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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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MYTHS OF LOCAL HEROES AND HEROINES<br />

had no honor amongst human beings nor in the homes of the gods. This she<br />

nursed and named it Centaurus. And it mated with the mares in Magnesia, in<br />

the foothills of Pelion, and from them sprung a wondrous host, like both parents,<br />

below like their mother, above like their father.<br />

We have already encountered Ixion as a sinner being punished in the Underworld<br />

(p. 345). Originally his punishment was in the sky. He was the first to<br />

shed kindred blood. He invited his father-in-law Eioneus to come and collect<br />

the price that Ixion was to pay for his bride, Dia. Eioneus came, but fell into a<br />

pit of burning coals that Ixion had dug and camouflaged. Since this was a new<br />

crime, no mortal was able to purify Ixion, and Zeus himself purified him, receiving<br />

him as a guest at his own hearth. Yet Ixion repaid him with a second<br />

crime, the attempt on Hera. Pindar describes the deception practiced by Zeus<br />

and the punishment of Ixion, bound to the wheel.<br />

CENTAURS AND LAPITHS<br />

The cloud (Nephele) that Ixion had impregnated gave birth to the monster Centaurus,<br />

which mated with the mares that grazed the slopes of Mt. Pelion and<br />

became the father of the Centaurs, creatures with a human head and torso and<br />

the legs and body of a horse. The most famous centaur was Chiron, who differs<br />

from the others in that he was wise and gentle, skilled in medicine and music. 1<br />

Pindar calls him the son of Cronus and the nymph Philyra. The other centaurs<br />

are generally portrayed as violent beings, and their best-known legend is that<br />

of their fight with the Thessalian tribe of the Lapiths.<br />

The Lapith chieftain Pirithous was the son of Ixion, and the centaurs were<br />

invited to his wedding. At the feast they got drunk and attempted to carry off<br />

the bride, Hippodamia, and the other Lapith women. The violent scene was frequently<br />

represented in Greek art, for example, in the west pediment of the temple<br />

of Zeus at Olympia and in the metopes of the Parthenon at Athens. The battle<br />

is described at length in the twelfth book of Ovid's Metamorphoses.<br />

Another Lapith was Caeneus. Born a girl, Caenis, she was seduced by Poseidon,<br />

who then granted her anything she wanted. She asked to be turned into<br />

a man and to become invulnerable. As a man, Caeneus set up his spear and ordered<br />

people to worship it. This impiety led Zeus to bring about his death. During<br />

the battle at the wedding of Pirithous and Hippodamia he was attacked by<br />

the centaurs, who buried him under the enormous pile of tree trunks that they<br />

hurled at him. Either his body was driven down into the Underworld by their<br />

weight or else a yellow-winged bird emerged from the pile, which the seer Mopsus<br />

announced to be Caeneus transformed.<br />

PELEUS<br />

On the southern border of Thessaly lies Phthia, and its prince was Peleus, the<br />

father of Achilles. He was the son of Aeacus, king of Aegina, and brother of<br />

Telamon. For killing his half-brother Phocus, he had to leave Aegina and came<br />

603

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