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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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374 THE GREEK SAGAS: GREEK LOCAL LEGENDS<br />

The richest of these cities, Mycenae, gave its name to the period, and it was the<br />

king of Mycenae who led the Greeks on the greatest of their expeditions, the<br />

war against Troy. There are three major geographical groups in the cycles of<br />

saga: first, cities of the Péloponnèse—Mycenae, Tiryns, Argos, and Sparta and<br />

the rural area of Arca<strong>dia</strong>; second, cities of the rest of the Greek mainland and<br />

their surrounding areas—Athens in Attica, Thebes and Orchomenus in Boeotia,<br />

and Iolcus in Thessaly; third, Troy in Asia Minor, whose relations with the Mycenaean<br />

cities may have been extensive. Beyond these groups are legends connected<br />

with Crete, whose Minoan civilization preceded Mycenae as the dominant<br />

power in the Aegean world, before its collapse at the end of the fifteenth<br />

century B.C. Finally, the story of Odysseus, although based in the Mycenaean<br />

world, extends far beyond it and incorporates many folktales.<br />

There is a historical dimension to Greek saga that archaeological discoveries<br />

have confirmed. It is important therefore to keep in mind our review of the<br />

historical background given in Chapter 2 (pp. 39-50). Many Minoan and Mycenaean<br />

sites that can be linked to the legends of the Greek and Roman heroes<br />

and heroines have been and are being excavated: Cnossus, Troy, Mycenae,<br />

Tiryns, Pylos, Thebes, and Athens, to name some of the more important. How<br />

to distinguish historical fact from romantic fiction affords endless and exciting<br />

debate.<br />

The sequence of these chapters from Greek saga is quite deliberate. We begin<br />

with Thebes and Oedipus because the treatment by Sophocles is so uniquely<br />

religious that it should follow closely upon a study of the gods. The spiritual intensity<br />

of Oedipus at Colonus, for example, provides concrete and sublime evidence<br />

for how the Greeks could actually use their myths for moral edification,<br />

and Sophocles makes us understand more clearly how they might have actually<br />

believed them, whether as reality or metaphor. Following this premise, Mycenaean<br />

legend comes next, which leads directly into the events of the Trojan War.<br />

We know that a different order, along legendary, chronological lines, may seem<br />

more logical. The chapters, however, are designed so that they can be read with<br />

profit in any order that one wishes.<br />

SELECT BIBLIOGRAPHY<br />

Larson, Jennifer. Greek Heroine Cults. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1995. A<br />

counterpart to the study of male heroic cults.<br />

Lyons, Deborah. Gender and Immortality: Heroines in Ancient Greek Myth and Cult. N<br />

York: Princeton University Press, 1997. An extensive and probing exploration of the<br />

multifaceted nature of the heroine.<br />

Segal, Robert A., ed. In Quest of the Hero. Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1990.<br />

Contains writings by Otto Rank, Lord Raglan, and Alan Dundes on the myth of<br />

the hero.

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