Thriae

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Camiros, Rhodes
, dated to 7th century BCE (British Museum)

The Thriae (

Kleodora ("Famed for her Gift"), and Daphnis ("Laurel") or Corycia
.

Mythology

They were the three Naiads (nymphs) of the sacred springs of the Corycian Cave of Mount Parnassus in Phocis, and the patrons of bees. The nymphs had women's heads and torsos and lower body and wings of a bee.[2]

The nymph sisters were romantically linked to the gods

Lycoreus with Apollo,[3][4] Kleodora was loved by Poseidon, and was the mother by him (or Kleopompos) of Parnassos (who founded the city of Parnassus[5]) while Melaina was also loved by Apollo, and bore him Delphos (although another tradition names Thyia as the mother of Delphos).[6] Her name, meaning "the black," suggests that she presided over subterranean
nymphs.

These three bee maidens with the power of

Homeric Hymn to Hermes, and the food of the gods is "identified as honey";[7] the bee maidens were originally associated with Apollo, and are probably not correctly identified with the Thriae. Both the Thriae and the Bee Maidens are credited with assisting Apollo in developing his adult powers, but the divination that Apollo learned from the Thriae differs from that of the Bee Maidens. The type of divination taught by the Thriae to Apollo was that of mantic pebbles, the throwing of stones, rather than the type of divination associated with the Bee Maidens and Hermes: cleromancy, the casting of lots.[8]
Honey, according to a Greek myth, was discovered by a nymph called Melissa ("Bee"); and honey was offered to the Greek gods from
Delphic oracle and the prophetess was sometimes called a bee.[9]

Notes

  1. Greek cult
    has given more: see the list in Scheinberg 1979:2.
  2. .
  3. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece 10.6.3
  4. Hyginus, Fabulae 161
  5. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece 10.6.1
  6. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece 10.6.4
  7. ^ Homeric Hymns 4.550-567
  8. ^ Larson, Jennifer (1996). "The Corycian Nymphs and the Bee Maidens of the Homeric Hymn to Hermes". Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies: 341–357.
  9. JSTOR 311093
    .

References

External links

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