READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
GEORGE GROTE'S HISTORY OF GREECELEGENDARY GREECE CHAPTER IV
HEROIC LEGENDS.—GENEALOGY OF ARGOS.
HAVING briefly enumerated the gods of Greece, with
their chief attributes as described in legend, we come to those genealogies
which connected them with historical men.
In the retrospective faith of a Greek, the ideas of
worship and ancestry coalesced. Every association of men, large or small, in
whom there existed a feeling of present union, traced back that union to some
common initial progenitor; that progenitor being either the common god whom
they worshipped, or some semi-divine person closely allied to him. What the
feelings of the community require is, a continuous pedigree to connect them
with this respected source of existence, beyond which they do not think of
looking back. A series of names, placed in filiation or fraternity, together
with a certain number of family or personal adventures ascribed to some of the
individuals among them, constitute the ante-historical past through which the
Greek looks back to his gods. The names of this genealogy are, to a great
degree, gentile or local names familiar to the people,—rivers, mountains,
springs, lakes, villages, demes, &c.,—embodied as persons, and introduced
as acting or suffering. They are moreover called kings or chiefs, but the
existence of a body of subjects surrounding them is tacitly implied rather than
distinctly set forth ; for their own personal exploits or family proceedings
constitute for the most part the whole matter of narrative. And thus the
genealogy was made to satisfy at once the appetite of the Greeks for romantic
adventure, and their demand for an unbroken line of filiation between
themselves and the gods.
The eponymous personage, from whom the community
derive their name, is sometimes the begotten son of the local god, even if it
could be ascertained, we must at once set it historical aside, if we wish to
look at the genealogy in the point of view of the Greeks. For to them, not only
all the members were alike real, but the gods and heroes at the commencement
were in a certain sense the most real; at least, they were the most esteemed
and indispensable of all. The value of the genealogy consisted, not in its
length, but in its continuity; not (according to the feeling of modern
aristocracy) in the power of setting out a prolonged series of human fathers
and grandfathers, but in the sense of ancestral union with the primitive god.
And the length of the series is traceable rather to humility, inasmuch as the
same person who was gratified with the belief that he was descended from a god
in the fifteenth generation, would have accounted it, criminal insolence to
affirm that a god was his father or grandfather. In presenting to the reader
those genealogies which constitute the supposed primitive history of Hellas, I
make no pretense to distinguish names real and historical from fictitious
creations; partly because I have no evidence upon which to draw the line, and
partly because by attempting it I should altogether depart from the genuine
Grecian point of view.
Nor is it possible to do more than exhibit a certain
selection of such as were most current and interesting; for the total number of
them which found place in Grecian faith exceeds computation. As a general rule,
every deme, every gens, every aggregate of men accustomed to combined action,
religious or political, had its own. The small and unimportant demes into which
Attica was divided had each its ancestral god and heroes, just as much as the
great Athens herself. Even among the villages of Phocis, which Pausanias will
hardly permit himself to call towns, deductions of legendary antiquity were not
wanting. And it is important to bear in mind, when we are reading the legendary
genealogies of Argos, or Sparta, or Thebes, that these are merely samples
amidst an extensive class, all perfectly analogous, and all exhibiting the
religious and patriotic retrospect of some fraction of the Hellenic world. They
are no more matter of historical tradition than any of the thousand other
legendary genealogies which men delighted to recall to memory at the periodical
festivals of their gees, their deme, or their village.
With these few prefatory remarks, I proceed to notice
the most conspicuous of the Grecian heroic pedigrees, and first, that of Argos.
Argeian genealogy-Inachus
The earliest name in Argeian antiquity is that of
Inachus, the son of Oceanus and Tethys, who gave his name to the Argeian river
flowing under the walls of the town. According to the chronological
computations of those who regarded the mythical genealogies as substantive
history, and who allotted a given number of years to each generation, the reign
of Inachus was placed 1986 BC, or about 1100 years prior to the commencement of
the recorded Olympiads.
The sons of Inachus were Phoroneus and Egialeus; both of whom however were sometimes
represented as autochthonous or indigenous men, the one in the territory of
Argos, the other in that of Sicyon. Egialeus gave his
name to the north-western region of the Peloponnesus, on the southern coast of
the Corinthian Gulf. The name of Phoreneus was of
great celebrity in the Argeian mythical genealogies, and furnished both the
title and the subject of the ancient poem called Phoronis,
in which he is styled “the father of mortal men”. He is said to have imparted
to mankind, who had before him lived altogether isolated, the first notion and
habits of social existence, and even the first knowledge of fire: his dominion
extended over the whole Peloponnesus. His tomb at Argos, and seemingly also the
place, called the Phoronic city, in which he formed
the first settlement of mankind, were still shown in the days of Pausanias. The
offspring of Phoroneus, by the nymph Teledike, were Apis and Niobe. Apis, a harsh ruler, was put to death by Thelxion and Telchin, having
given to Peloponnesus the name of Apia: he was succeeded by Argos, the son of
his sister Niobe by the god Zeus. From this sovereign Peloponnesus was
denominated Argos. By his wife Evadne, daughter of Strymon, he had four sons,
Ekbasus, Peiras, Epidaurus, and Kriasus.
Ekbasus was succeeded by his son Agenor, and he again by his son Argos
Panoptes, a very powerful prince, who is said to have bad eyes distributed over
all his body, and to have liberated Peloponnesus from several monsters and wild
animals which infested it: Akusilaus and Aeschylus
make this Argos an earthborn person, while Pherekydes reports him as son of Arestor. Iasus was the son of
Argos Panoptes by Ismene, daughter of Asopus. According to the authors whom
Apollodorus and Pausanias prefer, the celebrated Io was his daughter: but the
Hesiodic epic (as well as Akusilaus) represented her
as daughter of Peiras, while Aeschylus and Kastor the
chronologist affirmed the primitive king Inachus to have been her father. A
favorite theme, as well for the ancient genealogical poets as for the Attic
tragedians, were the adventures of Io; of whom, while priestess of Hera, at the
ancient and renowned Heraeon between Mycenae and
Tiryns, Zeus became amorous. When Hera discovered the intrigue and taxed him
with it, he denied the charge, and metamorphosed Io into a white cow. Here,
requiring that the cow should be surrendered to her, placed her under the
keeping of Argos Panoptes; but this guardian was slain by Hermes, at the
command of Zeus; and Hera then drove the cow Io away from her native land by
means of the incessant stinging of a gadfly, which compelled her to wander
without repose or sustenance over an immeasurable extent of foreign regions.
The wandering Io gave her name to the Ionian Gulf, traversed Epirus and
Illyria, passed the chain of Mount Haemus and the lofty summits of Caucasus,
and swam across the Thracian or Cimmerian Bosporus (which also from her derived
its appellation) into Asia. She then went through Scythia, Cimmeria, and many
Asiatic regions, until she arrived in Egypt, where Zeus at length bestowed upon
her rest, restored her to her original form, and enabled her to give birth to
his black son Epaphos.
Such is a general sketch of the adventures which the
ancient poets, epic, lyric, and tragic, and the logographers after them,
connect with the name of the Argeian Io—one of the numerous tales which the
fancy of the Greeks deduced from the amorous dispositions of Zeus and the
jealousy of Hera. That the scene should be laid in the Argeian territory
appears natural, when we recollect that both Argos and Mycenae were under the
special guardianship of Here, and that the Heraeon near Mycenae was one of the oldest and most celebrated temples in which she was
worshipped. It is useful to compare this amusing fiction with the
representation reported to us by Herodotus, and derived by him as well from
Phoenician as from Persian antiquarians, of the circumstances which occasioned
the transit of Io from Argos to Egypt—an event recognized by all of them as
historical matter of fact. According to the Persians, a Phoenician vessel had
arrived at the port near Argos, freighted with goods intended for sale to the
inhabitants of the country. After the vessel had remained a few days, and
disposed of most of her cargo, several Argeian women, and among them Io the
king’s daughter, coming on board to purchase, were seized and carried off by
the crew, who sold Io in Egypt. The Phoenician antiquarians, however, while
they admitted the circumstance that Io had left her own country in one of their
vessels, gave a different color to the whole by affirming that she emigrated
voluntarily, having been engaged in an amour with the captain of the vessel,
and fearing that her parents might come to the knowledge of her pregnancy. Both
Persians and Phoenicians described the abduction of Io as the first of a series
of similar acts between Greeks and Asiatics,
committed each in revenge for the preceding. First came the rape of Europe from
Phoenicia by Grecian adventurers—perhaps, as Herodotus supposed, by Cretans:
next, the abduction of Medeia from Colchis by Jason, which occasioned the
retaliatory act of Paris, when he stole away Helena from Menelaos. Up to this
point the seizures of women by Greeks from Asiatics,
and by Asiatics from Greeks, had been equivalent both
in number and in wrong. But the Greeks now thought fit to equip a vast conjoint
expedition to recover Helen, in the course of which they took and sacked Troy.
The invasions of Greece by Darius and Xerxes were intended, according to the
Persian antiquarians, as a long-delayed retribution for the injury inflicted on
the Asiatics by Agamemnon and his followers.
Danaos and his fifty daughters
The account thus given of the adventures of Io, when
contrasted with the genuine legend, is interesting, as it tends to illustrate
the phenomenon which early Grecian history is constantly presenting to us—the
way in which the epical furniture of an unknown past is recast and newly
colored so as to meet those changes which take place in the retrospective
feelings of the present. The religious and poetical character of the whole
legend disappears: nothing remains except the names of persons and places, and
the voyage from Argos to Egypt: we have in exchange a sober, quasi-historical
narrative, the value of which consists in its bearing on the grand contemporary
conflicts between Persia and Greece, which filled the imagination of Herodotus
and his readers.
To proceed with the genealogy of the kings of Argos,
Iasus was succeeded by Krotopus, son of his brother
Agenor; Krotopus by Sthenelas,
and he again by Gelanor. In the reign of the latter,
Danaos came with his fifty daughters from Egypt to Argos; and here we find
another of those romantic adventures which so agreeably decorate the barrenness
of the mythical genealogies. Danaos and Egyptos were
two brothers descending from Epaphos, son of Io: Egyptos had fifty sons, who were eager to marry the fifty
daughters of Danaos, in spite of the strongest repugnance of the latter. To
escape such a necessity, Danaos placed his fifty daughters on board of a penteconter (or vessel with fifty oars) and sought refuge
at Argos; touching in his voyage at the island of Rhodes, where he erected a
statue of Athena at Lindos, which was long exhibited
as a memorial of his passage. Egyptos and his sons
followed them to Argos, and still pressed their suit, to which Danaos found
himself compelled to assent; but on the wedding night he furnished each of his
daughters with a dagger, and enjoined them to murder their husbands during the
hour of deep. His orders were obeyed by all, with the single exception of Hypermnestra, who preserved her husband Lynkeus,
incurring displeasure and punishment from her father. He afterwards, however,
pardoned her; and when, by the voluntary abdication of Gelamor,
he became king of Argos, Lynkeus was recognized as
his son-in-law, and ultimately succeeded him. The remaining daughters, having
been purified by Athena and Hermes, were given in marriage to the victors in a gymnic contest publicly proclaimed. From Danaos was derived
the name of Danai, applied to the inhabitants of the Argeian territory, and to
the Homeric Greeks generally.
Akrisios and Proetus
From the legend of the Danaides we pass to two barren names of kings, Lynkeus and his
son Abas. The two sons of Abas were Akrisios and Proetos, who, after much dissension, divided between them
the Argeian territory; Akrisios ruling at Argos, and Proetos at Tiryns. The families of both formed the theme of
romantic stories. To pass over for the present the legend of Bellerophon, and
the unrequited passion which the wife of Proetos conceived for him, we are told that the daughters of Proetos,
beautiful, and solicited in marriage by suitors from all Greece, were smitten
with leprosy and driven mad, wandering in unseemly guise throughout
Peloponnesus. The visitation had overtaken them, according to Hesiod, because
they refused to take part in the Bacchic rites; according to Pherekydes and the Argeian Akusilaus,
because they had treated scornfully the wooden statue and simple equipments of Hera: the religious character of the old
legend here displays itself in a remarkable manner. Unable to cure his
daughters, Proetos invoked the aid of the renowned Pylian prophet and leech, Melampus son of Amythaon, who
undertook to remove the malady on condition of being rewarded with the third
part of the kingdom. Proetos indignantly refused
these conditions : but the state of his daughters becoming aggravated and
intolerable, he was compelled again to apply to Melampus; who, on the second
request, raised his demands still higher, and required another third of the
kingdom for his brother Bias. These terms being acceded to, he performed his
part of the covenant. He appeased the wrath of Hera by prayer and sacrifice;
or, according to another account, he approached the deranged women at the head
of a troop of young men, with shouting and ecstatic dance—the ceremonies
appropriate to the Bacchic worship of Dionysos,—and in this manner effected
their cure. Melampus, a name celebrated in many different Grecian myths, is the
legendary founder and progenitor of a great and long-continued family of
prophets. He and his brother Bias became kings of separate portions of the
Argeian territory: he is recognized as ruler there even in the Odyssey, and the
prophet Theoklymenos, his grandson, is protected and
carried to Ithaca by Telemachus. Herodotus also alludes to the cure of the
women, and to the double kingdom of Melampus and Bias in the Argeian land:
recognizing Melampus as the first person who introduced to the knowledge of the
Greeks the name and worship of Dionysos, with its appropriate sacrifices and
phallic processions. Here again he historicizes various features of the old
legend in a manner not unworthy of notice.
Perseus and the Gorgons
But Danae, the daughter of Akrisios,
with her son Perseus, acquired still greater celebrity than her cousins the Proetides. An oracle had apprised Akrisios that his daughter would give birth to a son by whose hand he would himself be
slain. To guard against this danger, he imprisoned Danae in a chamber of brass
underground. But the god Zeus had become amorous of her, and found means to
descend through the roof in the form of a shower of gold: the consequence of
his visits was the birth of Perseus. When Akrisios discovered that his daughter had given existence to a son, he enclosed both the
mother and the child in a coffer, which he cast into the sea. The coffer was
carried to the isle of Seriphos, where Diktys, brother of the king Polydektes,
fished it up, and rescued both Danae and Perseus. The exploits of Perseus, when
he grew up, against the three Phorkydes or daughters
of Phorkys, and the three Gorgons, are among the most
marvelous and imaginative in all Grecian legend: they bear a stamp almost
Oriental. I shall not here repeat the details of those unparalleled hazards
which the special favor of Athene enabled him to overcome, and which ended in
his bringing back from Libya the terrific head of the Gorgon Medusa, endued
with the property of turning everyone who looked upon it into stone. In his
return he rescued Andromeda, daughter of Cepheus, who had been exposed to be
devoured by a sea-monster, and brought her back as his wife. Akrisios trembled to see him after this victorious
expedition, and retired into Thessaly to avoid him; but Perseus followed him
thither, and having succeeded in calming his apprehensions, became competitor
in a gymnic contest where his grandfather was among
the spectators. By an incautious swing of his quoit, he unintentionally struck Akrisios, and caused his death: the predictions of the
oracle were thus at last fulfilled. Stung with remorse at the catastrophe, and
unwilling to return to Argos, which had been the principality of Akrisios, Perseus made an exchange with Megapenthes,
son of Proetos king of Tiryns. Megapenthes became king of Argos, and Perseus of Tiryns: moreover the latter founded,
within ten miles of Argos, the far-famed city of Mycenae. The massive walls of
this city, like those of Tiryns, of which a large portion yet remains, were
built for him by the Lycian Cyclopes.
The Perseids
We here reach the commencement of the Perseid dynasty
of Mycenae. It should be noticed, however, that there were among the ancient
legends contradictory accounts of the foundation of this city. Both the Odyssey
and the great Eoiai enumerated, among the heroines, Mykene, the Eponyma of the city;
the former poem classifying her with Tyre and Alkmene, the latter describing
her as the daughter of Inachus and wife of Arestor.
And Akusilaus mentioned an Eponymous Mykeneus, the son of Sparton and
grand-son of Phoreneus.
The prophetic family of Melampus maintained itself in
one of the three parts of the divided Argeian kingdom for five generations,
down to Amphiaraos and his sons Alkmaeon and
Amphilochos. The dynasty of his brother Bias, and that of Megapenthes,
son of Proetos, continued each for four generations:
a list of barren names fills up the interval. The Perseids of Mykenae boasted a descent long and glorious, heroic as well
as historical, continuing down to the last kings of Sparta. The issue of
Perseus was numerous: his son Alkaeos was father of
Alkmene; a third, Sthenelos, father of Eurysthenes.
After the death of Perseus, Alkaeos and Amphitryon dwelt at Tiryns. The latter became engaged in a quarrel with Elektryon respecting cattle, and in a fit of passion killed
him; moreover the piratical Taphians from the west
coast of Acarnania invaded the country, and slew the sons of Alektryon, so that Alkmene alone was left of that family.
She was engaged to wed Amphitryon; but she bound him by oath not to consummate
the marriage until he had avenged upon the Teleboae the death of her brothers. Amphitryon, compelled to flee the country as the
murderer of his uncle, took refuge in Thebes, whither Alkmene accompanied him: Sthenelos was left in possession of Tiryns. The Cadmeians of Thebes, together with the Lokrians and Phokians, supplied Amphitryon with troops, which
he conducted against the Teleboae and the Taphians: yet he could not have subdued them without the
aid of Komaetho, daughter of the Taphian king Pterelaus, who conceived a passion for him, and cut off from her father’s
head the golden lock to which Poseidon had attached the gift of immortality.
Having conquered and expelled his enemies, Amphitryon returned to Thebes,
impatient to consummate his marriage: but Zeus on the wedding-night assumed his
form and visited Alkmene before him: he had determined to produce from her a
son superior to all his prior offspring—“a specimen of invincible force both to
gods and men”. At the proper time Alkmene was delivered of twin sons: Heracles,
the offspring of Zeus, and the inferior and unhonoured Iphikles, offspring of Amphitryon.
Birth of Herakles
When Alkmene was on the point of being delivered at
Thebes, Zeus publicly boasted among the assembled gods, at the instigation of
the mischief-making Ate, that there was on that day about to be born on earth,
from his breed, a son who should rule over all his neighbors. Hera treated this
as an empty boast, calling upon him to bind himself by an irremissible oath
that the prediction should be realized. Zeus incautiously pledged his solemn
word; upon which Hera darted swiftly down from Olympus to the Achaic Argos, where the wife of Sthenelos (son of Perseus, and therefore grandson of Zeus) was already seven months gone
with child. By the aid of the Eileithyiae, the
special goddesses of parturition, she caused Eurystheus, the son of Sthenelos, to be born before his time on that very day,
while she retarded the delivery of Alkmene. Then returning to Olympus, she
announced the fact to Zeus: “The good man Eurystheus, son of the Perseid Sthenelos, is this day born of thy loins: the scepter of
the Argeians worthily belongs to him”. Zeus was
thunderstruck at the consummation which he had improvidently bound himself to
accomplish. He seized Ate his evil counselor by the hair, and hurled her for ever away from Olympus: but he had no power to avert
the ascendency of Eurystheus and the servitude of Herakles. “Many a pang did he
suffer when he saw his favorite son going through his degrading toil in the
tasks imposed upon him by Eurystheus”.
The legend, of unquestionable antiquity, here
transcribed from the Iliad, is one of the most pregnant and characteristic in
the Grecian mythology. It explains, according to the religious ideas familiar
to the old epic poets, both the distinguishing attributes and the endless toils
and endurances of Heracles—the most renowned and most ubiquitous of all the
semi-divine personages worshipped by the Hellenes—a being of irresistible
force, and especially beloved by Zeus, yet condemned constantly to labor for
others and to obey the commands of a worthless and cowardly persecutor. His
recompense is reserved to the close of his career, when his afflicting trials
are brought to a close: he is then admitted to the god-head and receives in
marriage Hebe. The twelve labors, as they are called, too notorious to be here
detailed, form a very small fraction of the exploits of this mighty being,
which filled the Herakleian epics of the ancient
poets. He is found not only in most parts of Hellas, but throughout all the
regions then known to the Greeks, from Gades to the river Thermodon in the Euxine and to Scythia, overcoming all difficulties and vanquishing all
opponents. Distinguished families are everywhere to be traced who bear his
patronymic, and glory in the belief that they are his descendants. Among
Achaeans, Cadmeians, and Dorians, Heracles is
venerated: the latter especially treat him as their principal hero—the Patron
Hero-God of the race: the Herakleids form among all
Dorians a privileged gens, in which at Sparta the special lineage of the two
kings was included.
His character lends itself to myths countless in
number, as well as disparate in their character. The irresistible force remains
constant, but it is sometimes applied with reckless violence against friends as
well as enemies, sometimes devoted to the relief of the oppressed. The comic
writers often brought him out as a coarse and stupid glutton, while the Keian
philosopher Prodikos, without at all distorting the
type, extracted from it the simple, impressive, and imperishable apologue still
known as the choice of Hercules.
After the death and apotheosis of Heracles, his son Hyllos and his other children were expelled and persecuted
by Eurystheus; the fear of whose vengeance deterred both the Trachinian king Keyx and the
Thebans from harboring them. The Athenians alone were generous enough to brave
the risk of offering them shelter. Eurystheus invaded Attica, but perished in
the attempt by the hand of Hyllos, or by that of Iolaos, the old companion and nephew of Heracles. The chivalrous
courage which the Athenians had on this occasion displayed on behalf of
oppressed innocence was a favorite theme for subsequent eulogy by Attic poets
and orators.
All the sons of Eurystheus lost their lives in the
battle along with him, so that the Perseid family was now represented only by
the Herakleids, who collected an army and endeavored
to recover the possessions from which they had been expelled. The united forces
of Ionians, Achaeans, and Arcadians, then inhabiting Peloponnesus, met the invaders
at the isthmus, when Hyllos, the eldest of the sons
of Heracles, proposed that the contest should be determined by a single combat
between himself and any champion of the opposing army. It was agreed that if Hyllos were victorious, the Herakleids should be restored to their possessions—if he were vanquished, that they should
forego all claim for the space of a hundred years, or fifty years, or three
generations,—for in the specification of the time accounts differ. Echemos, the hero of Tegea, in Arcadia, accepted the
challenge, and Hyllos was slain in the encounter; in
consequence of which the Herakleids retired, and
resided along with the Dorians under the protection of Egimios,
son of Dorus. As soon as the stipulated period of truce had expired, they renewed
their attempt upon Peloponnesus, conjointly with the Dorians, and with complete
success: the great Dorian establishments of Argos, Sparta, and Messenia were
the result. The details of this victorious invasion will be hereafter
recounted.
Sicyon, Phlios, Epidauros, and Troezen all
boasted of respected eponyms and a genealogy of dignified length, not exempt
from the usual discrepancies—but all just as much entitled to a place on the
tablet of history as the more renowned Eolids or Herakleids. I omit them here because I wish to impress upon
the reader's mind the salient features and character of the legendary
world,—not to load his memory with a full list of legendary names.
CHAPTER VDEUKALION, HELLEN, AND SONS OF HELLEN.
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