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Auxesia (mythology)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Goddess from Greek mythology

Auxesia (Ancient Greek:Αυξησία) was inGreek mythology the goddess who grants growth and prosperity to the fields, sometimes distinct and sometimes anepithet of the goddessPersephone. Her name is the Greek word for "increase".[1] She is often associated with the similar goddessDamia [fr], as the pair together -- similar to the pair of Demeter and Persephone -- were worshipped in several communities across theSaronic Gulf, though in some communities they may have been worshipped more as heroes than genuinely divine goddesses.[2][3] Auxesia was possibly simply a variant name ofAzesia.[4]

Their cults and rituals involved choruses of women exchanging verbal abuse or speaking indecently to one another, similar to various Demeter cults. In some places these choruses were secret and no men were permitted, while in others they were public, and trained by men, as atAegina, where each chorus was trained and overseen by a group of ten malechoregoi. Modern scholars generally take this to indicate that the cult hadmagical formulae consisting of sexual language intended to arouse or awaken the fertility of the earth.[2]

Myth

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According to aTroezenian legend, there came once during an insurrection at Troezen twoCretan maidens, Auxesia and Damia, whom some writers assume was a disguisedDemeter, and who, in editions of the ancient geographerPausanias, is called Lamia (though perhaps this is only an incorrect reading for Damia). During the tumult, the two maidens werestoned to death, whereupon the Troezenians paid divine honors to them, and instituted the festival of theLithobolia, a stone-throwing rite of symbolic battles between participants.[1][5][6][7]

According to anEpidaurian andAeginetan tradition, the country of Epidaurus was afflicted with famine, and theDelphic oracle advised the Epidaurians to erect statues of Auxesia and Damia, which were to be made of olive-wood. The Epidaurians therefore asked permission of theAthenians to cut down an Attic olive-tree. The request was granted, on the condition that the Epidaurians should annually offer sacrifices toAthena Agraulos andErechtheus. When the condition was complied with, the country of Epidaurus again bore fruit as before.[8]

When around 540 BCEAegina separated itself from Epidaurus, which had till then been regarded as its metropolis, the Aeginetans, who had sacred traditions in common with the Epidaurians, took away the two statues of Auxesia and Damia, and erected them in a part of their own island calledOea, where they offered sacrifices and celebrated mysteries. When the Epidaurians, in consequence of this, ceased to perform the sacrifices at Athens, and the Athenians heard of the statues being carried to Aegina, they demanded them back from the Aeginetans.

The islanders refused, and the Athenians threw ropes round the sacred statues, to drag them away by force. But, according to legend, thunder and earthquakes ensued, and the Athenians engaged in the work were seized with madness, in which they killed one another. Only one of them escaped to carry back to Athens the news.[9]

The Aeginetans added to this legend, that the statues, while the Athenians were dragging them down, fell upon their knees, and that they remained in this attitude ever after.[10][11][12][13]

Retroactive history

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Some of this myth was used by the historianHerodotus to explain the "ancient enmity" between Aegineta and Athens, which persisted into his time, and even goes so far as to use it to justify the state of modern fashion in these cities.[14] According to him, the lone surviving Athenian sailor, on returning to Athens, was stabbed to death with the brooch pins of the dead sailors' widows, causing the Athenians to forbid women from wearing thepeplos with its large brooches and instead start wearing thechiton with smaller brooches. The Aeginetan women, by comparison, celebrated the event by wearing even larger brooches than before.[15]

References

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  1. ^abJayne, Walter Addison (1925).The Healing Gods of Ancient Civilizations.Yale University Press. p. 315.ISBN 978-0-404-13286-6. Retrieved2025-02-02.{{cite book}}:ISBN / Date incompatibility (help)
  2. ^abPolinskaia, I. (2013).A Local History of Greek Polytheism: Gods, People and the Land of Aigina, 800-400 BCE.Brill Publishers. pp. 269–274.ISBN 9789004262089. Retrieved2025-02-02.
  3. ^Frazer, James George (1890).The Golden Bough. Vol. 1.Cambridge University Press. p. 39.
  4. ^Pausanias (1898).Frazer, James George (ed.).Description of Greece. Vol. 5. Macmillan and Company, limited. p. 592. Retrieved2025-02-06.
  5. ^Pausanias,Description of Greece 2.32.3
  6. ^Giannopoulou, Maria (2024). "Apotropaic and Prophylactic Practices at Troizen and Methana". In Wallensten, Jenny; Chidiroglou, Maria; Spathi, Maria G. (eds.).Apotropaia and Phylakteria: Confronting Evil in Ancient Greece. Archaeopress Publishing Limited. p. 23.ISBN 9781803277509. Retrieved2025-02-02.
  7. ^von Wagner, Johann Martin; Schelling, F. W. J. (2017). Ruprecht, Louis A. (ed.).Report on the Aeginetan Sculptures With Historical Supplements. State University of New York Press. p. 221.ISBN 9781438464824. Retrieved2025-02-02.
  8. ^Kindt, Julia (2016).Revisiting Delphi: Religion and Storytelling in Ancient Greece.Cambridge University Press.ISBN 9781107151574. Retrieved2025-02-02.
  9. ^Gagné, Renaud (2013).Ancestral Fault in Ancient Greece.Cambridge University Press. p. 291.ISBN 9781107039803. Retrieved2025-02-02.
  10. ^Herodotus,Histories 5.82-86
  11. ^Pausanias,Description of Greece 2.30.5
  12. ^Homeric Hymns 122
  13. ^Karl Otfried Müller,Die Dorier 2.10.4, note f., 4.6.11, Aeginet. p. 171
  14. ^Figueira, Thomas J. (1993).Excursions in Epichoric History: Aiginetan Essays. Rowman & Littlefield. p. 36.ISBN 9780847677924. Retrieved2025-02-02.
  15. ^Mikalson, Jon D. (2004).Herodotus and Religion in the Persian Wars.University of North Carolina Press. p. 23.ISBN 9780807862018. Retrieved2025-02-02.

 This article incorporates text from a publication now in thepublic domainSchmitz, Leonhard (1870)."Auxesia". InSmith, William (ed.).Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. Vol. 1. p. 448.

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