chapter 7 myths of the great god apollo ©2012 pearson education inc
TRANSCRIPT
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Chapter 7
Myths of the Great God Apollo
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APOLLO THE FAR-DARTER, GOD OF PROPHECY
Apollo guided men to higher knowledge.
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God of Prophecy
• From Lycia (Asia Minor) < his epithet "Lycian"?• Has elements from the north with the
Hyperboreans.• Mother Leto is perhaps a mother-earth
goddess from Lycia or Crete.– Originally having nothing to do with Apollo or his
sister Artemis
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God of Prophecy
• Sometimes he's the sun god.– Hence his association with Artemis (the moon
goddess)• His arrows bring plague and disease.
– He's the god of mice and plagues the first time we see him in Homer
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Fig. 7.1Apollo and Dionysus at Delphi.
(© The State Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg, Russia
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God of Prophecy
• His epithet shows his origin• Lycia or Lycus• Delian (Twin of Artemis)• Other stories associate him with the north –
swans carried him to the land of the Hyperboreans – and thereafter he spent the winters there.
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Fig. 7.2 Temple of Apollo at Bassae
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University of Wisconsin–Madison Photo Archive
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THE BIRTH OF APOLLO ON DELOSThe island that's "not on the earth."
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Birth of Apollo on Delos
• Two Homeric Hymns to Apollo– One tells of his birth
• Leto and Zeus• Leto is persecuted by Hera
– No land that sees the sun may let her give birth• Delos not covered by the command.
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Birth of Apollo on Delos
• Iris gets Eileithyia to help with the delivery– She clutches a palm tree during the delivery– Delos becomes his sacred island as per the
agreement
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Fig. 7.3 The Palm Tree on Delos
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Author’s photo
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APOLLO AT DELPHI
The great sanctuary of Apollo at Delphi was one of the major Pan-Hellenic sites.
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Apollo at Delphi
• Apollo welcomed in Olympus• He searches for a place for his cult.• Telephusa's trick.• Python and the serpent combat.
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Fig. 7.4The temple of Apollo at Delphi.
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V. Papaioannou; University of Wisconsin–Madison Photo Archive
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Apollo at Delphi
• Apollo and the Cretan ship– Delphi < delphis "dolphin."
• Expiated the miasma at the Vale of Tempê.– Others, including Orestes, came to him for
expiation and cleansing
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Fig. 7.5Orestes is purified at Delphi.
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Erich Lessing / Art Resource, New York
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OBSERVATIONS: THE DELPHIC ORACLE
The mechanisms of the prophecies are not well known.
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The Delphic Oracle
• Pan-Hellenic, even world site 800 BC – AD 394• Center of the world, marked by the omphalos• Apollo spoke through a prophetess, the Pythia,
seated on a tripod in the temple• Obscurity: e.g., Croesus's prophecy, and the
“the wooden walls” prophecy.
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The Delphic Oracle
• Also had moral overtones:– Nothing in excess– Know thyself
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Fig. 7.6The priestess sat on or near a caldron on a tripod.
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Staatliche Museen, Berlin; Bildarchiv Preußischer Kulturbesitz/Art Resource, New York
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APOLLO’S UNHAPPY LOVES
Apollo may have been the epitome of male beauty, but he was unlucky in love: Cassandra, Sibyl, Daphnê
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Fig. 7.7 Apollo and Daphnê
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British Museum, London; © Trustees of the British Museum / Art Resource, New York
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Apollo's Unhappy Loves
• Hyacinthus• Coronis
– Their son is the healing god Asclepius
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Fig. 7.8The healing god, Asclepius, a son of Apollo.
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Epidaurus Museum
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PERSPECTIVE 7.1
Bernini’s Apollo and Daphnê
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Perspective 7.1Gianlorenzo Bernini (Italian,1598–1680), Apollo and Daphnê.
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Villa Borghese, Rome; © Alinari/Art Resource, New York
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OBSERVATIONS: APOLLO, GOD OF SHAMANS
Like a shaman, Apollo can read the signs of nature.
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Apollo and Shamans
• Apollo resembles in many ways the traditional shaman ("he who knows")– He bridges the human and divine world, brings
divine wisdom and prophecies, and heals• He possess men and women, though in
different ways.
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Fig. 7.9Apollo intervenes in the battle between the centaurs and the Lapiths. His aristocratic calm, captured on the temple to Zeus, was an idealized image of the Hellenic spirit.
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Olympia Museum; Alinari/Art Resource, New York
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Apollo and Shamans
• His oracle lost much of its prestige after recommending surrender to the Persians, but it remained important for personal matters.– "Who is the wisest of men?"– "There is none wiser than Socrates."
• Closed down in AD 390 by the Roman Emperor Theodosius.
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End
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