READING HALLTHE DOORS OF WISDOM |
GEORGE GROTE'S HISTORY OF GREECELEGENDARY GREECE CHAPTER 5.DEUKALION, HELLEN, AND SONS OF HELLEN.
IN the Hesiodic theogony, as well as in the “Works and
Days”, the legend of Prometheus and Epimetheus presents an import religious,
ethical, and social, and in this sense it is carried forward by Aeschylus; but
to neither of the characters is any genealogical function assigned. The
Hesiodic Catalogue of Women brought both of them into the stream of Grecian
legendary lineage, representing Deucalion as the son of Prometheus and Pandora,
and seemingly his wife Pyrrha as daughter of Epimetheus.
Deucalion is important in Grecian mythical narrative
under two points of view. First, he is the person specially saved at the time
of the general deluge: next, he is the father of Hellen, the great eponym of
the Hellenic race: at least this was the more current story, though there were
other statements which made Hellen the son of Zeus.
The name of Deucalion is originally connected with the Lokrian towns of Kynos and
Opus, and with the race of the Leleges, but he
appears finally as settled in Thessaly, and ruling in the portion of that country
called Phthiotis. According to what seems to have
been the old legendary account, it is the deluge which transferred him from the
one to the other; but according to another statement, framed in more
historicizing times, he conducted a body of Kuretes and Leleges into Thessaly, and expelled the prior
Pelasgian occupants.
The enormous iniquity with which earth was
contaminated—as Apollodorus says, by the then existing brazen race, or as
others say, by the fifty monstrous sons of Lykaon—provoked Zeus to send a
general deluge? An unremitting and terrible rain laid the whole of Greece under
water, except the highest mountain tops, whereon a few stragglers found refuge. Deukalion was saved in a chest or ark, which he had
been forewarned by his father Prometheus to construct. After floating for nine
days on the water, he at length landed on the summit of Mount Parnassus. Zeus
having sent Hermes to him, promising to grant whatever he asked, he prayed that
men and companions might be sent to him in his solitude: accordingly Zeus
directed both him and Pyrrha to cast stones over their heads: those cast by
Pyrrha became women, those by Deucalion men. And thus the “stony race of men”
(if we may be allowed to translate an etymology which the Greek language
presents exactly, and which has not been disdained by Hesiod, by Pindar, by Epicharmus, and by Virgil) came to tenant the soil of
Greece. Deucalion on landing from the ark sacrificed a grateful offering to
Zeus Phyxios, or the god of escape; he also erected
altars in Thessaly to the twelve great gods of Olympus.
The reality of this deluge was firmly believed
throughout the historical ages of Greece; the chronologers, reckoning up by
genealogies, assigned the exact date of it, and placed it at the same time as
the conflagration of the world by the rashness of Phaethon, during the reign of Krotopos, king of Argos, the seventh from Inachus.
The meteorological work of Aristotle admits and reasons upon this deluge as an
unquestionable fact, though he alters the locality by placing it west of Mount
Pindus, near Dodona and the river Achelous. He at the same time treats it as a
physical phenomenon, the result of periodical cycles in the atmosphere—thus
departing from the religious character of the old legend, which described it as
a judgment inflicted by Zeus upon a wicked race. Statements founded upon this
event were in circulation throughout Greece even to a very late date. The
Megarians affirmed that Megaros, their hero, son of
Zeus by a local nymph, had found safety from the waters on the lofty summit of
their mountain Geraneia, which had not been completely submerged. And in the
magnificent temple of the Olympian Zeus at Athens a cavity in the earth was
shown, through which it was affirmed that the waters of the deluge had retired.
Even in the time of Pausanias, the priest poured into this cavity holy
offerings of meal and honey. In this, as in other parts of Greece, the idea of
the Deukalionian deluge was blended with the
religious impressions of the people, and commemorated by their sacred
ceremonies.
Hellen and Amphiktion
The offspring of Deucalion and Pyrrha were two sons,
Hellen and Amphiktyon, and a daughter, Protogeneia, whose son by Zeus was Aethlius:
it was however maintained by many that Helen was the son of Zeus and not of
Deucalion. Hellen had by a nymph three sons, Dorus, Xuthus, and Eolus. He gave
to those who had been before called Greeks the name of Hellenes, and
partitioned his territory among his three children. Eolus reigned in Thessaly;
Xuthus received Peloponnesus, and had by Kreusa as
his sons Achaeus and Ion; while Dorus occupied the country lying opposite to
the Peloponnesus, on the northern side of the Corinthian Gulf. These three gave
to the inhabitants of their respective countries the names of Aeolians,
Achaeans and Ionians, and Dorians.
Such is the genealogy as we find it in Apollodorus. In
so far as the names and filiation are concerned, many points in it are given
differently, or implicitly contradicted by Euripides and other writers. Though
as literal and personal history it deserves no notice, its import is both
intelligible and comprehensive. It expounds and symbolizes the first fraternal
aggregation of Hellenic men, together with their territorial distribution and
the institutions which they collectively venerated.
There were two great holding-points in common for
every section of Greeks. One was the Amphiktyonic assembly, which met half-yearly, alternately at Delphi and at Thermopylae;
originally and chiefly for common religious purposes, but indirectly and
occasionally embracing political and social objects along with them. The other
was the public festivals or games, of which the Olympic came first in
importance; next the Pythian, Nemean, and Isthmian—institutions which combined
religions solemnities with recreative effusion and hearty sympathies, in a
manner so imposing and so unparalleled. Amphiktyon represents the first of these institutions, and Aethlius the second. As the Amphiktyonic assembly was always
especially connected with Thermopylae and Thessaly, Amphiktyon is made the son of the Thessalian Deucalion; but as the Olympic festival was
nowise locally connected with Deucalion, Aethlius is
represented as having Zeus for his father, and as touching Deucalion only
through the maternal line. It will be seen presently that the only matter
predicated respecting Aethlius is, that he settled in
the territory of Elis, and begat Endymion: this brings him into local contact
with the Olympic games, and his function is then ended.
Division of Hellas: Eolians,
Dorians, Ionians
Having thus got Hellas as an aggregate with its main
cementing forces, we march on to its subdivision into parts, through Eolus,
Dorus, and Xuthus, the three sons of Hellen, a distribution which is far from
being exhaustive: nevertheless, the genealogists whom Apollodorus follows
recognize no more than three sons.
The genealogy is essentially post-Homeric; for Homer
knows Hellas and the Hellenes only in connection with a portion of Achaia Phthiotis. But as it is recognized in the Hesiodic
Catalogue—composed probably within the first century after the commencement of
recorded Olympiads, or before 676 BC—the peculiarities of it elating from so
early a period, deserve much attention. We may remark, first, that it seems to
exhibit to us Dorus and Eolus as the only pure and genuine offspring of Hellen.
For their brother Xuthus is not enrolled as an eponymous; he neither founds nor
names any people; it is only his sons Achaeus and Ion, after his blood has been
mingled with that of the Erechtheid Kreusa, who become eponyms and founders, each of his own
separate people. Next, as to the territorial distribution, Xuthus receives
Peloponnesus from his father, and unites himself with Attica (which the author
of this genealogy seems to have conceived as originally unconnected with
Hellen) by his marriage with the daughter of the indigenous hero Erechtheus. The issue of this marriage, Achaeus and Ion,
present to us the population of Peloponnesus and Attica conjointly as related
among themselves by the tie of brotherhood, but as one degree more distant both
from Dorians and Eolians. Eolus reigns over the
regions about Thessaly, and calls the people in those parts Aeolians; while
Dorus occupies “the country over against Peloponnesus on the opposite side of
the Corinthian Gulf”, and calls the inhabitants after himself Dorians. It is at
once evident that this designation is in no way applicable to the confined
district between Parnassus and Eta, which alone is known by the name of Doris,
and its inhabitants by that of Dorians, in the historical ages. In the view of
the author of this genealogy, the Dorians are the original occupants of the
large range of territory north of the Corinthian Gulf, comprising Phocis, and
the territory of the Ozolian Lokrians.
And this farther harmonizes with the other legend noticed by Apollodorus, when
he states that Etolus, son of Endymion, having been
forced to expatriate from Peloponnesus, crossed into the Kuretid territory, and was there hospitably received by Dorus, Laodokus,
and Polypcetes, sons of Apollo and Phthia. He slew his hosts, acquired the territory, and gave
to it the name of Etolia; his son Pleuron married Xanthippe, daughter of Dorus;
while his other son, Kalydon, marries Eolia, daughter
of Amythaon. Here again we have the name of Dorus, or the Dorians, connected
with the tract subsequently termed Etolia. That Dorus should in one place be
called the son of Apollo and Phthia, and in another
place the son of Hellen by a nymph, will surprise no one accustomed to the
fluctuating personal nomenclature of these old legends: moreover the name of Phthia is easy to reconcile with that of Hellen, as both
are identified with the same portion of Thessaly, even from the days of the
Iliad.
This story, that the Dorians were at one time the
occupants, or the chief occupants, of the range of territory between the river
Achelous and the northern shore of the Corinthian gulf, is at least more
suitable to the facts attested by historical evidence than the legends given in
Herodotus, who represents the Dorians as originally in the Phthiotid;
then as passing under Dorus, the son of Hellen, into the Histiotid,
under the mountains of Ossa and Olympus; next, as driven by the Kadmeians into the regions of Pindus; from thence passing
into the Dryopid territory, on Mount Eta; lastly,
from thence into Peloponnesus. The received story was, that the great Dorian
establishments in Peloponnesus were formed by invasion from the north, and that
the invaders crossed the gulf from Naupaktus,—a
statement which, however disputable with respect to Argos, seems highly
probable in regard both to Sparta and Messenia. That the name of Dorians
comprehended far more than the inhabitants of the insignificant tetrapolis of Doris Proper must be assumed, if we believe
that they conquered Sparta and Messenia: both the magnitude of the conquest
itself and the passage of a large portion of them from Naupaktus,
harmonize with the legend as given by Apollodorus, in which the Dorians are
represented as the principal inhabitants of the northern shore of the gulf.
The statements which we find in Herodotus, respecting
the early migrations of the Dorians, have been considered as possessing greater
historical value than those of the fabulist Apollodorus. But both are equally
matter of legend, while the brief indications of the latter seem to be most in
harmony with the facts which we afterwards find attested by history.
It has already been mentioned that the genealogy which
makes Eolus, Xuthus, and Dorus sons of Hellen, is as old as the Hesiodic Catalogue;
probably also that which makes Hellen son of Deucalion. Aethlius also is an Hesiodic personage; whether Amphiktion be
so or not, we have no proof. They could not have been introduced into the
legendary genealogy until after the Olympic games and the Amphiktyonic council had acquired an established and extensive reverence throughout Greece.
Respecting Dorus the son of Hellen, we find neither
legends nor legendary genealogy; respecting Xuthus, very little beyond the tale
of Kreusa and Ion, which has its place more naturally
among the Attic fables. Achaeus, however, who is here represented as the son of
Xuthus, appears in other stories with very different parentage and
accompaniments. According to the statement which we find in Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Achaeis, Phthius, and Pelasgus are sons of Poseidon and Larissa. They migrate
from Peloponnesus into Thessaly, and distribute the Thessalian territory
between them, giving their names to its principal divisions: their descendants
in the sixth generation were driven out of that country by the invasion of
Deucalion at the head of the Kuretes and the Leleges. This was the story of those who wanted to provide
an eponymus for the Achaeans in the southern
districts of Thessaly: Pausanias accomplishes the same object by different
means, representing Achaeus the son of Xuthus as having gone back to Thessaly
and occupied the portion of it to which his father was entitled. Then, by way
of explaining how it was that there were Achaeans at Sparta and at Argos, he
tells us that Archander and Architeles the sons of Achaeus, came back from Thessaly to Peloponnesus, and married two
daughters of Danaus: they acquired great influence at Argos and Sparta, and
gave to the people the name of Achaeans after their father Achaeus.
Euripides also deviates very materially from the
Hesiodic genealogy in respect to the eponymous persons. In the drama called
Ion, he describes Ion as son of Kreusa by Apollo, but
adopted by Xuthus: according to him, the real sons of Xuthus and Kreusa are Dorus and Achaeus,—eponyms of the Dorians and
Achaeans in the interior of Peloponnesus. And it is a still more capital point
of difference that he omits Hellen altogether—making Xuthus an Achaean by race,
the son of Eolus, who is the son of Zeus. This is the more remarkable, as in
the fragments of two other dramas of Euripides, the Melanippe and the Eolus, we find Hellen mentioned both as father of Eolus and son of
Zeus. To the general public even of the most instructed city of Greece,
fluctuations and discrepancies in these mythical genealogies seem to have been
neither surprising nor offensive.
CHAPTER VITHE AEOLIDS, OR SONS AND DAUGHTERS OF AEOLUS.
|