Wednesday, 6 May 2015

Penelope

Penelope1
         In Greek mythology, Penelope was described as the daughter of Icarius of Sparta and the nymph Periboea and wife of the hero Odysseus. They had one son, Telemachus.
Penelope

                                                                               When Helen was to be married, many suitors came from the whole of Greek, wishing to win her hand, and among them came Odysseus. King Tyndareus of Sparta, Helen's stepfather, feared then that the preference of one suitor might provoke the enmity of the others, and so Odysseus promised him that, if Tyndareus would help him to win the hand of  Helen's cousin Penelope, he would suggest a way by which there would be no dispute among the suitors. When Tyndareus agreed, promising to help him, Odysseus told him to exact an oath from all the suitors of Helen that they would defend the favoured bridegroom against any wrong that might be done him in respect of his marriage. So when Menelaus won the hand of Helen, all accepted it in virtue of the oath, and thus Odysseus married Penelope, who was the prize of such a wise advice.
                     According to some versions, Odysseus won Penelope in a foot-race for her wooers, organized by Icarius. Icarius gave his daughter in marriage to Odysseus, and  tried to make Odysseus settle in Lacedaemon. However, Odysseus refused, and he could not persuade Penelope either. So when the newly-weds set forth to Ithaca, the king followed the chariot begging her to stay. Odysseus ordered Penelope either to come with him willingly, or else go back with her father to Lacedaemon, if she preferred to do so.  Penelope did not reply, but instead covered her face with a veil, and by that sign they both understood that she wished to depart with her husband.
Odysseus and Penelope

                                                                       Odysseus, who was the king of Ithaca and the husband of a loving queen, not wishing to waste his life in wars and fights, decided to feign madness instead of honouring the oath of Tyndareus, and thereby join the alliance that was determined to sail against Troy in order to demand, either by persuasion or by force, the restoration of Helen and the property.
                                   Odysseus pretended to be crazy, put on a cap and yoked a horse and an ox to the plow. But Palamedes, who had come to Ithaca with Nestor and Menelaus in order to remind the king of his oath, snatched little Telemachus from Penelope's bosom or  from the cradle, and put him in front of the plow, forcing Odysseus to give up his pretence. In some versions, Palamedes threatened the child with his own sword, but in any case Odysseus was outwitted and had to join the alliance. However, clever Palamedes later paid with his own death for having spoiled Odysseus' sweet home life.
                          Penelope and Odysseus had spent together about a decade when the Trojan War broke up and Odysseus left. The war itself lasted ten years, but when it was over and nothing was known of him, a group of scoundrels known as the suitors of Penelope came to the palace wishing to marry the queen.
Penelope and the suitors.......

Penelope fooled them several years, declaring that she would marry one of them once she had completed the shroud of Laertes (father of Odysseus). However, Penelope had no intention of ever finishing her work, and so what she wove during the day, she unravelled by night. Until one of her maids reveals the secret, she unravels the piece that she has woven by day so that she will not have to give up hope for the return of her beloved husband and remarry.
Penelope and the suitors.......

So, realizing that they had been fooled by her in the course of several years, the suitors of Penelope decided that for as long as she maintained her attitude, they would continue to feast in the palace at the palace's expenses. Otherwise they used to amuse themselves in a free and easy way outside the palace with quoits and javelin-throwing, a nice and entertaining activity which they could consent to interrupt when supper was ready. Their banquets were prepared by slaughtering sheep, goats, hogs, and heifers from Odysseus' herd. And since banquets and music go together, there was always someone playing the lyre.
 Penelope

                             When Penelope's son Telemachus sailed to Pylos and Sparta in order to meet Nestor and Menelaus, with the hope of having news of his father.  The suitors of Penelope planned to slay Telemachus on his homeward way. However, Telemachus escaped the suitors of Penelope plot.
                             
                                                  When Odysseus return, looking as a distressful beggar, limping along with the aid of his staff, Odysseus came to the palace, where only his old dog recognized him, dying immediately after having seen his master in the twentieth year.  Penelope sent for the beggar; for such a stranger who seemed to have traveled far, she thought, might have heard of her husband. And not recognizing Odysseus, but being impressed by the stranger, she told him the whole story of her misery, how she had fooled the suitors with the web, how they loaded her with reproaches on discovering her trick, and how now she would be forced by time and circumstances to take the sad step of marrying one of the scoundrels.
Odysseus and Penelope

Odysseus- the beggar  not wishing Penelope to know his identity yet, fabricated a tale about how he had met Odysseus, giving proof, through many details, of his truthfulness. Penelope ordered the maids to wash the visitor's feet, spread a bed for him, and the next morning give him a bath and rub him with oil, so that he would be ready to eat breakfast with Telemachus in the palace's hall. Euryclia, the nurse of both Odysseus and Telemachus, was appointed to wash the visitor's feet. Odysseus had an old scar just above the knee, and when the old woman passed her hands over the scar, she recognized the feel of it at once, and knew that this stranger was indeed Odysseus. However, he ordered her to keep silent.
Odysseus and Euryclia

           Penelope and Odysseus son,Telemachus, actually desired Penelope to remarry, for otherwise the suitors would eat up his estate. Penelope proposed a trial of strength, and that she was prepared to marry whichever among the suitors proved the best at stringing the bow and shooting an arrow.
Odysseus kills the suitors....

                                   Penelope delivered to her suitors the bow of Odysseus, saying that she would marry him who bent the bow. And when none of them could bend it, Odysseus took it and shot down the suitors during a great battle in the hall of the palace. This is how Odysseus, won his wife for a second time while she slept in her chamber upstairs.When the massacre was completed, Euryclia, following Odysseus' instructions, woke up Penelope with incredible words:

"Wake up, Penelope, dear child, and see a sight you have longed for all these many days. Odysseus has come home … and he has killed the rogues who turned his whole house inside out, ate up his wealth, and oppressed his son." 
Penelope and Euryclia

                    Penelope, thus taken out of her sleep, thought that her old servant had lost her brains, or that some god had performed the killing. But Euryclia told her about the scar, and nothing else could Penelope do but go downstairs and see with her own eyes what had happened by meeting her son Telemachus, the dead suitors, and the man who had killed them.


This was not what Telemachus had expected. For he had imagined that his mother would sit at his father's side, asking questions and talking. For after all, he reasoned, here was the absent husband back, and there was so much to say and to know. And that is why he reproached his mother, telling her that her heart was harder than flint. But Penelope replied:

"My child, the heart in my breast is lost in wonder … I cannot find a word to say to him; I cannot ask him anything at all; I cannot even look him in the face. But if it really is Odysseus home again, we two shall surely recognize each other, and in an even better way; for there are tokens between us which only we two know and no one else has heard of."

Such a token was their own bed, which Odysseus himself had constructed, a detail only known by them. And now he described how he had built it, bringing to memory the olive tree, thick as a pillar, which grew inside the court. For round this tree he built the room, and lopping all the twigs off, he trimmed the stem and used it as a basis for the bed itself. Then he finished it off with an inlay of gold, silver and ivory, and fixed a set of purple ox-hide straps across the frame.When Odysseus had described all these details for Penelope. It was then that Penelope, seeing the complete fidelity of the description, burst into tears, and running up to Odysseus, threw her arms round his neck and kissed him.
Odysseus and Penelope

    In Greek mythology, Penelope had been associated with marital faithfulness. But according to one version, Penelope was seduced by Antinous, the greatest scoundrel among the suitors. In one version, Penelope was not seduced by Antinous, but instead by the more gentle suitor Amphinomus, who was known to enjoy Penelope's special approval for being an intelligent man and behaving correctly. According to one version, (perhaps in error) Penelope was seduced by the god Hermes and became the mothe og the god Pan.
                                    Later, when Odysseus was accidentally killed by Telegonus, his own son by the witch Circe. After Odysseus' death, Penelope was made immortal by Circe. In some version, Telegonus returns to his mother’s island with Penelope, whom he marries, and Telemachus, who marries Circe. Telegonus and Penelope have one son, Italus.

Penelope2
                            In Greek mythology, Penelope (or Penelopeia) was described as the tree nymph, of Mt Cyllene in Arkadia, southern Greece. Hermes fell in love with Penelope and seduced her. 
Penelope.....tree nymph.......

In some versions,by Hermes  she became the mother of Pan. Penelope is related to the nymphs Sose and Thymbris, who are both named as the mother of Pan in  different versions in Greek mythology.

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Monday, 4 May 2015

Odysseus

In Greek mythology, Odysseus was described as the king of Ithaca, son of son of Laertes and Anticleia (daughter of Autolycus1). In some version, Odysseus was described as the son of  Sisyphus and Anticleia.
                                                                 
Odysseus
  
   When Helen was to be married, many suitors came from the whole of Greek, wishing to win her hand, and among them came Odysseus. King Tyndareus of Sparta, Helen's stepfather, feared then that the preference of one suitor might provoke the enmity of the others, and so Odysseus promised him that, if Tyndareus would help him to win the hand of  Helen's sister Penelope, he would suggest a way by which there would be no dispute among the suitors. 
Odysseus and Penelope
When Tyndareus agreed, promising to help him, Odysseus told him to exact an oath from all the suitors of Helen that they would defend the favored bridegroom against any wrong that might be done him in respect of his marriage. So when Menelaus won the hand of Helen, all accepted it in virtue of the oath, and thus Odysseus married Penelope, who was the prize of such a wise advice. But later the seducer Paris abducted Helen, and so the kings of Greek, being bound by the oath of Tyndareus, were forced, after being summoned by Menelaus and his brother Agamemnon, to join the alliance that sailed to Troy with the purpose of obtaining, either peacefully or by force, the restoration of Helen and the property.

                                       It had been prophesied that Odysseus would not return to his island for a long time if he joined the Greek army against Troy, so he pretended to be crazy when Palamedes came to Ithaca to enroll him. He put on torn clothes, and tried to sow the land with salt, while ploughing the fields with a goat and an ox. Palamedes then put the Odysseus's infant son, Telemachus, in front of the plough which made Odysseus stop, revealing his sanity. After this, Odysseus hated Palamedes, and in some version, later Odysseus got his revenge through forging a letter from the Tojan king to Palamedes and burying gold under his tent. When the letter and the gold were discovered Palamedes was accused of treason and sentenced to death.
Achilles disguised as woman and Odysseus

 Odysseus and other envoys of Agamemnon then traveled to Scyros to recruit Achilles because of a prophecy that Troy could not be taken without him. Thetis, Achilles's mother, disguised the youth as a woman to hide him from the recruiters because an oracle had predicted that Achilles would either live a long, uneventful life or achieve everlasting glory while dying young. When Odysseus found that one of the girls at court was not a girl, he came up with a plan to reveal the truth. Raising an alarm that they were under attack Odysseus knew that the young Achilles would instinctively run for his weapons and armor, thereby revealing himself. Seeing that she could no longer prevent her son from realizing his destiny, Thetis then had Hephaestus make a shield and armor.
Odysseus with Diomedes in Trojan war

                  During the Trojan war Odysseus played an important part. Together with Diomedes he stole king Rhesus' horses, but the very next day he was wounded in battle. When Achilles was killed he held the Trojans back while Ajax carried the dead hero back to the camp. After the burial it was decided that Odysseus and not Ajax should get Achilles armor. Odysseus was also the one to convince 50 of the Greek heroes to hide inside the Trojan horse.

                                     When the Trojan War ended, Odysseus set sail for his homeland of Ithaca with a number of companions in several ships. They first stopped in the land of the Cicones. After sacking the city there, they were driven off and suffered significant losses. Next they arrived at the land of the lotus-eaters, so named because the people there ate the honey-sweet fruit from the lotus plant. This fruit acted like a drug, and when some of the Greeks ate it, they lost all desire to return home. Odysseus had to drag them to the ships and tie them down before he could set sail again.
Odysseus blinding Polyphemus

                  Odysseus next arrived at the land of the Cyclopes2, a race of one-eyed savage giants. When Odysseus and some of his men went into a large cave, the Cyclopes2 Polyphemus trapped them inside by rolling a huge stone across the entrance. Polyphemus, a son of Poseidon, proceeded to kill and eat several of Odysseus's men, and the survivors lost nearly all hope of escaping. Odysseus came up with a plan. After blinding Polyphemus with a stake, he and his men escaped the cave by clinging to the undersides of the giant's sheep as they were let out to graze. Odysseus and his companions ran to their ships and set sail. Polyphemus hurled rocks at them and called on Poseidon to take revenge against Odysseus.
                                  Odysseus landed next on the island of Aeolus, the keeper of the winds. Aeolus listened eagerly to Odysseus's tales of the Trojan War and gave the hero a bag containing all the storm winds. With these winds, Odysseus would be able to sail safely and quickly to Ithaca. After setting sail, however, his men became curious about the bag. Thinking that it might contain gold and jewels, they opened it and released the winds. The winds tossed the ships about and blew them back to the island of Aeolus. Aeolus refused to help Odysseus again and ordered the ships to leave.
                    After sailing for some time, Odysseus came to the land of the Laestrygonians, a race of cannibal giants. The giants destroyed all but one of his ships and ate many of his men. Barely escaping these dreadful creatures, Odysseus and his surviving companions traveled on to the island of Circe, a powerful enchantress. Circe cast a spell on some of Odysseus's men and turned them into pigs. Protected by a magical herb given to him by Hermes, Odysseus forced the enchantress to reverse her spell, and his men resumed their human form. Circe then invited Odysseus and his men to remain as her guests.
Odysseus and Circe

              Odysseus stayed with Circe for a year. Circe bore Odysseus three sons: Ardeas (or Agrius), Latinus; and Telegonus, who ruled over the Tyrsenoi. She told Odysseus that he must visit the underworld and consult the blind prophet Tiresias before returning to his homeland. Reluctantly and full of dread, Odysseus went to the kingdom of the dead. While there, he met his dead mother, Anticlea, and the spirits of Agamemnon, Achilles, and other Greek heroes. Tiresias told Odysseus what to expect and do during the rest of his journey and after he returned home to Ithaca.
Odysseus and Sirens

                                 After leaving the underworld, Odysseus went back to Circe's island for a short stay. Before he set sail again, the enchantress warned him about some of the dangers he still faced and advised him how to survive them. The first of these dangers was the Sirens, evil sea nymphs who lured sailors to their deaths with their beautiful singing. Odysseus ordered his men to plug their ears with wax so they would not hear the Sirens' song. Wanting to hear their songs himself, he had his men tie him to the ship's mast so that he could not be lured away.  Crazed with the Sirens' song Odysseus tried to sign to the crew to let him go, but they could not hear anything, and had promised the hero that they would not let him go no matter what.

              Odysseus and his men next faced the monsters Scylla and Charybdis, who guarded a narrow channel through which their ship had to pass. Odysseus barely escaped the monsters, and he lost some of his men to them. The survivors reached the island of the sacred cattle of the sun god Helios. Both Tiresias and Circe had warned Odysseus not to harm any of these animals, but his men ignored the warning and killed some of them as a sacrifice and for food. 
Odysseus and Helios cattle

When Helios complained to the gods, Zeus sent a storm that destroyed Odysseus's ship and drowned all his remaining companions. Alone, Odysseus was washed ashore on the island of Ogygia, where Calypso compelled him to remain as her lover for many years before he finally escaped upon Hermes telling Calypso to release Odysseus.
Odysseus and Calypso

                     After almost nine years, Odysseus finally leaves Calypso and at last arrives in Ithaca, where his wife, Penelope, and son, Telemachus, have been struggling to maintain their authority during his prolonged absence. Recognized at first only by his faithful dog and a nurse, Odysseus proves his identity, with the aid of goddess Athena by accomplishing Penelope’s test of stringing and shooting with his old bow.
Odysseus and Penelope reunion

 He then, with the help of Telemachus and two slaves, slays Penelope’s suitors. Penelope still does not believe him and gives him one further test. But at last she knows it is he and accepts him as her long-lost husband and the king of Ithaca.

                          Later, when Telegonus learned from his mother Circe that he was son of Odysseus, he sailed in search of his father. Having come to Ithaca, he drove away some of the cattle, and when Odysseus defended them, Telegonus  wounded him with the spear he had in his hands, which was barbed with the spine of a stingray, and Odysseus died of the wound. Telegonus then recognized him, and bitterly lamented what he had done.  According to other version, Odysseus died of old age.

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Perigune

In Greek mythology, Perigune was described as the beautiful daughter of Sinis, an Isthmian outlaw.  
Perigune

                                              Sinis would force travelers to help him bend pine trees to the ground and then unexpectedly let go, catapulting the victims through the air. According to other version, Sinis tied people to two pine trees that he bent down to the ground, then let the trees go, tearing his victims apart. Sinis was the second bandit to be killed by Theseus as he traveling from Troezen to Athens, in the very same way that Sinis had previously killed his own victims. (see the six labors of Theseus)
                                                        After Theseus killed her father, she  fled, and Theseus was sought her everywhere. She came into a place overgrown with brushwood shrubs, and asparagus-thorn, there, in a childlike, innocent manner, prayed and begged them, as if they understood her, to give her shelter, with vows that if she escaped she would never cut them down nor burn them. 
Perigune and Theseus

                          But Theseus calling upon her, and giving her his promise that he would use her with respect, and offer her no injury.  Perigune revealed herself and Theseus had sex intercourse with her. She later bore Theseus's first male heir, Melanippus. Perigune later married Deioneus of Oechalia.

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Friday, 1 May 2015

Astypalaea

In Greek mythology, Astypalaea was described as the daughter of Phoenix  and Perimede.

                       The sea god,  Poseidon was attracted by Astypalaea stunning beauty and carried her in the form of a winged fish-tailed leopard, to the island, which was named after her, where he seduced her.  Astypalaea gave birth to sons:- Ancaeus, King of Samos, and Eurypylos, King of Kos.

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Gorge

Gorge1
In Greek mythology, Gorge was described as the daughter of Oeneus, king of Calydon, and Althaea. Gorge was married to Andraemon, by whom she became the mother of Thoas.

                                             According to one version, Gorge was described as the mother of  Tydeus by her father Oeneus, because "Zeus willed it that Oeneus should fall in love with his own daughter." Later, Oeneus handed Calydon over to his son-in-law Andraemon, the husband of Gorge. Andraemon and Gorge were buried in one tomb which was shown in the city of Amphissa.

Gorge2
In Greek mythology, Gorge was described as one of the Danaides. She married and murdered Hippothous, son of Aegyptus.

Gorge3
In Greek mythology, Gorge was described as a woman of Lemnos who slew Elymus the night Lemnian women killed their men. (see Hypsipyle- The Queen of the island of Lemnos)

Gorge4
In Greek mythology,Gorge was described as the one of the female followers of Dionysus (Maenad) in the retinue of Dionysus during his Indian campaign.

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