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Helen of Troy

Helen of Troy,[2][3][4] Helen,[5] Helena,[6] (Ancient Greek: Ἑλένη, romanizedHelénē, pronounced [helénɛː]) also known as beautiful Helen, Helen of Argos, or Helen of Sparta,[7] was a figure in Greek mythology said to have been the most beautiful woman in the world. She was believed to have been the daughter of Zeus and Leda, and was the sister of Clytemnestra, Castor and Pollux, Philonoe, Phoebe and Timandra. She was married to King Menelaus of Sparta "who became by her the father of Hermione, and, according to others, of Nicostratus also."[6] Her abduction by Paris of Troy was the most immediate cause of the Trojan War.

Helen
Queen of Sparta
Member of the Trojans
Recovery of Helen by Menelaus. Attic black-figure amphora, c. 550 BC
AbodeSparta (modern-day Sparta, Greece)
Troy (modern-day Hisarlik, Turkey)
Personal information
Born
Died
Parents
SiblingsPollux (full-brother)
Clytemnestra, Castor, Timandra, Phoebe, Philonoe and other children of Zeus (half-siblings)
ConsortMenelaus, Paris, Deiphobus
Offspring
At least 5, including Hermione

Elements of her putative biography come from classical authors such as Aristophanes, Cicero, Euripides, and Homer (in both the Iliad and the Odyssey). Her story reappears in Book II of Virgil's Aeneid. In her youth, she was abducted by Theseus. A competition between her suitors for her hand in marriage saw Menelaus emerge victorious. All of her suitors were required to swear an oath (known as the Oath of Tyndareus) promising to provide military assistance to the winning suitor, if Helen were ever stolen from him. The obligations of the oath precipitated the Trojan War. When she married Menelaus she was still very young; whether her subsequent departure with Paris was an abduction or an elopement is ambiguous (probably deliberately so).

The legends of Helen during her time in Troy are contradictory: Homer depicts her ambivalently, both regretful of her choice and sly in her attempts to redeem her public image. Other accounts have a treacherous Helen who simulated Bacchic rites and rejoiced in the carnage she caused. In some versions, Helen doesn't arrive in Troy, but instead waits out the war in Egypt.[8] Ultimately, Paris was killed in action, and in Homer's account Helen was reunited with Menelaus, though other versions of the legend recount her ascending to Olympus instead. A cult associated with her developed in Hellenistic Laconia, both at Sparta and elsewhere; at Therapne she shared a shrine with Menelaus. She was also worshiped in Attica and on Rhodes.

Helen boards a ship for Troy, fresco from the House of the Tragic Poet in Pompeii

Her beauty inspired artists of all times to represent her, frequently as the personification of ideal human beauty. Images of Helen start appearing in the 7th century BC. In classical Greece, her abduction by Paris—or escape with him—was a popular motif. In medieval illustrations, this event was frequently portrayed as a seduction, whereas in Renaissance paintings it was usually depicted as a "rape" (i. e. abduction) by Paris.[a] Christopher Marlowe's lines from his tragedy Doctor Faustus (1604) are frequently cited: "Was this the face that launched a thousand ships / And burnt the topless towers of Ilium?"[b]

Etymology edit

 
The Love of Helen and Paris by Jacques-Louis David (oil on canvas, 1788, Louvre, Paris)

The etymology of Helen's name continues to be a problem for scholars. In the 1800s, Georg Curtius related Helen (Ἑλένη) to the moon (Selene; Σελήνη). But two early dedications to Helen in the Laconian dialect of ancient Greek spell her name with an initial digamma (Ϝ, probably pronounced like a w), which rules out any etymology originally starting with simple *s-.[9]

In the early 1900s, Émile Boisacq considered Ἑλένη to derive from the well-known noun ἑλένη meaning "torch".[10] It has also been suggested that the λ of Ἑλένη arose from an original ν, and thus the etymology of the name would be connected with the root of Venus. Linda Lee Clader, however, says that none of the above suggestions offers much satisfaction.[11][e]

More recently, Otto Skutsch has advanced the theory that the name Helen might have two separate etymologies, which belong to different mythological figures respectively, namely *Sṷelenā (related to Sanskrit svaraṇā "the shining one") and *Selenā, the first a Spartan goddess, connected to one or the other natural light phenomenon (especially St. Elmo's fire) and sister of the Dioscuri, the other a vegetation goddess worshiped in Therapne as Ἑλένα Δενδρῖτις ("Helena of the Trees").[14]

Others have connected the name's etymology to a hypothetical Proto-Indo-European sun goddess, noting the name's connection to the word for "sun" in various Indo-European cultures[15] including the Greek proper word and god for the sun, Helios.[16][17][18][14] In particular, her marriage myth may be connected to a broader Indo-European "marriage drama" of the sun goddess, and she is related to the divine twins, just as many of these goddesses are.[19] Martin L. West has thus proposed that Helena ("mistress of sunlight") may be constructed on the PIE suffix -nā ("mistress of"), connoting a deity controlling a natural element.[20]

Prehistoric and mythological context edit

 
Map of Homeric Greece; Menelaus and Helen reign over Laconia

Helen first appears in the poems of Homer, after which she became a popular figure in Greek literature. These works are set in the final years of the Age of Heroes, a mythological era which features prominently in the canon of Greek myth. Because the Homeric poems are known to have been transmitted orally before being written down, some scholars speculate that such stories were passed down from earlier Mycenaean Greek tradition, and that the Age of Heroes may itself reflect a mythologized memory of that era.[21]

Recent archaeological excavations in Greece suggest that modern-day Laconia was a distinct territory in the Late Bronze Age, while the poets narrate that it was a rich kingdom. Archaeologists have unsuccessfully looked for a Mycenaean palatial complex buried beneath present-day Sparta.[22] Modern findings suggest the area around Menelaion in the southern part of the Eurotas valley seems to have been the center of Mycenaean Laconia.[23]

Family edit

Helen and Menelaus had a daughter, Hermione. Different sources say she was also the mother of one or plus sons, named Aethiolas, Nicostratus, Megapenthes and Pleisthenes, but according to others these were instead illegitimate children of Menelaus and various lovers.

Helen and Paris had three sons, Bunomus, Aganus, Idaeus and a daughter also called Helen.[24] The three sons died during the Trojan War, when an earthquake caused the roof of the room where they slept to collapse. Helen was instead killed by her paternal grandmother Hecuba just after the fall of the city: the woman, mad with pain, killed the little girl to take revenge for the misfortune brought by her mother.

Mythology edit

Birth edit

 
Leda and the Swan by Cesare da Sesto (c. 1506–1510, Wilton). The artist has been intrigued by the idea of Helen's unconventional birth; she and Clytemnestra are shown emerging from one egg; Castor and Pollux from another.
 
Helen of Troy wearing a pileus

In most sources, including the Iliad and the Odyssey, Helen is the daughter of Zeus and of Leda, the wife of the Spartan king Tyndareus.[25] Euripides' play Helen, written in the late 5th century BC, is the earliest source to report the most familiar account of Helen's birth: that, although her putative father was Tyndareus, she was actually Zeus' daughter. In the form of a swan, the king of gods was chased by an eagle, and sought refuge with Leda. The swan gained her affection, and the two mated. Leda then produced an egg, from which Helen emerged.[26] The First Vatican Mythographer introduces the notion that two eggs came from the union: one containing Castor and Pollux; one with Helen and Clytemnestra. Nevertheless, the same author earlier states that Helen, Castor and Pollux were produced from a single egg.[27] Fabius Planciades Fulgentius also states that Helen, Castor and Pollux are born from the same egg.[28] Pseudo-Apollodorus states that Leda had intercourse with both Zeus and Tyndareus the night she conceived Helen.[29]

On the other hand, in the Cypria, part of the Epic Cycle, Helen was the daughter of Zeus and the goddess Nemesis.[1] The date of the Cypria is uncertain, but it is generally thought to preserve traditions that date back to at least the 7th century BC. In the Cypria, Nemesis did not wish to mate with Zeus. She therefore changed shape into various animals as she attempted to flee Zeus, finally becoming a goose. Zeus also transformed himself into a goose and raped Nemesis, who produced an egg from which Helen was born.[30] Presumably, in the Cypria, this egg was somehow transferred to Leda.[f] Later sources state either that it was brought to Leda by a shepherd who discovered it in a grove in Attica, or that it was dropped into her lap by Hermes.[31]

Asclepiades of Tragilos and Pseudo-Eratosthenes related a similar story, except that Zeus and Nemesis became swans instead of geese.[32] Timothy Gantz has suggested that the tradition that Zeus came to Leda in the form of a swan derives from the version in which Zeus and Nemesis transformed into birds.[33]

Pausanias states that in the middle of the 2nd century AD, the remains of an egg-shell, tied up in ribbons, were still suspended from the roof of a temple on the Spartan acropolis. People believed that this was "the famous egg that legend says Leda brought forth". Pausanias traveled to Sparta to visit the sanctuary, dedicated to Hilaeira and Phoebe, in order to see the relic for himself.[34]

Pausanias also says that there was a local tradition that Helen's brothers, "the Dioscuri" (i.e. Castor and Pollux), were born on the island of Pefnos, adding that the Spartan poet Alcman also said this,[35] while the poet Lycophron's use of the adjective "Pephnaian" (Πεφναίας) in association with Helen, suggests that Lycophron may have known a tradition which held that Helen was also born on the island.[36]

Youthful abduction by Theseus edit

 
Theseus pursuing a woman, probably Helen. Side A from an Attic red-figure bell-krater, c. 440–430 BC (Louvre, Paris).

Two Athenians, Theseus and Pirithous, thought that since they were sons of gods, they should have divine wives; they thus pledged to help each other abduct two daughters of Zeus. Theseus chose Helen, and Pirithous vowed to marry Persephone, the wife of Hades. Theseus took Helen and left her with his mother Aethra or his associate Aphidnus at Aphidnae or Athens. Theseus and Pirithous then traveled to the underworld, the domain of Hades, to kidnap Persephone. Hades pretended to offer them hospitality and set a feast, but, as soon as the pair sat down, snakes coiled around their feet and held them there. Helen's abduction caused an invasion of Athens by Castor and Pollux, who captured Aethra in revenge, and returned their sister to Sparta.[37] In Goethe's Faust, Centaur Chiron is said to have aided the Dioscuri brothers in returning Helen home.

In most accounts of this event, Helen was quite young; Hellanicus of Lesbos said she was seven years old and Diodorus makes her ten years old.[38] On the other hand, Stesichorus said that Iphigenia was the daughter of Theseus and Helen, which implies that Helen was of childbearing age.[39] In most sources, Iphigenia is the daughter of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra, but Duris of Samos and other writers followed Stesichorus' account.[40]

Ovid's Heroides give us an idea of how ancient and, in particular, Roman authors imagined Helen in her youth: she is presented as a young princess wrestling naked in the palaestra, alluding to a part of girls' physical education in classical (not Mycenaean) Sparta. Sextus Propertius imagines Helen as a girl who practices arms and hunts with her brothers:[41]

[...] or like Helen, on the sands of Eurotas, between Castor and Pollux, one to be victor in boxing, the other with horses: with naked breasts she carried weapons, they say, and did not blush with her divine brothers there.

Suitors edit

 
In this painting by Maarten van Heemskerck Helen, queen of the Greek city-state Sparta, is abducted by Paris, a prince of Troy in Asia Minor.[42] The Walters Art Museum.

When it was time for Helen to marry, many kings and princes from around the world came to seek her hand, bringing rich gifts with them or sent emissaries to do so on their behalf. During the contest, Castor and Pollux had a prominent role in dealing with the suitors, although the final decision was in the hands of Tyndareus.[43] Menelaus, her future husband, did not attend but sent his brother, Agamemnon, to represent him.

Oath of Tyndareus edit

Tyndareus was afraid to select a husband for his daughter, or send any of the suitors away, for fear of offending them and giving grounds for a quarrel. Odysseus was one of the suitors, but had brought no gifts because he believed he had little chance to win the contest. He thus promised to solve the problem, if Tyndareus in turn would support him in his courting of Penelope, the daughter of Icarius. Tyndareus readily agreed, and Odysseus proposed that, before the decision was made, all the suitors should swear a most solemn oath to defend the chosen husband against whoever should quarrel with him. After the suitors had sworn not to retaliate, Menelaus was chosen to be Helen's husband. As a sign of the importance of the pact, Tyndareus sacrificed a horse.[44] Helen and Menelaus became rulers of Sparta, after Tyndareus and Leda abdicated. Menelaus and Helen rule in Sparta for at least ten years; they have a daughter, Hermione, and (according to some myths) three sons: Aethiolas, Maraphius, and Pleisthenes.

The marriage of Helen and Menelaus marks the beginning of the end of the age of heroes. Concluding the catalog of Helen's suitors, Hesiod reports Zeus' plan to obliterate the race of men and the heroes in particular. The Trojan War, caused by Helen's elopement with Paris, is going to be his means to this end.[45]

Seduction or kidnapping by Paris edit

 
Meeting between Paris and Helen. Antique fresco in Pompeii, the House of the Golden Cupids

Paris, a Trojan prince, came to Sparta to claim Helen, in the guise of a supposed diplomatic mission. Before this journey, Paris had been appointed by Zeus to judge the most beautiful goddess; Hera, Athena, or Aphrodite. In order to earn his favour, Aphrodite promised Paris the most beautiful woman in the world. Swayed by Aphrodite's offer, Paris chose her as the most beautiful of the goddesses, earning the wrath of Athena and Hera.

Although Helen is sometimes depicted as being raped by Paris, Ancient Greek sources are often elliptical and contradictory. Herodotus states that Helen was abducted, but the Cypria simply mentions that after giving Helen gifts, "Aphrodite brings the Spartan queen together with the Prince of Troy."[46] Sappho argues that Helen willingly left behind Menelaus and their nine-year-old daughter, Hermione, to be with Paris:

Some say a host of horsemen, others of infantry and others
   of ships, is the most beautiful thing on the dark earth
   but I say, it is what you love
Full easy it is to make this understood of one and all: for
   she that far surpassed all mortals in beauty, Helen her
   most noble husband
Deserted, and went sailing to Troy, with never a thought for
   her daughter and dear parents.

— Sappho, fragment 16 (Voigt)[47]

Dio Chrysostom gives a completely different account of the story, questioning Homer's credibility: after Agamemnon had married Helen's sister, Clytemnestra, Tyndareus sought Helen's hand for Menelaus for political reasons. However, Helen was sought by many suitors, who came from far and near, among them Paris who surpassed all the others and won the favor of Tyndareus and his sons. Thus he won her fairly and took her away to Troia, with the full consent of her natural protectors.[48] Cypria narrate that in just three days Paris and Helen reached Troy. Homer narrates that during a brief stop-over in the small island of Kranai, according to Iliad, the two lovers consummated their passion. On the other hand, Cypria note that this happened the night before they left Sparta.[49]

In Egypt edit

At least three Ancient Greek authors denied that Helen ever went to Troy; instead, they suggested, Helen stayed in Egypt during the duration of the Trojan War. Those three authors are Euripides, Stesichorus, and Herodotus.[51][52] In the version put forth by Euripides in his play Helen, Hera fashioned a likeness of Helen (eidolon, εἴδωλον) out of clouds at Zeus' request, Hermes took her to Egypt, and Helen never went to Troy instead spending the entire war in Egypt. Eidolon is also present in Stesichorus' account, but not in Herodotus' rationalizing version of the myth. In addition to these accounts, Lycophron 822 states that Hesiod was the first to mention Helen's eidolon.[53] This statement may mean Hesiod stated this in a literary work or that the idea was widely known/circulated in early archaic Greece during the time of Hesiod and was consequently attributed to him.[53]

Herodotus adds weight to the "Egyptian" version of events by putting forward his own evidence—he traveled to Egypt and interviewed the priests of the temple (Foreign Aphrodite, ξείνη Ἀφροδίτη) at Memphis. According to these priests, Helen had arrived in Egypt shortly after leaving Sparta, because strong winds had blown Paris's ship off course. King Proteus of Egypt, appalled that Paris had seduced his host's wife and plundered his host's home in Sparta, disallowed Paris from taking Helen to Troy. Paris returned to Troy without a new bride, but the Greeks refused to believe that Helen was in Egypt and not within Troy's walls. Thus, Helen waited in Memphis for ten years, while the Greeks and the Trojans fought. Following the conclusion of the Trojan War, Menelaus sailed to Memphis, where Proteus reunited him with Helen.[54]

In Troy edit

When he discovered that his wife was missing, Menelaus called upon all the other suitors to fulfill their oaths, thus beginning the Trojan War.

The Greek fleet gathered in Aulis, but the ships could not sail for lack of wind. Artemis was enraged by a sacrilege, and only the sacrifice of Agamemnon's daughter, Iphigenia, could appease her. In Euripides Iphigenia in Aulis, Clytemnestra, Iphigenia's mother and Helen's sister, begs her husband to reconsider his decision, calling Helen a "wicked woman". Clytemnestra tries to warn Agamemnon that sacrificing Iphigenia for Helen's sake is, "buying what we most detest with what we hold most dear".[55][56]

Before the opening of hostilities, the Greeks dispatched a delegation to the Trojans under Odysseus and Menelaus; they endeavored without success to persuade Priam to hand Helen back. A popular theme, The Request of Helen (Helenes Apaitesis, Ἑλένης Ἀπαίτησις), was the subject of a drama by Sophocles, now lost.[g][57]

Homer paints a poignant, lonely picture of Helen in Troy. She is filled with self-loathing and regret for what she has caused; by the end of the war, the Trojans have come to hate her. When Hector dies, she is the third mourner at his funeral, and she says that, of all the Trojans, Hector and Priam alone were always kind to her:[58][59]

Wherefore I wail alike for thee and for my hapless self with grief at heart;
for no longer have I anyone beside in broad Troy that is gentle to me or kind;
but all men shudder at me.[60]

These bitter words reveal that Helen gradually realized Paris' weaknesses, and decided to ally herself with Hector. There is an affectionate relationship between the two, and Helen has harsh words for Paris when she compares the two brothers:[59][61]

Howbeit, seeing the gods thus ordained these ills,
would that I had been wife to a better man,
that could feel the indignation of his fellows and their many revilings. [...]
But come now, enter in, and sit thee upon this chair, my brother,
since above all others has trouble encompassed thy heart
because of shameless me, and the folly of Alexander.[62][58]

After Paris was killed in combat, there was some dispute among the Trojans about which of Priam's surviving sons she should remarry: Helenus or Deiphobus, but she was given to the latter.

During the Fall of Troy edit

 
Helen and Menelaus: Menelaus intends to strike Helen; captivated by her beauty, he drops his sword. A flying Eros and Aphrodite (on the left) watch the scene. Detail of an Attic red-figure krater c. 450–440 BC (Paris, Louvre)
 
Menelaus captures Helen in Troy, Ajax the Lesser drags Cassandra from Palladium before eyes of Priam, fresco from the Casa del Menandro, Pompeii

During the fall of Troy, Helen's role is ambiguous. In Virgil's Aeneid, Deiphobus gives an account of Helen's treacherous stance: when the Trojan Horse was admitted into the city, she feigned Bacchic rites, leading a chorus of Trojan women, and, holding a torch among them, she signaled to the Greeks from the city's central tower. In the Odyssey, however, Homer narrates a different story: Helen circled the Horse three times, and she imitated the voices of the Greek women left behind at home—she thus tortured the men inside (including Odysseus and Menelaus) with the memory of their loved ones, and brought them to the brink of destruction.[63]

After the deaths of Hector and Paris, Helen became the paramour of their younger brother, Deiphobus; but when the sack of Troy began, she hid her new husband's sword, and left him to the mercy of Menelaus and Odysseus. In Aeneid, Aeneas meets the mutilated Deiphobus in Hades; his wounds serve as a testimony to his ignominious end, abetted by Helen's final act of treachery.[64]

However, Helen's portraits in Troy seem to contradict each other. From one side, we read about the treacherous Helen who simulated Bacchic rites and rejoiced over the carnage of Trojans. On the other hand, there is another Helen, lonely and helpless; desperate to find sanctuary, while Troy is on fire. Stesichorus narrates that both Greeks and Trojans gathered to stone her to death.[65] When Menelaus finally found her, he raised his sword to kill her. He had demanded that only he should slay his unfaithful wife; but, when he was ready to do so, she dropped her robe from her shoulders, and the sight of her beauty caused him to let the sword drop from his hand.[h] Electra wails:[66]

Alas for my troubles! Can it be that her beauty has blunted their swords?

Fate edit

Helen returned to Sparta and lived with Menelaus, where she was encountered by Telemachus in Book 4 of The Odyssey. As depicted in that account, she and Menelaus were completely reconciled and had a harmonious married life—he holding no grudge at her having run away with a lover and she feeling no restraint in telling anecdotes of her life inside besieged Troy.

According to another version, used by Euripides in his play Orestes, Helen had been saved by Apollo from Orestes[67] and was taken up to Mount Olympus almost immediately after Menelaus' return. A curious fate is recounted by Pausanias the geographer (3.19.11–13), which has Helen share the afterlife with Achilles.[68]

Pausanias also has another story (3.19.9–10): "The account of the Rhodians is different. They say that when Menelaus was dead, and Orestes still a wanderer, Helen was driven out by Nicostratus and Megapenthes and came to Rhodes, where she had a friend in Polyxo, the wife of Tlepolemus. For Polyxo, they say, was an Argive by descent, and when she was already married to Tlepolemus, shared his flight to Rhodes. At the time she was queen of the island, having been left with an orphan boy. They say that this Polyxo desired to avenge the death of Tlepolemus on Helen, now that she had her in her power. So she sent against her when she was bathing handmaidens dressed up as Furies, who seized Helen and hanged her on a tree, and for this reason the Rhodians have a sanctuary of Helen of the Tree."[69] There are other traditions concerning the punishment of Helen. For example, she is offered as a sacrifice to the gods in Tauris by Iphigeneia, or Thetis, enraged when Achilles dies because of Helen, kills her on her return journey.[70]

Tlepolemus was a son of Heracles and Astyoche. Astyoche was a daughter of Phylas, King of Ephyra who was killed by Heracles. Tlepolemus was killed by Sarpedon on the first day of fighting in the Iliad. Nicostratus was a son of Menelaus by his concubine Pieris, an Aetolian slave. Megapenthes was a son of Menelaus by his concubine Tereis, no further origin.

In Euripides's tragedy The Trojan Women, Helen is shunned by the women who survived the war and is to be taken back to Greece to face a death sentence. This version is contradicted by two of Euripides' other tragedies Electra, which predates The Trojan Women, and Helen, as Helen is described as being in Egypt during the events of the Trojan War in each.

Artistic representations edit

 
Zeuxis et les Filles de Crotone (François-André Vincent, 1789, Paris, Louvre). The scene tells the story of the painter Zeuxis who was commissioned to produce a picture of Helen for the temple of Hera at Agrigentum, Sicily. To realize his task, Zeuxis chose the five most beautiful maidens in the region.[71]

From Antiquity, depicting Helen would be a remarkable challenge. The story of Zeuxis deals with this exact question: how would an artist immortalize ideal beauty?[72] He eventually selected the best features from five virgins. The ancient world starts to paint Helen's picture or inscribe her form on stone, clay and bronze by the 7th century BC.[73] Dares Phrygius describes Helen in his History of the Fall of Troy: "She was beautiful, ingenuous, and charming. Her legs were the best; her mouth the cutest. There was a beauty-mark between her eyebrows."[74]

Helen is frequently depicted on Athenian vases as being threatened by Menelaus and fleeing from him. This is not the case, however, in Laconic art: on an Archaic stele depicting Helen's recovery after the fall of Troy, Menelaus is armed with a sword but Helen faces him boldly, looking directly into his eyes; and in other works of Peloponnesian art, Helen is shown carrying a wreath, while Menelaus holds his sword aloft vertically. In contrast, on Athenian vases of c. 550–470, Menelaus threateningly points his sword at her.[75]

 
Antique fresco depicting Helen and Menelaus, from the Casa dell'Efebo, Pompeii

The abduction by Paris was another popular motif in ancient Greek vase-painting; definitely more popular than the kidnapping by Theseus. In a famous representation by the Athenian vase painter Makron, Helen follows Paris like a bride following a bridegroom, her wrist grasped by Paris' hand.[76] The Etruscans, who had a sophisticated knowledge of Greek mythology, demonstrated a particular interest in the theme of the delivery of Helen's egg, which is depicted in relief mirrors.[77]

In Renaissance painting, Helen's departure from Sparta is usually depicted as a scene of forcible removal (rape) by Paris. This is not, however, the case with certain secular medieval illustrations. Artists of the 1460s and 1470s were influenced by Guido delle Colonne's Historia destructionis Troiae, where Helen's abduction was portrayed as a scene of seduction. In the Florentine Picture Chronicle Paris and Helen are shown departing arm in arm, while their marriage was depicted into Franco-Flemish tapestry.[78]

In Christopher Marlowe's Doctor Faustus (1604), Faust conjures the shade of Helen. Upon seeing Helen, Faustus speaks the famous line: "Was this the face that launch'd a thousand ships, / And burnt the topless towers of Ilium." (Act V, Scene I.) Helen is also conjured by Faust in Goethe's Faust.

In William Shakespeare's play Troilus and Cressida, Helen is a minor character who adores Troilus.

In Pre-Raphaelite art, Helen is often shown with shining curly hair and ringlets. Other painters of the same period depict Helen on the ramparts of Troy, and focus on her expression: her face is expressionless, blank, inscrutable.[79] In Gustave Moreau's painting, Helen will finally become faceless; a blank eidolon in the middle of Troy's ruins.

Cult edit

The major centers of Helen's cult were in Laconia. At Sparta, the urban sanctuary of Helen was located near the Platanistas, so called for the plane trees planted there. Ancient sources associate Helen with gymnastic exercises or/and choral dances of maidens near the Evrotas River. This practice is referenced in the closing lines of Lysistrata, where Helen is said to be the "pure and proper" leader of the dancing Spartan women. Theocritus conjures the song epithalamium Spartan women sung at Platanistas commemorating the marriage of Helen and Menelaus:[80]

We first a crown of low-growing lotus
having woven will place it on a shady plane-tree.
First from a silver oil-flask soft oil
drawing we will let it drip beneath the shady plane-tree.
Letters will be carved in the bark, so that someone passing by
may read in Doric: "Reverence me. I am Helen's tree."

Helen's worship was also present on the opposite bank of Eurotas at Therapne, where she shared a shrine with Menelaus and the Dioscuri. The shrine has been known as "Menelaion" (the shrine of Menelaus), and it was believed to be the spot where Helen was buried alongside Menelaus. Despite its name, both the shrine and the cult originally belonged to Helen; Menelaus was added later as her husband.[81] In addition, there was a festival at the town, which was called Meneleaeia (Μενελάεια) in honour of Menelaus and Helen.[82]Isocrates writes that at Therapne Helen and Menelaus were worshiped as gods, and not as heroes. Clader argues that, if indeed Helen was worshiped as a goddess at Therapne, then her powers should be largely concerned with fertility,[83] or as a solar deity.[84] There is also evidence for Helen's cult in Hellenistic Sparta: rules for those sacrificing and holding feasts in their honor are extant.[85]

Helen was also worshiped in Attica along with her brothers, and on Rhodes as Helen Dendritis (Helen of the Trees, Έλένα Δενδρῖτις); she was a vegetation or a fertility goddess.[i] Martin P. Nilsson has argued that the cult in Rhodes has its roots to the Minoan, pre-Greek era, when Helen was allegedly worshiped as a vegetation goddess.[86] Claude Calame and other scholars try to analyze the affinity between the cults of Helen and Artemis Orthia, pointing out the resemblance of the terracotta female figurines offered to both deities.[87]

In popular culture edit

Pre-modern edit

 
Christopher Marlowe's (this 1585 portrait is disputed) play The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus (1604) is the source of the famous quote "Was this the face that launched a thousand ships / And burnt the topless towers of Ilium?",[88] although the line is ultimately derived from a quotation in Lucian's Dialogues of the Dead.[88][89]

Helen frequently appeared in Athenian comedies of the fifth century BC as a caricature of Pericles's mistress Aspasia.[90] In Hellenistic times, she was associated with the moon[90] due to the similarity of her name to the Greek word Σελήνη (Selēnē), meaning "Moon, goddess of the moon".[90] One Pythagorean source claimed that Helen had originally come from a colony on the moon,[90] where people were larger, stronger, and "fifteen times" more beautiful than ordinary mortals.[90] She is one of the eponymous women the tragedy The Trojan Women produced in 415 BC by the Greek playwright Euripides.

Dio Chrysostom absolved Helen of guilt for the Trojan War by making Paris her first, original husband and claiming that the Greeks started the war out of jealousy.[90] Virgil, in his Aeneid, makes Aeneas the one to spare Helen's life, rather than Menelaus,[90] and instead portrays the act as a lofty example of self-control.[90] Meanwhile, Virgil also makes Helen more vicious by having her betray her own husband Deiphobos and give him over to Menelaus as a peace offering.[90] The satirist Lucian of Samosata features Helen in his famous Dialogues of the Dead, in which he portrays her deceased spirit as aged and withered.[90]

In the early Middle Ages, after the rise of Christianity, Helen was seen as a pagan equivalent to Eve from the Book of Genesis.[90] Helen was so beloved by early medieval Christians that she even took on some of the roles of the Virgin Mary.[90]

Modern edit

During the Renaissance, the French poet Pierre de Ronsard wrote 142 sonnets addressed to a woman named Hélène de Surgères,[90] in which he declared her to be the "true", French Helen, rather than the "lie" of the Greeks.[90]

Helen appears in various versions of the Faust myth, including Christopher Marlowe's 1604 play The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus, in which Faustus famously marvels, "Was this the face that launched a thousand ships / And burnt the topless towers of Ilium?" upon seeing a demon impersonating Helen.[88] The line, which is frequently quoted out of context,[88][90] is a paraphrase of a statement from Lucian's Dialogues of the Dead.[89][88] It is debated whether the phrase conveys astonishment at Helen's beauty,[88] or disappointment that she is not more beautiful.[88] The German poet and polymath Johann Wolfgang von Goethe re-envisioned the meeting of Faust and Helen. In Faust: The Second Part of the Tragedy, the union of Helen and Faust becomes a complex allegory of the meeting of the classical-ideal and modern worlds.

In 1803, when French zoologist François Marie Daudin was to name a new species of beautifully colored snake, the trinket snake (Coelognathus helena), he chose the specific name helena in reference to Helen of Troy.[91]

 
Helen of Troy by Evelyn De Morgan (1898, London); Helen admiringly displays a lock of her hair, as she gazes into a mirror decorated with the nude Aphrodite.

In 1864, Paris saw the premiere of the operetta La belle Hélène by Jacques Offenbach.

Helen of Troy is a minor character in the opera Mefistofele by Arrigo Boito, which received its premiere in Milan in 1868.

In 1881, Oscar Wilde published a poem entitled "The New Helen",[90] in which he declared his friend Lillie Langtry to be the reincarnation of Helen of Troy.[90] Wilde portrays this new Helen as the antithesis of the Virgin Mary,[90] but endows her with the characteristics of Jesus Christ himself.[90] The Irish poet William Butler Yeats compared Helen to his muse, Maude Gonne, in his 1916 poem "No Second Troy".[92] The anthology The Dark Tower by C. S. Lewis includes a fragment entitled "After Ten Years". In Egypt after the Trojan War, Menelaus is allowed to choose between the real, disappointing Helen and an ideal Helen conjured by Egyptian magicians.

The English Pre-Raphaelite painter Evelyn De Morgan portrayed a sexually assertive Helen in her 1898 painting Helen of Troy.[90] Salvador Dalí was obsessed with Helen of Troy from childhood[90] and saw his wife Gala Dalí and the surrealist character Gradiva as the embodiments of Helen.[90] He dedicates his autobiography Diary of a Genius to "my genius Gala Gradiva, Helen of Troy, Saint Helen, Gala Galatea Placida."[90]

Minor planet 101 Helena discovered by James Craig Watson in 1868, is named after Helen of Troy.

John Erskine's 1925 bestselling novel The Private Life of Helen of Troy portrayed Helen as a "sensible, bourgeois heroine",[90] but the 1927 silent film of the same name, directed by Alexander Korda, transformed Helen into "a shopaholic fashion maven".[90]

In 1928, Richard Strauss wrote the German opera Die ägyptische Helena (The Egyptian Helena), which is the story of Helen and Menelaus's troubles when they are marooned on a mythical island.[93]

The 1938 short story, "Helen O'Loy", written by Lester del Rey, details the creation of a synthetic woman by two mechanics. The title is wordplay that combines "Helen of Troy" with "alloy".

The 1951 Swedish film Sköna Helena is an adapted version of Offenbach's operetta, starring Max Hansen and Eva Dahlbeck In 1956, a Franco-British epic titled Helen of Troy was released, directed by Oscar-winning director Robert Wise and starring Italian actress Rossana Podestà in the title role. It was filmed in Italy, and featured well-known British character actors such as Harry Andrews, Cedric Hardwicke, and Torin Thatcher in supporting roles.

The 1971 film The Trojan Women was an adaptation of the play by Euripides in which Irene Papas portrayed (a non-blonde) Helen of Troy.

In the 1998 TV series Hercules, Helen appears as a supporting character at Prometheus Academy as a student. Helen is caring and enthusiastic. She was the most popular girl in the academy and Adonis' girlfriend. Helen tries her best to keep Adonis from behaving stupidly, but mostly fails. She likes Hercules, but as a friend. She is a princess as in the myth but is not a half-sister of Hercules in the series. She was voiced by Jodi Benson.

A 2003 television version of Helen's life up to the fall of Troy, Helen of Troy, in which she was played by Sienna Guillory. In this version, Helen is depicted as unhappy in her marriage and willingly runs away with Paris, with whom she has fallen in love, but still returns to Menelaus after Paris dies and Troy falls.

Helen was portrayed by Diane Kruger in the 2004 film Troy. In this adaptation, as in the 2003 television version, she is unhappily married to Menelaus and willingly leaves with Paris, whom she loves. However, in this version she does not return to Sparta with Menelaus (who is killed by Hector), but escapes Troy with Paris and other survivors when the city falls.

Jacob M. Appel's 2008 play, Helen of Sparta, retells Homer's Iliad from Helen's point of view.[94]

Inspired by the line, "Was this the face that launched a thousand ships...?" from Marlowe's Faustus, Isaac Asimov jocularly coined the unit "millihelen" to mean the amount of beauty that can launch one ship.[95] Canadian novelist and poet Margaret Atwood re-envisioned the myth of Helen in modern, feminist guise in her poem "Helen of Troy Does Countertop Dancing".[96]

In the Legends of Tomorrow episode "Helen Hunt", Helen is portrayed by Israeli-American model and actress Bar Paly. In the episode, Helen is an anachronism appearing in 1930s Hollywood. She lands a job as an actress and unintentionally starts a war between two film studios. The Legends travel to the 1930s and try to get Helen back to the Bronze Age. She regretfully goes along, telling the team she wishes to stay away. After analyzing historical records of her impact on history, Zari Tomaz finds the best time to take her away from the fighting of her time and takes her to Themyscira.[97] Helen reappears in the season three finale, "The Good, the Bad and the Cuddly", as an Amazon warrior who assists the Legends in defeating the demon Mallus's army.[98]

In the 2018 TV miniseries Troy: Fall of a City, Helen was portrayed by Bella Dayne.[99]

Pop singer-songwriter Al Stewart released a song called "Helen and Cassandra" on the reissue of his 1988 album Last Days of the Century. In it he addresses many aspects of the Helen myth and contrasts her with the seer Cassandra.

Indie pop singer Lorde released a song called "Helen of Troy" for the deluxe version of her 2021 album Solar Power.

See also edit

Notes edit

  1. ^ Interchangeable usage of the terms rape and elope often lends ambiguity to the legend.[example needed]
  2. ^ However, the meeting with Helen in Marlowe's play and the ensuing temptation are not unambiguously positive, since they are closely followed by Faust's death and descent to Hell.
  3. ^ The name of Helen as worshipped at Sparta and Therapne began with a digamma. On the other hand, at Corinth, there is evidence of Helen without a digamma. Skutsch (Helen, 189 f. and passim) suggests that we have to make do "with two different names, two different mythological Helens".
  4. ^ Compare Proto-Indo-European *sa(e)wol, whence Greek helios, Latin sol, Sanskrit suryah, ultimately from *sawel "to shine". The relation with Selene is quite possible.
  5. ^ If the name has an Indo-European etymology, it is possibly a suffixed form of a Proto-Indo-European root *wel- "to turn, roll"[12] (or from that root's sense "to cover, enclose" – compare the theonyms Varuna, Veles),[citation needed] or of *sel- "to flow, run".[citation needed] The latter possibility would allow comparison to the Vedic Sanskrit Saraṇyū, a character who is abducted in Rigveda 10.17.2. This parallel is suggestive of a Proto-Indo-European abduction myth. Saraṇyū means "swift" and is derived from the adjective saraṇa ("running, swift"), the feminine of which is saraṇā; this is in every sound cognate with Ἑλένα, the form of her name that has no initial digamma.[c] The possible connection of Helen's name to ἑλένη ("torch"), as noted above, may also support the relationship of her name to Vedic svaranā ("the shining one").[d][13]
  6. ^ In the 5th century comedy "Nemesis" by Cratinus, Leda was told to sit on an egg so that it would hatch, and this is no doubt the egg that was produced by Nemesis (Cratinus fr. 115 PCG; Gantz, Early Greek Myth, ibid).
  7. ^ Ancient writers do not agree on whether the embassy was dispatched before the gathering of the Greek army in Aulis or after it reached Tenedos or Troia. In Herodotus' account the Trojans swore to the Greek envoys that Helen was in Egypt, not in Troy; but the Greeks did not believe them, and laid siege to the city, until they took it.
    Cypria. fr. 1.
    Herodotus. Histories. II, 118: 2–4.
    Homer. Iliad. III, 205.
    Pseudo-Appolodorus. Epitome. 28–29.
  8. ^ According to the ancient writers, it was the sight of Helen's face or breasts that made Menelaus drop his sword. See, inter alia, Aristophanes, Lysistrata, 155; Little Iliad, fr. 13 EGF.
    * Maguire, Helen of Troy, 52
  9. ^ A shared cult of Helen and her brothers in Attica is alluded to in Euripides, Helen, 1666–1669. See also Edmunds, Helen's Divine Origins, 26–29. Concerning Helen Dendritis, Gumpert (Grafting Helen, 96), and Skutsch (Helen, 109) support that she was a vegetation goddess. Meagher (The Meaning of Helen, 43 f.) argues that her cult in Rhodes reflects an ancient fertility ritual associated with Helen not only on Rhodes but also at Dendra, near Sparta. Edmunds (Helen's Divine Origins, 18) notes that it is unclear what an ancient tree cult might be.

References edit

  1. ^ a b Cypria, fr. 9 PEG.
  2. ^ Galt, John, ed. (1837). The Complete Works of Lord Byron. Paris: Baudry's European Library. p. 553.
  3. ^ Lang, Andrew (1892). Helen of Troy. Library of Alexandria. p. Title page. ISBN 978-1465600868.
  4. ^ Name made popular by the 1956 film "Helen of Troy" by Warner Bros. directed by Robert Wise.
  5. ^ Coleridge, Edward P. (1910). The Plays of Euripides. Vol. 1. London: G. Bell and Sons, Limited. p. 319. ark:/13960/t6tx37b16.
  6. ^ a b Smith, William, ed. (1870). A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. Vol. 2. Boston: Little, Brown, and Company. p. 370. ark:/13960/t9f47mp93.
  7. ^ Benjamin, S.G.W. (1880). Troy: Its Legend, History and Literature. C. Scribner's sons. p. v.
  8. ^ Way, Authur (1930). Euripides. Vol. 1. Londo & New York: William Heinemann, G. P. Putnam's Sons. p. 463. ark:/13960/t2v41093b.
  9. ^ West, M. L. (2007). Indo-European Poetry and Myth. OUP Oxford. p. 231. ISBN 978-0-19-928075-9.
  10. ^ ἑλένη. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project.
  11. ^ Clader, Helen, 63 f.; Skutsch, Helen, 191.
  12. ^ The American Heritage Dictionary, "Indo-European roots: wel".
  13. ^ Scutsch, Helen, 190 ff.
  14. ^ a b Skutsch, Otto. "Helen, her Name and Nature." In: Journal of Hellenic Studies 107 (1987), pp. 188–193.
  15. ^ Meagher, Robert E. (2002). The Meaning of Helen: In Search of an Ancient Icon. Bolchazy-Carducci Publishers. pp. 46ff. ISBN 978-0-86516-510-6.
  16. ^ Mallory, J. P.; Adams, D. Q., Encyclopedia of Indo-European Culture, Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers, 1997, ISBN 1-884964-98-2, p. 164
  17. ^ Euripides, Robert E. Meagher, Helen, Univ of Massachusetts Press, 1986
  18. ^ O'Brien, Steven. "Dioscuric Elements in Celtic and Germanic Mythology". Journal of Indo-European Studies 10:1 & 2 (Spring–Summer, 1982), 117–136
  19. ^ Jackson, Peter (2002). "Light from Distant Asterisks. Towards a Description of the Indo-European Religious Heritage". Numen. 49 (1): 61–102. doi:10.1163/15685270252772777. ISSN 0029-5973. JSTOR 3270472.
  20. ^ West, M. L. (2007). Indo-European Poetry and Myth. OUP Oxford. p. 137. ISBN 978-0-19-928075-9.
  21. ^ Meagher, The Meaning of Helen, 11–18; Thompson, The Trojan War, 20
  22. ^ Hughes, Helen of Troy, 29
  23. ^ Banou, Emilia (2009). "The Mycenaean Presence in the Southeastern Eurotas Valley: Vouno Panagias and Ayios Georgios". British School at Athens Studies. British School at Athens. 16: 77–84. JSTOR 40960624. Retrieved January 16, 2023.
  24. ^ Graves, Robert (2017). The Greek Myths - The Complete and Definitive Edition. Penguin Books Limited. p. 637. ISBN 9780241983386.
  25. ^ Homer, Iliad, III, 199, 418, 426; Odyssey, IV, 184, 219; XXIII, 218.
    * Gantz, Early Greek Myth, 318–9
  26. ^ Euripides, Helen 16–21 2016-04-10 at the Wayback Machine, 257–59 2016-04-10 at the Wayback Machine
  27. ^ First Vatican Mythographer, VM I 204.
    * Gantz, Early Greek Myth, 320–321; Hughes, Helen of Troy, 350; Moser, A Cosmos of Desire, 443–444
  28. ^ Whitbread, Leslie George (1972). Fulgentius the Mythographer. Ohio State University Press. p. 78. ISBN 9780814201626.
  29. ^ Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca, III, 10.7 2016-04-10 at the Wayback Machine
  30. ^ Athenaeus 8.334b-d, quoting the Cypria; Cypria, fr. 10 PEG.
  31. ^ Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca, III, 10.7 2016-04-10 at the Wayback Machine
    * Hard & Rose, The Roudledge Handbook, 438–439
  32. ^ Asclepiades 12F11, Pseudo-Eratosthenes Catast. 25.
  33. ^ Gantz, Early Greek Myth, ibid
  34. ^ Pausanias, 3.16.1
    * Hughes, Helen of Troy, 26–27
  35. ^ Pausanias, 3.26.2
  36. ^ Hornblower, p. 142; Lycophron, 87
  37. ^ The most complete accounts of this narrative are given by Apollodorus, Diodorus 4.63.1–3, and Plutarch, Theseus 31–34. For a collection of ancient sources narrating Helen's abduction by Theseus, see Hughes, Helen, 357; Mills, Theseus, 7–8
  38. ^ Hellanicus, 4F134; Diodorus Siculus, 4.63.1–3
  39. ^ Stesichorus, fr. 191 PMG.
  40. ^ Gantz, pp. 289, 291.
  41. ^ Ovid, Heroides, 16.149–152; Propertius, 3.14
    * Cairns, Sextus Propertius, 421–422; Hughes, Helen of Troy, 60; Pomeroy, Spartan Women, 28: "In the Roman period, because Sparta was a destination for tourists, the characteristics that made Sparta distinctive were emphasized. The athleticism of women was exaggerated."
  42. ^ "Panorama with the Abduction of Helen Amidst the Wonders of the Ancient World". The Walters Art Museum.
  43. ^ In the Hesiodic Catalogue of Women fr. 198.7–8, and 199.0–1, they are the recipients of the bridal presents. For further details, see A Catalog within a Catalog, 133–135
  44. ^ Hesiod, Catalogs of Women and Eoiae, fr. 204; Hyginus, Fables, 78; Pausanias, 3.20.9; Apollodorus, 3.10.9
    * Cingano, A Catalog within a Catalog, 128; Hughes, Helen of Troy, 76
  45. ^ Cypria, fr. 1; Hesiod, Catalogs of Women and Eoiae, fr. 204.96–101
    * Edmunds, Helen's Divine Origins, 7–8
  46. ^ Cypria, fr. 1; Herodotus, 113–119
  47. ^ Sappho, fr. 16. See an analysis of the poem by Gumpert, Grafting Helen, 92
  48. ^ Dio Chrysostom, Discourses, 1.37–53
    * Hughes, Helen of Troy, 128–129
  49. ^ Cypria, fr. 1; Homer, Iliad, III, 443–445
    * Cyrino, "Helen of Troy", 133–134
  50. ^ Kimmelman, Michael (March 1, 2007). "Lights! Darks! Action! Cut! Maestro of Mise-en-Scène". The New York Times. Retrieved July 11, 2009.
    * Schjeldahl, Peter (February 12, 2007). "Venetial Brass". The New Yorker. Retrieved July 11, 2009.
  51. ^ Allan, Introduction, 18–28
  52. ^ HELEN wsu.edu
  53. ^ a b Smoot, Guy (2012). . Washington, D.C.: Center for Hellenic Studies. Archived from the original on 2018-11-05. Retrieved 2018-11-04 – via The Center for Hellenic Studies.
  54. ^ Herodotus, 113–120; Kim, Homer, poet and historian, 30–35; Allan, Introduction, 22–24; Lindsay, Helen in the Fifth Century, 135–138
  55. ^ Euripides. Iphigenia in Aulis. 1166–1170.
  56. ^ Hughes. Helen of Troy. pp. 195–196.
  57. ^ About Euripides' lost drama, see Hughes. Helen of Troy. p. 191.
  58. ^ a b Hughes. Helen of Troy. p. 219.
  59. ^ a b Redfold. The Tragedy of Hector. p. 122.
  60. ^ Homer. Iliad. XXIV, 773–775.
  61. ^ Suzuki. Metamorphoses of Helen. p. 36.
  62. ^ Homer. Iliad. VI, 349–351, 354–356.
  63. ^ Homer, Odyssey, IV, 277–289; Virgil, Aeneid, 515–519.
    * Hughes, Helen of Troy, 220; Suzuki, Metamorphoses of Helen, 99–100.
  64. ^ Virgil, Aeneid 494–512
    * Suzuki, Metamorphoses of Helen, 101–102.
  65. ^ Stesichorus, fr. 201 PMG.
  66. ^ Euripides, Orestes 1286
  67. ^ Euripides and the Gods, Mary R. Lefkowitz
  68. ^ Blondell, Helen of Troy 46
  69. ^ "Pausanias, Description of Greece". Perseus.tufts.edu. Retrieved 2014-03-13.
  70. ^ Pierre Grimal, The Dictionary of Classical Mythology, s.v. "Helene p. 241"
  71. ^ Pliny, National History, 35.64–66. Cicero (De Inventione, 2.1–3) sets the story in Croton.
  72. ^ Mansfield, Too Beautiful to Picture, 29
  73. ^ Hughes, Helen of Troy 1–2
  74. ^ Dares of Phrygia. History of the Fall of Troy 12. A short prose work which purports to be a first hand account of the Trojan War by Dares, a Trojan priest of Hephaestus in the Iliad.
  75. ^ Pomeroy, Spartan Women, 169
  76. ^ Anderson, The Fall of Troy, 257; Matheson, Polygnotos and Vase Painting, 225
  77. ^ Caprino, Etruscan Italy, 66–71
  78. ^ David, Narrative in Context, 136; Hughes, Helen of Troy, 181–182
  79. ^ Maguire, Helen of Troy, 39–43, 47
  80. ^ Theocritus, The Epithalamium of Helen, 43–48
    * Edmunds, Helen's Divine Origins, 12
  81. ^ Herodotus, Histories, VI, 61.3
    * Hughes, Helen of Troy, 30–31; Lynn Budin, The Ancient Greeks, 286
  82. ^ A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities (1890), William Smith, LLD, William Wayte, G. E. Marindin, Ed., Meneleaeia
  83. ^ Isocrates, Helen, 63;
    Clader, Helen, 70;
    Jackson, The Transformations of Helen, 52.
    For a criticism of the theory that Helen was worshiped as a goddess in Therapne, see Edmunds, Helen's Divine Origins, 20–24.
  84. ^ Euripides, Helen, translated by Robert E. Meagher, University of Massachusetts Press, Amherst 1986.
  85. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece, III, 15.3, and 19.9;
    Allan, Introduction, 14 ff.;
    Calame, Choruses of Young Women, 192–197;
    Pomeroy, Spartan Women, 114–118.
  86. ^ Cited by Gumpert, Grafting Helen, 96, Edmunds, Helen's Divine Origins, 15–18, and Skutsch, Helen, 109. See critical remarks on this theory by Edmunds, Helen's Divine Origins, 16.
  87. ^ Calame, Choruses of Young Women, 201;
    Eaverly, Archaic Greek Equestrian Sculpture, 9;
    Pomeroy, Spartan Women, 162 f.
  88. ^ a b c d e f g Maguire, Laurie (2009). Helen of Troy: From Homer to Hollywood. Chichester, England: John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. pp. 160–163. ISBN 978-1-4051-2634-2.
  89. ^ a b Casson, Lionel (1962). Selected Satires of Lucian, Edited and Translated by Lionel Casson. New York City, New York: W. W. Norton and Company. ISBN 0-393-00443-0.
  90. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Blondell, Ruby (2013). Helen of Troy: Beauty, Myth, Devastation. Oxford, England: Oxford University Press. pp. 247–249. ISBN 978-0-19-973160-2.
  91. ^ Beolens, Bo; Watkins, Michael; Grayson, Michael (2011). The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles. Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press. xiii + 296 pp. ISBN 978-1-4214-0135-5. ("Helena", p. 120).
  92. ^ "36. No Second Troy. Yeats, W. B. 1916. Responsibilities and Other Poems". Bartleby.com. Retrieved 2014-03-13.
  93. ^ Baxter, Richard (2002). "Die ägyptische Helena. Richard Strauss (recording review)". The Opera Quarterly. 18 (4): 643–647. doi:10.1093/oq/18.4.643.
  94. ^ Horwitz, Jane. The Washington Post, December 16, 2008. P. C08.
  95. ^ [usurped]
  96. ^ "Helen of Troy Does Countertop Dancing by Margaret Atwood". Poemhunter.com. 20 January 2003. Retrieved 2014-03-13.
  97. ^ "Legends of Tomorrow Spoilers: "Helen Hunt"". DCLegendsTV. October 26, 2017. Retrieved November 14, 2017.
  98. ^ Burlingame, Russ. "'Legends of Tomorrow' Season Finale Will Feature Helen of Troy As An Amazon". comicbook.com. Retrieved 12 April 2018.
  99. ^ "'Troy: Fall Of A City': Bella Dayne, Louis Hunter & More Join BBC/Netflix Epic". Deadline. March 30, 2017. Retrieved April 1, 2017.

Additional references edit

Primary sources edit

  • Aristophanes, Lysistrata. For an English translation see the Perseus Project.
  • Cicero, De inventione II.1.1–2
  • Cypria, fragments 1, 9, and 10. For an English translation see the Medieval and Classical Literature Library.
  • Dio Chrysostom, Discourses. For an English translation, see Lacus Curtius.
  • Euripides, Helen. For an English translation, see the Perseus Project.
  • Euripides, Iphigenia in Aulis. For an English translation, see the Perseus project.
  • Euripides, Orestes. For an English translation, see the Perseus Project.
  • Herodotus, Histories, Book II. For an English translation, see the Perseus Project.
  • Hesiod, Catalogs of Women and Eoiae. For an English translation see the Medieval and Classical Literature Library.
  • Homer, Iliad, Book III; Odyssey, Books IV, and XXIII.
  • Hyginus, Fables. Translated in English by Mary Grant.
  • Isocrates, Helen. For an English translation, see the Perseus Project.
  • Servius, In Aeneida I.526, XI.262
  • Lactantius Placidus, Commentarii in Statii Thebaida I.21.
  • Little Iliad, fragment 13. For an English translation, see the Medieval and Classical Literature Library.
  • Ovid, Heroides, XVI.Paris Helenae. For an English translation, see the Perseus Project.
  • Pausanias, Description of Greece, Book III. For an English translation, see the Perseus Project.
  • Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca, Book III; Epitome.
  • Sappho, fragment 16.
  • Sextus Propertius, Elegies, 3.14. Translated in English by A.S. Kline.
  • Theocritus, Idylls, XVIII (The Epithalamium of Helen). Translated in English by J. M. Edmonds.
  • Virgil, Aeneid. Book VI. For an English translation see the Perseus Project.

Secondary sources edit

  • Allan, William (2008). "Introduction". Euripides: Helen. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-521-83690-6.
  • Anderson, Michael John (1997). "Further Directions". The Fall of Troy in early Greek Poetry and Art. Oxford University Press. ISBN 0-19-815064-4.
  • Blondell, Ruby (2013). Helen of Troy: Beauty, Myth, Devastation. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-973160-2.
  • Blondell, Ruby (2023). Helen of Troy in Hollywood. Princeton: Princeton University Press. ISBN 9780691229621.
  • Cairns, Francis (2006). "A Lighter Shade of Praise". Sextus Propertius. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-86457-7.
  • Calame, Claude (2001). "Chorus and Ritual". Choruses of Young Women in Ancient Greece (translated by Derek Collins and Janice Orion). Rowman & Littlefield. ISBN 0-7425-1525-7.
  • Caprino, Alexandra (1996). "Greek Mythology in Etruria". In Franklin Hall, John (ed.). Etruscan Italy. Indiana University Press. ISBN 0-8425-2334-0.
  • Chantraine, Pierre (2000). "Ἐλένη". Dictionnaire Étymologique de la Langue Gercque (in French). Klincksieck. ISBN 2-252-03277-4.
  • Cingano, Ettore (2005). "A Catalog within a Catalog: Helen's Suitors in the Hesiodic Catalog of Women". In Hunter, Richard L. (ed.). The Hesiodic Catalog of Women. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 0-521-83684-0.
  • Clader, Linda Lee (1976). Helen. Brill Archive. ISBN 90-04-04721-2.
  • Cyrino, Monica S. (2006). "Helen of Troy". In Winkler, Martin M. (ed.). Troy: from Homer's Iliad to Hollywood. Cambridge University Press. ISBN 1-4051-3182-9.
  • David, Benjamin (2005). "Narrative in Context". In Jenkens, Lawrence A. (ed.). Renaissance Siena. Truman State University. ISBN 1-931112-43-6.
  • Eaverly, Mary Ann (1995). "Geographical and Chronological Distribution". Archaic Greek Equestrian Sculpture. University of Michigan Press. ISBN 0-472-10351-2.
  • Edmunds, Lowell (May 2007). "Helen's Divine Origins". Electronic Antiquity: Communicating the Classics. X (2): 1–44. Retrieved 2009-07-07.
  • Frisk, Hjalmar (1960). "Ἐλένη". Griechisches Etymologisches Wörterbuch (in German). Vol. I. French & European Pubns.
  • Gantz, Timothy (2004). Early Greek Myth. Baltimore, MD and London: The Johns Hopkins University Press. ISBN 0-8018-5362-1.
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External links edit

helen, troy, other, uses, disambiguation, helen, sparta, redirects, here, play, helen, sparta, play, helen, helena, ancient, greek, Ἑλένη, romanized, helénē, pronounced, helénɛː, also, known, beautiful, helen, helen, argos, helen, sparta, figure, greek, mythol. For other uses see Helen of Troy disambiguation Helen of Sparta redirects here For the play see Helen of Sparta play Helen of Troy 2 3 4 Helen 5 Helena 6 Ancient Greek Ἑlenh romanized Helene pronounced helenɛː also known as beautiful Helen Helen of Argos or Helen of Sparta 7 was a figure in Greek mythology said to have been the most beautiful woman in the world She was believed to have been the daughter of Zeus and Leda and was the sister of Clytemnestra Castor and Pollux Philonoe Phoebe and Timandra She was married to King Menelaus of Sparta who became by her the father of Hermione and according to others of Nicostratus also 6 Her abduction by Paris of Troy was the most immediate cause of the Trojan War HelenQueen of SpartaMember of the TrojansRecovery of Helen by Menelaus Attic black figure amphora c 550 BCAbodeSparta modern day Sparta Greece Troy modern day Hisarlik Turkey Personal informationBornGreeceDiedSparta GreeceParentsZeusLeda or Nemesis 1 SiblingsPollux full brother Clytemnestra Castor Timandra Phoebe Philonoe and other children of Zeus half siblings ConsortMenelaus Paris DeiphobusOffspringAt least 5 including Hermione by MenelaosHermioneAethiolas disputed Nicostratus disputed Megapenthes disputed Pleisthenes disputed by ParisBunomusAganusIdaeusHelenElements of her putative biography come from classical authors such as Aristophanes Cicero Euripides and Homer in both the Iliad and the Odyssey Her story reappears in Book II of Virgil s Aeneid In her youth she was abducted by Theseus A competition between her suitors for her hand in marriage saw Menelaus emerge victorious All of her suitors were required to swear an oath known as the Oath of Tyndareus promising to provide military assistance to the winning suitor if Helen were ever stolen from him The obligations of the oath precipitated the Trojan War When she married Menelaus she was still very young whether her subsequent departure with Paris was an abduction or an elopement is ambiguous probably deliberately so The legends of Helen during her time in Troy are contradictory Homer depicts her ambivalently both regretful of her choice and sly in her attempts to redeem her public image Other accounts have a treacherous Helen who simulated Bacchic rites and rejoiced in the carnage she caused In some versions Helen doesn t arrive in Troy but instead waits out the war in Egypt 8 Ultimately Paris was killed in action and in Homer s account Helen was reunited with Menelaus though other versions of the legend recount her ascending to Olympus instead A cult associated with her developed in Hellenistic Laconia both at Sparta and elsewhere at Therapne she shared a shrine with Menelaus She was also worshiped in Attica and on Rhodes Helen boards a ship for Troy fresco from the House of the Tragic Poet in PompeiiHer beauty inspired artists of all times to represent her frequently as the personification of ideal human beauty Images of Helen start appearing in the 7th century BC In classical Greece her abduction by Paris or escape with him was a popular motif In medieval illustrations this event was frequently portrayed as a seduction whereas in Renaissance paintings it was usually depicted as a rape i e abduction by Paris a Christopher Marlowe s lines from his tragedy Doctor Faustus 1604 are frequently cited Was this the face that launched a thousand ships And burnt the topless towers of Ilium b Contents 1 Etymology 2 Prehistoric and mythological context 3 Family 4 Mythology 4 1 Birth 4 2 Youthful abduction by Theseus 4 3 Suitors 4 4 Oath of Tyndareus 4 5 Seduction or kidnapping by Paris 4 6 In Egypt 4 7 In Troy 4 8 During the Fall of Troy 4 9 Fate 5 Artistic representations 6 Cult 7 In popular culture 7 1 Pre modern 7 2 Modern 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Additional references 11 1 Primary sources 11 2 Secondary sources 12 External linksEtymology edit nbsp The Love of Helen and Paris by Jacques Louis David oil on canvas 1788 Louvre Paris The etymology of Helen s name continues to be a problem for scholars In the 1800s Georg Curtius related Helen Ἑlenh to the moon Selene Selhnh But two early dedications to Helen in the Laconian dialect of ancient Greek spell her name with an initial digamma Ϝ probably pronounced like a w which rules out any etymology originally starting with simple s 9 In the early 1900s Emile Boisacq considered Ἑlenh to derive from the well known noun ἑlenh meaning torch 10 It has also been suggested that the l of Ἑlenh arose from an original n and thus the etymology of the name would be connected with the root of Venus Linda Lee Clader however says that none of the above suggestions offers much satisfaction 11 e More recently Otto Skutsch has advanced the theory that the name Helen might have two separate etymologies which belong to different mythological figures respectively namely Sṷelena related to Sanskrit svaraṇa the shining one and Selena the first a Spartan goddess connected to one or the other natural light phenomenon especially St Elmo s fire and sister of the Dioscuri the other a vegetation goddess worshiped in Therapne as Ἑlena Dendrῖtis Helena of the Trees 14 Others have connected the name s etymology to a hypothetical Proto Indo European sun goddess noting the name s connection to the word for sun in various Indo European cultures 15 including the Greek proper word and god for the sun Helios 16 17 18 14 In particular her marriage myth may be connected to a broader Indo European marriage drama of the sun goddess and she is related to the divine twins just as many of these goddesses are 19 Martin L West has thus proposed that Helena mistress of sunlight may be constructed on the PIE suffix na mistress of connoting a deity controlling a natural element 20 Prehistoric and mythological context edit nbsp Map of Homeric Greece Menelaus and Helen reign over LaconiaHelen first appears in the poems of Homer after which she became a popular figure in Greek literature These works are set in the final years of the Age of Heroes a mythological era which features prominently in the canon of Greek myth Because the Homeric poems are known to have been transmitted orally before being written down some scholars speculate that such stories were passed down from earlier Mycenaean Greek tradition and that the Age of Heroes may itself reflect a mythologized memory of that era 21 Recent archaeological excavations in Greece suggest that modern day Laconia was a distinct territory in the Late Bronze Age while the poets narrate that it was a rich kingdom Archaeologists have unsuccessfully looked for a Mycenaean palatial complex buried beneath present day Sparta 22 Modern findings suggest the area around Menelaion in the southern part of the Eurotas valley seems to have been the center of Mycenaean Laconia 23 Family editHelen and Menelaus had a daughter Hermione Different sources say she was also the mother of one or plus sons named Aethiolas Nicostratus Megapenthes and Pleisthenes but according to others these were instead illegitimate children of Menelaus and various lovers Helen and Paris had three sons Bunomus Aganus Idaeus and a daughter also called Helen 24 The three sons died during the Trojan War when an earthquake caused the roof of the room where they slept to collapse Helen was instead killed by her paternal grandmother Hecuba just after the fall of the city the woman mad with pain killed the little girl to take revenge for the misfortune brought by her mother Mythology editBirth edit nbsp Leda and the Swan by Cesare da Sesto c 1506 1510 Wilton The artist has been intrigued by the idea of Helen s unconventional birth she and Clytemnestra are shown emerging from one egg Castor and Pollux from another nbsp Helen of Troy wearing a pileusIn most sources including the Iliad and the Odyssey Helen is the daughter of Zeus and of Leda the wife of the Spartan king Tyndareus 25 Euripides play Helen written in the late 5th century BC is the earliest source to report the most familiar account of Helen s birth that although her putative father was Tyndareus she was actually Zeus daughter In the form of a swan the king of gods was chased by an eagle and sought refuge with Leda The swan gained her affection and the two mated Leda then produced an egg from which Helen emerged 26 The First Vatican Mythographer introduces the notion that two eggs came from the union one containing Castor and Pollux one with Helen and Clytemnestra Nevertheless the same author earlier states that Helen Castor and Pollux were produced from a single egg 27 Fabius Planciades Fulgentius also states that Helen Castor and Pollux are born from the same egg 28 Pseudo Apollodorus states that Leda had intercourse with both Zeus and Tyndareus the night she conceived Helen 29 On the other hand in the Cypria part of the Epic Cycle Helen was the daughter of Zeus and the goddess Nemesis 1 The date of the Cypria is uncertain but it is generally thought to preserve traditions that date back to at least the 7th century BC In the Cypria Nemesis did not wish to mate with Zeus She therefore changed shape into various animals as she attempted to flee Zeus finally becoming a goose Zeus also transformed himself into a goose and raped Nemesis who produced an egg from which Helen was born 30 Presumably in the Cypria this egg was somehow transferred to Leda f Later sources state either that it was brought to Leda by a shepherd who discovered it in a grove in Attica or that it was dropped into her lap by Hermes 31 Asclepiades of Tragilos and Pseudo Eratosthenes related a similar story except that Zeus and Nemesis became swans instead of geese 32 Timothy Gantz has suggested that the tradition that Zeus came to Leda in the form of a swan derives from the version in which Zeus and Nemesis transformed into birds 33 Pausanias states that in the middle of the 2nd century AD the remains of an egg shell tied up in ribbons were still suspended from the roof of a temple on the Spartan acropolis People believed that this was the famous egg that legend says Leda brought forth Pausanias traveled to Sparta to visit the sanctuary dedicated to Hilaeira and Phoebe in order to see the relic for himself 34 Pausanias also says that there was a local tradition that Helen s brothers the Dioscuri i e Castor and Pollux were born on the island of Pefnos adding that the Spartan poet Alcman also said this 35 while the poet Lycophron s use of the adjective Pephnaian Pefnaias in association with Helen suggests that Lycophron may have known a tradition which held that Helen was also born on the island 36 Youthful abduction by Theseus edit nbsp Theseus pursuing a woman probably Helen Side A from an Attic red figure bell krater c 440 430 BC Louvre Paris Two Athenians Theseus and Pirithous thought that since they were sons of gods they should have divine wives they thus pledged to help each other abduct two daughters of Zeus Theseus chose Helen and Pirithous vowed to marry Persephone the wife of Hades Theseus took Helen and left her with his mother Aethra or his associate Aphidnus at Aphidnae or Athens Theseus and Pirithous then traveled to the underworld the domain of Hades to kidnap Persephone Hades pretended to offer them hospitality and set a feast but as soon as the pair sat down snakes coiled around their feet and held them there Helen s abduction caused an invasion of Athens by Castor and Pollux who captured Aethra in revenge and returned their sister to Sparta 37 In Goethe s Faust Centaur Chiron is said to have aided the Dioscuri brothers in returning Helen home In most accounts of this event Helen was quite young Hellanicus of Lesbos said she was seven years old and Diodorus makes her ten years old 38 On the other hand Stesichorus said that Iphigenia was the daughter of Theseus and Helen which implies that Helen was of childbearing age 39 In most sources Iphigenia is the daughter of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra but Duris of Samos and other writers followed Stesichorus account 40 Ovid s Heroides give us an idea of how ancient and in particular Roman authors imagined Helen in her youth she is presented as a young princess wrestling naked in the palaestra alluding to a part of girls physical education in classical not Mycenaean Sparta Sextus Propertius imagines Helen as a girl who practices arms and hunts with her brothers 41 or like Helen on the sands of Eurotas between Castor and Pollux one to be victor in boxing the other with horses with naked breasts she carried weapons they say and did not blush with her divine brothers there Suitors edit Main article Suitors of Helen nbsp In this painting by Maarten van Heemskerck Helen queen of the Greek city state Sparta is abducted by Paris a prince of Troy in Asia Minor 42 The Walters Art Museum When it was time for Helen to marry many kings and princes from around the world came to seek her hand bringing rich gifts with them or sent emissaries to do so on their behalf During the contest Castor and Pollux had a prominent role in dealing with the suitors although the final decision was in the hands of Tyndareus 43 Menelaus her future husband did not attend but sent his brother Agamemnon to represent him Oath of Tyndareus edit Tyndareus was afraid to select a husband for his daughter or send any of the suitors away for fear of offending them and giving grounds for a quarrel Odysseus was one of the suitors but had brought no gifts because he believed he had little chance to win the contest He thus promised to solve the problem if Tyndareus in turn would support him in his courting of Penelope the daughter of Icarius Tyndareus readily agreed and Odysseus proposed that before the decision was made all the suitors should swear a most solemn oath to defend the chosen husband against whoever should quarrel with him After the suitors had sworn not to retaliate Menelaus was chosen to be Helen s husband As a sign of the importance of the pact Tyndareus sacrificed a horse 44 Helen and Menelaus became rulers of Sparta after Tyndareus and Leda abdicated Menelaus and Helen rule in Sparta for at least ten years they have a daughter Hermione and according to some myths three sons Aethiolas Maraphius and Pleisthenes The marriage of Helen and Menelaus marks the beginning of the end of the age of heroes Concluding the catalog of Helen s suitors Hesiod reports Zeus plan to obliterate the race of men and the heroes in particular The Trojan War caused by Helen s elopement with Paris is going to be his means to this end 45 Seduction or kidnapping by Paris edit See also Judgement of Paris nbsp Meeting between Paris and Helen Antique fresco in Pompeii the House of the Golden CupidsParis a Trojan prince came to Sparta to claim Helen in the guise of a supposed diplomatic mission Before this journey Paris had been appointed by Zeus to judge the most beautiful goddess Hera Athena or Aphrodite In order to earn his favour Aphrodite promised Paris the most beautiful woman in the world Swayed by Aphrodite s offer Paris chose her as the most beautiful of the goddesses earning the wrath of Athena and Hera Although Helen is sometimes depicted as being raped by Paris Ancient Greek sources are often elliptical and contradictory Herodotus states that Helen was abducted but the Cypria simply mentions that after giving Helen gifts Aphrodite brings the Spartan queen together with the Prince of Troy 46 Sappho argues that Helen willingly left behind Menelaus and their nine year old daughter Hermione to be with Paris Some say a host of horsemen others of infantry and others of ships is the most beautiful thing on the dark earth but I say it is what you love Full easy it is to make this understood of one and all for she that far surpassed all mortals in beauty Helen her most noble husband Deserted and went sailing to Troy with never a thought for her daughter and dear parents Sappho fragment 16 Voigt 47 Dio Chrysostom gives a completely different account of the story questioning Homer s credibility after Agamemnon had married Helen s sister Clytemnestra Tyndareus sought Helen s hand for Menelaus for political reasons However Helen was sought by many suitors who came from far and near among them Paris who surpassed all the others and won the favor of Tyndareus and his sons Thus he won her fairly and took her away to Troia with the full consent of her natural protectors 48 Cypria narrate that in just three days Paris and Helen reached Troy Homer narrates that during a brief stop over in the small island of Kranai according to Iliad the two lovers consummated their passion On the other hand Cypria note that this happened the night before they left Sparta 49 nbsp The Abduction of Helen painting by Girolamo Genga circa 1510 Musee des Beaux Arts de Strasbourg nbsp In western painting Helen s journey to Troy is usually depicted as a forced abduction The Rape of Helen by Francesco Primaticcio c 1530 1539 Bowes Museum is representative of this tradition nbsp In Guido Reni s painting 1631 Louvre Paris however Paris holds Helen by her wrist as he already did in Genga s painting shown here on the left and leave together for Troia nbsp The Rape of Helen by Tintoretto 1578 1579 Museo del Prado Madrid Helen languishes in the corner of a land sea battle scene 50 nbsp El Juicio de Paris by Enrique Simonet c 1904 This painting depicts Paris judgement He is inspecting Aphrodite who is standing naked before him Hera and Athena watch nearby In Egypt edit At least three Ancient Greek authors denied that Helen ever went to Troy instead they suggested Helen stayed in Egypt during the duration of the Trojan War Those three authors are Euripides Stesichorus and Herodotus 51 52 In the version put forth by Euripides in his play Helen Hera fashioned a likeness of Helen eidolon eἴdwlon out of clouds at Zeus request Hermes took her to Egypt and Helen never went to Troy instead spending the entire war in Egypt Eidolon is also present in Stesichorus account but not in Herodotus rationalizing version of the myth In addition to these accounts Lycophron 822 states that Hesiod was the first to mention Helen s eidolon 53 This statement may mean Hesiod stated this in a literary work or that the idea was widely known circulated in early archaic Greece during the time of Hesiod and was consequently attributed to him 53 Herodotus adds weight to the Egyptian version of events by putting forward his own evidence he traveled to Egypt and interviewed the priests of the temple Foreign Aphrodite 3einh Ἀfrodith at Memphis According to these priests Helen had arrived in Egypt shortly after leaving Sparta because strong winds had blown Paris s ship off course King Proteus of Egypt appalled that Paris had seduced his host s wife and plundered his host s home in Sparta disallowed Paris from taking Helen to Troy Paris returned to Troy without a new bride but the Greeks refused to believe that Helen was in Egypt and not within Troy s walls Thus Helen waited in Memphis for ten years while the Greeks and the Trojans fought Following the conclusion of the Trojan War Menelaus sailed to Memphis where Proteus reunited him with Helen 54 In Troy edit When he discovered that his wife was missing Menelaus called upon all the other suitors to fulfill their oaths thus beginning the Trojan War The Greek fleet gathered in Aulis but the ships could not sail for lack of wind Artemis was enraged by a sacrilege and only the sacrifice of Agamemnon s daughter Iphigenia could appease her In Euripides Iphigenia in Aulis Clytemnestra Iphigenia s mother and Helen s sister begs her husband to reconsider his decision calling Helen a wicked woman Clytemnestra tries to warn Agamemnon that sacrificing Iphigenia for Helen s sake is buying what we most detest with what we hold most dear 55 56 nbsp Helen on the Ramparts of Troy was a popular theme in the late 19th century art seen here a depiction by Frederick Leighton nbsp In a similar fashion to Leighton Gustave Moreau depicts an expressionless Helen a blank or anguished face nbsp Lithographic illustration by Walter Crane nbsp Paul Dujardin after Gustave Moreau Helene photogravure 1880Before the opening of hostilities the Greeks dispatched a delegation to the Trojans under Odysseus and Menelaus they endeavored without success to persuade Priam to hand Helen back A popular theme The Request of Helen Helenes Apaitesis Ἑlenhs Ἀpaithsis was the subject of a drama by Sophocles now lost g 57 Homer paints a poignant lonely picture of Helen in Troy She is filled with self loathing and regret for what she has caused by the end of the war the Trojans have come to hate her When Hector dies she is the third mourner at his funeral and she says that of all the Trojans Hector and Priam alone were always kind to her 58 59 Wherefore I wail alike for thee and for my hapless self with grief at heart for no longer have I anyone beside in broad Troy that is gentle to me or kind but all men shudder at me 60 These bitter words reveal that Helen gradually realized Paris weaknesses and decided to ally herself with Hector There is an affectionate relationship between the two and Helen has harsh words for Paris when she compares the two brothers 59 61 Howbeit seeing the gods thus ordained these ills would that I had been wife to a better man that could feel the indignation of his fellows and their many revilings But come now enter in and sit thee upon this chair my brother since above all others has trouble encompassed thy heart because of shameless me and the folly of Alexander 62 58 After Paris was killed in combat there was some dispute among the Trojans about which of Priam s surviving sons she should remarry Helenus or Deiphobus but she was given to the latter During the Fall of Troy edit nbsp Helen and Menelaus Menelaus intends to strike Helen captivated by her beauty he drops his sword A flying Eros and Aphrodite on the left watch the scene Detail of an Attic red figure krater c 450 440 BC Paris Louvre nbsp Menelaus captures Helen in Troy Ajax the Lesser drags Cassandra from Palladium before eyes of Priam fresco from the Casa del Menandro PompeiiDuring the fall of Troy Helen s role is ambiguous In Virgil s Aeneid Deiphobus gives an account of Helen s treacherous stance when the Trojan Horse was admitted into the city she feigned Bacchic rites leading a chorus of Trojan women and holding a torch among them she signaled to the Greeks from the city s central tower In the Odyssey however Homer narrates a different story Helen circled the Horse three times and she imitated the voices of the Greek women left behind at home she thus tortured the men inside including Odysseus and Menelaus with the memory of their loved ones and brought them to the brink of destruction 63 After the deaths of Hector and Paris Helen became the paramour of their younger brother Deiphobus but when the sack of Troy began she hid her new husband s sword and left him to the mercy of Menelaus and Odysseus In Aeneid Aeneas meets the mutilated Deiphobus in Hades his wounds serve as a testimony to his ignominious end abetted by Helen s final act of treachery 64 However Helen s portraits in Troy seem to contradict each other From one side we read about the treacherous Helen who simulated Bacchic rites and rejoiced over the carnage of Trojans On the other hand there is another Helen lonely and helpless desperate to find sanctuary while Troy is on fire Stesichorus narrates that both Greeks and Trojans gathered to stone her to death 65 When Menelaus finally found her he raised his sword to kill her He had demanded that only he should slay his unfaithful wife but when he was ready to do so she dropped her robe from her shoulders and the sight of her beauty caused him to let the sword drop from his hand h Electra wails 66 Alas for my troubles Can it be that her beauty has blunted their swords Fate edit Helen returned to Sparta and lived with Menelaus where she was encountered by Telemachus in Book 4 of The Odyssey As depicted in that account she and Menelaus were completely reconciled and had a harmonious married life he holding no grudge at her having run away with a lover and she feeling no restraint in telling anecdotes of her life inside besieged Troy According to another version used by Euripides in his play Orestes Helen had been saved by Apollo from Orestes 67 and was taken up to Mount Olympus almost immediately after Menelaus return A curious fate is recounted by Pausanias the geographer 3 19 11 13 which has Helen share the afterlife with Achilles 68 Pausanias also has another story 3 19 9 10 The account of the Rhodians is different They say that when Menelaus was dead and Orestes still a wanderer Helen was driven out by Nicostratus and Megapenthes and came to Rhodes where she had a friend in Polyxo the wife of Tlepolemus For Polyxo they say was an Argive by descent and when she was already married to Tlepolemus shared his flight to Rhodes At the time she was queen of the island having been left with an orphan boy They say that this Polyxo desired to avenge the death of Tlepolemus on Helen now that she had her in her power So she sent against her when she was bathing handmaidens dressed up as Furies who seized Helen and hanged her on a tree and for this reason the Rhodians have a sanctuary of Helen of the Tree 69 There are other traditions concerning the punishment of Helen For example she is offered as a sacrifice to the gods in Tauris by Iphigeneia or Thetis enraged when Achilles dies because of Helen kills her on her return journey 70 Tlepolemus was a son of Heracles and Astyoche Astyoche was a daughter of Phylas King of Ephyra who was killed by Heracles Tlepolemus was killed by Sarpedon on the first day of fighting in the Iliad Nicostratus was a son of Menelaus by his concubine Pieris an Aetolian slave Megapenthes was a son of Menelaus by his concubine Tereis no further origin In Euripides s tragedy The Trojan Women Helen is shunned by the women who survived the war and is to be taken back to Greece to face a death sentence This version is contradicted by two of Euripides other tragedies Electra which predates The Trojan Women and Helen as Helen is described as being in Egypt during the events of the Trojan War in each Artistic representations edit nbsp Zeuxis et les Filles de Crotone Francois Andre Vincent 1789 Paris Louvre The scene tells the story of the painter Zeuxis who was commissioned to produce a picture of Helen for the temple of Hera at Agrigentum Sicily To realize his task Zeuxis chose the five most beautiful maidens in the region 71 From Antiquity depicting Helen would be a remarkable challenge The story of Zeuxis deals with this exact question how would an artist immortalize ideal beauty 72 He eventually selected the best features from five virgins The ancient world starts to paint Helen s picture or inscribe her form on stone clay and bronze by the 7th century BC 73 Dares Phrygius describes Helen in his History of the Fall of Troy She was beautiful ingenuous and charming Her legs were the best her mouth the cutest There was a beauty mark between her eyebrows 74 Helen is frequently depicted on Athenian vases as being threatened by Menelaus and fleeing from him This is not the case however in Laconic art on an Archaic stele depicting Helen s recovery after the fall of Troy Menelaus is armed with a sword but Helen faces him boldly looking directly into his eyes and in other works of Peloponnesian art Helen is shown carrying a wreath while Menelaus holds his sword aloft vertically In contrast on Athenian vases of c 550 470 Menelaus threateningly points his sword at her 75 nbsp Antique fresco depicting Helen and Menelaus from the Casa dell Efebo PompeiiThe abduction by Paris was another popular motif in ancient Greek vase painting definitely more popular than the kidnapping by Theseus In a famous representation by the Athenian vase painter Makron Helen follows Paris like a bride following a bridegroom her wrist grasped by Paris hand 76 The Etruscans who had a sophisticated knowledge of Greek mythology demonstrated a particular interest in the theme of the delivery of Helen s egg which is depicted in relief mirrors 77 In Renaissance painting Helen s departure from Sparta is usually depicted as a scene of forcible removal rape by Paris This is not however the case with certain secular medieval illustrations Artists of the 1460s and 1470s were influenced by Guido delle Colonne s Historia destructionis Troiae where Helen s abduction was portrayed as a scene of seduction In the Florentine Picture Chronicle Paris and Helen are shown departing arm in arm while their marriage was depicted into Franco Flemish tapestry 78 In Christopher Marlowe s Doctor Faustus 1604 Faust conjures the shade of Helen Upon seeing Helen Faustus speaks the famous line Was this the face that launch d a thousand ships And burnt the topless towers of Ilium Act V Scene I Helen is also conjured by Faust in Goethe s Faust In William Shakespeare s play Troilus and Cressida Helen is a minor character who adores Troilus In Pre Raphaelite art Helen is often shown with shining curly hair and ringlets Other painters of the same period depict Helen on the ramparts of Troy and focus on her expression her face is expressionless blank inscrutable 79 In Gustave Moreau s painting Helen will finally become faceless a blank eidolon in the middle of Troy s ruins Cult editThe major centers of Helen s cult were in Laconia At Sparta the urban sanctuary of Helen was located near the Platanistas so called for the plane trees planted there Ancient sources associate Helen with gymnastic exercises or and choral dances of maidens near the Evrotas River This practice is referenced in the closing lines of Lysistrata where Helen is said to be the pure and proper leader of the dancing Spartan women Theocritus conjures the song epithalamium Spartan women sung at Platanistas commemorating the marriage of Helen and Menelaus 80 We first a crown of low growing lotus having woven will place it on a shady plane tree First from a silver oil flask soft oil drawing we will let it drip beneath the shady plane tree Letters will be carved in the bark so that someone passing by may read in Doric Reverence me I am Helen s tree Helen s worship was also present on the opposite bank of Eurotas at Therapne where she shared a shrine with Menelaus and the Dioscuri The shrine has been known as Menelaion the shrine of Menelaus and it was believed to be the spot where Helen was buried alongside Menelaus Despite its name both the shrine and the cult originally belonged to Helen Menelaus was added later as her husband 81 In addition there was a festival at the town which was called Meneleaeia Menelaeia in honour of Menelaus and Helen 82 Isocrates writes that at Therapne Helen and Menelaus were worshiped as gods and not as heroes Clader argues that if indeed Helen was worshiped as a goddess at Therapne then her powers should be largely concerned with fertility 83 or as a solar deity 84 There is also evidence for Helen s cult in Hellenistic Sparta rules for those sacrificing and holding feasts in their honor are extant 85 Helen was also worshiped in Attica along with her brothers and on Rhodes as Helen Dendritis Helen of the Trees Elena Dendrῖtis she was a vegetation or a fertility goddess i Martin P Nilsson has argued that the cult in Rhodes has its roots to the Minoan pre Greek era when Helen was allegedly worshiped as a vegetation goddess 86 Claude Calame and other scholars try to analyze the affinity between the cults of Helen and Artemis Orthia pointing out the resemblance of the terracotta female figurines offered to both deities 87 In popular culture editPre modern edit nbsp Christopher Marlowe s this 1585 portrait is disputed play The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus 1604 is the source of the famous quote Was this the face that launched a thousand ships And burnt the topless towers of Ilium 88 although the line is ultimately derived from a quotation in Lucian s Dialogues of the Dead 88 89 Helen frequently appeared in Athenian comedies of the fifth century BC as a caricature of Pericles s mistress Aspasia 90 In Hellenistic times she was associated with the moon 90 due to the similarity of her name to the Greek word Selhnh Selene meaning Moon goddess of the moon 90 One Pythagorean source claimed that Helen had originally come from a colony on the moon 90 where people were larger stronger and fifteen times more beautiful than ordinary mortals 90 She is one of the eponymous women the tragedy The Trojan Women produced in 415 BC by the Greek playwright Euripides Dio Chrysostom absolved Helen of guilt for the Trojan War by making Paris her first original husband and claiming that the Greeks started the war out of jealousy 90 Virgil in his Aeneid makes Aeneas the one to spare Helen s life rather than Menelaus 90 and instead portrays the act as a lofty example of self control 90 Meanwhile Virgil also makes Helen more vicious by having her betray her own husband Deiphobos and give him over to Menelaus as a peace offering 90 The satirist Lucian of Samosata features Helen in his famous Dialogues of the Dead in which he portrays her deceased spirit as aged and withered 90 In the early Middle Ages after the rise of Christianity Helen was seen as a pagan equivalent to Eve from the Book of Genesis 90 Helen was so beloved by early medieval Christians that she even took on some of the roles of the Virgin Mary 90 Modern edit During the Renaissance the French poet Pierre de Ronsard wrote 142 sonnets addressed to a woman named Helene de Surgeres 90 in which he declared her to be the true French Helen rather than the lie of the Greeks 90 Helen appears in various versions of the Faust myth including Christopher Marlowe s 1604 play The Tragical History of Doctor Faustus in which Faustus famously marvels Was this the face that launched a thousand ships And burnt the topless towers of Ilium upon seeing a demon impersonating Helen 88 The line which is frequently quoted out of context 88 90 is a paraphrase of a statement from Lucian s Dialogues of the Dead 89 88 It is debated whether the phrase conveys astonishment at Helen s beauty 88 or disappointment that she is not more beautiful 88 The German poet and polymath Johann Wolfgang von Goethe re envisioned the meeting of Faust and Helen In Faust The Second Part of the Tragedy the union of Helen and Faust becomes a complex allegory of the meeting of the classical ideal and modern worlds In 1803 when French zoologist Francois Marie Daudin was to name a new species of beautifully colored snake the trinket snake Coelognathus helena he chose the specific name helena in reference to Helen of Troy 91 nbsp Helen of Troy by Evelyn De Morgan 1898 London Helen admiringly displays a lock of her hair as she gazes into a mirror decorated with the nude Aphrodite In 1864 Paris saw the premiere of the operetta La belle Helene by Jacques Offenbach Helen of Troy is a minor character in the opera Mefistofele by Arrigo Boito which received its premiere in Milan in 1868 In 1881 Oscar Wilde published a poem entitled The New Helen 90 in which he declared his friend Lillie Langtry to be the reincarnation of Helen of Troy 90 Wilde portrays this new Helen as the antithesis of the Virgin Mary 90 but endows her with the characteristics of Jesus Christ himself 90 The Irish poet William Butler Yeats compared Helen to his muse Maude Gonne in his 1916 poem No Second Troy 92 The anthology The Dark Tower by C S Lewis includes a fragment entitled After Ten Years In Egypt after the Trojan War Menelaus is allowed to choose between the real disappointing Helen and an ideal Helen conjured by Egyptian magicians The English Pre Raphaelite painter Evelyn De Morgan portrayed a sexually assertive Helen in her 1898 painting Helen of Troy 90 Salvador Dali was obsessed with Helen of Troy from childhood 90 and saw his wife Gala Dali and the surrealist character Gradiva as the embodiments of Helen 90 He dedicates his autobiography Diary of a Genius to my genius Gala Gradiva Helen of Troy Saint Helen Gala Galatea Placida 90 Minor planet 101 Helena discovered by James Craig Watson in 1868 is named after Helen of Troy John Erskine s 1925 bestselling novel The Private Life of Helen of Troy portrayed Helen as a sensible bourgeois heroine 90 but the 1927 silent film of the same name directed by Alexander Korda transformed Helen into a shopaholic fashion maven 90 In 1928 Richard Strauss wrote the German opera Die agyptische Helena The Egyptian Helena which is the story of Helen and Menelaus s troubles when they are marooned on a mythical island 93 The 1938 short story Helen O Loy written by Lester del Rey details the creation of a synthetic woman by two mechanics The title is wordplay that combines Helen of Troy with alloy The 1951 Swedish film Skona Helena is an adapted version of Offenbach s operetta starring Max Hansen and Eva Dahlbeck In 1956 a Franco British epic titled Helen of Troy was released directed by Oscar winning director Robert Wise and starring Italian actress Rossana Podesta in the title role It was filmed in Italy and featured well known British character actors such as Harry Andrews Cedric Hardwicke and Torin Thatcher in supporting roles The 1971 film The Trojan Women was an adaptation of the play by Euripides in which Irene Papas portrayed a non blonde Helen of Troy In the 1998 TV series Hercules Helen appears as a supporting character at Prometheus Academy as a student Helen is caring and enthusiastic She was the most popular girl in the academy and Adonis girlfriend Helen tries her best to keep Adonis from behaving stupidly but mostly fails She likes Hercules but as a friend She is a princess as in the myth but is not a half sister of Hercules in the series She was voiced by Jodi Benson A 2003 television version of Helen s life up to the fall of Troy Helen of Troy in which she was played by Sienna Guillory In this version Helen is depicted as unhappy in her marriage and willingly runs away with Paris with whom she has fallen in love but still returns to Menelaus after Paris dies and Troy falls Helen was portrayed by Diane Kruger in the 2004 film Troy In this adaptation as in the 2003 television version she is unhappily married to Menelaus and willingly leaves with Paris whom she loves However in this version she does not return to Sparta with Menelaus who is killed by Hector but escapes Troy with Paris and other survivors when the city falls Jacob M Appel s 2008 play Helen of Sparta retells Homer s Iliad from Helen s point of view 94 Inspired by the line Was this the face that launched a thousand ships from Marlowe s Faustus Isaac Asimov jocularly coined the unit millihelen to mean the amount of beauty that can launch one ship 95 Canadian novelist and poet Margaret Atwood re envisioned the myth of Helen in modern feminist guise in her poem Helen of Troy Does Countertop Dancing 96 In the Legends of Tomorrow episode Helen Hunt Helen is portrayed by Israeli American model and actress Bar Paly In the episode Helen is an anachronism appearing in 1930s Hollywood She lands a job as an actress and unintentionally starts a war between two film studios The Legends travel to the 1930s and try to get Helen back to the Bronze Age She regretfully goes along telling the team she wishes to stay away After analyzing historical records of her impact on history Zari Tomaz finds the best time to take her away from the fighting of her time and takes her to Themyscira 97 Helen reappears in the season three finale The Good the Bad and the Cuddly as an Amazon warrior who assists the Legends in defeating the demon Mallus s army 98 In the 2018 TV miniseries Troy Fall of a City Helen was portrayed by Bella Dayne 99 Pop singer songwriter Al Stewart released a song called Helen and Cassandra on the reissue of his 1988 album Last Days of the Century In it he addresses many aspects of the Helen myth and contrasts her with the seer Cassandra Indie pop singer Lorde released a song called Helen of Troy for the deluxe version of her 2021 album Solar Power See also editAstyanassa Simon Magus and HelenNotes edit Interchangeable usage of the terms rape and elope often lends ambiguity to the legend example needed However the meeting with Helen in Marlowe s play and the ensuing temptation are not unambiguously positive since they are closely followed by Faust s death and descent to Hell The name of Helen as worshipped at Sparta and Therapne began with a digamma On the other hand at Corinth there is evidence of Helen without a digamma Skutsch Helen 189 f and passim suggests that we have to make do with two different names two different mythological Helens Compare Proto Indo European sa e wol whence Greek helios Latin sol Sanskrit suryah ultimately from sawel to shine The relation with Selene is quite possible If the name has an Indo European etymology it is possibly a suffixed form of a Proto Indo European root wel to turn roll 12 or from that root s sense to cover enclose compare the theonyms Varuna Veles citation needed or of sel to flow run citation needed The latter possibility would allow comparison to the Vedic Sanskrit Saraṇyu a character who is abducted in Rigveda 10 17 2 This parallel is suggestive of a Proto Indo European abduction myth Saraṇyu means swift and is derived from the adjective saraṇa running swift the feminine of which is saraṇa this is in every sound cognate with Ἑlena the form of her name that has no initial digamma c The possible connection of Helen s name to ἑlenh torch as noted above may also support the relationship of her name to Vedic svarana the shining one d 13 In the 5th century comedy Nemesis by Cratinus Leda was told to sit on an egg so that it would hatch and this is no doubt the egg that was produced by Nemesis Cratinus fr 115 PCG Gantz Early Greek Myth ibid Ancient writers do not agree on whether the embassy was dispatched before the gathering of the Greek army in Aulis or after it reached Tenedos or Troia In Herodotus account the Trojans swore to the Greek envoys that Helen was in Egypt not in Troy but the Greeks did not believe them and laid siege to the city until they took it Cypria fr 1 Herodotus Histories II 118 2 4 Homer Iliad III 205 Pseudo Appolodorus Epitome 28 29 According to the ancient writers it was the sight of Helen s face or breasts that made Menelaus drop his sword See inter alia Aristophanes Lysistrata 155 Little Iliad fr 13 EGF Maguire Helen of Troy 52 A shared cult of Helen and her brothers in Attica is alluded to in Euripides Helen 1666 1669 See also Edmunds Helen s Divine Origins 26 29 Concerning Helen Dendritis Gumpert Grafting Helen 96 and Skutsch Helen 109 support that she was a vegetation goddess Meagher The Meaning of Helen 43 f argues that her cult in Rhodes reflects an ancient fertility ritual associated with Helen not only on Rhodes but also at Dendra near Sparta Edmunds Helen s Divine Origins 18 notes that it is unclear what an ancient tree cult might be References edit a b Cypria fr 9 PEG Galt John ed 1837 The Complete Works of Lord Byron Paris Baudry s European Library p 553 Lang Andrew 1892 Helen of Troy Library of Alexandria p Title page ISBN 978 1465600868 Name made popular by the 1956 film Helen of Troy by Warner Bros directed by Robert Wise Coleridge Edward P 1910 The Plays of Euripides Vol 1 London G Bell and Sons Limited p 319 ark 13960 t6tx37b16 a b Smith William ed 1870 A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology Vol 2 Boston Little Brown and Company p 370 ark 13960 t9f47mp93 Benjamin S G W 1880 Troy Its Legend History and Literature C Scribner s sons p v Way Authur 1930 Euripides Vol 1 Londo amp New York William Heinemann G P Putnam s Sons p 463 ark 13960 t2v41093b West M L 2007 Indo European Poetry and Myth OUP Oxford p 231 ISBN 978 0 19 928075 9 ἑlenh Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project Clader Helen 63 f Skutsch Helen 191 The American Heritage Dictionary Indo European roots wel Scutsch Helen 190 ff a b Skutsch Otto Helen her Name and Nature In Journal of Hellenic Studies 107 1987 pp 188 193 Meagher Robert E 2002 The Meaning of Helen In Search of an Ancient Icon Bolchazy Carducci Publishers pp 46ff ISBN 978 0 86516 510 6 Mallory J P Adams D Q Encyclopedia of Indo European Culture Fitzroy Dearborn Publishers 1997 ISBN 1 884964 98 2 p 164 Euripides Robert E Meagher Helen Univ of Massachusetts Press 1986 O Brien Steven Dioscuric Elements in Celtic and Germanic Mythology Journal of Indo European Studies 10 1 amp 2 Spring Summer 1982 117 136 Jackson Peter 2002 Light from Distant Asterisks Towards a Description of the Indo European Religious Heritage Numen 49 1 61 102 doi 10 1163 15685270252772777 ISSN 0029 5973 JSTOR 3270472 West M L 2007 Indo European Poetry and Myth OUP Oxford p 137 ISBN 978 0 19 928075 9 Meagher The Meaning of Helen 11 18 Thompson The Trojan War 20 Hughes Helen of Troy 29 Banou Emilia 2009 The Mycenaean Presence in the Southeastern Eurotas Valley Vouno Panagias and Ayios Georgios British School at Athens Studies British School at Athens 16 77 84 JSTOR 40960624 Retrieved January 16 2023 Graves Robert 2017 The Greek Myths The Complete and Definitive Edition Penguin Books Limited p 637 ISBN 9780241983386 Homer Iliad III 199 418 426 Odyssey IV 184 219 XXIII 218 Gantz Early Greek Myth 318 9 Euripides Helen 16 21 Archived 2016 04 10 at the Wayback Machine 257 59 Archived 2016 04 10 at the Wayback Machine First Vatican Mythographer VM I 204 Gantz Early Greek Myth 320 321 Hughes Helen of Troy 350 Moser A Cosmos of Desire 443 444 Whitbread Leslie George 1972 Fulgentius the Mythographer Ohio State University Press p 78 ISBN 9780814201626 Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca III 10 7 Archived 2016 04 10 at the Wayback Machine Athenaeus 8 334b d quoting the Cypria Cypria fr 10 PEG Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca III 10 7 Archived 2016 04 10 at the Wayback Machine Hard amp Rose The Roudledge Handbook 438 439 Asclepiades 12F11 Pseudo Eratosthenes Catast 25 Gantz Early Greek Myth ibid Pausanias 3 16 1 Hughes Helen of Troy 26 27 Pausanias 3 26 2 Hornblower p 142 Lycophron 87 The most complete accounts of this narrative are given by Apollodorus Diodorus 4 63 1 3 and Plutarch Theseus 31 34 For a collection of ancient sources narrating Helen s abduction by Theseus see Hughes Helen 357 Mills Theseus 7 8 Hellanicus 4F134 Diodorus Siculus 4 63 1 3 Stesichorus fr 191 PMG Gantz pp 289 291 Ovid Heroides 16 149 152 Propertius 3 14 Cairns Sextus Propertius 421 422 Hughes Helen of Troy 60 Pomeroy Spartan Women 28 In the Roman period because Sparta was a destination for tourists the characteristics that made Sparta distinctive were emphasized The athleticism of women was exaggerated Panorama with the Abduction of Helen Amidst the Wonders of the Ancient World The Walters Art Museum In the Hesiodic Catalogue of Women fr 198 7 8 and 199 0 1 they are the recipients of the bridal presents For further details see A Catalog within a Catalog 133 135 Hesiod Catalogs of Women and Eoiae fr 204 Hyginus Fables 78 Pausanias 3 20 9 Apollodorus 3 10 9 Cingano A Catalog within a Catalog 128 Hughes Helen of Troy 76 Cypria fr 1 Hesiod Catalogs of Women and Eoiae fr 204 96 101 Edmunds Helen s Divine Origins 7 8 Cypria fr 1 Herodotus 113 119 Sappho fr 16 See an analysis of the poem by Gumpert Grafting Helen 92 Dio Chrysostom Discourses 1 37 53 Hughes Helen of Troy 128 129 Cypria fr 1 Homer Iliad III 443 445 Cyrino Helen of Troy 133 134 Kimmelman Michael March 1 2007 Lights Darks Action Cut Maestro of Mise en Scene The New York Times Retrieved July 11 2009 Schjeldahl Peter February 12 2007 Venetial Brass The New Yorker Retrieved July 11 2009 Allan Introduction 18 28 HELEN wsu edu a b Smoot Guy 2012 Did the Helen of the Homeric Odyssey ever go to Troy Washington D C Center for Hellenic Studies Archived from the original on 2018 11 05 Retrieved 2018 11 04 via The Center for Hellenic Studies Herodotus 113 120 Kim Homer poet and historian 30 35 Allan Introduction 22 24 Lindsay Helen in the Fifth Century 135 138 Euripides Iphigenia in Aulis 1166 1170 Hughes Helen of Troy pp 195 196 About Euripides lost drama see Hughes Helen of Troy p 191 a b Hughes Helen of Troy p 219 a b Redfold The Tragedy of Hector p 122 Homer Iliad XXIV 773 775 Suzuki Metamorphoses of Helen p 36 Homer Iliad VI 349 351 354 356 Homer Odyssey IV 277 289 Virgil Aeneid 515 519 Hughes Helen of Troy 220 Suzuki Metamorphoses of Helen 99 100 Virgil Aeneid 494 512 Suzuki Metamorphoses of Helen 101 102 Stesichorus fr 201 PMG Euripides Orestes 1286 Euripides and the Gods Mary R Lefkowitz Blondell Helen of Troy 46 Pausanias Description of Greece Perseus tufts edu Retrieved 2014 03 13 Pierre Grimal The Dictionary of Classical Mythology s v Helene p 241 Pliny National History 35 64 66 Cicero De Inventione 2 1 3 sets the story in Croton Mansfield Too Beautiful to Picture 29 Hughes Helen of Troy 1 2 Dares of Phrygia History of the Fall of Troy 12 A short prose work which purports to be a first hand account of the Trojan War by Dares a Trojan priest of Hephaestus in the Iliad Pomeroy Spartan Women 169 Anderson The Fall of Troy 257 Matheson Polygnotos and Vase Painting 225 Caprino Etruscan Italy 66 71 David Narrative in Context 136 Hughes Helen of Troy 181 182 Maguire Helen of Troy 39 43 47 Theocritus The Epithalamium of Helen 43 48 Edmunds Helen s Divine Origins 12 Herodotus Histories VI 61 3 Hughes Helen of Troy 30 31 Lynn Budin The Ancient Greeks 286 A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Antiquities 1890 William Smith LLD William Wayte G E Marindin Ed Meneleaeia Isocrates Helen 63 Clader Helen 70 Jackson The Transformations of Helen 52 For a criticism of the theory that Helen was worshiped as a goddess in Therapne see Edmunds Helen s Divine Origins 20 24 Euripides Helen translated by Robert E Meagher University of Massachusetts Press Amherst 1986 Pausanias Description of Greece III 15 3 and 19 9 Allan Introduction 14 ff Calame Choruses of Young Women 192 197 Pomeroy Spartan Women 114 118 Cited by Gumpert Grafting Helen 96 Edmunds Helen s Divine Origins 15 18 and Skutsch Helen 109 See critical remarks on this theory by Edmunds Helen s Divine Origins 16 Calame Choruses of Young Women 201 Eaverly Archaic Greek Equestrian Sculpture 9 Pomeroy Spartan Women 162 f a b c d e f g Maguire Laurie 2009 Helen of Troy From Homer to Hollywood Chichester England John Wiley amp Sons Ltd pp 160 163 ISBN 978 1 4051 2634 2 a b Casson Lionel 1962 Selected Satires of Lucian Edited and Translated by Lionel Casson New York City New York W W Norton and Company ISBN 0 393 00443 0 a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p q r s t u v w x y Blondell Ruby 2013 Helen of Troy Beauty Myth Devastation Oxford England Oxford University Press pp 247 249 ISBN 978 0 19 973160 2 Beolens Bo Watkins Michael Grayson Michael 2011 The Eponym Dictionary of Reptiles Baltimore Johns Hopkins University Press xiii 296 pp ISBN 978 1 4214 0135 5 Helena p 120 36 No Second Troy Yeats W B 1916 Responsibilities and Other Poems Bartleby com Retrieved 2014 03 13 Baxter Richard 2002 Die agyptische Helena Richard Strauss recording review The Opera Quarterly 18 4 643 647 doi 10 1093 oq 18 4 643 Horwitz Jane The Washington Post December 16 2008 P C08 The Humanism of Isaac Asimov usurped Helen of Troy Does Countertop Dancing by Margaret Atwood Poemhunter com 20 January 2003 Retrieved 2014 03 13 Legends of Tomorrow Spoilers Helen Hunt DCLegendsTV October 26 2017 Retrieved November 14 2017 Burlingame Russ Legends of Tomorrow Season Finale Will Feature Helen of Troy As An Amazon comicbook com Retrieved 12 April 2018 Troy Fall Of A City Bella Dayne Louis Hunter amp More Join BBC Netflix Epic Deadline March 30 2017 Retrieved April 1 2017 Additional references editPrimary sources edit Aristophanes Lysistrata For an English translation see the Perseus Project Cicero De inventione II 1 1 2 Cypria fragments 1 9 and 10 For an English translation see the Medieval and Classical Literature Library Dio Chrysostom Discourses For an English translation see Lacus Curtius Euripides Helen For an English translation see the Perseus Project Euripides Iphigenia in Aulis For an English translation see the Perseus project Euripides Orestes For an English translation see the Perseus Project Herodotus Histories Book II For an English translation see the Perseus Project Hesiod Catalogs of Women and Eoiae For an English translation see the Medieval and Classical Literature Library Homer Iliad Book III Odyssey Books IV and XXIII Hyginus Fables Translated in English by Mary Grant Isocrates Helen For an English translation see the Perseus Project Servius In Aeneida I 526 XI 262 Lactantius Placidus Commentarii in Statii Thebaida I 21 Little Iliad fragment 13 For an English translation see the Medieval and Classical Literature Library Ovid Heroides XVI Paris Helenae For an English translation see the Perseus Project Pausanias Description of Greece Book III For an English translation see the Perseus Project Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca Book III Epitome Sappho fragment 16 Sextus Propertius Elegies 3 14 Translated in English by A S Kline Theocritus Idylls XVIII The Epithalamium of Helen Translated in English by J M Edmonds Virgil Aeneid Book VI For an English translation see the Perseus Project Secondary sources edit Allan William 2008 Introduction Euripides Helen Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 83690 6 Anderson Michael John 1997 Further Directions The Fall of Troy in early Greek Poetry and Art Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 815064 4 Blondell Ruby 2013 Helen of Troy Beauty Myth Devastation Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 973160 2 Blondell Ruby 2023 Helen of Troy in Hollywood Princeton Princeton University Press ISBN 9780691229621 Cairns Francis 2006 A Lighter Shade of Praise Sextus Propertius Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 86457 7 Calame Claude 2001 Chorus and Ritual Choruses of Young Women in Ancient Greece translated by Derek Collins and Janice Orion Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 0 7425 1525 7 Caprino Alexandra 1996 Greek Mythology in Etruria In Franklin Hall John ed Etruscan Italy Indiana University Press ISBN 0 8425 2334 0 Chantraine Pierre 2000 Ἐlenh Dictionnaire Etymologique de la Langue Gercque in French Klincksieck ISBN 2 252 03277 4 Cingano Ettore 2005 A Catalog within a Catalog Helen s Suitors in the Hesiodic Catalog of Women In Hunter Richard L ed The Hesiodic Catalog of Women Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 83684 0 Clader Linda Lee 1976 Helen Brill Archive ISBN 90 04 04721 2 Cyrino Monica S 2006 Helen of Troy In Winkler Martin M ed Troy from Homer s Iliad to Hollywood Cambridge University Press ISBN 1 4051 3182 9 David Benjamin 2005 Narrative in Context In Jenkens Lawrence A ed Renaissance Siena Truman State University ISBN 1 931112 43 6 Eaverly Mary Ann 1995 Geographical and Chronological Distribution Archaic Greek Equestrian Sculpture University of Michigan Press ISBN 0 472 10351 2 Edmunds Lowell May 2007 Helen s Divine Origins Electronic Antiquity Communicating the Classics X 2 1 44 Retrieved 2009 07 07 Frisk Hjalmar 1960 Ἐlenh Griechisches Etymologisches Worterbuch in German Vol I French amp European Pubns Gantz Timothy 2004 Early Greek Myth Baltimore MD and London The Johns Hopkins University Press ISBN 0 8018 5362 1 Gumpert Matthew 2001 Helen in Greece Grafting Helen University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 0 299 17124 8 Hard Robin Rose Herbert Jennings 2004 the Trojan War The Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology Routledge ISBN 0 415 18636 6 Hornblower Simon 2015 Lycophron Alexandra Greek Text Translation Commentary amp Introduction Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0199576708 Hughes Bettany 2005 Helen of Troy Goddess Princess Whore New York Alfred A Knopf ISBN 0 224 07177 7 Executive ed Joseph P Pickert 2000 Indo European roots wel The American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language Houghton Mifflin Harcourt ISBN 0 395 82517 2 Jackson Peter 2006 Shapeshifting Rape and Xoros The Transformations of Helen J H Roll Verlag Kim Lawrence 2010 Homer poet and historian Homer Between History and Fiction in Imperial Greek Literature Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 521 19449 5 Lindsay Jack 1974 Helen in the Fifth Century Helen of Troy Woman and Goddess Rowman and Littlefield ISBN 0 87471 581 4 Lynn Badin Stephanie 2006 Religion and Ideology The Ancient Greeks ABC CLIO ISBN 1 57607 814 0 Maguire Laurie 2009 Beauty Helen of Troy John Wiley and Sons ISBN 978 1 4051 2635 9 Mansfield Elizabeth 2007 Helen s Uncanny Beauty Too Beautiful to Picture University of Minnesota Press ISBN 978 0 8166 4749 1 Matheson Susan B 1996 Heroes Polygnotos and Vase Painting in Classical Athens University of Wisconsin Press ISBN 0 299 13870 4 Meagher Robert E 2002 The Meaning of Helen Bolchazy Carducci Publishers ISBN 0 86516 510 6 Mills Sophie 1997 Theseus and Helen Theseus Tragedy and the Athenian Empire Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 815063 6 Moser Thomas C 2004 A Cosmos of Desire University of Michigan Press ISBN 0 472 11379 8 Nilsson Martin Persson 1932 Mycenaean Centers and Mythological Centers The Mycenaean Origin of Greek Mythology Forgotten Books ISBN 1 60506 393 2 Pomeroy Sarah B 2002 Education Spartan Women Oxford University Press ISBN 0 19 513067 7 Redfield James 1994 The Hero The Tragedy of Hector Duke University Press ISBN 0 8223 1422 3 Rozokoki Alexandra The Significance of the Ancestry and Eastern Origins of Helen of Sparta Quaderni Urbinati Di Cultura Classica New Series 98 no 2 2011 35 69 http www jstor org stable 23048961 Skutsch Otto 1987 Helen her Name and Nature The Journal of Hellenic Studies 107 188 193 doi 10 2307 630087 JSTOR 630087 S2CID 161933465 Suzuki Mihoko 1992 The Iliad Metamorphoses of Helen Cornell University Press ISBN 0 8014 8080 9 Thompson Diane P 2004 The Fall of Troy The Beginning of Greek History The Trojan War McFarland ISBN 0 7864 1737 4 Whitby Michael 2002 Introduction Sparta Taylor amp Francis ISBN 0 415 93957 7 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Helen nbsp Wikisource has the text of the 1911 Encyclopaedia Britannica article Helen An analysis of the legend including historical evidence of worship as a goddess Helen New International Encyclopedia 1905 Helen The American Cyclopaedia 1879 Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Helen of Troy amp oldid 1207368411, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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