Achelous
In ancient Greek religion and mythology, Achelous (also Acheloos or Acheloios) (/ˌækɪˈloʊ.əs/; Ancient Greek: Ἀχελώϊος, and later Ἀχελῷος, Akhelôios) was the god associated with the Achelous River, the largest river in Greece. According to Hesiod, he was the son of the Titans Oceanus and Tethys. He was also said to be the father of the Sirens, several nymphs, and other offspring.
Achelous was able to change his shape, and in the form of a bull, he wrestled
.Etymology
The name Ἀχελώϊος is possibly pre-Greek, its meaning is not entirely certain. Recent arguments suggest it is
Genealogy
According to
Achelous had various offspring.
Achelous was also said to be the father (with no mothers mentioned) of several
Mythology
Heracles and Deianeira
Achelous was a suitor for
Sophocles, in his play Women of Trachis (c. 450–425 BC), has Deianeira tell her story, how Achelous wooed her in the shape of a bull, a snake, and a half-man/half-bull:[27]
For my suitor was a river-god, Achelous, who in three shapes was always asking me from my father—coming now as a bull in visible form, now as a serpent, sheeny and coiled, now ox-faced with human trunk, while from his thick-shaded beard wellheads of fountain-water sprayed. In the expectation that such a suitor would get me, I was always praying in my misery that I might die, before I should ever approach that marriage-bed. But at last, to my joy, the glorious son of Zeus and Alcmena came and closed with him in combat and delivered me.[28]
In later accounts, Achelous does not get his horn back, as he did in Pindar's poem.
Both Diodorus Siculus and Strabo provide rationalized accounts of the story.[34] According to Diodorus, Heracles diverted the Achelous River's course, while according to Strabo, some writers "conjecturing the truth from the myths" said that, to please his father-in-law Oeneus, Heracles confined the river by means of "embankments and channels". In this way, Heracles defeated the raging river, and in so doing created a large amount of new fertile land and "certain poets, as we are told, have made this deed into a myth" (Diodorus). By both accounts, this new bountiful land of the Achelous River delta came to be known as Amaltheia's horn of plenty.
Joseph Fontenrose saw in this story the possible reflection of an ancient tradition of conflict between Zeus and Achelous.[35]
Other stories
Achelous played a role in the story of the Argive hero Alcmaeon, who had killed his mother Eriphyle because of her treachery against his father Amphiaraus, and needed to be religiously purified.[36] According to Apollodorus, Alcmaeon was first purified by Phegeus the king of Psophis, but nevertheless the land of Psophis became barren because of the cursed Alcmaeon's presence. As Thucydides tells the story, the oracle of Apollo told Alcmaeon that he needed to find a land to live in that did not yet exist at the time of his mother's death. After long travels, Alcmaeon finally came to the springs of the Achelous River, where he was purified by the river-god, and received Achelous's daughter Callirrhoe as his wife, and at the mouth of the river he discovered a land newly made by deposits of river silt, where he could make his home free of his curse.[37] Later, according to Apollodorus, Achelous commanded Alcmaeon to dedicate the necklace and robe—the cause of his mother's treachery—at Delphi, which he did.[38]
Ovid, in his Metamorphoses, has the river-god involved in two transformation stories concerning the creation of islands near the mouth of the Achelous River.
I tore forests from forests, fields from fields; and with the place they stood on, I swept the nymphs away, who at last remembered me then, into the sea. There my flood and the sea, united, cleft the undivided ground into as many parts as now you see the Echinades yonder amid the waves.[41]
Achelous goes on to describe the creation of another island: "far away beyond the others is one island that I love: the sailors call it
Cult
From at least as early as Homer, Achelous was apparently considered to be an important divinity throughout Greece.[44] Calling Achelous "king", Homer mentions Achelous (along with Oceanus) as a mighty river, using him as a measure of the strength of (the even mightier) Zeus:[45]
- With [Zeus] doth not even king Achelous vie, nor the great might of deep-flowing Ocean, from whom all rivers flow and every sea, and all the springs and deep wells; howbeit even he hath fear of the lightning of great Zeus, and his dread thunder, whenso it crasheth from heaven.[46]
The clear implication is that Achelous is the mightiest of the rivers (save perhaps for Oceanus himself), which would be in accord with Acusilaus' making Achelous the "oldest and most honoured" of the river-god offspring of Oceanus.
According to the early 4th-century BC Greek historian Ephorus, the oracle at Dodona usually added to his pronouncements the command to offer sacrifices to Achelous, and that, while people would offer sacrifices to their local river, only the Achelous river was honoured everywhere, with Achelous's name often being invoked in oaths, prayers and sacrifices, "all the things that concern the gods."[53]
His name was often used to mean "water".[54] Thus Euripides can have a house, far from the Achelous river, being sprinkled with "Achelous' water".[55] Ephorus explained this "puzzle" by saying that, because of the frequent oracular command at Dodona to offer sacrifices to Achelous, it came to be thought that by "Achelous" the oracle meant, not the river but "water" in general.[56]
Plato has Socrates, walking in the countryside, come across a "sacred place of some nymphs and of Achelous, judging by the figurines and statues".[57] The 2nd-century geographer Pausanias, mentions a part of the altar at the Amphiareion of Oropos dedicated to "the nymphs and to Pan, and to the rivers Achelous and Cephisus",[58] as well as an altar to Achelous near Megara,[59] and the Megarian Treasury at Olympia, which contained a dedication representing the fight of Heracles with Achelous.[60]
Iconography
Achelous' wrestling bout with Heracles was the subject of several vase-paintings, from as early as the second quarter of the sixth century BC, and in most of these vases, Heracles can be seen grabbing Achelous by his single horn.
On one later example (c. 525–475 BC), an Attic
The river-god is depicted on several Acarnanian coins as a bull with the head of an old man.[71] The most common depiction of Achelous in Archaic and Classical times was this man-faced bull.[72] Often a city would feature a man-faced bull on its coinage to represent a local variant of Achelous, such as Achelous Gelas of Gela, Sicily, or Achelous Sebethos of Neapolis, Campania.[73]
Possible origins
That Achelous, rather than Oceanus, was perhaps, in some earlier version of the Iliad, the source of "all rivers ... and every sea", and that his name was often used to mean "water", have (along with other evidence from ancient sources), suggested the possibility to modern scholars that Achelous may have predated Oceanus as the original Greek water-god.[74]
A recent study has tried to show that both the form and substance of Achelous, as a god of water primarily depicted as a man-faced bull, have roots in Old Europe in the Bronze Age. After the disappearance of many Old European cultures, the traditions traveled to the Near East at the beginning of 4th millennium BC (Ubaid period),[75] and finally migrated to Greece, Italy, Sicily, and Sardinia with itinerant sea-folk during the Late Bronze Age through the Orientalizing period.[76] Although no single cult of Achelous persisted throughout all of these generations, the iconography and general mythos easily spread from one culture to another, and all examples of man-faced bulls are found around the area of the Mediterraneanan, suggesting some intercultural continuity.[77]
Achelous was also an important deity in the Etruscan religion,[78][79] intimately related to water as in the Greek tradition but also carrying significant chthonic associations. Man-faced bull iconography was first adapted to represent Achelous by the Etruscans in the 8th century BC, and the Greeks later adopted this same tradition.[80]
The leading exponents into the Greek and Etruscan worlds were seer-healers and mercenaries during the
The Achelous River
The
Pseudo-Plutarch gives a different story for how the river acquired its name. He says it was formerly called Thestius, after a son of Mars and Pisidice, who jumped into the river after discovering he had killed his son Calydon by mistake. In a similar fashion the river acquired the name Achelous, after a son of Oceanus and the nymph Naïs, who jumped into the river after he discovered he had slept with his daughter Cletoria by mistake.[86]
Strabo reports that in "earlier times" the river was called the Thoas.[87] According to Strabo, some writers "conjecturing the truth from the myths" attributed various legends concerning the river-god, to features of the Achelous River itself. These writers said that, like other rivers, the Achelous was called "like a bull", because of the river's roaring waters and its meanders (which he says were called horns). Likewise the Achelous was called "like a serpent" because of the river's great length and many serpentine turnings.[88]
Homer locates another Achelous river in Lydia, near Mount Sipylos,[89] and there were several other rivers with the name Achelous in ancient times.[90] The multiplicity of rivers with the same name, perhaps due to the river-god's equation with water,[91] has also been seen as suggesting the possibility that Achelous was originally "the primal source of all water".[92]
In the Metamorphoses
Ovid, in his Metamorphoses, provided a descriptive interlude when Theseus is the guest of Achelous, waiting for the river's raging flood to subside: "He entered the dark building, made of spongy pumice, and rough tuff. The floor was moist with soft moss, and the ceiling banded with freshwater mussel and oyster shells."[93]
See also
Notes
- ^ Molinari and Sisci, pp. 93–95.
- ISBN 3-88893-031-6.
- FabulaeTheogony.6.
- ).
- .
- ^ Alcaeus fr. 450 Campbell.
- OCLC 2118573.
Acaeus (sic) Oceani et Terrae filium esse sensit
- ^ Parada, s.v. Achelous, p. 3.
- ^ Grimal, s.v. Sirens p. 421; Kerényi 1951, pp. 56, 58.
- ^ Lycophron, Alexandra 712–716, with Mair's notes.
- ^ Apollonius of Rhodes, Argonautica 4.893; Nonnus, Dionysiaca 13.313–315.
- FabulaeTheogony.30, 125.13.
- ^ Apollodorus, 1.7.10.
- ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 5.552–555, 14.87–88.
- ^ Hard, p. 410; Apollodorus, 1.7.3; Hesiod, fr. 10.34–45 Most (pp. 54–55).
- ^ Grimal, s.v. Achelous, p. 4.
- ^ Pausanias, 2.2.3.
- ^ Panyassis fr. 2 West = Pausanias, 10.8.9.
- Bacchae 519–520.
- ^ Plato, Phaedrus 263d.
- ^ D'Alessio, p. 30; Panyassis fr. 23 West.
- ^ Hard, p. 327; Grimal, s.v. Achelous, p. 4; Apollodorus, 3.7.5; Pausanias, 8.24.9.
- ^ See D'Alessio, p. 30, which attributes to Panyassis, and "other fifth-century authors the idea that all springs derive" from Achelous.
- ISBN 978-9461616272.
- Fabulae 31.7; Apollodorus, 1.8.1, 2.7.5; Propertius, Elegies 2.34.33–34; Pausanias, 3.18.16, 6.19.12; Statius, Thebaid 4.106; Philostratus the Younger, Imagines 4; Nonnus, Dionysiaca 17.238–239, 43.12–15.
- ^ Gantz, pp. 28, 41–42, 432; Hard, p. 280; Jebb, Introduction 5; Archilochus, fr. 286 West [= Dio Chrysostom, 60.1], fr. 287 West [= Scholiast on Homer, Iliad 21.237]. Compare with Apollodorus, 2.7.5 [= Pherecydes of Athens fr. 42 Fowler], which says that the horn of Amalthea which Acelous traded for his broken-off horn, was also a bull's horn which, "according to Pherecydes, had the power of supplying meat or drink in abundance, whatever one might wish". Amalthea was the owner of a goat (or in later sources the goat itself) that nursed the infant Zeus (see Gantz, p. 41). According to Hard, p. 280, Apollodorus making Amalthea's horn of plenty a bull's horn was "evidently a misapprehension" arising from the fact that it was traded for the bull-horn of Achelous. According to Fowler 2013, pp. 323–324: "We are dealing here with different traditions, one a folktale about a magical cornucopia, the other a story about the goat that nursed the infant Zeus. By the time of Pherekydes these have become entangled with each other."
- ^ Gantz, p. 432.
- ^ Sophocles, Women of Trachis 9–21; compare with the Chorus's description of the fight at 497–525.
- ^ Gantz, p. 433; Ovid, Metamorphoses 9.1–100; compare with Ovid, Amores 3.6.35–36.
- ^ Gantz, p. 42; Ovid, Metamorphoses 9.85–88.
- Fabulae31.7.
- ^ Jebb, note on line 518; Strabo, 10.2.19. Cf. Nonnus, Dionysiaca 17.238–239.
- Titan Cronus.
- ^ Fontenrose, p. 351; Frazer, note 2 to Apollodorus 2.7.5; Smith 1873, s.v. Achelous; Diodorus Siculus, 4.35.3–4; Strabo, 10.2.19.
- ^ Fontenrose, p. 233.
- ^ Hard, p. 327; Grimal, s.v. Alcmaeon, p. 31.
- ^ Apollodorus, 3.7.5; Thucydides, 2.102.2–6. Compare with Ovid, Fasti 2.43–46; Pausanias, 8.24.8–9.
- ^ Apollodorus, 3.7.7.
- ^ Hard, p. 42; Tripp, s.v. Acheloüs, p. 5.
- ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 8.574–589.
- ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 8.583–589.
- ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 8.590–591.
- ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 8.592–610.
- ^ Fowler, p. 12; Jebb, note on line 9; Smith 1873, s.v. Achelous.
- ^ Gantz, p. 28.
- ^ Homer, Iliad 21.194–199; compare Pausanias, 8.38.10.
- ^ Andolfi, fr. 1.
- ^ Fowler 2013, p. 12; Andolfi, fr. 1. For a detailed discussion of this issue, arguing that the version of the Iliad with line 21.195 omitted "represents the earlier textual stage", see D'Alessio, pp. 16–23. This would of course account for the possible tradition (mentioned above) of Achelous being the source of all springs. As noted by Andolfi, "the insertion of l. 195 was functional to restore consistency within Homeric mythology and to eliminate an unorthodox peculiarity that did not match the cosmogonic account in book fourteen of the Iliad, where Oceanus' predominance is unquestionable."
- 221ix 1; 5.93 Erbse.
- ^ West 1983, pp. 92,115. According to D'Alessio, pp. 20–23, this poetic fragment may be from the same poem (or near contemporary versions of the same poem) as the fragment quoted in Oxyrhynchus Papyrus 221. For a discussion of the translation of ἶνας as "sinews" see D'Alessio, pp. 23ff.
- 221 ix 8-11; 5.93–94 Erbse. Fontenrose, p. 232, reads the Iliad passage itself, as appearing to identify Achelous and Oceanus.
- 221ix 18–20.
- .
- Bacchae 625, Hypsipyle, fr. 753 [= Macrobius, Saturnalia 5.18.12]; Aristophanes fr. 365 Henderson = fr. 365 PCG = Macrobius, Saturnalia 5.18.5. For a discussion of Achelous as a water-deity see Molinari and Sisci, pp. 60–62.
- ^ Euripides, Andromache 165–168.
- .
- ^ Plato, Phaedrus 230b.
- ^ Pausanias, 1.34.3.
- ^ Pausanias, 1.41.2.
- ^ Pausanias, 6.19.12.
- Beazley Archive 200437.
- ^ Gantz, p. 433.
- Beazley Archive 1011067. The cited sources give various date ranges, Stafford: c. 590–580 BC, Boardman: c. 570–560 BC, LIMC: 600–575 BC.
- Beazley Archive 300620).
- Beazley Archive 6911.
- .
- Beazley Archive 6911. As Gantz notes, the depiction of a broken-off horn lying on the ground, may also have been depicted already on an Archaic scarab (London 489).
- ^ Gantz, p. 433.
- ^ Gantz, p. 433; Stafford, p. 75; Pausanias, 3.18.16.
- ^ Gantz, p. 433; Stafford, pp. 75–76; Pausanias, 6.19.12.
- ^ Smith 1873, s.v. Achelous.
- ^ Molinari and Sisci, pp. 91–96.
- ^ Molinari and Sisci, pp. 97ff.
- ^ Fowler 2013, p. 12.
- ^ Molinari and Sisci, pp. 1–6.
- ^ Molinari and Sisci, pp. 22–30.
- ^ Molinari and Sisci, pp. 97ff.
- ^ Isler, Hans Peter (1970). Acheloos: Eine Monographie. Bern: Verlag.
- ^ Jannot, Jean-Rene. "Acheloos, le taureau androcephale et les masques cornus dans l'Etrurie archaique". Latomus. 33, 4.
- ^ Molinari and Sisci, pp. 48–68.
- ^ Molinari and Sisci, pp. 22–30.
- ^ Molinari and Sisci, p. 14.
- ^ Heffron, Yaǧmur; Brisch, Nicole (2016). "Asalluhi (god)". Ancient Mesopotamian Gods and Goddesses. University of Pennsylvania. Retrieved 20 October 2016.
- ^ Whittaker, Gordon (2009). "Milking the Udder of Heaven: A Note on Mesopotamian and Indo-Iranian Religious Imagery". From Daena to Din. Religion, Kultur und Sprache in der iranischen Welt: Festschrift fuer Philip Kreyenbroek zum 60. Geburstag. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz Verlag. p. 131.
- Servius, ad Virg. Georg. i. 9.
- ^ Fontenrose, p. 352; Smith 1873, s.v. Achelous; Pseudo-Plutarch, De fluviis 22.
- ^ Fontenrose, p. 352; Strabo, 10.2.1.
- ^ Smith 1873, s.v. Achelous; Strabo, 10.2.19. Compare with Diodorus Siculus, 4.35.3–4.
- ^ Homer, Iliad 24.614–617; cf. Pausanias, 8.38.10
- Arcadia (Smith 1854 s.v. Achelous 3.).
- ^ Andolfi, fr. 1.
- ^ Molinari and Sisci, p. 61.
- ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses VIII, 547ff.
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External links
- Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). 1911. .
- Theoi Project - Potamos Akheloios
- New International Encyclopedia. 1905.
.
- The Warburg Institute Iconographic Database (images of Achelous)