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Ganymede (mythology)

In Greek mythology, Ganymede (/ˈɡænɪmd/[1]) or Ganymedes (/ɡænɪˈmdz/;[2] Ancient Greek: Γανυμήδης Ganymēdēs) is a divine hero whose homeland was Troy. Homer describes Ganymede as the most beautiful of mortals and tells the story of how he was abducted by the gods to serve as Zeus's cup-bearer in Olympus.

Ganymede
Cupbearer to the gods
Roman marble bust depicting Ganymede, dating to the 2nd century, now at the Louvre
AbodeMount Olympus
ParentsTros and Callirhoe or Acallaris

[Ganymedes] was the loveliest born of the race of mortals, and therefore
the gods caught him away to themselves, to be Zeus' wine-pourer,
for the sake of his beauty, so he might be among the immortals.

— Homer, Iliad, Book XX, lines 233–235.[3]

The myth was a model for the Greek social custom of paiderastía, the romantic relationship between an adult male and an adolescent male. The Latin form of the name was Catamitus (and also "Ganymedes"), from which the English word catamite is derived.[4] Socrates says that Zeus was in love with Ganymede, called "desire" in Plato's Phaedrus. [5] According to Plato's Laws, the Cretans were regularly accused of inventing the myth because they wanted to justify their unnatural pleasures.[6]

Family

In Greek Mythology, Ganymede is the son of Tros of Dardania,[7][8][9] from whose name "Troy" is supposedly derived, either by his wife Callirrhoe, daughter of the river god Scamander,[10][11][12] or Acallaris, daughter of Eumedes.[13] Depending on the author, he is the brother of either Ilus, Assaracus, Cleopatra, or Cleomestra.[14]

Other details about Ganymede differ as well. Some authors called him a son of Laomedon[15][16] while others called him a son of Ilus.[17] He is also known in stories as Dardanus,[18] Erichthonius,[19] or Assaracus.[20]

Comparative table of Ganymede's family
Relation Names Sources
Homer Homeric Hymns Euripides Diodorus Cicero Dionysius Apollodorus Hyginus Dictys Clement Suda Tzetzes
Parentage Tros ♂
Acallaris ♀
Callirhoe ♀
Laomedon ♂
Erichthonius ♂
Assaracus ♂
Dardanus ♂
Ilus ♂
Siblings Ilus
Assaracus
Cleopatra
Cleomestra

Mythology

 
Roman-era relief depicting the eagle of Zeus abducting Ganymede, his Phrygian cap denoting an eastern origin, and a river god

Ganymede was abducted by Zeus from Mount Ida near Troy in Phrygia.[a] Ganymede had been tending sheep, a rustic or humble pursuit characteristic of a hero's boyhood before his privileged status is revealed, when an eagle transported the youth to Mount Olympus. The bird is sometimes described as being under the command of Zeus and sometimes as being the god transformed.[22]

On Olympus, Zeus granted Ganymede eternal youth and immortality as the official cup bearer to the gods, in place of Hebe, who was relieved of cup-bearing duties upon her marriage to Herakles. Alternatively, the Iliad presented Hebe (and at one instance, Hephaestus) as the cup bearer of the gods with Ganymede acting as Zeus's personal cup bearer.[23][24] Edmund Veckenstedt associated Ganymede with the creation of mead, which had a traditional origin in Phrygia.[25] In various literature such as the Aeneid, Hera, Zeus's wife, regards Ganymede as a rival for her husband's affection.[26] In various stories, Zeus later put Ganymede in the sky as the constellation Aquarius (the "water-carrier" or "cup-carrier"), which is adjacent to Aquila (the Eagle).[27] In recognition of this myth, the largest moon of the planet Jupiter (named after Zeus's Roman counterpart) was named Ganymede by the German astronomer Simon Marius.[28]

 
Ganymede pouring Zeus a libation (Attic red-figure calyx krater by the Eucharides Painter, c. 490–480 BCE)

In the Iliad, Zeus is said to have compensated Ganymede's father Tros with the gift of fine horses, "the same that carry the immortals", delivered by the messenger god Hermes.[29] Tros was consoled that his son was now immortal and would be the cupbearer for the gods, a position of much distinction.

 
Zeus kissing Ganymede – A copy of an original by Wilhelm Böttner. Originally painted c. 1780. This copy was painted in the 19th century

Plato accounts for the pederastic aspect of the myth by attributing its origin to Crete, where the social custom of paiderastía was supposed to have originated (see "Cretan pederasty").[30] Athenaeus recorded a version of the myth where Ganymede was abducted by the legendary King Minos to serve as his cup-bearer instead of Zeus.[31] Some authors have equated this version of the myth to Cretan pederasty practices, as recorded by Strabo and Ephoros, which involved abduction of a youth by an older lover for a period of two months before the youth was able to re-enter society as a man.[31] Xenophon portrays Socrates denying that Ganymede was the catamite of Zeus, instead asserting that the god loved him for his psychē, "mind" or "soul," giving the etymology of his name as ganu- "taking pleasure" and mēd- "mind." Xenophon's Socrates points out that Zeus did not grant any of his lovers immortality, but that he did grant immortality to Ganymede.[32]

In poetry, Ganymede became a symbol for the beautiful young male who attracted homosexual desire and love. He is not always portrayed as acquiescent. However, in the Argonautica of Apollonius of Rhodes, Ganymede is furious at the god Eros for having cheated him at the game of chance played with knucklebones, and Aphrodite scolds her son for "cheating a beginner".[33] The Augustan poet Virgil portrays the abduction with pathos: the boy's aged tutors try in vain to draw him back to Earth, and his hounds bay uselessly at the sky.[34] The loyal hounds left calling after their abducted master is a frequent motif in visual depictions and is referenced by Statius:

Here the Phrygian hunter is borne aloft on tawny wings, Gargara’s range sinks downwards as he rises, and Troy grows dim beneath him; sadly stand his comrades; vainly the hounds weary their throats with barking, pursue his shadow or bay at the clouds.[35]

In the arts

Ancient visual arts

 
Ganymede rolling a hoop and bearing aloft a cockerel, a love-gift[36] from Zeus, who is pictured in pursuit on the obverse of a vase by the Berlin Painter (Attic red-figure krater, 500–490 B.C.E.)
 
Zeus carrying away Ganymede (Late Archaic terracotta, 480–470 BC)

In 5th-century Athens, the story of Ganymede became popular among vase-painters, which was suited to the all-male symposium.[37] Ganymede was usually depicted as a muscular young man, although Greek and Roman sculpture typically depicted his physique as less developed than athletes'.[38]

One of the earliest depictions of Ganymede is a red-figure krater by the Berlin Painter in the Musée du Louvre.[39] Zeus pursues Ganymede on one side, while the youth runs away on the other side, rolling along a hoop while holding aloft a crowing cock. The Ganymede myth was depicted in recognizable contemporary terms, illustrated with common behavior of homoerotic courtship rituals, as on a vase by the "Achilles Painter" where Ganymede also flees with a cock. Cocks were common gifts from older male suitors to younger men they were interested in romantically in 5th century Athens.[37] Leochares (c. 350 BCE), a Greek sculptor of Athens who was engaged with Scopas on the Mausoleum at Halicarnassus cast a lost bronze group of Ganymede and the Eagle, a work that was held remarkable for its ingenious composition.[37] It is apparently copied in a well-known marble group in the Vatican.[40] Such Hellenistic gravity-defying feats were influential in the sculpture of the Baroque.

Ganymede and Zeus in the guise of an eagle were a popular subject on Roman funerary monuments with at least 16 sarcophagi depicting this scene.[38]

Renaissance and Baroque

Ganymede was a major symbol of homosexual love in the visual and literary arts from the Renaissance to the Late Victorian era, until when Antinous, the reported lover of the Roman Emperor Hadrian, became a more popular subject.[41]

In Shakespeare's As You Like It (1599), a comedy about misunderstandings in the magical setting of the Forest of Arden, Celia, dressed as a shepherdess, becomes "Aliena" (Latin "stranger", Ganymede's sister) and Rosalind, because she is "more than common tall", dresses up as a boy, Ganymede, a well-known image to the audience. She plays on her ambiguous charm to seduce Orlando, but also (inadvertently) the shepherdess Phoebe. Thus behind the conventions of Elizabethan theater in its original setting, the young boy played the girl Rosalind who dresses up as a boy and is then courted by another boy playing Phoebe. Ganymede also appears in the opening of Christopher Marlowe's play Dido, Queen of Carthage, where his and Zeus's affectionate banter is interrupted by an angry Aphrodite (Venus).[42] In the later Jacobean tragedy Women Beware Women by Thomas Middleton, Ganymede, Hebe, and Hymen briefly appear to serve as cup bearers to the court, one of which has been poisoned in an assassination attempt, although the plan goes awry.[43]

Allusions to Ganymede occur with some frequency in 17th-century Spanish theater. In El castigo sin venganza (1631) by Lope de Vega, Federico, the son of the Duke of Mantua, rescues Casandra, his future stepmother, and the pair will later develop an incestuous relationship. To emphasize the non-normative relation, the work includes a long passage, possibly an ekphrasis derived from Italian art, in which Jupiter in the form of an eagle abducts Ganymede.[44] Two plays by Tirso de Molina, in particular La prudencia en la mujer, include intriguing references to Ganymede. In this particular play, a Jewish doctor who seeks to poison the future king, carries a cup which is compared to Ganymede's.[45]

One of the earliest surviving non-ancient depictions of Ganymede is a woodcut from the first edition of Emblemata (c. 1531), which shows the youth riding the eagle as opposed to being carried away. However, this composition is uncommon, with only sketches by Michelangelo that survived depicting Ganymede being carried.[46] The painter-architect Baldassare Peruzzi included a panel of The Rape of Ganymede in a ceiling at the Villa Farnesina, Rome, (c. 1509–1514), with Ganymede's long blond hair and girlish pose making him identifiable at first glance, grasping the eagle's wing without resistance. In Antonio Allegri Correggio's Ganymede Abducted by the Eagle (Vienna) Ganymede's grasp is more intimate. Rubens painted two well-known versions, the earlier dating to 1611–1612 (Fürstlich Schwarzenbergische Kunststiftung, on permanent loan to the Liechtenstein Museum) portrays the young Ganymede in the embrace of the eagle being handed his cup[47] while a later version dating to 1636–1638 painted for the Spanish king's hunting lodge (Museo del Prado) shows the young many being swept up violently by the eagle.[48] Johann Wilhelm Baur portrays a full-grown Ganymede confidently riding the eagle towards Olympus in Ganymede Triumphant (c. 1640s).[46] On the other hand, when Rembrandt painted The Rape of Ganymede for a Dutch Calvinist patron in 1635, a dark eagle carries aloft a plump cherubic baby (Paintings Gallery, Dresden) who is bawling and urinating in fright.[49] A 1685 statue of Ganymede and Zeus entitled Ganymède Médicis by Pierre Laviron stands in the gardens of Versailles.

Examples of Ganymede in 18th-century France have been studied by Michael Preston Worley.[50] The image of Ganymede was always that of a naive adolescent accompanied by an eagle and the homoerotic aspects of the legend were rarely dealt with. In fact, the story was often more sexualized. The Neoplatonic interpretation of the myth, also common in the Italian Renaissance, the rape of Ganymede, represented the ascent to spiritual perfection. These however seemed to be of no interest to Enlightenment philosophers and mythographers. Jean-Baptiste Marie Pierre, Charles-Joseph Natoire, Guillaume II Coustou, Pierre Julien, Jean-Baptiste Regnault and others contributed images of Ganymede to French art during this period.

Gallery

Modern

 
Ganymede (1804) by José Álvarez Cubero
 
Ganymed by Hermann Hubacher [de] at Lake Zurich
 
“'Modern Version of Ganymede' Introduction of Budweiser to the Gods": ad in Theatre Magazine, February 1906
  • José Álvarez Cubero's sculpture of Ganymede, executed in Paris in 1804, brought the Spanish sculptor immediate recognition as one of the leading sculptors of his day.[51]
  • Vollmer's Wörterbuch der Mythologie aller Völker,[52] (Stuttgart, 1874) illustrates "Ganymede" by an engraving of a "Roman relief", showing a seated bearded Zeus who holds the cup aside to draw a naked Ganymede into his embrace. That engraving however was nothing but a copy of Raphael Mengs's counterfeit Roman fresco, painted as a practical joke on the eighteenth-century art critic Johann Winckelmann who was growing desperate in his search for homoerotic Greek and Roman antiquities. This story is very briefly told by Goethe in his Italienische Reise.[53]
  • At Chatsworth in the nineteenth century the bachelor Duke of Devonshire added to his sculpture gallery Adamo Tadolini's Neoclassic "Ganymede and the Eagle", in which a luxuriously reclining Ganymede, embraced by one wing, prepares to exchange a peck with the eagle. The delicate cup in his hand is made of gilt-bronze, lending an unsettling immediacy and realism to the white marble group.
  • In the early years of the twentieth century, the topos of Ganymede's abduction by Zeus was drafted into the service of commercial enterprise. Adapting an 1892 lithograph by Frank Kirchbach, the brewery of Anheuser-Busch launched in 1904 an ad campaign publicizing the successes of Budweiser beer. Collectibles featuring the graphics of the poster continued to be produced into the early 1990s.
  • The poem “Ganymed” by Goethe was set to music by Franz Schubert in 1817; published in his Opus 19, no. 3 (D. 544). Also set by Hugo Wolf.
  • The Portuguese sculptor António Fernandes de Sá represented the abduction of Ganymede in 1898. The sculpture can be found in Jardim da Cordoaria, in Porto (Portugal).
  • In stories by P. G. Wodehouse, the Junior Ganymede is a servants' club, analogous to the Drones, to which Jeeves belongs. Wodehouse named it after Ganymede presumably in reference to his role of cup-bearer.
  • Ganymede is a reluctant music fan in Kurtis Blow's 1980 song "Way Out West". After hours of rap by "The Stranger" (Kurtis), he eventually gets up to dance.
  • American artist Henry Oliver Walker painted a mural in the Library of Congress in Washington D.C. c. 1900, depicting an adolescent, nude Ganymede on the back of an eagle.
  • Ganymede and the god Dionysus make an appearance in Everworld VI: Fear the Fantastic, of K.A. Applegate's fantasy series Everworld. Ganymede is described as attracting both males and females.

My first thought, my first flash was that it was a beautiful woman.... The angel was beautiful, with a face dominated by immense, lustrous green eyes and framed by golden ringlets, and with a bow mouth and full lips and brilliant white teeth.
And only then, only after I had felt that first rush of improbable carnal lust, did it occur to me that this angel was a man.[54]

 
Ganymede Waters Zeus as an Eagle by Bertel Thorvaldsen (Thorvaldsens Museum, Copenhagen, Denmark)
  • In 1959 Robert Rauschenberg referenced the myth in one of his best-known works, Canyon and in another work, Pail for Ganymede. In "Canyon", a photo of Rauschenberg's son Christopher beautifully reiterates the infant portrayed by Rembrandt in the 17th century. A stuffed eagle emerges from the flat picture plane with a pillow tied to a piece of string very near his claw. The pillow also reflects upon the young boy's body and Rembrandt's painting.
  • Ganymede is a reluctant son in W. H. Auden's poem of that name, but he adores the eagle which teaches him how to kill.
  • Felice Picano's 1981 novel An Asian Minor reinvents the story of Ganymede.
  • In the 2016 video game Overwatch, the character Bastion has a bird named Ganymede.
  • A character in the Terra Ignota series by Ada Palmer is named Ganymede de la Trémoille
  • The opening of Will Self's 2017 novel Phone refers to 'agents of Ganymede' (p. 6) to explore caution within the homosexual community in previous decades.
  • The first poem in Jericho Brown's Pulitzer Prize for Poetry-winning 2019 book The Tradition is titled "Ganymede". Brown, who frequently interrogates topics of sexuality and race, brings the Greek abduction myth into contact with the history of American slavery.

Family tree

Notes

  1. ^ Some variants of the myth have Ganymede snatched from Harpagion instead.[21]

References

  1. ^ "Ganymede". Oxford English Dictionary (Online ed.). Oxford University Press. (Subscription or participating institution membership required.)
  2. ^ "Ganymedes". Dictionary.com Unabridged (Online). n.d.
  3. ^ Lattimore, Richard, trans. The Iliad of Homer. Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1951.
  4. ^ According to AMHER (2000), catamite, p. 291.
  5. ^ "Plato: Phaedrus". Perseus Digital Library. 255c. Retrieved 7 February 2023.
  6. ^ "Plato: Laws". Perseus Digital Library. 636C. Retrieved 13 March 2020.
  7. ^ Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca historica 4.75.3–5
  8. ^ Homer, Iliad 20.230–240
  9. ^ Suda v.s. Minos
  10. ^ Tzetzes on Lycophron, 29
  11. ^ Scholiast on Homer's Iliad 20.231 who refers to Hellanicus as his authority
  12. ^ Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca 3.12.2
  13. ^ Dionysius of Halicarnassus, Antiquitates Romanae 1.62.2
  14. ^ Dictys Cretensis, Trojan War Chronicle 4.22
  15. ^ Cicero, Tusculanae Disputationes 1.65
  16. ^ Euripides, Troad 822
  17. ^ Tzetzes ad Lycophron 34
  18. ^ Clement of Alexandria, Recognitions 22
  19. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 271
  20. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 224
  21. ^ Strabo. "Geography 13.1.11". Perseus Digital Library. Tufts University. Retrieved 19 March 2020.
  22. ^ Virgil, Aeneid, 5.252
  23. ^ Homer, Iliad 20.230
  24. ^ Combellack, Frederick M. (1987). "The lusis ek ths lecews". The American Journal of Philology. 108 (2): 202–219. doi:10.2307/294813. JSTOR 294813.
  25. ^ Edmund Veckenstedt, Ganymedes, Libau, 1881.
  26. ^ Virgil, Aeneid, 1.28
  27. ^ Marshall, David Weston (2018). Ancient Skies: Constellation Mythology of the Greeks. New York, NY: The Countryman Press. pp. 45–46. ISBN 978-1682682111.
  28. ^ Marius/Schlör, Mundus Iovialis, p. 78 f. (with misprint In for Io)
  29. ^ The Achaean Diomedes is keen to capture the horses of Aeneas because "...they are of that stock wherefrom Zeus, whose voice is borne afar, gave to Tros recompense for his son Ganymedes, for that they were the best of all horses that are beneath the dawn and the sun.": Homer, Iliad 5.265ff.
  30. ^ Plato, Laws 636D, as cited by Thomas Hubbard, Homosexuality in Greece and Rome, p252
  31. ^ a b Koehl, Robert B. (1986). "The Chieftain Cup and a Minoan Rite of Passage". The Journal of Hellenic Studies. 106: 99–110. doi:10.2307/629645. JSTOR 629645. S2CID 159630527.
  32. ^ Xenophon, Symposium 8.29–30; Craig Williams, Roman Homosexuality (Oxford University Press, 1999, 2010), p. 153.
  33. ^ Apollonius Rhodius, Argonautica 3.112
  34. ^ Virgil, Aeneid 5.256–7.
  35. ^ Statius, Thebaid 1.549.
  36. ^ For the cockerel as an emblematic gift to the eromenos, see, for example, H. A. Shapiro, "Courtship scenes in Attic vase-painting", American Journal of Archaeology, 1981; the gift is "gender specific, and it is clear that the cock had significance as evocative of male potency", T. J. Figueira observes, in reviewing two recent works on Greek pederasty, in American Journal of Archaeology, 1981.
  37. ^ a b c Woodford, Susan (1993). The Trojan War in Ancient Art. Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press. p. 39. ISBN 978-0801481642.
  38. ^ a b Bartman, Elizabeth (2002). "Eros's Flame: Images of Sexy Boys in Roman Ideal Sculpture". Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome. Supplementary Volumes 1: 249–271. doi:10.2307/4238454. JSTOR 4238454.
  39. ^ "www.louvre.fr".
  40. ^ D'Souza, J.P. (1947). "The Story of Vasu Uparichara and Its Sumerian, Greek and Roman Parallels". Proceedings of the Indian History Congress. 10: 171–176. JSTOR 44137123.
  41. ^ Waters, Sarah (1995). ""The Most Famous Fairy in History": Antinous and Homosexual Fantasy". Journal of the History of Sexuality. 6 (2): 194–230. JSTOR 3704122.
  42. ^ Williams, Deanne (2006). "Dido, Queen of England". ELH. 73 (1): 31–59. doi:10.1353/elh.2006.0010. JSTOR 30030002. S2CID 153554373.
  43. ^ Levin, Richard A. (1997). "The Dark Color of a Cardinal's Discontentment: The Political Plot of "Women Beware Women"". Medieval & Renaissance Drama in England. 10: 201–217. JSTOR 24322350.
  44. ^ Frederick A. de Armas, "From Mantua to Madrid: The License of Desire in Giulio Romano, Correggio and Lope de Vega's El castigo sin venganzaBulletin of the Comediantes 59.2 (2008): 233–65.
  45. ^ Felipe E. Rojas, "Representing An-'Other' Ganymede: The Multi-Faceted Character of Ismael in Tirso de Molina's La prudencia en la mujer (1634)," Bulletin of Hispanic Studies (2014): 347–64.
  46. ^ a b Orgel, Stephen (2004). "Ganymede Agonistes". GLQ: A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies. 10 (3): 485–501. doi:10.1215/10642684-10-3-485. S2CID 201783650.
  47. ^ {https://www.wga.hu/frames-e.html?/html/r/rubens/21mythol/10mythol.html Peter Paul Rubens, The Abduction of Ganymede] in the Liechtenstein Museum
  48. ^ Peter Paul Rubens, The Rape of Ganymede in the Museo del Prado
  49. ^ Barfoot, C. C.; Todd, Richard. The Great Emporium : the Low Countries as cultural crossroads in the Renaissance and the eighteenth century. Amsterdam: Editions Rodopi B.V.
  50. ^ Worley, "The Image of Ganymede in France, 1730–1820: The Survival of a Homoerotic Myth," Art Bulletin 76 (December 1994: 630–643).
  51. ^   One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Alvarez, Don José". Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  52. ^ "Vollmer-mythologie.de". Vollmer-mythologie.de. Retrieved 22 January 2014.
  53. ^ "Textlog.de". Textlog.de. Retrieved 22 January 2014.
  54. ^ Applegate, K. A., Everworld VI: Fear the Fantastic, p. 50.

Sources

Ancient sources

Ganymede is named by various ancient Greek and Roman authors:

Modern sources

  •   This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domainChisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Ganymede". Encyclopædia Britannica. Vol. 11 (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press. p. 454.

External links

  • World History of Male Love: Zeus and Ganymede
  • The Zeus and Ganymede Myth: Analysis and Resources by Andrew Calimach
  • Ganymedes, Theoi Project
  • Ganymede: Subject of the Visual Arts
  • Goethe, "Ganymed" 30 November 2015 at the Wayback Machine (in German)
  • Warburg Institute Iconographic Database (c. 200 images of Ganymede) 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine

ganymede, mythology, other, uses, ganymede, this, article, multiple, issues, please, help, improve, discuss, these, issues, talk, page, learn, when, remove, these, template, messages, this, article, relies, excessively, references, primary, sources, please, im. For other uses see Ganymede This article has multiple issues Please help improve it or discuss these issues on the talk page Learn how and when to remove these template messages This article relies excessively on references to primary sources Please improve this article by adding secondary or tertiary sources Find sources Ganymede mythology news newspapers books scholar JSTOR September 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message This article describes a work or element of fiction in a primarily in universe style Please help rewrite it to explain the fiction more clearly and provide non fictional perspective August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Learn how and when to remove this template message In Greek mythology Ganymede ˈ ɡ ae n ɪ m iː d 1 or Ganymedes ɡ ae n ɪ ˈ m iː d iː z 2 Ancient Greek Ganymhdhs Ganymedes is a divine hero whose homeland was Troy Homer describes Ganymede as the most beautiful of mortals and tells the story of how he was abducted by the gods to serve as Zeus s cup bearer in Olympus GanymedeCupbearer to the godsRoman marble bust depicting Ganymede dating to the 2nd century now at the LouvreAbodeMount OlympusParentsTros and Callirhoe or Acallaris Ganymedes was the loveliest born of the race of mortals and thereforethe gods caught him away to themselves to be Zeus wine pourer for the sake of his beauty so he might be among the immortals Homer Iliad Book XX lines 233 235 3 The myth was a model for the Greek social custom of paiderastia the romantic relationship between an adult male and an adolescent male The Latin form of the name was Catamitus and also Ganymedes from which the English word catamite is derived 4 Socrates says that Zeus was in love with Ganymede called desire in Plato s Phaedrus 5 According to Plato s Laws the Cretans were regularly accused of inventing the myth because they wanted to justify their unnatural pleasures 6 Contents 1 Family 2 Mythology 3 In the arts 3 1 Ancient visual arts 3 2 Renaissance and Baroque 4 Gallery 4 1 Modern 5 Family tree 6 Notes 7 References 8 Sources 8 1 Ancient sources 8 2 Modern sources 9 External linksFamily EditIn Greek Mythology Ganymede is the son of Tros of Dardania 7 8 9 from whose name Troy is supposedly derived either by his wife Callirrhoe daughter of the river god Scamander 10 11 12 or Acallaris daughter of Eumedes 13 Depending on the author he is the brother of either Ilus Assaracus Cleopatra or Cleomestra 14 Other details about Ganymede differ as well Some authors called him a son of Laomedon 15 16 while others called him a son of Ilus 17 He is also known in stories as Dardanus 18 Erichthonius 19 or Assaracus 20 Comparative table of Ganymede s family Relation Names SourcesHomer Homeric Hymns Euripides Diodorus Cicero Dionysius Apollodorus Hyginus Dictys Clement Suda TzetzesParentage Tros Acallaris Callirhoe Laomedon Erichthonius Assaracus Dardanus Ilus Siblings Ilus Assaracus Cleopatra Cleomestra Mythology Edit Roman era relief depicting the eagle of Zeus abducting Ganymede his Phrygian cap denoting an eastern origin and a river god Ganymede was abducted by Zeus from Mount Ida near Troy in Phrygia a Ganymede had been tending sheep a rustic or humble pursuit characteristic of a hero s boyhood before his privileged status is revealed when an eagle transported the youth to Mount Olympus The bird is sometimes described as being under the command of Zeus and sometimes as being the god transformed 22 On Olympus Zeus granted Ganymede eternal youth and immortality as the official cup bearer to the gods in place of Hebe who was relieved of cup bearing duties upon her marriage to Herakles Alternatively the Iliad presented Hebe and at one instance Hephaestus as the cup bearer of the gods with Ganymede acting as Zeus s personal cup bearer 23 24 Edmund Veckenstedt associated Ganymede with the creation of mead which had a traditional origin in Phrygia 25 In various literature such as the Aeneid Hera Zeus s wife regards Ganymede as a rival for her husband s affection 26 In various stories Zeus later put Ganymede in the sky as the constellation Aquarius the water carrier or cup carrier which is adjacent to Aquila the Eagle 27 In recognition of this myth the largest moon of the planet Jupiter named after Zeus s Roman counterpart was named Ganymede by the German astronomer Simon Marius 28 Ganymede pouring Zeus a libation Attic red figure calyx krater by the Eucharides Painter c 490 480 BCE In the Iliad Zeus is said to have compensated Ganymede s father Tros with the gift of fine horses the same that carry the immortals delivered by the messenger god Hermes 29 Tros was consoled that his son was now immortal and would be the cupbearer for the gods a position of much distinction Zeus kissing Ganymede A copy of an original by Wilhelm Bottner Originally painted c 1780 This copy was painted in the 19th century Plato accounts for the pederastic aspect of the myth by attributing its origin to Crete where the social custom of paiderastia was supposed to have originated see Cretan pederasty 30 Athenaeus recorded a version of the myth where Ganymede was abducted by the legendary King Minos to serve as his cup bearer instead of Zeus 31 Some authors have equated this version of the myth to Cretan pederasty practices as recorded by Strabo and Ephoros which involved abduction of a youth by an older lover for a period of two months before the youth was able to re enter society as a man 31 Xenophon portrays Socrates denying that Ganymede was the catamite of Zeus instead asserting that the god loved him for his psyche mind or soul giving the etymology of his name as ganu taking pleasure and med mind Xenophon s Socrates points out that Zeus did not grant any of his lovers immortality but that he did grant immortality to Ganymede 32 In poetry Ganymede became a symbol for the beautiful young male who attracted homosexual desire and love He is not always portrayed as acquiescent However in the Argonautica of Apollonius of Rhodes Ganymede is furious at the god Eros for having cheated him at the game of chance played with knucklebones and Aphrodite scolds her son for cheating a beginner 33 The Augustan poet Virgil portrays the abduction with pathos the boy s aged tutors try in vain to draw him back to Earth and his hounds bay uselessly at the sky 34 The loyal hounds left calling after their abducted master is a frequent motif in visual depictions and is referenced by Statius Here the Phrygian hunter is borne aloft on tawny wings Gargara s range sinks downwards as he rises and Troy grows dim beneath him sadly stand his comrades vainly the hounds weary their throats with barking pursue his shadow or bay at the clouds 35 In the arts EditAncient visual arts Edit Ganymede rolling a hoop and bearing aloft a cockerel a love gift 36 from Zeus who is pictured in pursuit on the obverse of a vase by the Berlin Painter Attic red figure krater 500 490 B C E Zeus carrying away Ganymede Late Archaic terracotta 480 470 BC In 5th century Athens the story of Ganymede became popular among vase painters which was suited to the all male symposium 37 Ganymede was usually depicted as a muscular young man although Greek and Roman sculpture typically depicted his physique as less developed than athletes 38 One of the earliest depictions of Ganymede is a red figure krater by the Berlin Painter in the Musee du Louvre 39 Zeus pursues Ganymede on one side while the youth runs away on the other side rolling along a hoop while holding aloft a crowing cock The Ganymede myth was depicted in recognizable contemporary terms illustrated with common behavior of homoerotic courtship rituals as on a vase by the Achilles Painter where Ganymede also flees with a cock Cocks were common gifts from older male suitors to younger men they were interested in romantically in 5th century Athens 37 Leochares c 350 BCE a Greek sculptor of Athens who was engaged with Scopas on the Mausoleum at Halicarnassus cast a lost bronze group of Ganymede and the Eagle a work that was held remarkable for its ingenious composition 37 It is apparently copied in a well known marble group in the Vatican 40 Such Hellenistic gravity defying feats were influential in the sculpture of the Baroque Ganymede and Zeus in the guise of an eagle were a popular subject on Roman funerary monuments with at least 16 sarcophagi depicting this scene 38 Renaissance and Baroque Edit Ganymede was a major symbol of homosexual love in the visual and literary arts from the Renaissance to the Late Victorian era until when Antinous the reported lover of the Roman Emperor Hadrian became a more popular subject 41 In Shakespeare s As You Like It 1599 a comedy about misunderstandings in the magical setting of the Forest of Arden Celia dressed as a shepherdess becomes Aliena Latin stranger Ganymede s sister and Rosalind because she is more than common tall dresses up as a boy Ganymede a well known image to the audience She plays on her ambiguous charm to seduce Orlando but also inadvertently the shepherdess Phoebe Thus behind the conventions of Elizabethan theater in its original setting the young boy played the girl Rosalind who dresses up as a boy and is then courted by another boy playing Phoebe Ganymede also appears in the opening of Christopher Marlowe s play Dido Queen of Carthage where his and Zeus s affectionate banter is interrupted by an angry Aphrodite Venus 42 In the later Jacobean tragedy Women Beware Women by Thomas Middleton Ganymede Hebe and Hymen briefly appear to serve as cup bearers to the court one of which has been poisoned in an assassination attempt although the plan goes awry 43 Allusions to Ganymede occur with some frequency in 17th century Spanish theater In El castigo sin venganza 1631 by Lope de Vega Federico the son of the Duke of Mantua rescues Casandra his future stepmother and the pair will later develop an incestuous relationship To emphasize the non normative relation the work includes a long passage possibly an ekphrasis derived from Italian art in which Jupiter in the form of an eagle abducts Ganymede 44 Two plays by Tirso de Molina in particular La prudencia en la mujer include intriguing references to Ganymede In this particular play a Jewish doctor who seeks to poison the future king carries a cup which is compared to Ganymede s 45 One of the earliest surviving non ancient depictions of Ganymede is a woodcut from the first edition of Emblemata c 1531 which shows the youth riding the eagle as opposed to being carried away However this composition is uncommon with only sketches by Michelangelo that survived depicting Ganymede being carried 46 The painter architect Baldassare Peruzzi included a panel of The Rape of Ganymede in a ceiling at the Villa Farnesina Rome c 1509 1514 with Ganymede s long blond hair and girlish pose making him identifiable at first glance grasping the eagle s wing without resistance In Antonio Allegri Correggio s Ganymede Abducted by the Eagle Vienna Ganymede s grasp is more intimate Rubens painted two well known versions the earlier dating to 1611 1612 Furstlich Schwarzenbergische Kunststiftung on permanent loan to the Liechtenstein Museum portrays the young Ganymede in the embrace of the eagle being handed his cup 47 while a later version dating to 1636 1638 painted for the Spanish king s hunting lodge Museo del Prado shows the young many being swept up violently by the eagle 48 Johann Wilhelm Baur portrays a full grown Ganymede confidently riding the eagle towards Olympus in Ganymede Triumphant c 1640s 46 On the other hand when Rembrandt painted The Rape of Ganymede for a Dutch Calvinist patron in 1635 a dark eagle carries aloft a plump cherubic baby Paintings Gallery Dresden who is bawling and urinating in fright 49 A 1685 statue of Ganymede and Zeus entitled Ganymede Medicis by Pierre Laviron stands in the gardens of Versailles Examples of Ganymede in 18th century France have been studied by Michael Preston Worley 50 The image of Ganymede was always that of a naive adolescent accompanied by an eagle and the homoerotic aspects of the legend were rarely dealt with In fact the story was often more sexualized The Neoplatonic interpretation of the myth also common in the Italian Renaissance the rape of Ganymede represented the ascent to spiritual perfection These however seemed to be of no interest to Enlightenment philosophers and mythographers Jean Baptiste Marie Pierre Charles Joseph Natoire Guillaume II Coustou Pierre Julien Jean Baptiste Regnault and others contributed images of Ganymede to French art during this period Gallery EditGanymede in Renaissance and Baroque art Michelangelo s Ganymede Copy after a lost original 1532 pencil Royal Collection Windsor Castle The Rape of Ganymede 1611 1612 by Rubens Liechtenstein Museum The Rape of Ganymede 1636 1638 by Rubens Prado The Rape of Ganymede 1635 by Rembrandt The Induction of Ganymede in Olympus 1768 by van Loo Ganymede Medicis 1684 1685 by Pierre Laviron at Versailles Modern Edit Ganymede 1804 by Jose Alvarez Cubero Ganymed by Hermann Hubacher de at Lake Zurich Modern Version of Ganymede Introduction of Budweiser to the Gods ad in Theatre Magazine February 1906 Jose Alvarez Cubero s sculpture of Ganymede executed in Paris in 1804 brought the Spanish sculptor immediate recognition as one of the leading sculptors of his day 51 Vollmer s Worterbuch der Mythologie aller Volker 52 Stuttgart 1874 illustrates Ganymede by an engraving of a Roman relief showing a seated bearded Zeus who holds the cup aside to draw a naked Ganymede into his embrace That engraving however was nothing but a copy of Raphael Mengs s counterfeit Roman fresco painted as a practical joke on the eighteenth century art critic Johann Winckelmann who was growing desperate in his search for homoerotic Greek and Roman antiquities This story is very briefly told by Goethe in his Italienische Reise 53 At Chatsworth in the nineteenth century the bachelor Duke of Devonshire added to his sculpture gallery Adamo Tadolini s Neoclassic Ganymede and the Eagle in which a luxuriously reclining Ganymede embraced by one wing prepares to exchange a peck with the eagle The delicate cup in his hand is made of gilt bronze lending an unsettling immediacy and realism to the white marble group In the early years of the twentieth century the topos of Ganymede s abduction by Zeus was drafted into the service of commercial enterprise Adapting an 1892 lithograph by Frank Kirchbach the brewery of Anheuser Busch launched in 1904 an ad campaign publicizing the successes of Budweiser beer Collectibles featuring the graphics of the poster continued to be produced into the early 1990s The poem Ganymed by Goethe was set to music by Franz Schubert in 1817 published in his Opus 19 no 3 D 544 Also set by Hugo Wolf The Portuguese sculptor Antonio Fernandes de Sa represented the abduction of Ganymede in 1898 The sculpture can be found in Jardim da Cordoaria in Porto Portugal In stories by P G Wodehouse the Junior Ganymede is a servants club analogous to the Drones to which Jeeves belongs Wodehouse named it after Ganymede presumably in reference to his role of cup bearer Ganymede is a reluctant music fan in Kurtis Blow s 1980 song Way Out West After hours of rap by The Stranger Kurtis he eventually gets up to dance American artist Henry Oliver Walker painted a mural in the Library of Congress in Washington D C c 1900 depicting an adolescent nude Ganymede on the back of an eagle Ganymede and the god Dionysus make an appearance in Everworld VI Fear the Fantastic of K A Applegate s fantasy series Everworld Ganymede is described as attracting both males and females My first thought my first flash was that it was a beautiful woman The angel was beautiful with a face dominated by immense lustrous green eyes and framed by golden ringlets and with a bow mouth and full lips and brilliant white teeth And only then only after I had felt that first rush of improbable carnal lust did it occur to me that this angel was a man 54 Ganymede Waters Zeus as an Eagle by Bertel Thorvaldsen Thorvaldsens Museum Copenhagen Denmark In 1959 Robert Rauschenberg referenced the myth in one of his best known works Canyon and in another work Pail for Ganymede In Canyon a photo of Rauschenberg s son Christopher beautifully reiterates the infant portrayed by Rembrandt in the 17th century A stuffed eagle emerges from the flat picture plane with a pillow tied to a piece of string very near his claw The pillow also reflects upon the young boy s body and Rembrandt s painting Ganymede is a reluctant son in W H Auden s poem of that name but he adores the eagle which teaches him how to kill Felice Picano s 1981 novel An Asian Minor reinvents the story of Ganymede In the 2016 video game Overwatch the character Bastion has a bird named Ganymede A character in the Terra Ignota series by Ada Palmer is named Ganymede de la Tremoille The opening of Will Self s 2017 novel Phone refers to agents of Ganymede p 6 to explore caution within the homosexual community in previous decades The first poem in Jericho Brown s Pulitzer Prize for Poetry winning 2019 book The Tradition is titled Ganymede Brown who frequently interrogates topics of sexuality and race brings the Greek abduction myth into contact with the history of American slavery Family tree EditvteTrojan raceOceanusTethysAtlasPleioneScamanderIdaeaSimoeisZeus JupiterElectraTeucerDardanusBateaIlusErichthoniusAstyocheCallirrhoeTrosIlusGanymedeAssaracusHieromnemeLaomedonThemisteCapysPriamAnchisesAphrodite VenusLatinusCreusa of TroyAeneasLaviniaAscaniusSilviusAeneas SilviusLatinus SilviusAlbaAtysCapysCapetusTiberinus SilviusAgrippaRomulus SilviusAventinusProcasNumitorAmuliusAres MarsRhea Silvia IliaHersiliaRomulusRemusNotes Edit Some variants of the myth have Ganymede snatched from Harpagion instead 21 References Edit Ganymede Oxford English Dictionary Online ed Oxford University Press Subscription or participating institution membership required Ganymedes Dictionary com Unabridged Online n d Lattimore Richard trans The Iliad of Homer Chicago University of Chicago Press 1951 According to AMHER 2000 catamite p 291 Plato Phaedrus Perseus Digital Library 255c Retrieved 7 February 2023 Plato Laws Perseus Digital Library 636C Retrieved 13 March 2020 Diodorus Siculus Bibliotheca historica 4 75 3 5 Homer Iliad 20 230 240 Suda v s Minos Tzetzes on Lycophron 29 Scholiast on Homer s Iliad 20 231 who refers to Hellanicus as his authority Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca 3 12 2 Dionysius of Halicarnassus Antiquitates Romanae 1 62 2 Dictys Cretensis Trojan War Chronicle 4 22 Cicero Tusculanae Disputationes 1 65 Euripides Troad 822 Tzetzes ad Lycophron 34 Clement of Alexandria Recognitions 22 Hyginus Fabulae 271 Hyginus Fabulae 224 Strabo Geography 13 1 11 Perseus Digital Library Tufts University Retrieved 19 March 2020 Virgil Aeneid 5 252 Homer Iliad 20 230 Combellack Frederick M 1987 The lusis ek ths lecews The American Journal of Philology 108 2 202 219 doi 10 2307 294813 JSTOR 294813 Edmund Veckenstedt Ganymedes Libau 1881 Virgil Aeneid 1 28 Marshall David Weston 2018 Ancient Skies Constellation Mythology of the Greeks New York NY The Countryman Press pp 45 46 ISBN 978 1682682111 Marius Schlor Mundus Iovialis p 78 f with misprint In for Io The Achaean Diomedes is keen to capture the horses of Aeneas because they are of that stock wherefrom Zeus whose voice is borne afar gave to Tros recompense for his son Ganymedes for that they were the best of all horses that are beneath the dawn and the sun Homer Iliad 5 265ff Plato Laws 636D as cited by Thomas Hubbard Homosexuality in Greece and Rome p252 a b Koehl Robert B 1986 The Chieftain Cup and a Minoan Rite of Passage The Journal of Hellenic Studies 106 99 110 doi 10 2307 629645 JSTOR 629645 S2CID 159630527 Xenophon Symposium 8 29 30 Craig Williams Roman Homosexuality Oxford University Press 1999 2010 p 153 Apollonius Rhodius Argonautica 3 112 Virgil Aeneid 5 256 7 Statius Thebaid 1 549 For the cockerel as an emblematic gift to the eromenos see for example H A Shapiro Courtship scenes in Attic vase painting American Journal of Archaeology 1981 the gift is gender specific and it is clear that the cock had significance as evocative of male potency T J Figueira observes in reviewing two recent works on Greek pederasty in American Journal of Archaeology 1981 a b c Woodford Susan 1993 The Trojan War in Ancient Art Ithaca NY Cornell University Press p 39 ISBN 978 0801481642 a b Bartman Elizabeth 2002 Eros s Flame Images of Sexy Boys in Roman Ideal Sculpture Memoirs of the American Academy in Rome Supplementary Volumes 1 249 271 doi 10 2307 4238454 JSTOR 4238454 www louvre fr D Souza J P 1947 The Story of Vasu Uparichara and Its Sumerian Greek and Roman Parallels Proceedings of the Indian History Congress 10 171 176 JSTOR 44137123 Waters Sarah 1995 The Most Famous Fairy in History Antinous and Homosexual Fantasy Journal of the History of Sexuality 6 2 194 230 JSTOR 3704122 Williams Deanne 2006 Dido Queen of England ELH 73 1 31 59 doi 10 1353 elh 2006 0010 JSTOR 30030002 S2CID 153554373 Levin Richard A 1997 The Dark Color of a Cardinal s Discontentment The Political Plot of Women Beware Women Medieval amp Renaissance Drama in England 10 201 217 JSTOR 24322350 Frederick A de Armas From Mantua to Madrid The License of Desire in Giulio Romano Correggio and Lope de Vega s El castigo sin venganza Bulletin of the Comediantes 59 2 2008 233 65 Felipe E Rojas Representing An Other Ganymede The Multi Faceted Character of Ismael in Tirso de Molina s La prudencia en la mujer 1634 Bulletin of Hispanic Studies 2014 347 64 a b Orgel Stephen 2004 Ganymede Agonistes GLQ A Journal of Lesbian and Gay Studies 10 3 485 501 doi 10 1215 10642684 10 3 485 S2CID 201783650 https www wga hu frames e html html r rubens 21mythol 10mythol html Peter Paul Rubens The Abduction of Ganymede in the Liechtenstein Museum Peter Paul Rubens The Rape of Ganymede in the Museo del Prado Barfoot C C Todd Richard The Great Emporium the Low Countries as cultural crossroads in the Renaissance and the eighteenth century Amsterdam Editions Rodopi B V Worley The Image of Ganymede in France 1730 1820 The Survival of a Homoerotic Myth Art Bulletin 76 December 1994 630 643 One or more of the preceding sentences incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Alvarez Don Jose Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Vollmer mythologie de Vollmer mythologie de Retrieved 22 January 2014 Textlog de Textlog de Retrieved 22 January 2014 Applegate K A Everworld VI Fear the Fantastic p 50 Sources EditAncient sources Edit Ganymede is named by various ancient Greek and Roman authors Homer Iliad 5 265 Iliad 20 232 Homerica The Little Iliad Frag 7 Homeric Hymns Hymn V To Aphrodite 203 217 Theognis Fragments 1 1345 Pindar Olympian Odes 1 11 Euripides Iphigenia at Aulis 1051 Plato Phaedrus 255 Laws 636c Apollonios Rhodios Argonautica 3 112f ps Apollodorus Bibliotheke 2 104 3 141 Strabo Geography 13 1 11 Pausanias Guide to Greece V 24 5 V 26 2 3 Diodorus Siculus The Library of History 4 75 3 Hyginus Fabulae 89 224 271 Astronomica 2 16 2 29 Ovid Metamorphoses 10 152 Virgil Aeneid 1 28 5 252 Cicero De Natura Deorum 1 40 Valerius Flaccus Argonautica 2 414 5 690 Statius Thebaid 1 549 Silvae 3 4 13 Apuleius The Golden Ass 6 15 6 24 Quintus Smyrnaeus Fall of Troy 8 427 14 324 Nonnus Dionysiaca 8 93 10 258 10 308 12 39 14 430 15 279 17 76 19 158 25 430 27 241 31 252 33 74 39 67 47 98 Suda Ilion Minos Modern sources Edit This article incorporates text from a publication now in the public domain Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Ganymede Encyclopaedia Britannica Vol 11 11th ed Cambridge University Press p 454 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Ganymede Wikisource has the text of The New Student s Reference Work article Ganymede Zeus and Ganymede source source Read by Timothy Carter music by Steve Gorn from the Lovers Legends Unbound collection by Andrew Calimach Problems playing this file See media help World History of Male Love Zeus and Ganymede The Zeus and Ganymede Myth Analysis and Resources by Andrew Calimach Ganymedes Theoi Project Ganymede Subject of the Visual Arts Goethe Ganymed Archived 30 November 2015 at the Wayback Machine in German Warburg Institute Iconographic Database c 200 images of Ganymede Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Ganymede mythology amp oldid 1150045801, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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