Orithyia of Athens

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Boreas & Oreithyia Louvre

In

Latin: Ōrīthyia) was an Athenian princess who was raped by Boreas, the north wind, and gave birth to the twin Boreads
, Zetes and Calaïs.

Family

Orithyia was the fifth daughter of King

Creusa, and Chthonia.[2] Her other possible siblings were Merope,[3] Orneus,[4] Thespius,[5] Eupalamus[6] and Sicyon.[7]

Orithyia gave Boreas two daughters,

Legends

Folding mirror depicting the abduction of Orithyia by Boreas at the cover. Post 300 BC, found in Eretria at Euboea. National Archaeological Museum, Athens

Ilissos River,[11] Orithyia was carried off to Sarpedon's Rock, near the Erginos River in Thrace. There she was wrapped in a cloud and attacked.[12] Aeschylus wrote a satyr play
about the abduction called Orithyia which has been lost.

Ilissos, but from the Areopagus, a rock outcropping near the Acropolis where murderers were tried.[13] However, many scholars regard this as a later gloss.[14]

Plato also recounted that Orithyia was playing with a companion nymph Pharmacea.[15]

Because she was in Thrace with Boreas, she did not die when her sisters who either committed suicide or were sacrificed so that Athens could win a war against

]

In the Posthomerica of Quintus Smyrnaeus, she gave Penthesileia a very swift horse when she visited Thrace. [16]

Orithyia was later made into the goddess of cold mountain winds. It is said that prior to the destruction of a large number of barbarian ships due to weather during the Persian War, the Athenians offered sacrifices to Boreas and Oreithyia, praying for their assistance.[17]

In art

Gallery

Notes

  1. ^ Apollodorus, 3.15.1
  2. ^ Apollodorus, 3.15.1; Suida, s.v. Maidens, Virgins (Παρθένοι)
  3. ^ Plutarch, Theseus 19.5
  4. ^ Pausanias, 2.25.6; Plutarch, Theseus 32.1; Stephanus of Byzantium, s.v. Orneiai
  5. ^ Diodorus Siculus, 4.29.2
  6. ^ Diodorus Siculus, 4.76.1
  7. ^ Pausanias, 2.6.5, citing Hesiod (Ehoiai fr. 224) for Erechtheus
  8. ^ Scholiast on Homer, Odyssey 14.533
  9. ^ Pindar, Pythian Odes 4.8
  10. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 6.683
  11. ^ Apollodorus, 3.15.2
  12. ^ Apollonius of Rhodes, Argonautica 1.212
  13. ^ Plato, Phaedrus 229
  14. ^ See Fowler's translation of Plato, Phaedrus 229d
  15. ^ Plato, Phaedrus 229c
  16. ^ Quintus Smyrnaeus, Posthomerica 1.165-169
  17. ^ Herodotus, 7.189
  18. ^ artothek.de
  19. ^ nationalmuseum.az
  20. ^ Walters Art Museum
  21. ^ Art Gallery of Ontario
  22. ^ "The Rape of Orithyia by Boreas".

References

External links