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Tecmessa (daughter of Teleutas)

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(Redirected fromTecmessa of Phrygia)
Concubine of Ajax the Greater
This article is about the Phrygian princess. For other uses, seeTecmessa.
Tecmessa, Eurysaces and Ajax by Jakob Carstens, 1791.

InGreek mythology,Tecmessa (Ancient Greek:Τέκμησσα,romanizedTékmēssa) is a princess fromPhrygia, a region in westernAsia Minor, daughter of kingTeleutas. During theTrojan War Tecmessa's homeland was raided by the Greeks, and Tecmessa herself became a war-prize ofAjax the Greater, one of the strongest Greek warriors. Tecmessa comforted Ajax after his divine-induced madness caused him to attack herds, and mourned his death when he decided to kill himself.

Tecmessa is mostly known from her appearance in the ancient Greek tragedyAjax, a play bySophocles, in which she tries to dissuade the shame-stricken Ajax from killing himself, and grieves his demise when she fails.

Family

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The Phrygian princess Tecmessa was the daughter of KingTeleutas, king ofPhrygia (orTethras orTeuthas, king ofTeuthrania inMysia).[1][2]

Mythology

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During the ten-year longTrojan War the Greek army sacked several cities in the northwestern coast ofAsia Minor. During one of those raidsAjax the Greater killed the king, captured Tecmessa,[3] enamored with her great beauty,[4] and kept her as a concubine.[1] She bore him a son,Eurysaces.[5][6] Ajax having taken his own prize is an element as early asHomer, though the concubine herself does not appear in his works, nor is her name mentioned.[7] Despite her status being less than that of a legally married wife, Tecmessa's relationship with Ajax was defined by respect and fidelity.[8]

Ajax

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Tecmessa's largest role is inAjax, a mid-fifth century BC play by the Athenian playwrightSophocles.[5] After the goddessAthena drove the revenge-seeking Ajax mad, he left his tent with the aim to killOdysseus and the two Atreides while Tecmessa advised him to stay inside; nevertheless he ignored her. Due to Athena's curse, he mistook a herd of cattle and a flock of sheep for his perceived enemies and attacked them. He carried the animals back to the tent, and Tecmessa watched him slaughter and whip them one by one until his frenzy was over.[9][10] The anguished Tecmessa then ran to Ajax's sailors and crewmen to inform them of their master's madness.[11] The sober Ajax joined them soon, terribly shaken by his actions and begging the rest to put him out of his misery.[12] Tecmessa and the sailors tried to comfort him and speak him out of his suicidal thoughts, with Tecmessa reminding him of her precarious position as a slave, and the dire fate that awaited her and their young son Eurysaces should he perish.[13][10][14] Her words however did little to motivate Ajax.[15]

A messenger from Ajax's half-brotherTeucer arrived next, instructing them not to let Ajax venture out of his tent, as Teucer had been informed by the seerCalchas that he would not see his brother alive again unless Ajax stayed inside the whole day.[16] Tecmessa in horror then realised that the tent was empty and Ajax was gone, and decided to go out looking for him.[17][18] Meanwhile the depressed Ajax put an end to his life with his own sword, once gifted to him byHector.[18] It was Tecmessa who discovered the body, and then greatly mourned his death, in time joined by Teucer.[19] Tecmessa used her robe as funerary shroud for him to conceal the body from prying eyes and together with their son paid due to the dead man by placing strands of their own hair as offering.[20][15][21]

Other authors

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Tecmessa drops from the Trojan War narrative after Ajax's death, and she is usually ignored by other authors; her son Eurysaces eventually embarked for his father's homelandSalamis, but Tecmessa is not necessarily always with him.[1]Servius writes thatTelamon exiled Teucer not because of Ajax's suicide, but rather because he thought Teucer did not bring Tecmessa and Eurysaces along, who in fact arrived in Salamis later on a different ship.[22]

Iconography

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A red-figure lekythos of about 460 BC depicts a woman, apparently Tecmessa, spreading a cloak over Ajax's dead body.[23]

See also

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References

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  1. ^abcBell 1991, s.v.Tecmessa (1).
  2. ^Smith 1873, s.v.Tecmessa.
  3. ^Tripp 1970, s.v.Tecmessa.
  4. ^Horace,Carmina 2.4.5-6
  5. ^abGrimal 1987, s.v.Tecmessa.
  6. ^Seyffert 1901, p. 21.
  7. ^Homer,Iliad1.138
  8. ^Harder, Ruth Elisabeth (October 1, 2006)."Tecmessa". In Cancik, Hubert; Schneider, Helmuth (eds.).Brill's New Pauly. Zurich: Brill Reference Online.doi:10.1163/1574-9347_bnp_e1202610.ISSN 1574-9347. RetrievedDecember 18, 2024.
  9. ^Sophocles,Ajax284–330
  10. ^abRoman & Roman 2010, p. 43.
  11. ^Sophocles,Ajax201-283
  12. ^Sophocles,Ajax348-363
  13. ^Sophocles,Ajax392-595
  14. ^Hard 2004, p. 471.
  15. ^abMarch 2014, pp. 34,454-457.
  16. ^Sophocles,Ajax719-783
  17. ^Sophocles,Ajax784-814
  18. ^abRoman & Roman 2010, p. 44.
  19. ^Sophocles,Ajax880
  20. ^Sophocles,Ajax915-925
  21. ^Roman & Roman 2010, p. 45.
  22. ^Gantz 1996, p. 695.
  23. ^Gantz 1996, p. 634.

Bibliography

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