife—put provisions into a chest and climbed into it.
Carried across the waters ofthe flood, they landed on Mount Parnassus.
After the waters receded, the couple gratefully made sacrifices to Zeus.
His response was to send Hermes to instruct themhow to repopulate the world.
They should cast stones behind them.
Stones thrown by Deucalion became men; those thrown by Pyrrha, women.
B2 The Greek People
According to myth, the various peoples of Greece descended from Hellen, son of Deucalion and Pyrrha.
One genealogy related that the Dorian and the Aeolian Greekssprang from Hellen’s sons Dorus and Aeolus.
The Achaeans and Ionians descended from Achaeos and Ion, sons of Hellen’s other son, Xuthus.
These figures, in theirturn, produced offspring who, along with children born of unions between divinities and mortals, made up the collection of heroes and heroines whose exploits constitutea central part of Greek mythology.
C Heroes
Myths about heroes are particularly characteristic of Greek mythology.
Many of these heroes were the sons of gods, and a number of myths involved expeditions bythese heroes.
The expeditions generally related to quests or combats.
Scholars consider some of these myths partly historical in nature—that is, they explained eventsin the distant past and were handed down orally from one generation to the next.
Two of the most important of the semihistorical myths involve the search for theGolden Fleece and the quest that led to the Trojan War.
In other myths heroes such as Heracles and Theseus had to overcome fearsome monsters.
C1 Jason and the Golden Fleece
Jason was a hero who sailed in the ship Argo , with a band of heroes called the Argonauts, on a dangerous quest for the Golden Fleece at the eastern end of the Black Sea in the land of Colchis.
Jason had to fetch this family property, a fleece made of gold from a winged ram, in order to regain his throne.
A dragon that never sleptguarded the fleece and made the mission nearly impossible.
Thanks to the magical powers of Medea, daughter of the ruler of Colchis, Jason performed the impossibletasks necessary to win the fleece and to take it from the dragon.
Afterward Medea took horrible revenge on Pelias, who had killed Jason’s parents, stolen Jason’sthrone, and sent Jason on the quest for the fleece.
She tricked Pelias’s daughters into cutting him up and boiling him in a cauldron.
Medea’s story continued to involvehorrific violence.
When Jason rejected her for another woman, Medea once more used her magic to avenge herself with extreme cruelty.
C2 Meleager
Jason and the same generation of heroes took part in another adventure, with Meleager, the son of King Oeneus of Calydon and his wife Althea.
At Meleager’s birth theFates predicted that he would die when a log burning on the hearth was completely consumed.
His mother snatched the log and hid it in a chest.
Meleager grew tomanhood.
One day, his father accidentally omitted Artemis, the goddess of the hunt, from a sacrifice.
In revenge Artemis sent a mighty boar to ravage the country..
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Liens utiles
- Prometheus Unbound Author's Preface Percy Bysshe Shelley The Greek tragic writers, in selecting as their subject any portion of their national history or mythology, employed in their treatment of it a certain arbitrary discretion.
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