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Hypnos

In Greek mythology, Hypnos (/ˈhɪpnɒs/; Ancient Greek: Ὕπνος, 'sleep'),[3] also spelled Hypnus, is the personification of sleep; the Roman equivalent is known as Somnus. His name is the origin of the word hypnosis.[4] Pausanias wrote that Hypnos was the dearest friend of the Muses.[5]

Hypnos
Hypnos marble head (National Roman Museum, Rome)
AbodeUnderworld
SymbolPoppy, River Lethe, Cottonwood
Personal information
ParentsNyx alone[1]
Nyx and Erebus[2]
SiblingsThanatos (twin brother)
ConsortPasithea
Equivalents
Roman equivalentSomnus
Bronze statue of Hypnos (Museum of History & Archaeology, Almedinilla, Spain).

Description edit

Hypnos is usually the fatherless son of Nyx ("The Night"), although sometimes Nyx's consort Erebus ("The Darkness") is named as his father. His twin brother is Thanatos ("Death"). Both siblings live in the underworld (Hades). According to rumors, Hypnos lived in a big cave, which the river Lethe ("Forgetfulness") comes from and where night and day meet. His bed is made of ebony, and on the entrance of the cave grow several poppies and other soporific plants. No light and no sound would ever enter his grotto. According to Homer, he lives on the island Lemnos, which later on has been claimed to be his very own dream island. He is said to be a calm and gentle god, as he helps humans in need and, due to their sleep, owns half of their lives.[6][7]

Family edit

Hypnos lived next to his twin[8] brother, Thanatos (Θάνατος, "death"), in the Underworld, where the rays of the sun never reach them.[9]

Hypnos' mother was Nyx (Νύξ, "Night"), the goddess of Night, without a father. However, sometimes he was the son of Nyx and Erebus, the god of Darkness. Nyx was a dreadful and powerful goddess, and even Zeus feared to enter her realm.[10]

His wife, Pasithea, was one of the youngest of the Charites and was promised to him by Hera, who is the goddess of marriage and birth.[11]

Mythology edit

Hypnos in the Iliad edit

 
Hypnos and Thanatos carrying the body of Sarpedon from the battlefield of Troy; detail from an Attic white-ground lekythos, ca. 440 BC.

Hypnos used his powers to trick Zeus. Hypnos was able to trick him and help the Danaans win the Trojan War. During the war, Hera loathed her brother and husband, Zeus, so she devised a plot to trick him. She decided that to trick him she needed to make him so enamored with her that he would fall for the trick. So she washed herself with ambrosia and anointed herself with oil, made especially for her to make herself impossible for Zeus to resist. She wove flowers through her hair, put on three brilliant pendants for earrings, and donned a wondrous robe. She then called for Aphrodite, the goddess of love, and asked her for a charm that would ensure that her trick would not fail. To procure the charm, however, she lied to Aphrodite because they sided on opposite sides of the war. She told Aphrodite that she wanted the charm to help herself and Zeus stop fighting. Aphrodite willingly agreed. Hera was almost ready to trick Zeus, but she needed the help of Hypnos, who had tricked Zeus once before.[12]

Hera called on Hypnos and asked him to help her by putting Zeus to sleep. Hypnos was reluctant because the last time he had put the god to sleep, he was furious when he awoke. It was Hera who had asked him to trick Zeus the first time as well. She was furious that Heracles, Zeus' son, sacked the city of the Trojans. So she had Hypnos put Zeus to sleep, and set blasts of angry winds upon the sea while Heracles was still sailing home. When Zeus awoke he was furious and went on a rampage looking for Hypnos. Hypnos managed to avoid Zeus by hiding with his mother, Nyx. This made Hypnos reluctant to accept Hera's proposal and help her trick Zeus again. Hera first offered him a beautiful golden seat that can never fall apart and a footstool to go with it. He refused this first offer, remembering the last time he tricked Zeus. Hera finally got him to agree by promising that he would be married to Pasithea, one of the youngest Graces, whom he had always wanted to marry. Hypnos made her swear by the river Styx and call on the gods of the underworld to be witnesses so that he would be ensured that he would marry Pasithea.[13]

Hera went to see Zeus on Gargarus, the topmost peak of Mount Ida. Zeus was extremely taken by her and suspected nothing as Hypnos was shrouded in a thick mist and hidden upon a pine tree that was close to where Hera and Zeus were talking. Zeus asked Hera what she was doing there and why she had come from Olympus, and she told him the same lie she told Aphrodite. She told him that she wanted to go help her parent stop quarreling and she stopped there to consult him because she didn't want to go without his knowledge and have him be angry with her when he found out. Zeus said that she could go any time and that she should postpone her visit and stay there with him so they could enjoy each other's company. He told her that he was never in love with anyone as much as he loved her at that moment. He took her in his embrace and Hypnos went to work putting him to sleep, with Hera in his arms. While this went on, Hypnos traveled to the ships of the Achaeans to tell Poseidon, God of the Sea, that he could now help the Danaans and give them a victory while Zeus was sleeping. This is where Hypnos leaves the story, leaving Poseidon eager to help the Danaans. Thanks to Hypnos helping to trick Zeus, the war changed its course in Hera's favor, and Zeus never found out that Hypnos had tricked him one more time.[14]

Hypnos and Endymion edit

According to a passage in Deipnosophistae, the sophist and dithyrambic poet Licymnius of Chios[15] tells a different tale about the Endymion myth, in which Hypnos loves Endymion and does not close the eyes of his beloved even while he is asleep, but lulls him to rest with eyes wide open so that he may without interruption enjoy the pleasure of gazing at them.[16]

Hypnos in art edit

 
Ariadne asleep at Hypnos's side. Detail of ancient fresco in Pompeii
 
Hypnos head found in Civitella d'Arno, Italy (British Museum).
 
Sarpedon's body carried by Hypnos and Thanatos (Sleep and Death), while Hermes watches, Attic red-figured calyx-krater signed by Euxitheos (potter) and Euphronios (painter)

Hypnos appears in numerous works of art, most of which are vases. An example of one vase that Hypnos is featured on is called "Ariadne Abandoned by Theseus," which is part of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston's collection. In this vase, Hypnos is shown as a winged god dripping Lethean water upon the head of Ariadne as she sleeps.[17]

There are only three bronze statues featuring Hypnos known to be found in the Roman world. The first one was found in mid-19th century in Civitella d'Arno (Italy), kept in the British Museum in London since 1868. This bronze head has wings sprouting from his temples and the hair is elaborately arranged, some tying in knots and some hanging freely from his head.[18] The second one, a torsus, was found in Jumilla (Spain) in 1893 and is now exhibited at the Berlin antiquities collection. The most recent discovery took place in 1988 in Almedinilla (also in Spain), where bronze statue almost intact of Hypnos was found in a Roman villa dated in the 2nd century A.D. It is kept in the local History & Archaeology Museum.

The National Roman Museum of the Italian capital keeps an Hypnos marble head found in Hadrian's Villa, build around 120 AD by Emperor Hadrian in Tivoli as a retreat not far from Rome.

Words derived from Hypnos edit

The English word "hypnosis" is derived from his name, referring to the fact that when hypnotized, a person is put into a sleep-like state (hypnosis "sleep" + -osis "condition").[19] The class of medicines known as "hypnotics" which induce sleep also take their name from Hypnos.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 212
  2. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae Theogony 1 (Smith and Trzaskoma, p. 95); Cicero, De Natura Deorum 3.17.
  3. ^ ὕπνος. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project.
  4. ^ James H. Mantinband. Concise Dictionary of Greek Literature. New York: Philosophical Library, 1962.
  5. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece, 202.31.3
  6. ^ Wilhelm Vollmer: Wörterbuch der Mythologie aller Völker. Reprint-Verlag, Leipzig 2003 (new edition), ISBN 3826222008, page 263.
  7. ^ Scott C. Littleton: Gods, Goddesses, and Mythology, Volume 4. Marshall Cavendish/Tarrytown, New York (US) 2005, ISBN 076147563X, pages 474–476.
  8. ^ Homer, Iliad 16.672
  9. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 755-766
  10. ^ Homer, Iliad 14.260–265
  11. ^ Homer, Iliad 14.268–276
  12. ^ Homer, Iliad 14.154–250
  13. ^ Homer, Iliad 14.242–280
  14. ^ Homer, Iliad 14.290–365
  15. ^ Licymnius is known only through a few quoted lines and second-hand through references (Smith, s.v. Licy'mnius).
  16. ^ Licymnius, Fragment 771 (from Athenaeus, Scholars at Dinner) (trans. Campbell, Vol. Greek Lyric V)
  17. ^ "Ancient Greek Art: Ariadne Abandoned by Theseus." Ancient Greek Art: Ariadne Abandoned by Theseus. N.p., n.d. Web. 15 Oct. 2013.
  18. ^ "Bronze Head of Hypnos." British Museum -. N.p., n.d. Web. 15 Oct. 2013.
  19. ^ "Hypnosis | Define Hypnosis at Dictionary.com". Dictionary.reference.com. Retrieved 2014-01-27.

Bibliography edit

  • Athenaeus, The Learned Banqueters, Volume V: Books 10.420e-11, edited and translated by S. Douglas Olson, Loeb Classical Library No. 274, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, 2009. ISBN 978-0-674-99632-8. Online version at Harvard University Press.
  • Cicero, Marcus Tullius, De Natura Deorum in Cicero: On the Nature of the Gods. Academics, translated by H. Rackham, Loeb Classical Library No. 268, Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press, first published 1933, revised 1951. ISBN 978-0-674-99296-2. Online version at Harvard University Press. Internet Archive.
  • Hesiod, Theogony, in The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G. Evelyn-White, Cambridge, MA., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1914. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Homer, The Iliad with an English Translation by A.T. Murray, Ph.D. in two volumes. Cambridge, MA., Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann, Ltd. 1924. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Hyginus, Gaius Julius, Fabulae in Apollodorus' Library and Hyginus' Fabulae: Two Handbooks of Greek Mythology, Translated, with Introductions by R. Scott Smith and Stephen M. Trzaskoma, Hackett Publishing, 2007. ISBN 978-0-87220-821-6. Google Books.

External links edit

  • HYPNOS from The Theoi Project
  • HYPNOS from Greek Mythology Link
  • 3D model of Bronze head of Hypnos via laser scan of a cast of British Museum's bronze.

hypnos, other, uses, disambiguation, greek, mythology, ancient, greek, Ὕπνος, sleep, also, spelled, hypnus, personification, sleep, roman, equivalent, known, somnus, name, origin, word, hypnosis, pausanias, wrote, that, dearest, friend, muses, personification,. For other uses see Hypnos disambiguation In Greek mythology Hypnos ˈ h ɪ p n ɒ s Ancient Greek Ὕpnos sleep 3 also spelled Hypnus is the personification of sleep the Roman equivalent is known as Somnus His name is the origin of the word hypnosis 4 Pausanias wrote that Hypnos was the dearest friend of the Muses 5 HypnosPersonification of sleepHypnos marble head National Roman Museum Rome AbodeUnderworldSymbolPoppy River Lethe CottonwoodPersonal informationParentsNyx alone 1 Nyx and Erebus 2 SiblingsThanatos twin brother ConsortPasitheaEquivalentsRoman equivalentSomnus Bronze statue of Hypnos Museum of History amp Archaeology Almedinilla Spain Contents 1 Description 2 Family 3 Mythology 3 1 Hypnos in the Iliad 3 2 Hypnos and Endymion 4 Hypnos in art 5 Words derived from Hypnos 6 See also 7 References 8 Bibliography 9 External linksDescription editHypnos is usually the fatherless son of Nyx The Night although sometimes Nyx s consort Erebus The Darkness is named as his father His twin brother is Thanatos Death Both siblings live in the underworld Hades According to rumors Hypnos lived in a big cave which the river Lethe Forgetfulness comes from and where night and day meet His bed is made of ebony and on the entrance of the cave grow several poppies and other soporific plants No light and no sound would ever enter his grotto According to Homer he lives on the island Lemnos which later on has been claimed to be his very own dream island He is said to be a calm and gentle god as he helps humans in need and due to their sleep owns half of their lives 6 7 Family editHypnos lived next to his twin 8 brother Thanatos 8anatos death in the Underworld where the rays of the sun never reach them 9 Hypnos mother was Nyx Ny3 Night the goddess of Night without a father However sometimes he was the son of Nyx and Erebus the god of Darkness Nyx was a dreadful and powerful goddess and even Zeus feared to enter her realm 10 His wife Pasithea was one of the youngest of the Charites and was promised to him by Hera who is the goddess of marriage and birth 11 Mythology editHypnos in the Iliad edit nbsp Hypnos and Thanatos carrying the body of Sarpedon from the battlefield of Troy detail from an Attic white ground lekythos ca 440 BC Hypnos used his powers to trick Zeus Hypnos was able to trick him and help the Danaans win the Trojan War During the war Hera loathed her brother and husband Zeus so she devised a plot to trick him She decided that to trick him she needed to make him so enamored with her that he would fall for the trick So she washed herself with ambrosia and anointed herself with oil made especially for her to make herself impossible for Zeus to resist She wove flowers through her hair put on three brilliant pendants for earrings and donned a wondrous robe She then called for Aphrodite the goddess of love and asked her for a charm that would ensure that her trick would not fail To procure the charm however she lied to Aphrodite because they sided on opposite sides of the war She told Aphrodite that she wanted the charm to help herself and Zeus stop fighting Aphrodite willingly agreed Hera was almost ready to trick Zeus but she needed the help of Hypnos who had tricked Zeus once before 12 Hera called on Hypnos and asked him to help her by putting Zeus to sleep Hypnos was reluctant because the last time he had put the god to sleep he was furious when he awoke It was Hera who had asked him to trick Zeus the first time as well She was furious that Heracles Zeus son sacked the city of the Trojans So she had Hypnos put Zeus to sleep and set blasts of angry winds upon the sea while Heracles was still sailing home When Zeus awoke he was furious and went on a rampage looking for Hypnos Hypnos managed to avoid Zeus by hiding with his mother Nyx This made Hypnos reluctant to accept Hera s proposal and help her trick Zeus again Hera first offered him a beautiful golden seat that can never fall apart and a footstool to go with it He refused this first offer remembering the last time he tricked Zeus Hera finally got him to agree by promising that he would be married to Pasithea one of the youngest Graces whom he had always wanted to marry Hypnos made her swear by the river Styx and call on the gods of the underworld to be witnesses so that he would be ensured that he would marry Pasithea 13 Hera went to see Zeus on Gargarus the topmost peak of Mount Ida Zeus was extremely taken by her and suspected nothing as Hypnos was shrouded in a thick mist and hidden upon a pine tree that was close to where Hera and Zeus were talking Zeus asked Hera what she was doing there and why she had come from Olympus and she told him the same lie she told Aphrodite She told him that she wanted to go help her parent stop quarreling and she stopped there to consult him because she didn t want to go without his knowledge and have him be angry with her when he found out Zeus said that she could go any time and that she should postpone her visit and stay there with him so they could enjoy each other s company He told her that he was never in love with anyone as much as he loved her at that moment He took her in his embrace and Hypnos went to work putting him to sleep with Hera in his arms While this went on Hypnos traveled to the ships of the Achaeans to tell Poseidon God of the Sea that he could now help the Danaans and give them a victory while Zeus was sleeping This is where Hypnos leaves the story leaving Poseidon eager to help the Danaans Thanks to Hypnos helping to trick Zeus the war changed its course in Hera s favor and Zeus never found out that Hypnos had tricked him one more time 14 Hypnos and Endymion edit According to a passage in Deipnosophistae the sophist and dithyrambic poet Licymnius of Chios 15 tells a different tale about the Endymion myth in which Hypnos loves Endymion and does not close the eyes of his beloved even while he is asleep but lulls him to rest with eyes wide open so that he may without interruption enjoy the pleasure of gazing at them 16 Hypnos in art edit nbsp Ariadne asleep at Hypnos s side Detail of ancient fresco in Pompeii nbsp Hypnos head found in Civitella d Arno Italy British Museum nbsp Sarpedon s body carried by Hypnos and Thanatos Sleep and Death while Hermes watches Attic red figured calyx krater signed by Euxitheos potter and Euphronios painter Hypnos appears in numerous works of art most of which are vases An example of one vase that Hypnos is featured on is called Ariadne Abandoned by Theseus which is part of the Museum of Fine Arts in Boston s collection In this vase Hypnos is shown as a winged god dripping Lethean water upon the head of Ariadne as she sleeps 17 There are only three bronze statues featuring Hypnos known to be found in the Roman world The first one was found in mid 19th century in Civitella d Arno Italy kept in the British Museum in London since 1868 This bronze head has wings sprouting from his temples and the hair is elaborately arranged some tying in knots and some hanging freely from his head 18 The second one a torsus was found in Jumilla Spain in 1893 and is now exhibited at the Berlin antiquities collection The most recent discovery took place in 1988 in Almedinilla also in Spain where bronze statue almost intact of Hypnos was found in a Roman villa dated in the 2nd century A D It is kept in the local History amp Archaeology Museum The National Roman Museum of the Italian capital keeps an Hypnos marble head found in Hadrian s Villa build around 120 AD by Emperor Hadrian in Tivoli as a retreat not far from Rome Words derived from Hypnos editThe English word hypnosis is derived from his name referring to the fact that when hypnotized a person is put into a sleep like state hypnosis sleep osis condition 19 The class of medicines known as hypnotics which induce sleep also take their name from Hypnos See also edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Hypnos Aergia a goddess of sloth and attendant of Hypnos MorpheusReferences edit Hesiod Theogony 212 Hyginus Fabulae Theogony 1 Smith and Trzaskoma p 95 Cicero De Natura Deorum 3 17 ὕpnos Liddell Henry George Scott Robert A Greek English Lexicon at the Perseus Project James H Mantinband Concise Dictionary of Greek Literature New York Philosophical Library 1962 Pausanias Description of Greece 202 31 3 Wilhelm Vollmer Worterbuch der Mythologie aller Volker Reprint Verlag Leipzig 2003 new edition ISBN 3826222008 page 263 Scott C Littleton Gods Goddesses and Mythology Volume 4 Marshall Cavendish Tarrytown New York US 2005 ISBN 076147563X pages 474 476 Homer Iliad 16 672 Hesiod Theogony 755 766 Homer Iliad 14 260 265 Homer Iliad 14 268 276 Homer Iliad 14 154 250 Homer Iliad 14 242 280 Homer Iliad 14 290 365 Licymnius is known only through a few quoted lines and second hand through references Smith s v Licy mnius Licymnius Fragment 771 from Athenaeus Scholars at Dinner trans Campbell Vol Greek Lyric V Ancient Greek Art Ariadne Abandoned by Theseus Ancient Greek Art Ariadne Abandoned by Theseus N p n d Web 15 Oct 2013 Bronze Head of Hypnos British Museum N p n d Web 15 Oct 2013 Hypnosis Define Hypnosis at Dictionary com Dictionary reference com Retrieved 2014 01 27 Bibliography editAthenaeus The Learned Banqueters Volume V Books 10 420e 11 edited and translated by S Douglas Olson Loeb Classical Library No 274 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press 2009 ISBN 978 0 674 99632 8 Online version at Harvard University Press Cicero Marcus Tullius De Natura Deorum in Cicero On the Nature of the Gods Academics translated by H Rackham Loeb Classical Library No 268 Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press first published 1933 revised 1951 ISBN 978 0 674 99296 2 Online version at Harvard University Press Internet Archive Hesiod Theogony in The Homeric Hymns and Homerica with an English Translation by Hugh G Evelyn White Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1914 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Homer The Iliad with an English Translation by A T Murray Ph D in two volumes Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1924 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Hyginus Gaius Julius Fabulae in Apollodorus Libraryand Hyginus Fabulae Two Handbooks of Greek Mythology Translated with Introductions by R Scott Smith and Stephen M Trzaskoma Hackett Publishing 2007 ISBN 978 0 87220 821 6 Google Books External links edit nbsp Look up Hypnos in Wiktionary the free dictionary HYPNOS from The Theoi Project HYPNOS from Greek Mythology Link 3D model of Bronze head of Hypnos via laser scan of a cast of British Museum s bronze Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Hypnos amp oldid 1220579848, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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