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Eromenos

In ancient Greece, an eromenos was the younger and passive (or 'receptive') partner in a male homosexual relationship. The partner of an eromenos was the erastes, the older and active partner. The eromenos was often depicted as a beautiful, and smaller and more youthful-looking than the erastes.

Berlin painter, Ganymede rolling a hoop and bearing aloft a cockerel, a love-gift from Zeus, early fifth century B.C. , Musée du Louvre.

Terminology

Erômenos (ἐρώμενος) means ‘one who is sexually desired’ in Greek language and is the past participle of the verb eramai, to have sexual desire. In Greek Homosexuality, the first modern scholarly work on this topic, Kenneth Dover used the literal translation of the Greek word as an English word to refer to the passive partner in Greek homosexual relationship. Though in many contexts the younger man is also called pais, ‘boy’, the word can also be used for child, girl, son, daughter and slave, and therefore eromenos would be more specific and can “avoid the cumbrousness and…imprecision of ‘boy’”.[1] It is in contrast to the masculine active participle erάn (‘be in love with…’, ‘have a passionate desire for’).[1] The word erastes (lover), however, can be adapted to a married man’s role in both heterosexual and homosexual relationship.

Characteristics

In vase paintings and other artworks, the eromenos is often depicted as a beautiful young adult. His relatively smaller stature suggests his passive role in the relationship and younger age as well as social status. Usually, they show a combination of a youthful-looking face with a body which possesses mature musculature. The lack of beard and pubic hair are an important clue in identifying an eromenos, though this may possibly be attributed to style. A poem quoted in Greek Sexuality (couplet 1327f) shows that ‘the poet will never cease to ‘fawn on’ the boy so long as the boy’s cheek is hairless.[1]

His specific age is a nuanced issue for the eromenos, and the writer Strato put it:

The youthful bloom of the twelve-year-old gives me joy, but much more desirable is the boy of thirteen. He whose years are fourteen is a still sweeter flower of the Loves, and even more charming is he who is beginning his fifteenth year. The sixteenth year is that of the gods, and to desire the seventeenth does not fall to my lot, but only to Zeus. But if one longs for one still older, he no longer plays, but already demands the Homeric ‘but to him replied.’[2]

Therefore, we can conclude that eromenos is not a fixed term, as it is only a stage in the development of young Greek men. After they grow up, their relationship with the erastes could end and they could get married or start another relationship. This experience, similar to some forms of socially-constructed bisexuality, is also shown in books, such as how Bion the Borysthenite condemns Alcibiades, that in his adolescence he drew away the husbands from their wives, and as a young man the wives from their husbands. [3] According to Garrison, for Cretan boys, the passage to adulthood is the ‘prewedding’ of sex with a mature man.[4]

Representation

Visual art

The image of Ganymede in the figure above is the ideal portrait of an eromenos. The muscles on his body contrasts with the hoop, a child's toy which emphasises the shape of his genitals and inner thighs, and he holds the cockerel, which is the love gift from Zeus. There is no moustache or pubic hair.

John Beazley’s three types of erotic scenes appear in Athenian vase paintings. Eromenoi are often touched on chin and genitals by their erastes (alpha group), presented with gifts (beta group) or entwined between the thighs of their erastes (gamma group).[5] Meanwhile, Eva Cantarella discovered that representations of pederastic relationships contain two successive moments of courtship. The first phase is similar to Beazley’s alpha group, while in the second phase the eromenos stands behind the erastes with his penis between his thighs, somehow similar to the gamma group.[6] This vase (Brygos Painter) depicts a classical scene of an erastes courting an eromenos. As the eromenos’ legs are positioned between the erastes’ thighs with the erastes touching his penis and his chin, it is similar to the alpha group. The pectoral and belly muscles show that he was well-trained in wrestling schools, and the bag of ‘Kydonian apples’ or quinces is a sign of his sexual awakening.[4]

Dover and Gundel Koch-Harnack have argued that the gift-giving scene to the eromenos is in fact a courting scene. [5] Common gifts include a sprig of flowers, a rabbit, and a fighting cock.[7]

Poems and literature

The love for an eromenos is a frequent topic in Ancient Greek poems. Dover studied poems related to pederasty and quoted some verses expressing love to the eromonos, ‘O boy with the virginal eyes, I seek you, but you do not listen, not knowing that you are the charioteer of my soul!’[8] Also, A surviving fragment of Solon from the early sixth century B.C. writes that ‘Till he loves a lad in the flower of youth, bewitched by thighs and by sweet lips.’ [9]

The graffiti of Thera verified that anal penetration was normal in pederastic relationships, for in the inscriptions, Krimon used the verb oipein (male sexual act performed as either active or passive partner in Dorian dialect) to describe the intercourse with his eromenos, which indicates anal penetration.[10] Also, literature suggested that the charm of the eromenos lay in his attractive anal area, which was described by various metaphors such as rosebud, fruits, figs or gold.[10]

It is noteworthy that most of the Greek verses about homosexuality were about how the erastes longed for the eromenos, but few were written from the perspective of the eromenos.

Myths

 
The Death of Hyacinthos (1801) by Jean Broc. Hyacinth (left) has been killed by the discus at his feet thrown by Apollo (right).

The erastes-eromenos relationship can be not only between humans but also between humans and gods. The love between Apollo and Hyacinth was said to have been the archetype of pederasty in Sparta. Apollo fell in love with Hyacinth on account of his youthful beauty, and became his instructor in archery, music, hunting and the gymnasium. Hyacinth was killed by the discus thrown by Apollo when studying discus-throwing with him, and in some versions of myths it was Zephyr (a divinity of the wind) who also loved Hyacinth, and who disturbed the wind to cause this accident.

Though usually known as the mortal lover of Aphrodite, Adonis was said to be loved by other gods such as Apollo, Heracles and Dionysus, for his youth and beauty.

The Homeric Hymn of Aphrodite gives an explicit portrait of the erotic relationship between Ganymede and Zeus.[11] Ganymede is a beautiful youth kidnapped by Zeus from Troy and who became immortal on Olympus. He was depicted in ancient vase paintings as the ideal of the eromenos.

Attitudes

The Athenians banned slaves from pursuing courtship of freeborn youths with themselves as the active partner, as Against Timarchus states that ‘A slave shall not be the lover of a free boy nor follow after him, or else he shall receive fifty blows of the public lash’; but this did not apply to free men. Nevertheless, to be in such a relationship with honour, eromenoi were supposed to resist the pursuit of their erastes to test their love, before finally yielding.[12] According to Foucault, an eromenos should avoid being chased too easily, receiving too many gifts or quickly getting into a relationship before the erastes proved their passion, love and responsibility. Moreover, the perception of pederasty varied in different cities. While it was allowed in Elis and Boeotia, Ionians did not accept pederastic courtship. Athenians held a complicated attitude, as it was considered that Athenian fathers ought to protect their sons from suitors.[12]

Scholarship

Analysis of power structure

Some scholars believe that what the eromenoi gained from their erastes were not material rewards, but intellectual and moral edification, as well as learning how to achieve ejaculation, as pederasty was regarded as a process of education and sensual pleasure.[13] For over a millennium, this relationship was the primary way of educating young men of the ruling class in military skills, social values, literature and the arts.[14] Eric Bethe, the first classical scholar to acknowledge Greek homosexuality, believed that the transmission of semen via anal intercourse was regarded as the conduit whereby the noble qualities of tutor-love were passed down to the youth.[14] However, Michel Foucault argued that, according to Plutarch, the erastes' sexual contact was imposed through violence, and the eromenos could only feel anger, hatred, the desire for revenge and social shame through having become an object of contempt, which he described as acharistos.[15]

James Neill reads the relationship between the erastes and the eromenos as the younger man's liminal passage into adulthood. The youth attracted heroic noble men by his beauty and virtue, and from among them chose his adult lover, who later tutored him in warrior skills, arts and other knowledge. After the youth acquired these qualities, he would be transformed into an adult.

Comparison with women

In heterosexual erotic images in Ancient Greece, the gender roles of male and female are often depicted as the dominant and subordinate positions. Women are depicted bending over, recumbent, or supported by men positioned upright or on top; while eromenoi are often depicted as experiencing ‘intercrural sex’ (i.e., between the thighs), with their partners standing face-to-face with them.

To erastes, whether the appeal and seduction of the eromenos lies in their masculinity or femininity is contested. Dover discovered a line of Athenian Kritias quoted by a Roman writer, ‘In males, the most beautiful appearance is that which is female; but in females, the opposite.’[16] However, due to the lack of specific context and further supporting evidence, we cannot conclude that female characteristics of eromenos are the stimuli of pederasty. He also found that beardless male and female faces share the same contours, except for the eyes. Some scholars like Eva Cantarella and Cohen found that the lengths of time during which one ought to resist one's suitors' advances were similar in both same-sex and different-sex courtships; since the honour lay not in the refusal, but the choice of which was the best time to give in. [17] Also, Garrison argues that the love of boys by men is emblematic of attitudes prevalent among the ruling class, in which love for women is devalued. The love for eromenoi can be related to misogyny in Ancient Greece.[18]

Not all homosexual relationships in Ancient Greece are typified as pederasty or as the erastes-eromenos relationship. The love between Achilles and Patroclus might be a counterargument to pederasty, for both of them showed their masculinity in this heroic, blood-brother like relationship, and were around the same age, with Patroclus only slightly older than Achilles.

Later depictions

The 20th-century English and South African writer Mary Renault was famous for her romantic novels on pederasty in Ancient Greece. Her novel The Last of the Wine (1956) tells the love story of Alexias, a beautiful and noble Athenian youth and Socrates’ student who was chased by a number of older men because of his beauty. Bernard F. Dick commented on her novels that they provided historically accurate representation of Greek homosexuality. Her fan community also created artworks that imitate Greek vase paintings portraying courting scenes between the erastes and eromenos.

See also

References

  1. ^ a b c Dover, Kenneth J. (1989). Greek Homosexuality. Cambridge: Harvard UP. p. 16.
  2. ^ Neill, James (2009). The Origins and Role of Same-sex Relations in Human Societies. Jefferson: McFarland &. p. 165.
  3. ^ Foucault, Michel (1978). The History of Sexuality. New York: Pantheon Books. p. 188.
  4. ^ a b Garrison, Daniel H. (2000). Sexual Culture in Ancient Greece. Norman: Sexual Culture in Ancient Greece. p. 164.
  5. ^ a b Percy, William (1996). Pederasty and Pedagogy in Archaic Greece. Urbana: Pederasty and Pedagogy in Archaic Greece. p. 119.
  6. ^ Cantarella, Eva (1994). Bisexuality in the Ancient World. New Haven: Bisexuality in the Ancient World. p. 25.
  7. ^ Masterson, Mark; Sorkin, Nancy (2015). Sex in Antiquity: Exploring Gender and Sexuality in the Ancient World. Rewriting Antiquity. New York: Routledge. p. 103.
  8. ^ Dover, Greek Homosexuality, 84.
  9. ^ Dover, Greek Homosexuality, 84.
  10. ^ a b Cantarella, Bisexuality in the Ancient World, 26-27.
  11. ^ Neill, The Origins and Role of Same-sex Relations in Human Societies, 150.
  12. ^ a b Cantarella, Bisexuality in the Ancient World, 20.
  13. ^ Giulia Sissa, Sex and Sensuality in the Ancient World (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2008), 67
  14. ^ a b Neill, The Origins and Role of Same-sex Relations in Human Societies, 130.
  15. ^ Michel Foucault, The History of Sexuality, 1st American ed. (New York: Pantheon Books, 1978), 206.
  16. ^ Dover, Greek Homosexuality, 68.
  17. ^ Cantarella, Bisexuality in the Ancient World, 18.
  18. ^ Cantarella, Bisexuality in the Ancient World, 18.

Selected bibliography

Cantarella, Eva. Bisexuality in the Ancient World. New Haven: Yale University Press, 1994.

Dover, Kenneth James. Greek Homosexuality. Updated and with a New Postcript. ed. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press, 1989.

Foucault, Michel. The History of Sexuality. 1st American ed. New York: Pantheon Books, 1978.

Garrison, Daniel H. Sexual Culture in Ancient Greece. Oklahoma Series in Classical Culture; v. 24. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 2000.

Masterson, Mark, Nancy Sorkin Rabinowitz, and James Robson. Sex in Antiquity: Exploring Gender and Sexuality in the Ancient World. Rewriting Antiquity. Abingdon, Oxon; New York, NY: Routledge, 2015.

Neill, James. The Origins and Role of Same-sex Relations in Human Societies. Jefferson, N.C.: McFarland &, 2009.

Percy, William A. Pederasty and Pedagogy in Archaic Greece. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, 1996.

Sissa, Giulia. Sex and Sensuality in the Ancient World. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2008.

eromenos, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, jstor, december, 2020, l. This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Eromenos news newspapers books scholar JSTOR December 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message In ancient Greece an eromenos was the younger and passive or receptive partner in a male homosexual relationship The partner of an eromenos was the erastes the older and active partner The eromenos was often depicted as a beautiful and smaller and more youthful looking than the erastes Berlin painter Ganymede rolling a hoop and bearing aloft a cockerel a love gift from Zeus early fifth century B C Musee du Louvre Contents 1 Terminology 2 Characteristics 3 Representation 3 1 Visual art 3 2 Poems and literature 3 3 Myths 4 Attitudes 5 Scholarship 5 1 Analysis of power structure 5 2 Comparison with women 6 Later depictions 7 See also 8 References 9 Selected bibliographyTerminology EditEromenos ἐrwmenos means one who is sexually desired in Greek language and is the past participle of the verb eramai to have sexual desire In Greek Homosexuality the first modern scholarly work on this topic Kenneth Dover used the literal translation of the Greek word as an English word to refer to the passive partner in Greek homosexual relationship Though in many contexts the younger man is also called pais boy the word can also be used for child girl son daughter and slave and therefore eromenos would be more specific and can avoid the cumbrousness and imprecision of boy 1 It is in contrast to the masculine active participle eran be in love with have a passionate desire for 1 The word erastes lover however can be adapted to a married man s role in both heterosexual and homosexual relationship Characteristics EditIn vase paintings and other artworks the eromenos is often depicted as a beautiful young adult His relatively smaller stature suggests his passive role in the relationship and younger age as well as social status Usually they show a combination of a youthful looking face with a body which possesses mature musculature The lack of beard and pubic hair are an important clue in identifying an eromenos though this may possibly be attributed to style A poem quoted in Greek Sexuality couplet 1327f shows that the poet will never cease to fawn on the boy so long as the boy s cheek is hairless 1 His specific age is a nuanced issue for the eromenos and the writer Strato put it The youthful bloom of the twelve year old gives me joy but much more desirable is the boy of thirteen He whose years are fourteen is a still sweeter flower of the Loves and even more charming is he who is beginning his fifteenth year The sixteenth year is that of the gods and to desire the seventeenth does not fall to my lot but only to Zeus But if one longs for one still older he no longer plays but already demands the Homeric but to him replied 2 Therefore we can conclude that eromenos is not a fixed term as it is only a stage in the development of young Greek men After they grow up their relationship with the erastes could end and they could get married or start another relationship This experience similar to some forms of socially constructed bisexuality is also shown in books such as how Bion the Borysthenite condemns Alcibiades that in his adolescence he drew away the husbands from their wives and as a young man the wives from their husbands 3 According to Garrison for Cretan boys the passage to adulthood is the prewedding of sex with a mature man 4 Representation EditVisual art Edit The image of Ganymede in the figure above is the ideal portrait of an eromenos The muscles on his body contrasts with the hoop a child s toy which emphasises the shape of his genitals and inner thighs and he holds the cockerel which is the love gift from Zeus There is no moustache or pubic hair John Beazley s three types of erotic scenes appear in Athenian vase paintings Eromenoi are often touched on chin and genitals by their erastes alpha group presented with gifts beta group or entwined between the thighs of their erastes gamma group 5 Meanwhile Eva Cantarella discovered that representations of pederastic relationships contain two successive moments of courtship The first phase is similar to Beazley s alpha group while in the second phase the eromenos stands behind the erastes with his penis between his thighs somehow similar to the gamma group 6 This vase Brygos Painter depicts a classical scene of an erastes courting an eromenos As the eromenos legs are positioned between the erastes thighs with the erastes touching his penis and his chin it is similar to the alpha group The pectoral and belly muscles show that he was well trained in wrestling schools and the bag of Kydonian apples or quinces is a sign of his sexual awakening 4 Dover and Gundel Koch Harnack have argued that the gift giving scene to the eromenos is in fact a courting scene 5 Common gifts include a sprig of flowers a rabbit and a fighting cock 7 Poems and literature Edit The love for an eromenos is a frequent topic in Ancient Greek poems Dover studied poems related to pederasty and quoted some verses expressing love to the eromonos O boy with the virginal eyes I seek you but you do not listen not knowing that you are the charioteer of my soul 8 Also A surviving fragment of Solon from the early sixth century B C writes that Till he loves a lad in the flower of youth bewitched by thighs and by sweet lips 9 The graffiti of Thera verified that anal penetration was normal in pederastic relationships for in the inscriptions Krimon used the verb oipein male sexual act performed as either active or passive partner in Dorian dialect to describe the intercourse with his eromenos which indicates anal penetration 10 Also literature suggested that the charm of the eromenos lay in his attractive anal area which was described by various metaphors such as rosebud fruits figs or gold 10 It is noteworthy that most of the Greek verses about homosexuality were about how the erastes longed for the eromenos but few were written from the perspective of the eromenos Myths Edit The Death of Hyacinthos 1801 by Jean Broc Hyacinth left has been killed by the discus at his feet thrown by Apollo right The erastes eromenos relationship can be not only between humans but also between humans and gods The love between Apollo and Hyacinth was said to have been the archetype of pederasty in Sparta Apollo fell in love with Hyacinth on account of his youthful beauty and became his instructor in archery music hunting and the gymnasium Hyacinth was killed by the discus thrown by Apollo when studying discus throwing with him and in some versions of myths it was Zephyr a divinity of the wind who also loved Hyacinth and who disturbed the wind to cause this accident Though usually known as the mortal lover of Aphrodite Adonis was said to be loved by other gods such as Apollo Heracles and Dionysus for his youth and beauty The Homeric Hymn of Aphrodite gives an explicit portrait of the erotic relationship between Ganymede and Zeus 11 Ganymede is a beautiful youth kidnapped by Zeus from Troy and who became immortal on Olympus He was depicted in ancient vase paintings as the ideal of the eromenos Attitudes EditThe Athenians banned slaves from pursuing courtship of freeborn youths with themselves as the active partner as Against Timarchus states that A slave shall not be the lover of a free boy nor follow after him or else he shall receive fifty blows of the public lash but this did not apply to free men Nevertheless to be in such a relationship with honour eromenoi were supposed to resist the pursuit of their erastes to test their love before finally yielding 12 According to Foucault an eromenos should avoid being chased too easily receiving too many gifts or quickly getting into a relationship before the erastes proved their passion love and responsibility Moreover the perception of pederasty varied in different cities While it was allowed in Elis and Boeotia Ionians did not accept pederastic courtship Athenians held a complicated attitude as it was considered that Athenian fathers ought to protect their sons from suitors 12 Scholarship EditAnalysis of power structure Edit Some scholars believe that what the eromenoi gained from their erastes were not material rewards but intellectual and moral edification as well as learning how to achieve ejaculation as pederasty was regarded as a process of education and sensual pleasure 13 For over a millennium this relationship was the primary way of educating young men of the ruling class in military skills social values literature and the arts 14 Eric Bethe the first classical scholar to acknowledge Greek homosexuality believed that the transmission of semen via anal intercourse was regarded as the conduit whereby the noble qualities of tutor love were passed down to the youth 14 However Michel Foucault argued that according to Plutarch the erastes sexual contact was imposed through violence and the eromenos could only feel anger hatred the desire for revenge and social shame through having become an object of contempt which he described as acharistos 15 James Neill reads the relationship between the erastes and the eromenos as the younger man s liminal passage into adulthood The youth attracted heroic noble men by his beauty and virtue and from among them chose his adult lover who later tutored him in warrior skills arts and other knowledge After the youth acquired these qualities he would be transformed into an adult Comparison with women Edit In heterosexual erotic images in Ancient Greece the gender roles of male and female are often depicted as the dominant and subordinate positions Women are depicted bending over recumbent or supported by men positioned upright or on top while eromenoi are often depicted as experiencing intercrural sex i e between the thighs with their partners standing face to face with them To erastes whether the appeal and seduction of the eromenos lies in their masculinity or femininity is contested Dover discovered a line of Athenian Kritias quoted by a Roman writer In males the most beautiful appearance is that which is female but in females the opposite 16 However due to the lack of specific context and further supporting evidence we cannot conclude that female characteristics of eromenos are the stimuli of pederasty He also found that beardless male and female faces share the same contours except for the eyes Some scholars like Eva Cantarella and Cohen found that the lengths of time during which one ought to resist one s suitors advances were similar in both same sex and different sex courtships since the honour lay not in the refusal but the choice of which was the best time to give in 17 Also Garrison argues that the love of boys by men is emblematic of attitudes prevalent among the ruling class in which love for women is devalued The love for eromenoi can be related to misogyny in Ancient Greece 18 Not all homosexual relationships in Ancient Greece are typified as pederasty or as the erastes eromenos relationship The love between Achilles and Patroclus might be a counterargument to pederasty for both of them showed their masculinity in this heroic blood brother like relationship and were around the same age with Patroclus only slightly older than Achilles Later depictions EditThe 20th century English and South African writer Mary Renault was famous for her romantic novels on pederasty in Ancient Greece Her novel The Last of the Wine 1956 tells the love story of Alexias a beautiful and noble Athenian youth and Socrates student who was chased by a number of older men because of his beauty Bernard F Dick commented on her novels that they provided historically accurate representation of Greek homosexuality Her fan community also created artworks that imitate Greek vase paintings portraying courting scenes between the erastes and eromenos See also EditPederasty in ancient Greece Homosexuality in ancient Greece Homosexuality in the militaries of ancient Greece Greek HomosexualityReferences Edit a b c Dover Kenneth J 1989 Greek Homosexuality Cambridge Harvard UP p 16 Neill James 2009 The Origins and Role of Same sex Relations in Human Societies Jefferson McFarland amp p 165 Foucault Michel 1978 The History of Sexuality New York Pantheon Books p 188 a b Garrison Daniel H 2000 Sexual Culture in Ancient Greece Norman Sexual Culture in Ancient Greece p 164 a b Percy William 1996 Pederasty and Pedagogy in Archaic Greece Urbana Pederasty and Pedagogy in Archaic Greece p 119 Cantarella Eva 1994 Bisexuality in the Ancient World New Haven Bisexuality in the Ancient World p 25 Masterson Mark Sorkin Nancy 2015 Sex in Antiquity Exploring Gender and Sexuality in the Ancient World Rewriting Antiquity New York Routledge p 103 Dover Greek Homosexuality 84 Dover Greek Homosexuality 84 a b Cantarella Bisexuality in the Ancient World 26 27 Neill The Origins and Role of Same sex Relations in Human Societies 150 a b Cantarella Bisexuality in the Ancient World 20 Giulia Sissa Sex and Sensuality in the Ancient World New Haven Yale University Press 2008 67 a b Neill The Origins and Role of Same sex Relations in Human Societies 130 Michel Foucault The History of Sexuality 1st American ed New York Pantheon Books 1978 206 Dover Greek Homosexuality 68 Cantarella Bisexuality in the Ancient World 18 Cantarella Bisexuality in the Ancient World 18 Selected bibliography EditCantarella Eva Bisexuality in the Ancient World New Haven Yale University Press 1994 Dover Kenneth James Greek Homosexuality Updated and with a New Postcript ed Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press 1989 Foucault Michel The History of Sexuality 1st American ed New York Pantheon Books 1978 Garrison Daniel H Sexual Culture in Ancient Greece Oklahoma Series in Classical Culture v 24 Norman University of Oklahoma Press 2000 Masterson Mark Nancy Sorkin Rabinowitz and James Robson Sex in Antiquity Exploring Gender and Sexuality in the Ancient World Rewriting Antiquity Abingdon Oxon New York NY Routledge 2015 Neill James The Origins and Role of Same sex Relations in Human Societies Jefferson N C McFarland amp 2009 Percy William A Pederasty and Pedagogy in Archaic Greece Urbana University of Illinois Press 1996 Sissa Giulia Sex and Sensuality in the Ancient World New Haven Yale University Press 2008 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Eromenos amp oldid 1125809967, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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