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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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28<br />

THE MYTHS OF CREATION: THE GODS<br />

The mythographers were late compilers of handbooks of mythology. Of<br />

these, the work ascribed to Apollodorus with the title Bibliotheca (Library of Greek<br />

<strong>Mythology</strong>), which is still valuable, perhaps was composed around A.D. 120. The<br />

Periegesis (Description of Greece) of Pausanias (ca. A.D. 150) contains many myths<br />

in its accounts of religious sites and their works of art.<br />

The philosophers, most notably Plato (fourth century B.C.), used myth for<br />

didactic purposes, and Plato himself developed out of the tradition of religious<br />

tales' "philosophical myth" as a distinct literary form. His myth of Er, for example,<br />

is a philosophical allegory about the soul and its existence after death. It<br />

is important as evidence for beliefs about the Underworld, and its religious origins<br />

go back to earlier centuries, in particular to the speculations of Pythagorean<br />

and Orphic doctrine. The Roman poet Vergil (discussed later in this chapter), in<br />

his depiction of the afterlife, combines more traditional mythology developed<br />

out of Homer with mythical speculations about rebirth and reincarnation found<br />

in philosophers like Plato. Thus by translating all three authors—Homer, Plato,<br />

and Vergil—on the Realm of Hades (Chapter 15) we have a composite and virtually<br />

complete summary of the major mythical and religious beliefs about the<br />

afterlife evolved by the Greeks and Romans.<br />

One late philosopher who retold archaic myths for both philosophical and<br />

satirical purposes was the Syrian author Lucian (born ca. A.D. 120), who wrote<br />

in Greek. His satires, often in <strong>dia</strong>logue form, present the Olympian gods and<br />

the old myths with a good deal of humor and critical insight. "The Judgment of<br />

Paris," found in Chapter 19, is a fine example of his art.<br />

Roman Sources. The Greek authors are the foundation of our knowledge of classical<br />

myth. Nevertheless, the Roman authors were not merely derivative. Vergil<br />

(70-19 B.c.) developed the myth of the Trojan hero Aeneas in his epic, the Aeneid.<br />

In so doing, he preserved the saga of the fall of Troy, a part of the Greek epic<br />

cycle now lost to us. He also developed the legend of the Phoenician queen Dido<br />

and told a number of myths and tales associated with particular Italian localities,<br />

such as the story of Hercules at Rome. Several passages from Vergil appear<br />

in Chapter 26 as well as Chapter 15.<br />

Vergil's younger contemporary Ovid (43 B.C.-A.D. 17) is the single most important<br />

source for classical mythology after Homer, and his poem Metamorphoses<br />

(completed ca. A.D. 8) has probably been more influential—even than Homer—<br />

as a source for representations of the classical myths in literature and art. A kind<br />

of epic, the poem includes more than 200 legends arranged in a loose chronological<br />

framework from the Creation down to Ovid's own time. Many of the<br />

most familiar stories come from Ovid, for example, the stories of Echo and Narcissus,<br />

Apollo and Daphne, and Pyramus and Thisbe. Ovid's poem on the Roman<br />

religious calendar, Fasti, is a unique source for the myths of the Roman<br />

gods, although he completed only the first six months of the religious year. We<br />

include a great deal from Ovid, in direct translation or in paraphrase.

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