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Endymion (mythology)

In Greek mythology, Endymion[a] (/ɛnˈdɪmiən/; Ancient Greek: Ἐνδυμίων, gen.: Ἐνδυμίωνος) was variously a handsome Aeolian shepherd, hunter, or king who was said to rule and live at Olympia in Elis.[1] He was also venerated and said to reside on Mount Latmus in Caria, on the west coast of Asia Minor.[2]

Endymion
The Sleep of Endymion by Anne-Louis Girodet (1791), Musée du Louvre, Paris.
AbodeElis or Mount Latmus
Personal information
ParentsAethlius and Calyce
Zeus and Phoenissa
ConsortSelene
Iphianassa or Asterodia or Chromia or Hyperippe
ChildrenNarcissus, Aetolus, Eurypyle, Eurycyda, Paeon, Epeius, fifty daughters with Selene

There is confusion over Endymion's identity, as some sources suppose that he was, or was related to, the prince of Elis, and others suggest he was a shepherd from Caria. There is also a later suggestion that he was an astronomer: Pliny the Elder[3] mentions Endymion as the first human to observe the movements of the moon, which (according to Pliny) accounts for Endymion's infatuation with its tutelary goddess. Consequently, Endymion's tomb has been attributed to two different sites. The people of Heracleia claimed that he was laid to rest on Mount Latmus, while the Eleans declared that it was at Olympia.[4]

Endymion as hunter (with a dog), sitting on rocks in a landscape, holding two spears, looking at Selene who descends to him. Antique fresco from Pompeii.

However, the role of lover of Selene, the Moon, is attributed primarily to the Endymion who was either a shepherd or an astronomer, as either profession provides justification for the time he spent gazing at the Moon.[citation needed]

Mythology edit

 
Selene and Endymion, by Sebastiano Ricci (1713), Chiswick House, England.

Apollonius of Rhodes[5] (3rd century BC) is one of the many poets[6] who tell how Selene, the Titan goddess of the Moon,[b] loved the mortal Endymion. She found Endymion so beautiful that she asked his father, Zeus, to grant him eternal youth so that he would never leave her. Alternatively, Selene so loved how Endymion looked when he was asleep in the cave on Mount Latmus, near Miletus in Caria,[7] that she entreated Zeus that he might remain that way. In some versions, Zeus wanted to punish Endymion for daring to show romantic interest in Hera (much like Ixion). Whatever the case, Zeus granted Selene's wish and put Endymion into an eternal sleep. Every night, Selene visited him where he slept, and by him had fifty daughters[8] who are equated by some scholars (such as James George Frazer or H. J. Rose) with the fifty months of the Olympiad.[9][need quotation to verify].[10][11]

According to a passage in the Deipnosophistae, the sophist and dithyrambic poet Licymnius of Chios[12] (probably 4th century BCE) told a different tale, in which Hypnos, the god of sleep, loves Endymion and does not close the eyes of his beloved even while he is asleep, but lulls him to rest with eyes wide open so that he may without interruption enjoy the pleasure of gazing at them.[13]

The Bibliotheke claims that:

Calyce and Aethlius had a son Endymion who led Aeolians from Thessaly and founded Elis. But some say that he was a son of Zeus. As he was of unsurpassed beauty, the Moon fell in love with him, and Zeus allowed him to choose what he would, and he chose to sleep for ever, remaining deathless and ageless. Endymion had by a Naiad nymph or, as some say, by Iphianassa, a son Aetolus, who slew Apis, son of Phoroneus, and fled to the Curetian country. There he killed his hosts, Dorus and Laodocus and Polypoetes, the sons of Phthia and Apollo, and called the country Aetolia after himself.[14]

In a similar vein, a scholiast on Apollonius Rhodius wrote that, according to Hesiod, Zeus allowed Endymion to be the keeper of his own death and to decide on his own when he would die.[15]

 
Diana and Endymion by Jérôme-Martin Langlois, c. 1822

According to Pausanias, Endymion deposed Clymenus, son of Cardys, at Olympia.[16] Describing the "early history" of the Eleans, Pausanias reports that:

The first to rule in this land, they say, was Aethlius, who was the son of Zeus and of Protogeneia, the daughter of Deucalion, and the father of Endymion. The Moon, they say, fell in love with this Endymion and bore him fifty daughters. Others with greater probability say that Endymion took a wife Asterodia—others say she was Chromia, the daughter of Itonus, the son of Amphictyon; others again, Hyperippe, the daughter of Arcas—but all agree that Endymion begat Paeon, Epeius, Aetolus, and also a daughter Eurycyda. Endymion set his sons to run a race at Olympia for the throne; Epeius won, and obtained the kingdom, and his subjects were then named Epeans for the first time. Of his brothers they say that Aetolus remained at home, while Paeon, vexed at his defeat, went into the farthest exile possible, and that the region beyond the river Axius was named after him Paeonia. As to the death of Endymion, the people of Heracleia near Miletus do not agree with the Eleans for while the Eleans show a tomb of Endymion, the folk of Heracleia say that he retired to Mount Latmus and give him honor, there being a shrine of Endymion on Latmus.[17]

Pausanias also reports seeing a statue of Endymion in the treasury of Metapontines at Olympia.[18]

Propertius (Book 2, el. 15), Cicero's Tusculanae Quaestiones (Book 1), and Theocritus discuss the Endymion myth at some length, but reiterate the above to varying degrees. The myth surrounding Endymion has been expanded and reworked during the modern period by figures like Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and John Keats (in his 1818 narrative poem Endymion).

The satirical author Lucian of Samosata records an otherwise unattested myth where a fair nymph named Myia becomes Selene's rival for Endymion's affections; the chatty nymph would endlessly talk to him when he slept, waking him up. This annoyed Endymion, and enraged Selene, who transformed the girl into a fly. In memory of Endymion, the fly still grudges all sleepers their rest.[19]

Comparative table of Endymion's family
Relation Names Sources
Hesiod Conon Apollodorus Pausanias Nonnus Clement Stephanus
Parents Aethlius and Calyce
Aethlius
Aethnos
Zeus
Zeus and Phoenissa
Wife Naiad nymph
Iphianassa
Selene
Asterodia
Cromia
Hyperippe
Children Aetolus
Eurypyle
50 daughters
Eurycyda
Epeius
Paeon
Narcissus
Naxos

Background edit

 
Another Roman Endymion sarcophagus, mid-2nd century AD. (Metropolitan Museum of Art)[20]
 
Gallo-Roman "Endymion" sarcophagus, early 3rd century (Louvre)
 
Roman "Endymion" statue, reign of Hadrian - early 2nd century (Gustav III's Antikmuseum, Stockholm)
 
Artemis and Endymion in Palais Garnier, Paris

No explicit narrative has survived. In the Argonautica (iv.57ff) the "daughter of Titan," the Moon, was witness to Medea's fearful night-time flight to Jason, and "rejoiced with malicious pleasure as she reflected to herself: 'I'm not the only one then to skulk off to the Latmian cave, nor is it only I that burn with desire for fair Endymion'" she muses. "But now you yourself it would seem, are a victim of a madness like mine."[21] Lemprière's Classical Dictionary reinforces Pliny's account of Endymion's attachment to astronomy and cites it as the source of why Endymion was said to have a relationship with the moon as she passed by.

The mytheme of Endymion being not dead but endlessly asleep, which was proverbial (the proverb—Endymionis somnum dormire, "to sleep the sleep of Endymion")[22] ensured that scenes of Endymion and Selene were popular subjects for sculpted sarcophagi in Late Antiquity, when after-death existence began to be a heightened concern. The Louvre example, discovered at Saint-Médard-d'Eyrans, France (illustration above), is one of this class.

Some[who?] believe that he was the personification of sleep, or the sunset (most likely the last one as his name, if it were Greek rather than Carian can be construed from "to dive in" [Greek en (ἐν) in, and duein (δύειν) dive], which would imply a representation of that sort. Latin writers explained the name from somnum ei inductum, the "sleep put upon him".[23])

The myth of Endymion was never easily transferred to ever-chaste Artemis, the Olympian associated with the Moon.[24] In the Renaissance, the revived moon goddess Diana had the Endymion myth attached to her.

Notes edit

  1. ^ Michael Drayton's spelling in Endimion and Phœbe (1597) did not catch on.
  2. ^ Her Roman equivalent is Luna.

Citations edit

  1. ^ Classical sources linking Endymion with Elis include Pausanias, 5.1.3 & Pseudo-Apollodorus. Bibliotheca, 1.7.5-6
  2. ^ Classical sources linking Endymion with Mount Latmus include Ovid, Heroides, 18.61–65; Ovid, Ars Amatoria, 3.83; Lucian, Dialogi Deorum 19, where Endymion is discussed by Aphrodite and Selene; Cicero, Tusculan Disputations i.38.92.
  3. ^ Pliny's Naturalis Historia Book II.IV.43.
  4. ^ John Lemprière's Classical Dictionary
  5. ^ Argonautica 4.57ff.
  6. ^ Compare Plato, Phaedo 72c.
  7. ^ Sappho localises the myth at Mount Latmus.
  8. ^ Pausanias 5.1.4
  9. ^ J. Davidson, "Time and Greek Religion", in A Companion to Greek Religion, edited by D. Ogden (John Wiley & Sons, 2010) ISBN 978-1-44433417-3, pp. 204–5.
  10. ^ Frazer, James George (1911). "The Mortality of the Gods". The Golden Bough. Volume 4, Part 3 of The Golden Bough: A Study in Magic and Religion (3 ed.). London: Macmillan and Company, Limited. p. 90. Retrieved 19 January 2023. [...] as scholars have already perceived, Endymion is the sunken sun overtaken by the moon below the horizon, and his fifty daughters by her are the fifty lunar months of an Olympiad, or, more strictly speaking, of every alternate Olympiad.
  11. ^ Bos, A. P. (1989). Cosmic and Meta-Cosmic Theology in Aristotle's Lost Dialogues. Volume 16 of Brill's studies in intellectual history. Leiden: E. J. Brill. p. 210. ISBN 9789004091559. Retrieved 19 January 2023. Endymion is sometimes called the founder of the Olympic games, which links up with the legend that the moon goddess bore him fifty daughters, Pausanius 5.1.4. H. J. Rose (Oxf. Class. Dict. s.v.) sees this as a reference to the fifty months of an Olympiad.
  12. ^ Licymnius is known only through a few quoted lines and second-hand through references (William Smith, ed. Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities 1870 2007-04-05 at the Wayback Machine)
  13. ^ Licymnius, Fragment 771 (from Athenaeus, Scholars at Dinner) (trans. Campbell, Vol. Greek Lyric V)
  14. ^ Apollodorus, 1.7.5-6
  15. ^ Hesiod, Catalogue of Women frag 8
  16. ^ Pausanias, Graeciae Descriptio 5.8.1
  17. ^ Pausanias, 5.3–5.
  18. ^ Pausanias, 6.19.11.
  19. ^ Lucian, Praising a Fly 10
  20. ^ Accession Number 24.97.13.
  21. ^ Richard Hunter, Apollonius of Rhodes: Jason and the Golden Fleece (Oxford University Press) 1993:100.
  22. ^ Described in Sir James George Frazer, ed., Apollodorus, Library and Epitome [1].
  23. ^ Graves, 1960, 64 note 2.
  24. ^ Hyginus (Fabula 271) identifies Endymion as he "whom Luna loved", keeping the necessary moon connection but avoiding Diana.

References edit

Ancient edit

  • Apollonius of Rhodes, Argonautica; with an English translation by R. C. Seaton. William Heinemann, 1912.
  • Apollodorus. Apollodorus, The Library, with an English Translation by Sir James George Frazer, F.B.A., F.R.S. in 2 Volumes. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann 1921.
  • Pausanias, Description of Greece. W.H.S. Jones (translator). Loeb Classical Library. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann (1918). Vol. 1. Books I–II: ISBN 0-674-99104-4.
  • Plato. Plato in Twelve Volumes, Vol. 1 translated by Harold North Fowler; introduction by W.R.M. Lamb. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann 1966.
  • Lucian, Phalaris. Hippias or The Bath. Dionysus. Heracles. Amber or The Swans. The Fly. Nigrinus. Demonax. The Hall. My Native Land. Octogenarians. A True Story. Slander. The Consonants at Law. The Carousal (Symposium) or The Lapiths. Translated by A. M. Harmon. Loeb Classical Library 14. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1913.
  • Hyginus. Fabulae, 271.

Modern edit

  • Karl Kerenyi. The Gods of the Greeks. London: Thames & Hudson, 1951 (pp. 196–98).
  • Robert Graves. The Greek Myths (1955) 1960, 64 a-c.
  • Natalia Agapiou. "Endymion at the Crossroads: The Fortune of the Myth of Endymion at the Dawn of the Modern Era", in Res Publica Litterarum: Studies in the Classical Tradition, 27/7 (2004), p. 70-82.
  • Natalia Agapiou. Endymion au carrefour. La fortune littéraire et artistique du mythe d'Endymion à l'aube de l'ère moderne (Berlin, 2005): ISBN 978-3-7861-2499-3.

External links edit

  • ENDYMION in The Theoi Project
  • ENDYMION in Greek Mythology Link
  • . Artwork of the Month. National Museums Liverpool: Walker Art Gallery. November 1999. Archived from the original on 2 February 2012. Retrieved 2008-02-24.
  • For works by Gerard de Lairesse, Frans Floris, in RKD (The Hague) and Bildindex (Marburg), see the; et al. "Iconclass Browser".{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link)
  •   The Awakening of Endymion., a poem by Letitia Elizabeth Landon, being one of her Subjects for Pictures, 1837.
  • Diana and Endymion painting by Pierre Subleyras (c. 1740)
  • The Warburg Institute Iconographic Database (images of Endymion)

endymion, mythology, other, uses, endymion, disambiguation, greek, mythology, endymion, ancient, greek, Ἐνδυμίων, Ἐνδυμίωνος, variously, handsome, aeolian, shepherd, hunter, king, said, rule, live, olympia, elis, also, venerated, said, reside, mount, latmus, c. For other uses see Endymion disambiguation In Greek mythology Endymion a ɛ n ˈ d ɪ m i e n Ancient Greek Ἐndymiwn gen Ἐndymiwnos was variously a handsome Aeolian shepherd hunter or king who was said to rule and live at Olympia in Elis 1 He was also venerated and said to reside on Mount Latmus in Caria on the west coast of Asia Minor 2 EndymionThe Sleep of Endymion by Anne Louis Girodet 1791 Musee du Louvre Paris AbodeElis or Mount LatmusPersonal informationParentsAethlius and CalyceZeus and PhoenissaConsortSeleneIphianassa or Asterodia or Chromia or HyperippeChildrenNarcissus Aetolus Eurypyle Eurycyda Paeon Epeius fifty daughters with SeleneThere is confusion over Endymion s identity as some sources suppose that he was or was related to the prince of Elis and others suggest he was a shepherd from Caria There is also a later suggestion that he was an astronomer Pliny the Elder 3 mentions Endymion as the first human to observe the movements of the moon which according to Pliny accounts for Endymion s infatuation with its tutelary goddess Consequently Endymion s tomb has been attributed to two different sites The people of Heracleia claimed that he was laid to rest on Mount Latmus while the Eleans declared that it was at Olympia 4 Endymion as hunter with a dog sitting on rocks in a landscape holding two spears looking at Selene who descends to him Antique fresco from Pompeii However the role of lover of Selene the Moon is attributed primarily to the Endymion who was either a shepherd or an astronomer as either profession provides justification for the time he spent gazing at the Moon citation needed Contents 1 Mythology 2 Background 3 Notes 4 Citations 5 References 5 1 Ancient 5 2 Modern 6 External linksMythology edit nbsp Selene and Endymion by Sebastiano Ricci 1713 Chiswick House England Apollonius of Rhodes 5 3rd century BC is one of the many poets 6 who tell how Selene the Titan goddess of the Moon b loved the mortal Endymion She found Endymion so beautiful that she asked his father Zeus to grant him eternal youth so that he would never leave her Alternatively Selene so loved how Endymion looked when he was asleep in the cave on Mount Latmus near Miletus in Caria 7 that she entreated Zeus that he might remain that way In some versions Zeus wanted to punish Endymion for daring to show romantic interest in Hera much like Ixion Whatever the case Zeus granted Selene s wish and put Endymion into an eternal sleep Every night Selene visited him where he slept and by him had fifty daughters 8 who are equated by some scholars such as James George Frazer or H J Rose with the fifty months of the Olympiad 9 need quotation to verify 10 11 According to a passage in the Deipnosophistae the sophist and dithyrambic poet Licymnius of Chios 12 probably 4th century BCE told a different tale in which Hypnos the god of sleep loves Endymion and does not close the eyes of his beloved even while he is asleep but lulls him to rest with eyes wide open so that he may without interruption enjoy the pleasure of gazing at them 13 The Bibliotheke claims that Calyce and Aethlius had a son Endymion who led Aeolians from Thessaly and founded Elis But some say that he was a son of Zeus As he was of unsurpassed beauty the Moon fell in love with him and Zeus allowed him to choose what he would and he chose to sleep for ever remaining deathless and ageless Endymion had by a Naiad nymph or as some say by Iphianassa a son Aetolus who slew Apis son of Phoroneus and fled to the Curetian country There he killed his hosts Dorus and Laodocus and Polypoetes the sons of Phthia and Apollo and called the country Aetolia after himself 14 In a similar vein a scholiast on Apollonius Rhodius wrote that according to Hesiod Zeus allowed Endymion to be the keeper of his own death and to decide on his own when he would die 15 nbsp Diana and Endymion by Jerome Martin Langlois c 1822According to Pausanias Endymion deposed Clymenus son of Cardys at Olympia 16 Describing the early history of the Eleans Pausanias reports that The first to rule in this land they say was Aethlius who was the son of Zeus and of Protogeneia the daughter of Deucalion and the father of Endymion The Moon they say fell in love with this Endymion and bore him fifty daughters Others with greater probability say that Endymion took a wife Asterodia others say she was Chromia the daughter of Itonus the son of Amphictyon others again Hyperippe the daughter of Arcas but all agree that Endymion begat Paeon Epeius Aetolus and also a daughter Eurycyda Endymion set his sons to run a race at Olympia for the throne Epeius won and obtained the kingdom and his subjects were then named Epeans for the first time Of his brothers they say that Aetolus remained at home while Paeon vexed at his defeat went into the farthest exile possible and that the region beyond the river Axius was named after him Paeonia As to the death of Endymion the people of Heracleia near Miletus do not agree with the Eleans for while the Eleans show a tomb of Endymion the folk of Heracleia say that he retired to Mount Latmus and give him honor there being a shrine of Endymion on Latmus 17 Pausanias also reports seeing a statue of Endymion in the treasury of Metapontines at Olympia 18 Propertius Book 2 el 15 Cicero s Tusculanae Quaestiones Book 1 and Theocritus discuss the Endymion myth at some length but reiterate the above to varying degrees The myth surrounding Endymion has been expanded and reworked during the modern period by figures like Henry Wadsworth Longfellow and John Keats in his 1818 narrative poem Endymion The satirical author Lucian of Samosata records an otherwise unattested myth where a fair nymph named Myia becomes Selene s rival for Endymion s affections the chatty nymph would endlessly talk to him when he slept waking him up This annoyed Endymion and enraged Selene who transformed the girl into a fly In memory of Endymion the fly still grudges all sleepers their rest 19 Comparative table of Endymion s family Relation Names SourcesHesiod Conon Apollodorus Pausanias Nonnus Clement StephanusParents Aethlius and Calyce Aethlius Aethnos Zeus Zeus and Phoenissa Wife Naiad nymph Iphianassa Selene Asterodia Cromia Hyperippe Children Aetolus Eurypyle 50 daughters Eurycyda Epeius Paeon Narcissus Naxos Background edit nbsp Another Roman Endymion sarcophagus mid 2nd century AD Metropolitan Museum of Art 20 nbsp Gallo Roman Endymion sarcophagus early 3rd century Louvre nbsp Roman Endymion statue reign of Hadrian early 2nd century Gustav III s Antikmuseum Stockholm nbsp Artemis and Endymion in Palais Garnier ParisNo explicit narrative has survived In the Argonautica iv 57ff the daughter of Titan the Moon was witness to Medea s fearful night time flight to Jason and rejoiced with malicious pleasure as she reflected to herself I m not the only one then to skulk off to the Latmian cave nor is it only I that burn with desire for fair Endymion she muses But now you yourself it would seem are a victim of a madness like mine 21 Lempriere s Classical Dictionary reinforces Pliny s account of Endymion s attachment to astronomy and cites it as the source of why Endymion was said to have a relationship with the moon as she passed by The mytheme of Endymion being not dead but endlessly asleep which was proverbial the proverb Endymionis somnum dormire to sleep the sleep of Endymion 22 ensured that scenes of Endymion and Selene were popular subjects for sculpted sarcophagi in Late Antiquity when after death existence began to be a heightened concern The Louvre example discovered at Saint Medard d Eyrans France illustration above is one of this class Some who believe that he was the personification of sleep or the sunset most likely the last one as his name if it were Greek rather than Carian can be construed from to dive in Greek en ἐn in and duein dyein dive which would imply a representation of that sort Latin writers explained the name from somnum ei inductum the sleep put upon him 23 The myth of Endymion was never easily transferred to ever chaste Artemis the Olympian associated with the Moon 24 In the Renaissance the revived moon goddess Diana had the Endymion myth attached to her Notes edit Michael Drayton s spelling in Endimion and Phœbe 1597 did not catch on Her Roman equivalent is Luna Citations edit Classical sources linking Endymion with Elis include Pausanias 5 1 3 amp Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca 1 7 5 6 Classical sources linking Endymion with Mount Latmus include Ovid Heroides 18 61 65 Ovid Ars Amatoria 3 83 Lucian Dialogi Deorum 19 where Endymion is discussed by Aphrodite and Selene Cicero Tusculan Disputations i 38 92 Pliny s Naturalis Historia Book II IV 43 John Lempriere s Classical Dictionary Argonautica 4 57ff Compare Plato Phaedo 72c Sappho localises the myth at Mount Latmus Pausanias 5 1 4 J Davidson Time and Greek Religion in A Companion to Greek Religion edited by D Ogden John Wiley amp Sons 2010 ISBN 978 1 44433417 3 pp 204 5 Frazer James George 1911 The Mortality of the Gods The Golden Bough Volume 4 Part 3 of The Golden Bough A Study in Magic and Religion 3 ed London Macmillan and Company Limited p 90 Retrieved 19 January 2023 as scholars have already perceived Endymion is the sunken sun overtaken by the moon below the horizon and his fifty daughters by her are the fifty lunar months of an Olympiad or more strictly speaking of every alternate Olympiad Bos A P 1989 Cosmic and Meta Cosmic Theology in Aristotle s Lost Dialogues Volume 16 of Brill s studies in intellectual history Leiden E J Brill p 210 ISBN 9789004091559 Retrieved 19 January 2023 Endymion is sometimes called the founder of the Olympic games which links up with the legend that the moon goddess bore him fifty daughters Pausanius 5 1 4 H J Rose Oxf Class Dict s v sees this as a reference to the fifty months of an Olympiad Licymnius is known only through a few quoted lines and second hand through references William Smith ed Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities 1870 Archived 2007 04 05 at the Wayback Machine Licymnius Fragment 771 from Athenaeus Scholars at Dinner trans Campbell Vol Greek Lyric V Apollodorus 1 7 5 6 Hesiod Catalogue of Women frag 8 Pausanias Graeciae Descriptio 5 8 1 Pausanias 5 3 5 Pausanias 6 19 11 Lucian Praising a Fly 10 Accession Number 24 97 13 Richard Hunter Apollonius of Rhodes Jason and the Golden Fleece Oxford University Press 1993 100 Described in Sir James George Frazer ed Apollodorus Library and Epitome 1 Graves 1960 64 note 2 Hyginus Fabula 271 identifies Endymion as he whom Luna loved keeping the necessary moon connection but avoiding Diana References editAncient edit Apollonius of Rhodes Argonautica with an English translation by R C Seaton William Heinemann 1912 Apollodorus Apollodorus The Library with an English Translation by Sir James George Frazer F B A F R S in 2 Volumes Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann 1921 Pausanias Description of Greece W H S Jones translator Loeb Classical Library Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann 1918 Vol 1 Books I II ISBN 0 674 99104 4 Plato Plato in Twelve Volumes Vol 1 translated by Harold North Fowler introduction by W R M Lamb Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann 1966 Lucian Phalaris Hippias or The Bath Dionysus Heracles Amber or The Swans The Fly Nigrinus Demonax The Hall My Native Land Octogenarians A True Story Slander The Consonants at Law The Carousal Symposium or The Lapiths Translated by A M Harmon Loeb Classical Library 14 Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 1913 Hyginus Fabulae 271 Modern edit Karl Kerenyi The Gods of the Greeks London Thames amp Hudson 1951 pp 196 98 Robert Graves The Greek Myths 1955 1960 64 a c Natalia Agapiou Endymion at the Crossroads The Fortune of the Myth of Endymion at the Dawn of the Modern Era in Res Publica Litterarum Studies in the Classical Tradition 27 7 2004 p 70 82 Natalia Agapiou Endymion au carrefour La fortune litteraire et artistique du mythe d Endymion a l aube de l ere moderne Berlin 2005 ISBN 978 3 7861 2499 3 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Endymion ENDYMION in The Theoi Project ENDYMION in Greek Mythology Link Diana and Endymion circa 1700 1730 by Francesco Solimena 1657 1747 Artwork of the Month National Museums Liverpool Walker Art Gallery November 1999 Archived from the original on 2 February 2012 Retrieved 2008 02 24 For works by Gerard de Lairesse Frans Floris in RKD The Hague and Bildindex Marburg see the et al Iconclass Browser a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint multiple names authors list link nbsp The Awakening of Endymion a poem by Letitia Elizabeth Landon being one of her Subjects for Pictures 1837 Diana and Endymion painting by Pierre Subleyras c 1740 The Warburg Institute Iconographic Database images of Endymion Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Endymion mythology amp oldid 1177612614, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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