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Salmoneus

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Greek mythological king
For the shrimp genus, seeSalmoneus (crustacean).
Salmoneus wielding a sword, to his left is Iris, to the right his astonished wife.
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InGreek mythology,Salmoneus (/səlˈmniəs/;Ancient Greek: Σαλμωνεύς) was 'the wicked'[1] eponymous king and founder ofSalmone inPisatis.[2]

Family

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Salmoneus was formerly aThessalian prince as son of KingAeolus ofAeolia. His mother was identified as (1)Enarete, daughter ofDeimachus, or (2)Iphis, daughter ofPeneus,[3] or (3)Laodice,[4] daughter ofAloeus. Salmoneus was the brother ofAthamas,Sisyphus,Cretheus,Perieres,Deioneus,Magnes,Calyce,Canace,Alcyone,Pisidice andPerimede.[1][5]

Salmoneus's first wife wasAlcidice by whom he became the father ofTyro, while his second wife wasSidero.[6]

Mythology

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Emigrating from Aeolis with a number of Aeolians, Salmoneus founded a city in Eleia (Elis) on the banks of the riverAlpheius and called it Salmonia after his own name. He then married Alcidice, the daughter of Aleus but when she died, the king took for a second wife Sidero who treated his beautiful daughter Tyro unkindly.[7]

Salmoneus and his brother Sisyphus hated each other. Sisyphus found out from anoracle that if he married Tyro, she would bear him children who would kill Salmoneus. At first, Tyro submitted to Sisyphus, married him, and bore him a son. When Tyro found out what the child would do to Salmoneus, she killed the boy. It was soon after this that Tyro lay withPoseidon and bore himPelias andNeleus.

Salmoneus, being an overbearing man and impious, came to be hated by his subjects for he ordered them to worship him under the name ofZeus.[8] He built a bridge of brass, over which he drove at full speed in his chariot to imitate thunder, the effect being heightened by dried skins and cauldrons trailing behind while torches were thrown into the air to represent lightning. For this sin ofhubris, Zeus eventually struck him down with his thunderbolt and destroyed the town.[9][10]

And he [i.e. Salmoneus] acted profanely, by casting torches (in the air) as if they were lightnings,
And dragging dried hides with kettles at his chariot,
Pretending to make thunder, so he was thunderstruck by Zeus.[8]

Virgil'sAeneid has Salmoneus placed inTartarus after Zeus smites him where he is subjected to eternal torment.[11]

Inspiration

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According to Frazer, the early Greek kings, who were expected to produce rain for the benefit of the crops, were in the habit of imitating thunder and lightning in the character of Zeus.[12][13] AtCrannon inThessaly, there was a bronze chariot which in time of drought was shaken and prayers offered for rain.[14] S. Reinach[15] suggests that the story that Salmoneus was struck by lightning was due to the misinterpretation of a picture, in which a Thessalian magician appeared bringing down lightning and rain from heaven. Hence arose the idea that he was the victim of the anger or jealousy of Zeus and that the picture represented his punishment.[10]

See also

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Notes

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  1. ^abHesiod,Ehoiai fr. 4 as cited inPlutarch,Moralia p. 747; Scholia adPindar,Pythian Ode 4.263
  2. ^Strabo,8.3.32
  3. ^Hellanicus in scholia onPlato,Symposium 208 (p. 376)
  4. ^Scholia onHomer,Odyssey11.235
  5. ^Apollodorus,1.7.3
  6. ^Apollodorus,1.9.8
  7. ^Diodorus Siculus,4.68.12
  8. ^abTzetzes,Chiliades7.9
  9. ^Apollodorus,1.9.7;Virgil,Aeneid6.585 with Heyne's excursus; Strabo, 8, p. 356;Hyginus,Fabulae6061;Manilius,Astronom. 5, 91
  10. ^ab One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in thepublic domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Salmoneus".Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 24 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 85.
  11. ^Virgil,Aeneid6.585–594
  12. ^Frazer,Early History of the Kingship 1905
  13. ^see alsoGolden Bough, i., 1900, p. 82
  14. ^Antigonus of Carystus,Historiae mirabiles 15
  15. ^S. ReinachRevue archéologique, 1903, i. 154

References

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