Aphroditus
Aphroditus or Aphroditos (Greek: Ἀφρόδιτος, Aphróditos, [apʰróditos]) was a male Aphrodite originating from Amathus on the island of Cyprus and celebrated in Athens.
Aphroditus was portrayed as having a female shape and clothing like Aphrodite's but also a phallus, and hence, a male name.[2] This deity would have arrived in Athens from Cyprus in the 4th century BC. In the 5th century BC, however, there existed hermae of Aphroditus, or phallic statues with a female head.[3]
Aphroditus is the same as the later god
One of the earliest surviving images from Athens is a fragment (late 4th century BC), found in the
This combination of the male and female in one divinity and being associated with the moon, both of which were considered to have fertilizing powers, was regarded as having an influence over the entire animal and vegetable creation.[10]
Etymology
Aphroditus (Ἀφρόδιτος) seems to be the male version of Aphrodite (Ἀφροδίτη), with the female thematic ending -ē (-η) exchanged for the male thematic ending -os (-ος), as paralleled e.g. in Cleopatra/Cleopatros or Andromache/Andromachus.
Origins
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Worship
According to
Literature
Theophrastus (c. 371 – c. 287 BC), Characters 16.10
"On the fourth and seventh days of each month, he directs
convolvuluses; he returns to spend the day worshiping the statue of Hermaphroditus."[11]
Philochorus (c. 337–283 BC), Atthis
Pausanias (c. 110 – c. 180 AD), Description of Greece 1.19.2
"Concerning the district called The Gardens, and the temple of Aphrodite, there is no story that is told by them, nor yet about the Aphrodite which stands near the temple. Now the shape of it is square, like that of the
"Having woven a garland of flowers, I repaired to the temple of Hermaphroditus, to fix it there, in honour of my deceased husband Phaedria [sic] but I was seized there by Moschion and his companions. He had been teasing me to marry him; but I refused, partly through compassion for my young children; and also because my dear Phaedria [sic] is ever in my thoughts."[13]
Philostratus (c. 190 – c. 230 AD), Imagines 1.2
"The torches give a faint light, enough for the revellers to see what is close in front of them, but not enough for us to see them. Peals of laughter rise, and women rush along with men, wearing men's sandals and garments girt in strange fashion; for the revel permits women to masquerade as men, and men to "put on women's garb" and to ape the walk of women."[14]
Macrobius (c. 400s AD), Saturnalia 3.8.2
"There's also a statue of
scepter and male genitals, and they conceive her as both male and female. Aristophanes calls her Aphroditus, and Laevius says: Worshiping, then, the nurturing god Venus, whether she is male or female, just as the Moon is a nurturing goddess. In his Atthis Philochorus, too, states that she is the Moon and that men sacrifice to her in women's dress, women in men's, because she is held to be both male and female."[15]
See also
Notes
- ^ "Bronze figure of a hermaphrodite". The British Museum Collections. Retrieved 9 July 2013.
- ^ ISBN 9780812214314
- )
- ISBN 0875428320
- ^ Siculus, Diodorus. Library of History. pp. 4. 6. 5.
Hermaphroditos, as he has been called, who was born of Hermes and Aphrodite and received a name which is a combination of those of both his parents.
- ISBN 9780521839808
- ISBN 085989746X
- ^ Theophrastus; James Diggle (2004), Characters, Cambridge University Press; pp. 367-68
- ISBN 0415217520
- ^ Freese, John Henry (1911). Chisholm, Hugh (ed.). Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 2 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 166. . In
- ^ Theophrastus (1870) Translated by Sir Richard Claverhouse Jebb, Theophrastou Charakteres, Macmillan; pp. 165, 269
- ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece, Paus. 1.19.2
- ^ John Jortin (1790), Tracts, philogical, critical, and miscellaneous: consisting of pieces many before published separately, several annexed to the works of learned friends, and others now first printed from the author's manuscripts, Volume 2, White; p. 45
- ^ Translated by Fairbanks, Arthur (1931), Elder Philostratus, Younger Philostratus, Callistratus, Loeb Classical Library Volume 256, Imagines Book 1.2, London: William Heinemann
- ISBN 0674996712
References
- Marie Delcourt (1961). Hermaphrodite: Myths and Rites of the Bisexual Figure in Classical Antiquity. p. 27.
- Walter Burkert (1985). Greek Religion. Harvard University Press. p. 152. ISBN 9780674362819.
- Yves Bonnefoy (1992). Greek and Egyptian Mythologies. University of Chicago Press. p. 171. ISBN 9780226064543.
aphroditus.
- Yulia Ustinova (1999). The Supreme Gods of the Bosporan Kingdom. Brill. pp. 37, 106. ISBN 9004112316.
- Luc Brisson (2002). Sexual ambivalence: androgyny and hermaphroditism in Graeco-Roman antiquity. University of California Press. p. 54. ISBN 9780520223912.
- Signe Isager; Poul Pedersen (2004). The Salmakis inscription and Hellenistic Halikarnassos. University Press of Southern Denmark. p. 60. ISBN 9788778388230.
- Rabun M. Taylor (2008). The Moral Mirror of Roman Art. Cambridge University Press. p. 218. ISBN 9780521866125.
- Marie-Louise Winbladh (2012). The Bearded Goddess. Armida Publications. ISBN 978-9963-706-31-0.
External links
- The dictionary definition of Aphroditus at Wiktionary
- Venus Barbata, Roman Mythology Index at mythindex.com
- Hermaphrodism among Gods and Mortals by Edward Carpenter (1914)
- Hermaphrodite Goddesses and Queer Priests - Academic Paper by Jeramy Townsley