READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
GEORGE GROTE'S HISTORY OF GREECELEGENDARY GREECECHAPTER XI.ATTIC LEGENDS AND GENEALOGIES
THE most ancient name in Attic archaeology, as far as
our means of information reach, is that of Erechtheus, who is mentioned both in
the Catalogue of the Iliad and in a brief allusion of the Odyssey. Born of the
Earth, he is brought up by the goddess Athene, adopted by her as her ward, and
installed in her temple at Athens, where the Athenians offer to him annual
sacrifices. The Athenians are styled in the Iliad, “the people of Erechtheus”.
This is the most ancient testimony concerning Erechtheus, exhibiting him as a
divine or heroic, certainly a superhuman person, and identifying him with the
primitive germination (if I may use a term, the Grecian equivalent of which
would have pleased an Athenian ear) of Attic man. And he was recognized in this
same character, even at the close of the fourth century before the Christian
era, by the Butadae, one of the most ancient and
important Gentes at Athens, who boasted of him as their original ancestor: the
genealogy of the great Athenian orator Lycurgus, a member of this family, drawn
up by his son Abron, and painted on a public tablet in the Erechtheion,
contained as its first and highest name, Erechtheus, son of Hephaestos and the Earth. In the Erechtheion, Erechtheus was
worshipped conjointly with Athene: he was identified with the god Poseidon, and
bore the denomination of Poseidon Erechtheus: one of the family of the Butadae, chosen among themselves by lot, enjoyed the
privilege and performed the functions of his hereditary priest. Herodotus also
assigns the same earth-born origin to Erechtheus but Pindar, the old poem
called the Danais, Euripides and Apollodorus—all name Erichthonius, son of Hephaestos and the Earth, as the being who was thus adopted
and made the temple-companion of Athene, while Apollodorus in another place
identifies Erichthonius with Poseidon. The Homeric scholiast treated Erechtheus
and Erichthonius as the same person under two names: and since, in regard to
such mythical persons, there exists no other test of identity of the subject
except perfect similarity of the attributes, this seems the reasonable
conclusion.
We may presume, from the testimony of Homer, that the
first and oldest conception of Athens and its sacred acropolis places it under
the special protection, and represents it as the settlement and favorite abode
of Athene, jointly with Poseidon; the latter being the inferior, though the
chosen companion of the former, and therefore exchanging his divine appellation
for the cognomen of Erechtheus. But the country called Attica, which, during
the historical ages, forms one social and political aggregate with Athens, was
originally distributed into many independent demes or cantons, and included,
besides, various religious clans or hereditary sects (if the expression may be
permitted); that is, a multitude of persons not necessarily living together in
the same locality, but bound together by an hereditary communion of sacred
rites, and claiming privileges, as well as performing obligations, founded upon
the traditional authority of divine persons for whom they had a common
veneration. Even down to the beginning of the Peloponnesian war, the demots of the various Attic demes, though long since
embodied in the larger political union of Attica, and having no wish for
separation, still retained the recollection of their original political
autonomy. They lived in their own separate localities, resorted habitually to
their own temples, and visited Athens only occasionally for private or
political business, or for the great public festivals. Each of these
aggregates, political as well as religious, had its own eponymous god or hero,
with a genealogy more or less extended, and a train of mythical incidents more
or less copious, attached to his name, according to the fancy of the local
exegetes and poets. The eponymous heroes Marathon, Dekelus, Kollinus, or Phlyus, had
each their own title to worship, and their own position as themes of legendary
narrative, independent of Erechtheus, or Poseidon, or Athena, the patrons of
the acropolis common to all of them.
But neither the archaeology of Attica, nor that of its
various component fractions, was much dwelt upon by the ancient epic poets of
Greece. Theseus is noticed both in the Iliad and Odyssey as having carried off
from Crete Ariadne, the daughter of Minos — thus commencing that connection
between the Cretan and Athenian legends which we afterwards find so largely
amplified—and the sons of Theseus take part in the Trojan war. The chief
collectors and narrators of the Attic myths were, the prose logographers,
authors of the many compositions called Atthides, or
works on Attic archaeology. These writers—Hellanikus, the contemporary of
Herodotus, is the earliest composer of an Atthis expressly named, though Pherekydes also touched upon
the Attic fables — these writers, I say, interwove into one chronological
series the legends which either greatly occupied their own fancy, or commanded
the most general reverence among their countrymen. In this way the religious
and political legends of Eleusis, a town originally independent of Athens, but
incorporated with it before the historical age, were worked into one continuous
sequence along with those of the Erechtheids. In this
way, Kekrops, the eponymous hero of the portion of Attica called Kekropia, came to be placed in the mythical chronology at a
higher point even than the primitive god or hero Erechtheus.
KEKROPS, PROKNE AND PHILOMELA.
Ogyges is said to have reigned in Attica 1020 years before the first Olympiad, or 1796
years BC. In his time happened the deluge of Deucalion, which destroyed most of
the inhabitants of the country: after along interval, Kekrops, an indigenous
person, half man and half serpent, is given to us by Apollodorus as the first
king of the country: he bestowed upon the land, which had before been called Akte, the name of Kekropia. In
his day there ensued a dispute between Athene and Poseidon respecting the
possession of the acropolis at Athens, which each of them coveted. First,
Poseidon struck the rock with his trident, and produced the well of salt water
which existed in it, called the Erechtheis: next came Athene, who planted the
sacred olive-tree ever afterwards seen and venerated in the portion of Erechtheion called the cell of Pandrosus. The twelve gods
decided the dispute; and Kekrops having testified before them that Athene had
rendered this inestimable service, they adjudged the spot to her in preference
to Poseidon. Both the ancient olive-tree and the well-produced by Poseidon were
seen on the acropolis, in the temple consecrated jointly to Athene and
Erechtheus, throughout the historical ages. Poseidon, as a mark of his wrath
for the preference given to Athens, inundated the Thriasian plain with water
During the reign of Kekrops, Attica was laid waste by
Carian pirates on the coast, and by invasions of the Aonian inhabitants from
Boeotia. Kekrops distributed the inhabitants of Attica into twelve local
sections—Kekropia, Tetrapolis, Epakria, Dekeleia, Eleusis, Aphidna, Thorikus, Brauron, Kytherus, Sphettus, Kephisius, Phalerus. Wishing to
ascertain the number of inhabitants, he commanded each man to cast a single
stone into a general heap: the number of stones was counted, and it was found
that there were twenty thousand.
Kekrops married the daughter of Aktaeus,
who (according to Pausanias’s version) had been king of the country before him,
and had called it by the name of Aktaea. By her he
had three daughters, Aglaurus, Erse and Pandrosus, and a son, Erysichthon.
Erysichthon died without issue, and Kranaus succeeded him, another autochthonous person and another eponymous,—for the name Kranai was an old denomination of the inhabitants of
Attica. Kranaus was dethroned by Amphiktyon,
by some called an autochthonous man; by others, a son of Deucalion Amphityon in his turn was expelled by Erichthonius, son of
Hephaestus and the Earth,—the same person apparently as Erechtheus, but
inserted by Apollodorus at this point of the series. Erichthonius, the pupil
and favored companion of Athene, placed in the acropolis the original Palladium
or wooden statue of that goddess, said to have dropped from heaven: he was
moreover the first to celebrate the festival of the Panatherinae.
He married the nymph Pasithea, and had for his son
and successor Pandion. Erichthonius was the first person who taught the art of
breaking in horses to the yoke, and who drove a chariot and four.
In the time of Pandion, who succeeded to Erichthonius,
Dionysus and Demeter both came into Attica: the latter was received by Keleos at Eleusis. Pandion married the nymph Zeuxippe, and
had twin sons, Erechtheus and Butes, and two
daughters, Prokne and Philomela. The two latter are
the subjects of a memorable and well-known legend. Pandion having received aid
in repelling the Thebans from Tereus, king of Thrace, gave him his daughter Prokne in marriage, by whom he had a son, Itys. The
beautiful Philomela, going to visit her sister, inspired the barbarous Thracian
with an irresistible passion: he violated her person, confined her in a distant
pastoral hut, and pretended that she was dead, cutting out her tongue to
prevent her from revealing the truth. After a long interval, Philomela found
means to acquaint her sister of the cruel deed which had been perpetrated; she
wove into a garment words describing her melancholy condition, and dispatched
it by a trusty messenger. Prokne, overwhelmed with
sorrow and anger, took advantage of the free egress enjoyed by women during the
Bacchanalian festival to go and release her sister: the two sisters then revenged
themselves upon Tereus by killing the boy Itys, and serving him up for his
father to eat: after the meal had been finished, the horrid truth was revealed
to him. Tereus snatched a hatchet to put Prokne to
death: she fled, along with Philomela, and all the three were changed into
birds —Prokne became a swallow, Philomela a
nightingale, and Tereus an hoopoe. This tale, so popular with the poets, and so
illustrative of the general character of Grecian legend, is not less remarkable
in another point of view—that the great historian Thucydides seems to allude to
it as an historical fact, not however directly mentioning the final
metamorphosis.
After the death of Pandion, Erechtheus succeeded to
the kingdom, and his brother, Butes, became priest of
Poseidon Erichthonius, a function which his descendants ever afterwards
exercised, the Butadae or Eteobutadae.
Erechtheus seems to appear in three characters in the fabulous history of
Athens—as a god, Poseidon Erechtheus—as a hero, Erechtheus, son of the
Earth—and now, as a king, son of Pandion: so much did the ideas of divine and
human rule become confounded and blended together in the imagination of the
Greeks in reviewing their early times.
THE DAUGHTERS OF ERECHTHEUS.
The daughters of Erechtheus were not less celebrated
in Athenian legend than those of Pandion. Prokris,
one of them, is among the heroines seen by Odysseus in Hades: she became the
wife of Kephalus, son of Deiones,
and lived in the Attic dome of Thorikus. Kephalus tried her fidelity by pretending that he was going
away for a long period; but shortly returned, disguising his person and
bringing with him a splendid necklace. He presented himself to Prokris without being recognized, and succeeded in
triumphing over her chastity. Having accomplished this object, he revealed to
her his true character: she earnestly besought his forgiveness, and prevailed
upon him to grant it. Nevertheless he became shortly afterwards the
unintentional author of her death: for he was fond of hunting, and staid out a
long time on his excursions, so that Prokris suspected him of visiting some rival. She determined to watch him by concealing
herself in a thicket near the place of his midday repose; and when Kephalus implored the presence of Nephele, (a cloud) to
protect him from the sun's rays, she suddenly started from her hiding-place: Kephalus, thus disturbed, cast his hunting-spear
unknowingly into the thicket and slew his wife. Erechtheus interred her with
great magnificence, and Kephalus was tried for the
act before the court of Areopagus, which condemned him to exile.
Kreusa,
another daughter of Erechtheus, seduced by Apollo, becomes the mother of Ion,
whom she exposes immediately after his birth in the cave north of the
acropolis, concealing the fact from everyone. Apollo prevails upon Hermes to
convey the new-born child to Delphi, where he is brought up as a servant of the
temple, without knowing his parents. Kreusa marries
Xuthus, son of Eolus, but continuing childless, she goes with Xuthus to the
Delphian oracle to inquire for a remedy. The god presents to them Ion, and
desires them to adopt him as their son: their son Achaeus is afterwards born to
them, and Ion and Achaeus become the eponyms of the Ionians and Achaeans.
Oreithyia, the third daughter of Erechtheus, was stolen away by
the god Boreas while amusing herself on the banks of the Ilissus,
and carried to his residence in Thrace. The two sons of this marriage, Zetes
and Kalais, were born with wings: they took part in the Argonautic expedition,
and engaged in the purrsuit of the Harpie: they were slain at Tenos by Heracles. Cleopatra,
the daughter of Boreas and Oreithyia, was married to
Phineus, and had two sons, Plexippus and Pandion; but
Phineus afterwards espoused a second wife, Idaea, the daughter of Dardanus,
who, detesting the two sons of the former bed, accused them falsely of
attempting her chastity, and persuaded Phineus in his wrath to put out the eyes
of both. For this cruel proceeding he was punished by the Argonauts in the
course of their voyage.
On more than one occasion the Athenians derived, or at
least believed themselves to have derived, important benefits from this
marriage of Boreas with the daughter of their primeval hero: one inestimable
service, rendered at a juncture highly critical for Grecian independence,
deserves to be specified. At the time a of the invasion of Greece by Xerxes,
the Grecian fleet was assembled at Chalcis and Artemision in Euboea, awaiting the approach of the Persian force, so overwhelming in its
numbers as well by sea as on land. The Persian fleet had reached the coast of
Magnesia and the south-eastern corner of Thessaly without any material damage,
when the Athenians were instructed by an oracle “to invoke the aid of their
son-in-law”. Understanding the advice to point to Boreas, they supplicated his
aid and that of Oreithyia, most earnestly, as well by
prayer as by sacrifice, and the event corresponded to their wishes. A furious
north-easterly wind immediately arose, and continued for three days to afflict
the Persian fleet as it lay on an unprotected coast: the number of ships driven
ashore, both vessels of war and of provision, was immense, and the injury done
to the armament was never thoroughly repaired. Such was the powerful succor
which the Athenians derived, at a time of their utmost need, from their
son-in-law Boreas; and their gratitude was shown by consecrating to him a new
temple on the banks of the Ilissus.
The three remaining daughters of Erechtheus—he had six
in all—were in Athenian legend yet more venerated than their sisters, on
account of having voluntarily devoted themselves to death for the safety of
their country. Eumolpus of Eleusis was the son of Poseidon and the eponymous
hero of the sacred gens called the Eumolpids, in whom the principal functions,
appertaining to the mysterious rites of Demeter at Eleusis, were vested by
hereditary privilege: he made war upon Erechtheus and the Athenians, with the
aid of a body of Thracian allies; indeed it appears that the legends of Athens,
originally foreign and unfriendly to those of Eleusis, represented him as
having been himself a Thracian born and an immigrant into Attica. Respecting
Eumolpus however and his parentage, the discrepancies much exceed even the
measure of license usual in the legendary genealogies, and some critics, both
ancient and modern, have sought to reconcile these contradictions by the usual
stratagem of supposing two or three different persons of the same name. Even
Pausanias, so familiar with this class of unsworn witnesses, complains of the
want of native Eleusinian genealogists, and of the extreme license of fiction
in which other authors had indulged.
ATHENS AND ELEUSIS
In the Homeric Hymn to Demeter, the most ancient
testimony before us,—composed, to all appearance, earlier than the complete
incorporation of Eleusis with Athens,—Eumolpus appears (to repeat briefly what
has been stated in a previous chapter) as one of the native chiefs or princes
of Eleusis, along with Triptolemus, Diokles, Polyxeinus and Dolichus; Keleos is the king, or principal among these chiefs, the
son or lineal descendant of the eponymous Eleusis himself. To these chiefs, and
to the three daughters of Keleos, the goddess Demeter
comes in her sorrow for the loss of her daughter Persephone; being hospitably
entertained by Keleos she reveals her true character,
commands that a temple shall be built to her at Eleusis, and prescribes to them
the rites according to which they are to worship her. Such seems to have been
the ancient story of the Eleusinians respecting their
own religious antiquities; Keleos, with Metaneira his wife, and the other chiefs here mentioned,
were worshipped at Eleusis, and from thence transferred to Athens as local gods
or heroes. Eleusis became incorporated with Athens, apparently not very long
before the time of Solon; and the Eleusinian worship of Demeter was then
received into the great religious solemnities of the Athenian state, to which
it owes its remarkable subsequent extension and commanding influence. In the
Atticized worship of the Eleusinian Demeter, the Eumolpids and the Kerykes were the principal hereditary functionaries:
Eumolpus, the eponym of this great family, came thus to play the principal part
in the Athenian legendary version of the war between Athens and Eleusis. An
oracle had pronounced that Athens could only be rescued from his attack by the
death of the three daughters of Erechtheus; their generous patriotism consented
to the sacrifice, and their father put them to death. He then went forth
confidently to the battle, totally vanquished the enemy, and killed Eumolpus with
his own hand. Erechtheus was worshipped as a god, and his daughters as
goddesses, at Athens. Their names and their exalted devotion were cited along
with those of the warriors of Marathon, in the public assembly of Athens, by
orators who sought to arouse the languid patriot, or to denounce the cowardly
deserter; and the people listened both to one and the other with analogous
feelings of grateful veneration, as well as with equally unsuspecting faith in
the matter of fact.
Though Erechtheus gained the victory over Eumolpus,
yet the story represents Poseidon as having put an end to the life and reign of
Erechtheus, who was (it seems) slain in the battle. He was succeeded by his son
Kekrops II, and the latter again by his son Pandion two names unmarked by any
incidents, and which appear to be mere duplication of the former Kekrops and
Pandion, placed there by the genealogizers for the
purpose of filling up what seemed to them a chronological chasm.
Apollodorus passes at once from Erechtheus to his son
Kekrops II, then to Pandion II, next to the four sons of the latter, Egeus,
Pallas, Mins and Lykus. But the tragedians here
insert the story of Xuthus, Kreusa and Ion; the
latter being the son of Creusa by Apollo, but given by the god to Xuthus, and
adopted by the latter as his own. Ion becomes the successor of Erechtheus, and
his sons (Teleon, Hoples, Argades and Aigikores) become the
eponyms of the four ancient tribes of Athens, which subsisted until the
revolution of Kleisthenes. Ion himself is the eponym of the Ionic race both in
Asia, in Europe, and in the Aegean islands: Dorus and Achaeus are the sons of Kreusa by Xuthus, so that Ion is distinguished from both of
them by being of divine parentage. According to the story given by Philochorus, Ion rendered such essential service in
rescuing the Athenians from the attack of the Thracians under Eumolpus, that he
was afterwards made king of the country, and distributed all the inhabitants
into four tribes or castes, corresponding to different modes of life, — soldiers,
husbandmen, goatherds, and artisans. And it seems that the legend explanatory
of the origin of the festival Boedromia, originally
important enough to furnish a name to one of the Athenian months, was attached
to the aid thus rendered by Io.
THESEUS AND HIS ADVENTURES.
We pass from Ion to persons of far greater mythical
dignity and interest,—Egeus and his son Theseus.
Pandion had four sons, Egeus, Nisus, Lykus, and Pallas, between whom he divided his dominions.
Nisus received the territory of Megaris, which had
been under the sway of Pandion, and there founded the seaport of Nistea. Lykus was made king of
the eastern coast, but a dispute afterwards ensued, and he quitted the country
altogether, to establish himself on the southern coast of Asia Minor among the Termilae, to whom he gave the name of Lykians.
Egeus, as the eldest of the four, became king of Athens; but Pallas received a
portion both of the southwestern coast and the interior, and he as well as his
children appear as frequent enemies both to Egeus and to Theseus. Pallas is the
eponym of the deme Pallene, and the stories respecting him and his sons seem to
be connected with old and standing feuds among the different demes of Attica,
originally independent communities. These feuds penetrated into the legend, and
explain the story which we find that Egeus and Theseus were not genuine Erechtheids, the former being denominated a suppositious
child to Pandion.
Egeus has little importance in the mythical history
except as the father of Theseus: it may even be doubted whether his name is
anything more than a mere cognomen of the god Poseidon, who was (as we are
told) the real father of this great Attic Heracles. As I pretend only to give a
very brief outline of the general territory of Grecian legend, I cannot permit
myself to recount in detail the chivalrous career of Theseus, who is found both
in the Kalydonian boar-hunt and in the Argonautic
expedition —his personal and victorious encounters with the robbers Siunis, Procrustes, Periphetes, Sciron and others — his valuable service in ridding his
country of the Krommyonian sow and the Maratonian bull—his conquest of the Minotaur in Crete, and
his escape from the dangers of the labyrinth by the aid of Ariadne, whom he
subsequently carries off and abandons—his many amorous adventures, and his
expeditions both against the Amazons and into the under-world along with Peirithous.
Thucydides delineates the character of Theseus as a
man who combined sagacity with political power, and who conferred upon his
country the inestimable benefit of uniting all the separate and self-governing
demes of Attica into one common political society. From the well-earned
reverence attached to the assertion of Thucydides, it has been customary to
reason upon this assertion as if it were historically authentic, and to treat
the romantic attributes which we find in Plutarch and Diodorus as if they were
fiction superinduced upon this basis of fact. Such a view of the case is in my
judgment erroneous. The athletic and amorous knight-errant is the old version
of the character—the profound and long-sighted politician is a subsequent
correction, introduced indeed by men of superior mind, but destitute of
historical warranty, and arising out of their desire to find reasons of their own
for concurring in the veneration which the general public paid more easily and
heartily to their national hero. Theseus, in the Iliad and Odyssey, fights with
the Lapithae against the Centaurs : Theseus, in the
Hesiodic poems, is misguided by his passion for the beautiful Egle, daughter of Panopeus: and the Theseus described in Plutarch’s
biography is in great part a continuation and expansion of these same or
similar attributes, mingled with many local legends, explaining, like the Fasti
of Ovid, or the lost Aitia of Callimachus, the original genesis of prevalent
religious and social customs. Plutarch has doubtless greatly softened down and
modified the adventures which he found in the Attic logographers as well as in
the poetical epics called Theseis. For in his preface
to the life of Theseus, after having emphatically declared that he is about to
transcend the boundary both of the known and the knowable, but that the
temptation of comparing the founder of Athens with the founder of Rome is
irresistible, he concludes with the following remarkable words: “I pray that
this fabulous matter may be so far obedient to my endeavors as to receive, when
purified by reason, the aspect of history: in those cases where it haughtily
scorns plausibility and will admit no alliance with what is probable, I shall
beg for indulgent hearers, willing to receive antique narrative in a mild
spirit”. We see here that Plutarch sat down, not to recount the old fables as
he found them, but to purify them by reason and to impart to them the aspect of
history. We have to thank him for having retained, after this purification, so
much of what is romantic and marvelous; but we may be sure that the sources
from which he borrowed were more romantic and marvelous still. It was the
tendency of the enlightened men of Athens, from the days of Solon downwards, to
refine and politicize the character of Thesuas : even
Peisistratus expunged from one of the Hesiodic poems the line which described
the violent passion of the hero for the fair Egle : and the tragic poets found
it more congenial to the feelings of their audience to exhibit him as a
dignified and liberal sovereign, rather than as an adventurous single-handed
fighter. But the logographers and the Alexandrine poets remained more faithful to
the old fables. The story of Hekale, the hospitable
old woman who received and blessed Theseus when he went against the Marathonian
bull, and whom he found dead when he came back to recount the news of his
success, was treated by Callimachus : and Virgil must have had his mind full of
the unrefined legends when he numbered this Attic Heracles among the unhappy
sufferers condemned to endless penance in the under-world.
Two however among the Theseian fables cannot be dismissed without some special notice,—the war against the
Amazons, and the expedition against Crete. The former strikingly illustrates
the facility as well as the tenacity of Grecian legendary faith; the latter
embraces the story of Daedalus and Minos, two of the most eminent among Grecian
ante-historical personages.
LEGEND OF THE AMAZONS.
The Amazons, daughters of Ares and Harmonia, are both
early creations and frequent reproductions of the ancient epic—which was
indeed, we may generally remark, largely occupied both with the exploits and
sufferings of women, or heroines, the wives and daughters of the Grecian
heroes—and which recognized in Pallas Athene the finished type of an
irresistible female warrior. A nation of courageous, hardy and indefatigable
women, dwelling apart from men, permitting only a short temporary intercourse
for the purpose of renovating their numbers, and burning out their right breast
with a view of enabling themselves to draw the bow freely,—this was at once a
general type stimulating to the fancy of the poet and a theme eminently popular
with his hearers. Nor was it at all repugnant to the faith of the latter—who
had no recorded facts to guide them, and no other standard of credibility as to
the past except such poetical narratives themselves — to conceive communities
of Amazons as having actually existed in anterior time. Accordingly we find
these warlike females constantly reappearing in the ancient poems, and
universally accepted as past realities. In the Iliad, when Priam wishes to
illustrate emphatically the most numerous host in which he ever found himself
included, he tells us that it was assembled in Phrygia, on the banks of the Sangarius, for the purpose of resisting the formidable
Amazons. When Bellerophon is to be employed on a deadly and perilous
undertaking, by those who indirectly wish to procure his death, he is
dispatched against the Amazons. In the Ethiopis of Arktinus, describing the post-Homeric war of Troy, Penthesileia, queen of the Amazons, appears as the most
effective ally of the besieged city, and as the most formidable enemy of the
Greeks, succumbing only to the invincible might of Achilles. The Argonautic
heroes find the Amazons on the river Thermadon, in
their expedition along the southern coast of the Euxine. To the same spot
Heracles goes to attack them, in the performance of the ninth labor imposed
upon him by Eurystheus, for the purpose of procuring the girdle of the
Amazonian queen, Hippolyte; and we are told that they had not yet recovered
from the losses sustained in this severe aggression when Theseus also assaulted
and defeated them, carrying off their queen, Antiope. This injury they avenged
by invading Attica,—an undertaking (as Plutarch justly observes) "neither
trifling nor feminine," especially if according to the statement of
Hellanikus, they crossed the Cimmerian Bosporus on the winter ice, beginning
their march from the Asiatic side of the Pallus Maeotis. They overcame all the resistances and difficulties of this prodigious
march, and penetrated even into Athens itself, where the final battle,
hard-fought and at one time doubtful, by which Theseus crushed them, was
fought—in the very heart of the city.
Attic antiquaries confidently pointed out the exact
position of the two contending armies: the left wing of the Amazons rested upon
the spot occupied by the commemorative monument called the Amazoneion;
the right wing touched the Pnyx, the place in which the public assemblies of
the Athenian democracy were afterwards held. The details and fluctuations of
the combat, as well as the final triumph and consequent truce, were recounted
by these authors with as complete faith and as much circumstantiality as those
of the battle of Plataea by Herodotus. The sepulchral edifice called the Amazoneion, the tomb or pillar of Antiope near the western
gate of the city—the spot called the Horkomosion near
the temple of Theseus—even the hill of Areiopagus itself, and the sacrifices which it was customary to offer to the Amazons at
the periodical festival of the Theseia—were all so
many religious mementos of this victory; which was moreover a favorite subject
of art both with the sculptor and the painter, at Athens as well as in other
parts of Greece.
No portion of the ante-historical epic appears to have
been more deeply worked into the national mind of Greece than this invasion and
defeat of the Amazons. It was not only a constant theme of the logographers,
but was also familiarly appealed to by the popular orators along with Marathon
and Salamis, among those antique exploits of which their fellow-citizens might
justly be proud. It formed a part of the retrospective faith of Herodotus,
Lysias, Plato and Isocrates, and the exact date of the event was settled by the
chronologists. Nor did the Athenians stand alone in such a belief. Throughout
many other regions of Greece, both European and Asiatic, traditions and
memorials of the Amazons were found. At Megara, at Troezen,
in Laconia near Cape Taenarus, at Chaeronea in
Boeotia, and in more than one part of Thessaly, sepulchers or monuments of the
Amazons were preserved. The warlike women (it was said), on their way to
Attica, had not traversed those countries, without leaving some evidences of
their passage.
Amongst the Asiatic Greeks the supposed traces of the
Amazons were yet more numerous. Their proper territory was asserted to be the
town and plain of Themiskyra, near the Grecian colony
of Amisus, on the river Thermodon,
a region called after their name by Roman historians and geographers. But they
were believed to have conquered and occupied in early times a much wider range
of territory, extending even to the coast of Ionia and Eolis. Ephesus, Smyrna, Kyme, Myrina, Paphos and Sinope were affirmed to have been
founded and denominated by them. Some authors placed them in Libya or Ethiopia;
and when the Poetic Greeks on the north-western shore of the Euxine had become
acquainted with the hardy and daring character of the Sarmatian maidens,—who
were obliged to have slain each an enemy in battle as the condition of
obtaining a husband, and who artificially prevented the growth of the right
breast during childhood,—they could imagine no more satisfactory mode of
accounting for such attributes than by deducing the Sarmatians from a colony of
vagrant Amazons, expelled by the Grecian heroes from their territory on the Thermodon. Pindar ascribed the first establishment of the
memorable temple of Artemis at Ephesus to the Amazons. And Pausanias explains
in part the preeminence which this temple enjoyed over every other in Greece by
the widely diffused renown of its female founders, respecting whom he observes
(with perfect truth, if we admit the historical character of the old epic),
that women possess an unparalleled force of resolution in resisting adverse
events, since the Amazons, after having been first roughly handled by Heracles
and then completely defeated by Theseus, could yet find courage to play so
conspicuous a part in the defense of Troy against the Grecian besiegers.
It is thus that in what is called early Grecian
history, as the Greeks themselves looked back upon it, the Amazons were among
the most prominent and undisputed personages. Nor will the circumstance appear
wonderful if we reflect, that the belief in them was first established at a
time when the Grecian mind was fed with nothing else but religious legend and
epic poetry, and that the incidents of the supposed past, as received from
these sources, were addressed to their faith and feelings, without being
required to adapt themselves to any canons of credibility drawn from present
experience. But the time came when the historians of Alexander the Great
audaciously abused this ancient credence. Amongst other tales calculated to
exalt the dignity of that monarch, they affirmed that after his conquest and
subjugation of the Persian empire, he had been visited in Hyrcania by Thalestris, queen of the Amazons, who admiring his warlike
prowess, was anxious to be enabled to return into her own country in a
condition to produce offspring of a breed so invincible. But the Greeks had now
been accustomed for a century and a half to historical and philosophical
criticism —and that uninquiring faith, which was readily accorded to the
wonders of the past, could no longer be invoked for them when tendered as
present reality. For the fable of the Amazons was here reproduced in its naked
simplicity, without being rationalized or painted over with historical colors.
Some literary men indeed, among whom were Demetrius of
Skepsis, and the Mitylenaean Theophanes, the
companion of Pompey in his expeditions, still continued their belief both in
Amazons present and Amazons past; and when it becomes notorious that at least
there were none such on the banks of the Thermodon,
these authors supposed them to have migrated from their original locality, and
to have settled in the unvisited regions north of Mount Caucasus. Strabo, on
the contrary, feeling that the grounds of disbelief applied with equal force to
the ancient stories and to the modern, rejected both the one and the other. But
he remarks at the same time, not without some surprise, that it was usual with
most persons to adopt a middle course,—to retain the Amazons as historical
phenomena of the remote past, but to disallow them as realities of the present,
and to maintain that the breed had died out. The accomplished intellect of
Julius Cesar did not scruple to acknowledge them as having once conquered and
held in dominion a large portion of Asia; and the compromise between early,
traditional, and religious faith on the one hand, and established habits of
critical research on the other, adopted by the historian Arrian, deserves to be
transcribed in his own words, as illustrating strikingly the powerful sway of
the old legends even over the most positive-minded Greeks:—“Neither Aristobulus
nor Ptolemy (he observes), nor any other competent witness, has recounted this
visit of the Amazons and their queen to Alexander: nor does it seem to me that
the race of the Amazons was preserved down to that time, nor have they been
noticed either by any one before Alexander, or by Xenophon, though he mentions
both the Phasians and the Kolchians,
and the other barbarous nations which the Greeks saw both before and after
their arrival at Trapezus, in which marches they must
have met with the Amazons, if the latter had been still in existence. Yet it is
incredible to me that this race of women, celebrated as they have been by
authors so many and so commanding, should never have existed at all. The story
tells of Heracles, that he set out from Greece and brought back with him the
girdle of their queen Hippolyte; also of Theseus and the Athenians, that they
were the first who defeated in battle and repelled these women in their
invasion of Europe; and the combat of the Athenians with the Amazons has been
painted by Mikon, not less than that between the Athenians and the Persians.
Moreover Herodotus has spoken in many places of these women, and those Athenian
orators who have pronounced panegyrics on the citizens slain in battle, have
dwelt upon the victory over the Amazons as among the most memorable of Athenian
exploits. If the satrap of Media sent any equestrian women at all to Alexander,
I think that they must have come from some of the neighboring tribes, practiced
in riding and equipped in the costume generally called Amazonian”.
There cannot be a more striking evidence of the
indelible force with which these ancient legends were worked into the national
faith and feelings of the Greeks, than these remarks of a judicious historian
upon the fable of the Amazons. Probably if any plausible mode of rationalizing
it, and of transforming it into a quasi-political event, had been offered to
Arrian, he would have been better pleased to adopt such a middle term, and
would have rested comfortably in the supposition that he believed the legend in
its true meaning, while his less inquiring countrymen were imposed upon by the
exaggerations of poets. But as the story was presented to him plain end
unvarnished, either for acceptance or rejection, his feelings as a patriot and
a religious man prevented him from applying to the past such tests of
credibility as his untrammeled reason acknowledged to be paramount in regard to
the present. When we see moreover how much his belief was strengthened, and all
tendency to skepticism shut out by the familiarity of his eye and memory with
sculptured or painted Amazons—we may calculate the irresistible force of this
sensible demonstration on the convictions of the unlettered public, at once
more deeply retentive of passive impressions, and unaccustomed to the
countervailing habit of rational investigation into evidence. Had the march of
an army of warlike women, from the Thermodon or the Tanais into the heart of Attica, been recounted to Arrian
as an incident belonging to the time of Alexander the Great, he would have
rejected it no less emphatically than Strabo; but cast back as it was into an
undefined past, it took rank among the hallowed traditions of divine or heroic
antiquity,—gratifying to extol by rhetoric, but repulsive to scrutinize in
argument.
CHAPTER XII
CRETAN LEGENDS.—MINOS AND HIS FAMILY.
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