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Ariadne

In Greek mythology, Ariadne (/ˌæriˈædni/; Greek: Ἀριάδνη; Latin: Ariadne) was a Cretan princess and the daughter of King Minos of Crete. There are different variations of Ariadne's myth, but she is known for helping Theseus escape the Minotaur and being abandoned by him on the island of Naxos. There, Dionysus saw Ariadne sleeping, fell in love with her, and later married her. Many versions of the myth recount Dionysus throwing Ariadne's jeweled crown into the sky to create a constellation, the Corona Borealis.[1][2]

Ariadne
Ariadne asleep at Hypnos's side. Detail of ancient fresco in Pompeii
AbodeCrete, later Mount Olympus
SymbolString / Thread, Serpent, Bull
Personal information
ParentsMinos and Pasiphaë (or Crete, daughter of Asterius)
SiblingsAcacallis, Phaedra, Catreus, Deucalion, Glaucus, Androgeus, Xenodice; the Minotaur
ConsortDionysus, Theseus
ChildrenStaphylus, Oenopion, Thoas, Peparethus, Phanus, Eurymedon, Phliasus, Ceramus, Maron, Evanthes, Latramys, Tauropolis, Enyeus and Eunous
Equivalents
Roman equivalentArianna, Libera

Ariadne is associated with mazes and labyrinths because of her involvement in the myths of Theseus and the Minotaur.

There are also festivals held in Cyprus and Naxos in Ariadne's honor.[3][4]

Etymology edit

 
Bacchus and Ariadne by Titian: Dionysus discovers Ariadne on the shore of Naxos. The painting also depicts the constellation named after Ariadne.[5]

Greek lexicographers in the Hellenistic period claimed that Ariadne is derived from the ancient Cretan dialectical elements ari (ἀρι-) "most" (which is an intensive prefix) and adnós (ἀδνός) "holy".[6] Conversely, Stylianos Alexiou has argued that despite the belief being that Ariadne's name is of Indo-European origin, it is actually pre-Greek.[7]

Linguist Robert S. P. Beekes has also supported Ariadne having a pre-Greek origin; specifically being Minoan from Crete because her name includes the sequence dn (δν), rare in Indo-European languages and an indication that it is a Minoan loanword.[8]

Family edit

Ariadne was the daughter of Minos, the King of Crete[9] and son of Zeus, and of Pasiphaë, Minos' queen and daughter of Helios.[10] Others denominated her mother "Crete", daughter of Asterius, the husband and King of Europa. Ariadne was the sister of Acacallis, Androgeus, Deucalion, Phaedra, Glaucus, Xenodice, and Catreus.[11] Through her mother, Pasiphaë, she was also the half-sister of the Minotaur (who was known in Crete as Asterion).[12]

Ariadne married Dionysus and became the mother of Oenopion, the personification of wine, Staphylus, who was associated with grapes, Thoas, Peparethus, Phanus, Eurymedon, Phliasus, Ceramus, Maron, Euanthes, Latramys, Tauropolis,[13] Enyeus,[14] and Eunous.[15]

Ariadne's family
Relation Names Sources
Homer Hesiod Apollon. Diod. Ovid Apollod. Plutarch Hyginus Pausa Quin. Theophilus
Ody. Sch. Ili. Ehoiai Arg. Sch. Her. Met. Theseus Fabulae Autolycus
Parentage Minos
Minos & Pasiphae
Consort Dionysus ✓ or
Theseus
Children Enyeus
Thoas
Oenopion
Staphylus
Latromis
Euanthes
Tauropolis
Peparethus
Phanus
Phliasus
Eurymedon
Ceramus
Maron
Eunous

Mythology edit

 
Bacchus and Ariadne, Guido Reni, c. 1620

Minos put Ariadne in charge of the labyrinth where sacrifices were made as part of reparations either to Poseidon or Athena, depending on the version of the myth; later, she helped Theseus conquer the Minotaur and save the children from sacrifice. In other narrations she was the bride of Dionysus, her status as mortal or divine varying in those accounts.[16][17]

Minos and Theseus edit

Because ancient Greek myths were orally transmitted, like other myths, that of Ariadne has many variations. According to an Athenian version, Minos attacked Athens after his son, Androgeus, was killed there. The Athenians asked for terms and were required to sacrifice 7 young men and 7 maidens to the Minotaur every 1, 7 or 9 years (depending on the source).[18] One year, the sacrificial party included Theseus, the son of King Aegeus, who volunteered in order to kill the Minotaur.[19] At first sight, Ariadne fell in love with him and provided him a sword and ball of thread (ο Μίτος της Αριάδνης, "Ariadne's string") so that he could retrace his way out of the labyrinth of the Minotaur.[12]

 
The abandoned Ariadne, ancient fresco from Pompeii, National Archaeological Museum, Naples

Ariadne betrayed her father and her country for her lover Theseus. She eloped with Theseus after he killed the Minotaur, yet according to Homer in the Odyssey "he had no joy of her, for ere that, Artemis slew her in seagirt Dia because of the witness of Dionysus". The phrase "seagirt Dia" refers to the uninhabited island of Dia, which lies off the northern coast of the Greek island of Crete in the Mediterranean Sea. Dia may have referred to the island of Naxos.

Most accounts claim that Theseus abandoned Ariadne on Naxos, and in some versions Perseus mortally wounds her. According to some, Dionysus claimed Ariadne as wife, therefore causing Theseus to abandon her.[20] Homer does not elaborate on the nature of Dionysus' accusation, yet the Oxford Classical Dictionary speculated that she was already married to him when she eloped with Theseus. According to Plutarch, Paion the Amathusian recounted Theseus accidentally abandoned Ariadne only to come back when it was too late.[12]

Naxos edit

 
A Greek Epigrams Pompeii Plate by Geremia Discanno depicting Ariadne abandoned on the island Naxos

In Hesiod and in most other versions, Theseus abandoned Ariadne sleeping on Naxos, and Dionysus rediscovered and wedded her. In a few versions of the myth,[21] Dionysus appeared to Theseus as they sailed from Crete, saying that he had chosen Ariadne as his wife and demanding that Theseus leave her on Naxos for him; this had the effect of absolving the Athenian cultural hero of desertion.[20] The vase painters of Athens often depicted Athena leading Theseus from the sleeping Ariadne to his ship.[citation needed]

Ariadne bore Dionysus famous children, including Oenopion, Staphylus, and Thoas. Dionysus set her wedding diadem in the heavens as the constellation Corona Borealis. Ariadne was faithful to Dionysus. In one version of her myth, Perseus killed her at Argos by turning her to stone with the head of Medusa during Perseus' war with Dionysus.[22] The Odyssey[23] relates that Artemis killed her. According to Plutarch, one version of the myth tells that Ariadne hanged herself after being abandoned by Theseus.[24] Dionysus then went to Hades, and brought her and his mother Semele to Mount Olympus, where they were deified.[25]

Some scholars have posited, because of Ariadne's associations with thread-spinning and winding, that she was a weaving goddess,[26] like Arachne, and support this theory with the mytheme of the Hanged Nymph[27][28] (see weaving in mythology).[citation needed]

As a goddess edit

 
Ariadne of Las Incantadas from the agora of Thessalonica, 2nd century, Louvre.

Karl Kerenyi and Robert Graves theorized that Ariadne, whose name they thought derived from Hesychius' enumeration of "Άδνον", a Cretan-Greek form of "arihagne" ("utterly pure"), was a Great Goddess of Crete, "the first divine personage of Greek mythology to be immediately recognized in Crete",[29] once archaeological investigation began. Kerenyi observed that her name was merely an epithet and claimed that she was originally the "Mistress of the Labyrinth", both a winding dancing ground and, in the Greek opinion, a prison with the dreaded Minotaur in its centre. Kerenyi explained that a Linear B inscription from Knossos "to all the gods, honey… [,] to the mistress of the labyrinth honey" in equal amounts, implied to him that the Mistress of the Labyrinth was a Great Goddess in her own right.[30] Professor Barry Powell suggested that she was the Snake Goddess of Minoan Crete.[31]

 
Ariadne as the consort of Dionysus: bronze appliqué from Chalki, Rhodes, late fourth century BCE, in the British Museum.

Plutarch, in his Life of Theseus, which treats him as a historical person, reported that in contemporary Naxos was an earthly Ariadne, who was distinct from a divine one:

Some of the Naxians also have a story of their own, that there were two Minoses and two Ariadnes, one of whom, they say, was married to Dionysos in Naxos and bore him Staphylos and his brother, and the other, of a later time, having been carried off by Theseus and then abandoned by him, came to Naxos, accompanied by a nurse named Korkyne, whose tomb they show; and that this Ariadne also died there.[32]

In a kylix by the painter Aison (c. 425 – c. 410 BC)[a] Theseus drags the Minotaur from a temple-like labyrinth, yet the goddess who attends him in this Attic representation is Athena.

 
The Vatican Sleeping Ariadne, long erroneously identified as Cleopatra, a Roman marble in late Hellenistic style

An ancient cult of Aphrodite-Ariadne was observed at Amathus, Cyprus, according to the obscure Hellenistic mythographer Paeon of Amathus; his works are lost, but his narrative is among the sources that Plutarch cited in his vita of Theseus (20.3–5). According to the myth that was current at Amathus, the second most important Cypriot cult centre of Aphrodite, Theseus' ship was swept off course and the pregnant and suffering Ariadne put ashore in the storm. Theseus, attempting to secure the ship, was inadvertently swept out to sea, thus being absolved of abandoning Ariadne. The Cypriot women cared for Ariadne, who died in childbirth and was memorialized in a shrine. Theseus, overcome with grief upon his return, left money for sacrifices to Ariadne and ordered two cult images, one of silver and one of bronze, erected.

At the observation in her honour on the second day of the month Gorpiaeus, a young man lay on the ground and vicariously experienced the throes of labour. The sacred grove in which the shrine was located was denominated the "Grove of Aphrodite-Ariadne".[33] According to Cypriot legend, Ariadne's tomb was located within the temenos of the sanctuary of Aphrodite-Ariadne.[34] The primitive nature of the cult at Amathus in this narrative appears to be much older than the Athenian sanctioned shrine of Aphrodite, who at Amathus received "Ariadne" (derived from "hagne", "sacred") as an epithet.[citation needed]

Libera edit

The Roman author Hyginus identified Ariadne as the Roman Libera, bride to Liber.[35][36]

Festivals edit

 
Ariadne on the Derveni krater.

Ariadneia (ἀριάδνεια) festivals honored Ariadne and were held in Naxos and Cyprus. According to Plutarch, some Naxians believed there were two Ariadnes, one of which died on the island of Naxos after being abandoned by Theseus. The Ariadneia festival honors Naxos as the place of her death with sacrifices and mourning.[3][37] Paeon, as stated by Plutarch, attributes the Ariadneia festival in Cyprus to Theseus, who left money to the island so sacrifices could be made to commemorate Ariadne. Sacrifices were held in the grove of Ariadne Aphrodite, where Ariadne's tomb resided. During these sacrifices, a young man shall lie down and mimic a woman in labour by crying out and gesturing on the second day of the month, Gorpiaeus. One silver and one bronze statuette were also constructed in her honor.

In Etruscan culture edit

Ariadne, in Etruscan Areatha, is paired with Dionysus, in Etruscan "Fufluns", on Etruscan engraved bronze mirror backs, where the Athenian cultural hero Theseus is absent, and Semele, in Etruscan "Semla", as mother of Dionysus, may accompany the pair,[38] lending an especially Etruscan air[39] of familial authority.

Reference in post-classical culture edit

Non-musical works edit

  • Ariadne: A Tragedy in Five Acts, a play by Thomas Corneille.
  • In Letitia Elizabeth Landon's poem   Ariadne. from Ideal Likenesses (1825), she sees her as "a lesson how inconstancy should be repaid again by like inconstancy".[40] She returned to the subject of Ariadne in 1838 with her   Ariadne watching the Sea after the Departure of Theseus.:[41] one of her Subjects for Pictures.
  • Johann Heinrich von Dannecker's marble sculpture Ariadne on the Panther (1814), was well known in 19th-century Germany.
  • The narrative of Ariadne is a theme throughout the second volume of George Eliot's novel Romola.
  • "Ariadne auf Naxos", a poem by Heinrich Wilhelm von Gerstenberg.
  • "Ariadne", a story by Anton Chekhov.
  • "Klage der Ariadne", a poem by Friedrich Nietzsche.
  • Metaphysical painter Giorgio de Chirico painted 8 works with a classical statue of Ariadne as a prop.
  • Ariadne (1924), a play by A. A. Milne.
  • Ariadne (1932), an epic poem by F. L. Lucas.[42]
  • Ariadne is a major character in Mary Renault's historical novel The King Must Die (1958), about the Bronze Age hero Theseus.
  • An adaptation of the narrative of Ariadne appears in the novel Death in the Andes by Mario Vargas Llosa.
  • Ariadne is the subject of W. N. Herbert's poem Ariadne on Broughty Ferry Beach (1983).[43]
  • Ariadne, played by Aiysha Hart, is a major character in the BBC series Atlantis (2013), which is loosely based on Greek myths. She falls in love with Jason and helps him conquer the Minotaur and escape the labyrinth. Later, her stepmother, Pasiphae tries to prevent their union.
  • Ariadne is the name of the protagonist in the Korean Reincarnation Manhwa "Sister, In This Life I Have Become The Queen". The protagonist is loosely based on Greek mythology as she helps her original love interest kill his half brother to usurp the throne, only to be tossed aside at the last second for her sister.
  • In Christopher Nolan's Inception, the character Ariadne, played by Elliot Page, is a graduate student of architecture recruited to construct various dreamscapes, which are described as mazes. [44]

Musical works edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ The kylix is conserved at the National Archaeological Museum of Spain, Madrid; see image.

References edit

  1. ^ Hall, James (4 May 2018). Dictionary of Subjects and Symbols in Art. Routledge. ISBN 978-0-429-97358-1.
  2. ^ "Corona Borealis | constellation | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 6 June 2023.
  3. ^ a b "Plutarch • Life of Theseus". penelope.uchicago.edu. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
  4. ^ "LacusCurtius • Greek Festivals — Ariadneia (Smith's Dictionary, 1875)". penelope.uchicago.edu. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
  5. ^ Lucas, Arthur; Plesters, Joyce (1978). "Titian's 'Bacchus and Ariadne'". National Gallery Technical Bulletin. 2: 25–47. ISSN 0140-7430. JSTOR 42616250.
  6. ^ Hanks & Hodges 1997, pp. 15.
  7. ^ Alexiou 1969, pp. 72.
  8. ^ Beekes, Robert S. P. (2010). Etymological Dictionary of Greek. Volume I, with the assistance of Lucien van Beek. Leiden Indo-European Etymological Dictionary Series; 10. Leiden, Boston: Brill, 2010. p. 130. ISBN 978-90-04-17420-7.
  9. ^ Homer, Odyssey, 11.320; Hesiod, Theogony, 947; and later authors.
  10. ^ Pasiphaë is mentioned as mother of Ariadne in Apollodorus, 3.1.2 (Pasiphaë, daughter of the Sun); Apollonius, Argonautica, 3.997; and Hyginus, Fabulae, 224.
  11. ^ Apollodorus, 3.1.2.
  12. ^ a b c "Rewriting Ariadne: What Is Her Myth?". TheCollector. 2 August 2021. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  13. ^ The classical references to these progeny are at "TheoiProject: Ariadne" and "Theoi Project: Dionysus Family". Euanthes, Latramys, and Tauropolis are only mentioned in scholia on Apollonius Rhodius, Argonautica, 3. 997.
  14. ^ Scholia on Homer, Iliad, 9.668.
  15. ^ Theophilus of Antioch, To Autolycus 7
  16. ^ In creating a "biography" for a historicized Ariadne, Theseus' having abandoned her on Naxos explains her presence there; in assembling a set of biographical narrative episodes, this would have had to be placed after her abduction from Knossos. In keeping with the office of Minos as King of Crete, Ariadne came to bear the late title of "Princess". The culmination of this rationalization is the realistic historicizing fiction of Mary Renault, The Bull from the Sea (1962).
  17. ^ Fiana Sidhe, "Goddess Ariadne in the Spotlight" 10 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine, MatriFocus, 2002.
  18. ^ "Minotaur | Definition, Story, Labyrinth, & Facts | Britannica". www.britannica.com. Retrieved 10 May 2023.
  19. ^ Carter, Tim (1999). "Lamenting Ariadne?". Early Music. 27 (3): 395–405. doi:10.1093/earlyj/XXVII.3.395. ISSN 0306-1078. JSTOR 3128655.
  20. ^ a b "LacusCurtius • Diodorus Siculus — Book V Chapters 47‑84". penelope.uchicago.edu. Retrieved 20 May 2023.
  21. ^ Diodorus Siculus, 4.61 and 5.51; Pausanias, 1.20, § 2, 9.40, § 2, and 10.29, § 2.
  22. ^ Nonnus, Dionysiaca, 47.665
  23. ^ Homer, Odyssey, Book XI.
  24. ^ Plutarch, Theseus, 20.1
  25. ^ Ariadne, greekmythology.com. "greekmythology.com". greekmythology.com.
  26. ^ Berg, Nicole M. (2020). "Inserting Sources in Spartacus". Discovering Kubrick's Symbolism: The Secrets of the Films. Jefferson, North Carolina: McFarland. p. 207. ISBN 9781476680491. Retrieved 12 February 2023. In the movie, Bacchus himself is reclining in the arms of Ariadne (the weaving goddess) [...].
  27. ^ Wedeck, Harry E., ed. (1963). "Tibullus". Classics of Roman Literature. Translated by Elton, C. A. Lanham, Maryland: Rowman & Littlefield. pp. 121–122. ISBN 9781442233812. Retrieved 12 February 2023.
    Know, father Bacchus hates the mournful lay.
    So thou, O Cretan maid! didst once deplore
    A perjured tongue, left lonely on the shore,
    As skill'd Catullus tells, who paints in song
    The ingrate Theseus, Ariadne's wrong.
    Take warning, Youths! oh blest! whoe'er shall know
    The art to profit by another's woe.
    Let not the hanging nymph's embrace deceive,
    Nor protestations of base tongues believe [...].


    Compare an alternative translation of the equivalent passage from Tibullus' Sixth Elegy by Theodore Chickering Williams:

    "Delightful Bacchus at his mystery
    Forbids these words of woe.

    Once, by the wave, lone Ariadne pale,
    Abandoned of false Theseus, weeping stood:—
    Our wise Catullus tells the doleful tale
    Of love's ingratitude.

    Take warning friends! How fortunate is he,
    Who learns of others' loss his own to shun!
    Trust not caressing arms and sighs, nor be
    By flatteries undone!"

    (The Elegies of Tibullus)
  28. ^ Larson, Jennifer Lynn (1995). "The Wrongful Death of the Heroine". Greek Heroine Cults. Wisconsin studies in classics. Madison: University of Wisconsin Press. p. 141. ISBN 9780299143701. Retrieved 12 February 2023. The motif of the hanged goddess or heroine is quite widespread. [...] the thread running through most of these stories is that they involve heroines who die a wrongful death. The same aetion is used all over the Greek world to explain hanging or swinging rituals. Hanging is a particularly feminine form of death in the Greek mind [...].
  29. ^ Kerenyi (1976), Dionysos: Archetypal Image of Indestructible Life, p. 89.
  30. ^ Kerenyi 1976, p. 90f.
  31. ^ Barry B. Powell, Classical Myth, 2nd ed., with new translations of ancient texts by Herbert M. Howe, Upper Saddle River, NJ, USA, Prentice-Hall, 1998, p. 368.
  32. ^ Plutarch, Life of Theseus, xx.5
  33. ^ Edmund P. Cueva, "Plutarch's Ariadne in Chariton's Chaereas and Callirhoe", American Journal of Philology, 117.3 (Autumn 1996), pp. 473–84.
  34. ^ Breitenberger, Barbara (2007). Aphrodite and Eros: The Development of Greek Erotic Mythology. New York, NY: Routledge. p. 32.
  35. ^ Wiseman, T. P. (1988). "Satyrs in Rome? The Background to Horace's Ars Poetica". Journal of Roman Studies. 78: 7 n54. doi:10.2307/301447. ISSN 0075-4358. JSTOR 301447. S2CID 161849654.
  36. ^ Hyginus. Fabulae (in Latin). 224. Qui facti sunt ex mortalibus immortales ... Ariadnen Liber pater Liberam appellavit, Minois et Pasiphaes filiam;
  37. ^ "LacusCurtius • Greek Festivals — Ariadneia (Smith's Dictionary, 1875)". penelope.uchicago.edu. Retrieved 11 May 2023.
  38. ^ For example on the mirror engraving reproduced in Larissa Bonfante and Judith Swaddling, Etruscan Myths, The Legendary Past series, University of Texas/British Museum, 2006, fig. 25, p. 41.
  39. ^ "The married couple is ubiquitous in Etruscan art. It is appropriate to the social situation of the Etruscan aristocracy, in which the wife's family played as important a role in the family's genealogy as that of the husband." (Bonfante and Swaddling, 2006, 51f.).
  40. ^ Landon, Letitia Elizabeth (1825). "Ideal Likenesses". The New Monthly Magazine, 1825. Henry Colburn. p. 485.
  41. ^ Landon, Letitia Elizabeth (1838). "poem". The New Monthly Magazine, 1838, Volume 52. Henry Colburn. p. 79.
  42. ^ "Ariadne | English literature 1830–1900". Cambridge University Press. Retrieved 15 December 2020.
  43. ^ Herbert, William N. "Ariadne on Broughty Ferry Beach". Scottish Poetry Library.
  44. ^ Tyler, Adrienne (14 July 2022). "Inception: Ariadne's Name Has A Cool Hidden Meaning". Screen Rant.
  45. ^ cite web https://composers.com/composers/irwin-fischer/ariadne-abandoned

Bibliography edit

External links edit

  • Theoi Project – Ariadne Assembles Greek and Latin quotations concerning Ariadne, in translation.
  • The Warburg Institute Iconographic Database (images of Ariadne)

ariadne, other, uses, disambiguation, thread, redirects, here, class, algorithm, thread, logic, greek, mythology, greek, Ἀριάδνη, latin, cretan, princess, daughter, king, minos, crete, there, different, variations, myth, known, helping, theseus, escape, minota. For other uses see Ariadne disambiguation Ariadne s thread redirects here For the class of algorithm see Ariadne s thread logic In Greek mythology Ariadne ˌ aer i ˈ ae d n i Greek Ἀriadnh Latin Ariadne was a Cretan princess and the daughter of King Minos of Crete There are different variations of Ariadne s myth but she is known for helping Theseus escape the Minotaur and being abandoned by him on the island of Naxos There Dionysus saw Ariadne sleeping fell in love with her and later married her Many versions of the myth recount Dionysus throwing Ariadne s jeweled crown into the sky to create a constellation the Corona Borealis 1 2 AriadneAriadne asleep at Hypnos s side Detail of ancient fresco in PompeiiAbodeCrete later Mount OlympusSymbolString Thread Serpent BullPersonal informationParentsMinos and Pasiphae or Crete daughter of Asterius SiblingsAcacallis Phaedra Catreus Deucalion Glaucus Androgeus Xenodice the MinotaurConsortDionysus TheseusChildrenStaphylus Oenopion Thoas Peparethus Phanus Eurymedon Phliasus Ceramus Maron Evanthes Latramys Tauropolis Enyeus and EunousEquivalentsRoman equivalentArianna Libera Ariadne is associated with mazes and labyrinths because of her involvement in the myths of Theseus and the Minotaur There are also festivals held in Cyprus and Naxos in Ariadne s honor 3 4 Contents 1 Etymology 2 Family 3 Mythology 3 1 Minos and Theseus 3 2 Naxos 4 As a goddess 4 1 Libera 5 Festivals 6 In Etruscan culture 7 Reference in post classical culture 7 1 Non musical works 7 2 Musical works 8 Notes 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksEtymology edit nbsp Bacchus and Ariadne by Titian Dionysus discovers Ariadne on the shore of Naxos The painting also depicts the constellation named after Ariadne 5 Greek lexicographers in the Hellenistic period claimed that Ariadne is derived from the ancient Cretan dialectical elements ari ἀri most which is an intensive prefix and adnos ἀdnos holy 6 Conversely Stylianos Alexiou has argued that despite the belief being that Ariadne s name is of Indo European origin it is actually pre Greek 7 Linguist Robert S P Beekes has also supported Ariadne having a pre Greek origin specifically being Minoan from Crete because her name includes the sequence dn dn rare in Indo European languages and an indication that it is a Minoan loanword 8 Family editAriadne was the daughter of Minos the King of Crete 9 and son of Zeus and of Pasiphae Minos queen and daughter of Helios 10 Others denominated her mother Crete daughter of Asterius the husband and King of Europa Ariadne was the sister of Acacallis Androgeus Deucalion Phaedra Glaucus Xenodice and Catreus 11 Through her mother Pasiphae she was also the half sister of the Minotaur who was known in Crete as Asterion 12 Ariadne married Dionysus and became the mother of Oenopion the personification of wine Staphylus who was associated with grapes Thoas Peparethus Phanus Eurymedon Phliasus Ceramus Maron Euanthes Latramys Tauropolis 13 Enyeus 14 and Eunous 15 Ariadne s family Relation Names Sources Homer Hesiod Apollon Diod Ovid Apollod Plutarch Hyginus Pausa Quin Theophilus Ody Sch Ili Ehoiai Arg Sch Her Met Theseus Fabulae Autolycus Parentage Minos Minos amp Pasiphae Consort Dionysus or Theseus Children Enyeus Thoas Oenopion Staphylus Latromis Euanthes Tauropolis Peparethus Phanus Phliasus Eurymedon Ceramus Maron Eunous Mythology edit nbsp Bacchus and Ariadne Guido Reni c 1620 Minos put Ariadne in charge of the labyrinth where sacrifices were made as part of reparations either to Poseidon or Athena depending on the version of the myth later she helped Theseus conquer the Minotaur and save the children from sacrifice In other narrations she was the bride of Dionysus her status as mortal or divine varying in those accounts 16 17 Minos and Theseus edit Because ancient Greek myths were orally transmitted like other myths that of Ariadne has many variations According to an Athenian version Minos attacked Athens after his son Androgeus was killed there The Athenians asked for terms and were required to sacrifice 7 young men and 7 maidens to the Minotaur every 1 7 or 9 years depending on the source 18 One year the sacrificial party included Theseus the son of King Aegeus who volunteered in order to kill the Minotaur 19 At first sight Ariadne fell in love with him and provided him a sword and ball of thread o Mitos ths Ariadnhs Ariadne s string so that he could retrace his way out of the labyrinth of the Minotaur 12 nbsp The abandoned Ariadne ancient fresco from Pompeii National Archaeological Museum Naples Ariadne betrayed her father and her country for her lover Theseus She eloped with Theseus after he killed the Minotaur yet according to Homer in the Odyssey he had no joy of her for ere that Artemis slew her in seagirt Dia because of the witness of Dionysus The phrase seagirt Dia refers to the uninhabited island of Dia which lies off the northern coast of the Greek island of Crete in the Mediterranean Sea Dia may have referred to the island of Naxos Most accounts claim that Theseus abandoned Ariadne on Naxos and in some versions Perseus mortally wounds her According to some Dionysus claimed Ariadne as wife therefore causing Theseus to abandon her 20 Homer does not elaborate on the nature of Dionysus accusation yet the Oxford Classical Dictionary speculated that she was already married to him when she eloped with Theseus According to Plutarch Paion the Amathusian recounted Theseus accidentally abandoned Ariadne only to come back when it was too late 12 Naxos edit nbsp A Greek Epigrams Pompeii Plate by Geremia Discanno depicting Ariadne abandoned on the island Naxos In Hesiod and in most other versions Theseus abandoned Ariadne sleeping on Naxos and Dionysus rediscovered and wedded her In a few versions of the myth 21 Dionysus appeared to Theseus as they sailed from Crete saying that he had chosen Ariadne as his wife and demanding that Theseus leave her on Naxos for him this had the effect of absolving the Athenian cultural hero of desertion 20 The vase painters of Athens often depicted Athena leading Theseus from the sleeping Ariadne to his ship citation needed Ariadne bore Dionysus famous children including Oenopion Staphylus and Thoas Dionysus set her wedding diadem in the heavens as the constellation Corona Borealis Ariadne was faithful to Dionysus In one version of her myth Perseus killed her at Argos by turning her to stone with the head of Medusa during Perseus war with Dionysus 22 The Odyssey 23 relates that Artemis killed her According to Plutarch one version of the myth tells that Ariadne hanged herself after being abandoned by Theseus 24 Dionysus then went to Hades and brought her and his mother Semele to Mount Olympus where they were deified 25 Some scholars have posited because of Ariadne s associations with thread spinning and winding that she was a weaving goddess 26 like Arachne and support this theory with the mytheme of the Hanged Nymph 27 28 see weaving in mythology citation needed As a goddess edit nbsp Ariadne of Las Incantadas from the agora of Thessalonica 2nd century Louvre Karl Kerenyi and Robert Graves theorized that Ariadne whose name they thought derived from Hesychius enumeration of Adnon a Cretan Greek form of arihagne utterly pure was a Great Goddess of Crete the first divine personage of Greek mythology to be immediately recognized in Crete 29 once archaeological investigation began Kerenyi observed that her name was merely an epithet and claimed that she was originally the Mistress of the Labyrinth both a winding dancing ground and in the Greek opinion a prison with the dreaded Minotaur in its centre Kerenyi explained that a Linear B inscription from Knossos to all the gods honey to the mistress of the labyrinth honey in equal amounts implied to him that the Mistress of the Labyrinth was a Great Goddess in her own right 30 Professor Barry Powell suggested that she was the Snake Goddess of Minoan Crete 31 nbsp Ariadne as the consort of Dionysus bronze applique from Chalki Rhodes late fourth century BCE in the British Museum Plutarch in his Life of Theseus which treats him as a historical person reported that in contemporary Naxos was an earthly Ariadne who was distinct from a divine one Some of the Naxians also have a story of their own that there were two Minoses and two Ariadnes one of whom they say was married to Dionysos in Naxos and bore him Staphylos and his brother and the other of a later time having been carried off by Theseus and then abandoned by him came to Naxos accompanied by a nurse named Korkyne whose tomb they show and that this Ariadne also died there 32 In a kylix by the painter Aison c 425 c 410 BC a Theseus drags the Minotaur from a temple like labyrinth yet the goddess who attends him in this Attic representation is Athena nbsp The Vatican Sleeping Ariadne long erroneously identified as Cleopatra a Roman marble in late Hellenistic style An ancient cult of Aphrodite Ariadne was observed at Amathus Cyprus according to the obscure Hellenistic mythographer Paeon of Amathus his works are lost but his narrative is among the sources that Plutarch cited in his vita of Theseus 20 3 5 According to the myth that was current at Amathus the second most important Cypriot cult centre of Aphrodite Theseus ship was swept off course and the pregnant and suffering Ariadne put ashore in the storm Theseus attempting to secure the ship was inadvertently swept out to sea thus being absolved of abandoning Ariadne The Cypriot women cared for Ariadne who died in childbirth and was memorialized in a shrine Theseus overcome with grief upon his return left money for sacrifices to Ariadne and ordered two cult images one of silver and one of bronze erected At the observation in her honour on the second day of the month Gorpiaeus a young man lay on the ground and vicariously experienced the throes of labour The sacred grove in which the shrine was located was denominated the Grove of Aphrodite Ariadne 33 According to Cypriot legend Ariadne s tomb was located within the temenos of the sanctuary of Aphrodite Ariadne 34 The primitive nature of the cult at Amathus in this narrative appears to be much older than the Athenian sanctioned shrine of Aphrodite who at Amathus received Ariadne derived from hagne sacred as an epithet citation needed Libera edit The Roman author Hyginus identified Ariadne as the Roman Libera bride to Liber 35 36 Festivals edit nbsp Ariadne on the Derveni krater Ariadneia ἀriadneia festivals honored Ariadne and were held in Naxos and Cyprus According to Plutarch some Naxians believed there were two Ariadnes one of which died on the island of Naxos after being abandoned by Theseus The Ariadneia festival honors Naxos as the place of her death with sacrifices and mourning 3 37 Paeon as stated by Plutarch attributes the Ariadneia festival in Cyprus to Theseus who left money to the island so sacrifices could be made to commemorate Ariadne Sacrifices were held in the grove of Ariadne Aphrodite where Ariadne s tomb resided During these sacrifices a young man shall lie down and mimic a woman in labour by crying out and gesturing on the second day of the month Gorpiaeus One silver and one bronze statuette were also constructed in her honor In Etruscan culture editAriadne in Etruscan Areatha is paired with Dionysus in Etruscan Fufluns on Etruscan engraved bronze mirror backs where the Athenian cultural hero Theseus is absent and Semele in Etruscan Semla as mother of Dionysus may accompany the pair 38 lending an especially Etruscan air 39 of familial authority Reference in post classical culture editThis article may contain irrelevant references to popular culture Please remove the content or add citations to reliable and independent sources December 2017 Non musical works edit Ariadne A Tragedy in Five Acts a play by Thomas Corneille In Letitia Elizabeth Landon s poem nbsp Ariadne from Ideal Likenesses 1825 she sees her as a lesson how inconstancy should be repaid again by like inconstancy 40 She returned to the subject of Ariadne in 1838 with her nbsp Ariadne watching the Sea after the Departure of Theseus 41 one of her Subjects for Pictures Johann Heinrich von Dannecker s marble sculpture Ariadne on the Panther 1814 was well known in 19th century Germany The narrative of Ariadne is a theme throughout the second volume of George Eliot s novel Romola Ariadne auf Naxos a poem by Heinrich Wilhelm von Gerstenberg Ariadne a story by Anton Chekhov Klage der Ariadne a poem by Friedrich Nietzsche Metaphysical painter Giorgio de Chirico painted 8 works with a classical statue of Ariadne as a prop Ariadne 1924 a play by A A Milne Ariadne 1932 an epic poem by F L Lucas 42 Ariadne is a major character in Mary Renault s historical novel The King Must Die 1958 about the Bronze Age hero Theseus An adaptation of the narrative of Ariadne appears in the novel Death in the Andes by Mario Vargas Llosa Ariadne is the subject of W N Herbert s poem Ariadne on Broughty Ferry Beach 1983 43 Ariadne played by Aiysha Hart is a major character in the BBC series Atlantis 2013 which is loosely based on Greek myths She falls in love with Jason and helps him conquer the Minotaur and escape the labyrinth Later her stepmother Pasiphae tries to prevent their union Ariadne is the name of the protagonist in the Korean Reincarnation Manhwa Sister In This Life I Have Become The Queen The protagonist is loosely based on Greek mythology as she helps her original love interest kill his half brother to usurp the throne only to be tossed aside at the last second for her sister In Christopher Nolan s Inception the character Ariadne played by Elliot Page is a graduate student of architecture recruited to construct various dreamscapes which are described as mazes 44 Musical works edit Richard Strauss s standard repertory opera Ariadne auf Naxos of 1912 was preceded by a L Arianna each by Claudio Monteverdi in 1608 and Carlo Agostino Badia in 1702 Ariadne by German composer Johann Georg Conradi in 1691 and Arianna in ca 1727 by Benedetto Marcello and by non operatic Ariadne auf Naxos works including a cantata based on the Heinrich Wilhelm von Gerstenberg poem Jiri Antonin Benda s 1775 melodrama Ariadne auf Naxos and Joseph Haydn s 1790 cantata Arianna a Naxos Albert Roussel s 1931 ballet score Bacchus and Ariadne American composer Irwin Fischer composed Ariadne Abandoned in 1938 a short piece scored for solo piano or orchestra 45 Ariadne is a song in The Frogs a 1974 musical with music and lyrics by Stephen Sondheim book by Burt Shevelove revisions by Nathan Lane 2004 In 2004 the British indie pop band The Clientele released an EP called Ariadne Notes edit The kylix is conserved at the National Archaeological Museum of Spain Madrid see image References edit Hall James 4 May 2018 Dictionary of Subjects and Symbols in Art Routledge ISBN 978 0 429 97358 1 Corona Borealis constellation Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 6 June 2023 a b Plutarch Life of Theseus penelope uchicago edu Retrieved 11 May 2023 LacusCurtius Greek Festivals Ariadneia Smith s Dictionary 1875 penelope uchicago edu Retrieved 11 May 2023 Lucas Arthur Plesters Joyce 1978 Titian s Bacchus and Ariadne National Gallery Technical Bulletin 2 25 47 ISSN 0140 7430 JSTOR 42616250 Hanks amp Hodges 1997 pp 15 Alexiou 1969 pp 72 Beekes Robert S P 2010 Etymological Dictionary of Greek Volume I with the assistance of Lucien van Beek Leiden Indo European Etymological Dictionary Series 10 Leiden Boston Brill 2010 p 130 ISBN 978 90 04 17420 7 Homer Odyssey 11 320 Hesiod Theogony 947 and later authors Pasiphae is mentioned as mother of Ariadne in Apollodorus 3 1 2 Pasiphae daughter of the Sun Apollonius Argonautica 3 997 and Hyginus Fabulae 224 Apollodorus 3 1 2 a b c Rewriting Ariadne What Is Her Myth TheCollector 2 August 2021 Retrieved 20 May 2023 The classical references to these progeny are at TheoiProject Ariadne and Theoi Project Dionysus Family Euanthes Latramys and Tauropolis are only mentioned in scholia on Apollonius Rhodius Argonautica 3 997 Scholia on Homer Iliad 9 668 Theophilus of Antioch To Autolycus 7 In creating a biography for a historicized Ariadne Theseus having abandoned her on Naxos explains her presence there in assembling a set of biographical narrative episodes this would have had to be placed after her abduction from Knossos In keeping with the office of Minos as King of Crete Ariadne came to bear the late title of Princess The culmination of this rationalization is the realistic historicizing fiction of Mary Renault The Bull from the Sea 1962 Fiana Sidhe Goddess Ariadne in the Spotlight Archived 10 September 2017 at the Wayback Machine MatriFocus 2002 Minotaur Definition Story Labyrinth amp Facts Britannica www britannica com Retrieved 10 May 2023 Carter Tim 1999 Lamenting Ariadne Early Music 27 3 395 405 doi 10 1093 earlyj XXVII 3 395 ISSN 0306 1078 JSTOR 3128655 a b LacusCurtius Diodorus Siculus Book V Chapters 47 84 penelope uchicago edu Retrieved 20 May 2023 Diodorus Siculus 4 61 and 5 51 Pausanias 1 20 2 9 40 2 and 10 29 2 Nonnus Dionysiaca 47 665 Homer Odyssey Book XI Plutarch Theseus 20 1 Ariadne greekmythology com greekmythology com greekmythology com Berg Nicole M 2020 Inserting Sources in Spartacus Discovering Kubrick s Symbolism The Secrets of the Films Jefferson North Carolina McFarland p 207 ISBN 9781476680491 Retrieved 12 February 2023 In the movie Bacchus himself is reclining in the arms of Ariadne the weaving goddess Wedeck Harry E ed 1963 Tibullus Classics of Roman Literature Translated by Elton C A Lanham Maryland Rowman amp Littlefield pp 121 122 ISBN 9781442233812 Retrieved 12 February 2023 Know father Bacchus hates the mournful lay So thou O Cretan maid didst once deploreA perjured tongue left lonely on the shore As skill d Catullus tells who paints in songThe ingrate Theseus Ariadne s wrong Take warning Youths oh blest whoe er shall knowThe art to profit by another s woe Let not the hanging nymph s embrace deceive Nor protestations of base tongues believe Compare an alternative translation of the equivalent passage from Tibullus Sixth Elegy by Theodore Chickering Williams Delightful Bacchus at his mystery Forbids these words of woe Once by the wave lone Ariadne pale Abandoned of false Theseus weeping stood Our wise Catullus tells the doleful tale Of love s ingratitude Take warning friends How fortunate is he Who learns of others loss his own to shun Trust not caressing arms and sighs nor be By flatteries undone The Elegies of Tibullus Larson Jennifer Lynn 1995 The Wrongful Death of the Heroine Greek Heroine Cults Wisconsin studies in classics Madison University of Wisconsin Press p 141 ISBN 9780299143701 Retrieved 12 February 2023 The motif of the hanged goddess or heroine is quite widespread the thread running through most of these stories is that they involve heroines who die a wrongful death The same aetion is used all over the Greek world to explain hanging or swinging rituals Hanging is a particularly feminine form of death in the Greek mind Kerenyi 1976 Dionysos Archetypal Image of Indestructible Life p 89 Kerenyi 1976 p 90f Barry B Powell Classical Myth 2nd ed with new translations of ancient texts by Herbert M Howe Upper Saddle River NJ USA Prentice Hall 1998 p 368 Plutarch Life of Theseus xx 5 Edmund P Cueva Plutarch s Ariadne in Chariton s Chaereas and Callirhoe American Journal of Philology 117 3 Autumn 1996 pp 473 84 Breitenberger Barbara 2007 Aphrodite and Eros The Development of Greek Erotic Mythology New York NY Routledge p 32 Wiseman T P 1988 Satyrs in Rome The Background to Horace s Ars Poetica Journal of Roman Studies 78 7 n54 doi 10 2307 301447 ISSN 0075 4358 JSTOR 301447 S2CID 161849654 Hyginus Fabulae in Latin 224 Qui facti sunt ex mortalibus immortales Ariadnen Liber pater Liberam appellavit Minois et Pasiphaes filiam LacusCurtius Greek Festivals Ariadneia Smith s Dictionary 1875 penelope uchicago edu Retrieved 11 May 2023 For example on the mirror engraving reproduced in Larissa Bonfante and Judith Swaddling Etruscan Myths The Legendary Past series University of Texas British Museum 2006 fig 25 p 41 The married couple is ubiquitous in Etruscan art It is appropriate to the social situation of the Etruscan aristocracy in which the wife s family played as important a role in the family s genealogy as that of the husband Bonfante and Swaddling 2006 51f Landon Letitia Elizabeth 1825 Ideal Likenesses The New Monthly Magazine 1825 Henry Colburn p 485 Landon Letitia Elizabeth 1838 poem The New Monthly Magazine 1838 Volume 52 Henry Colburn p 79 Ariadne English literature 1830 1900 Cambridge University Press Retrieved 15 December 2020 Herbert William N Ariadne on Broughty Ferry Beach Scottish Poetry Library Tyler Adrienne 14 July 2022 Inception Ariadne s Name Has A Cool Hidden Meaning Screen Rant cite web https composers com composers irwin fischer ariadne abandonedBibliography editAlexiou Stylianos 1969 Minoan Civilization Translated by Ridley Cressida 6th revised ed Heraklion Greece Retrieved 8 May 2020 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint location missing publisher link Hanks Patrick Hodges Flavia 1997 A Concise Dictionary of First Names Revised ed New York City United States Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0198662594 Retrieved 8 May 2020 Henry Liddell Robert Scott 1940 Jones Henry Stuart ed A Greek English Lexicon Clarendon Press Kerenyi Karl Dionysos Archetypal Image of Indestructible Life part I iii The Cretan core of the Dionysos myth Princeton Princeton University Press 1976 Peck Harry Thurston Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities 1898 Ruck Carl A P and Danny Staples The World of Classical Myth Durham Carolina Academic Press 1994 Barthes Roland Camera Lucida Barthes quotes Nietzsche A labyrinthine man never seeks the truth but only his Ariadne using Ariadne in reference to his mother who had recently died External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ariadne Theoi Project Ariadne Assembles Greek and Latin quotations concerning Ariadne in translation The Warburg Institute Iconographic Database images of Ariadne Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ariadne amp oldid 1219262991, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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