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Pasiphaë

In ancient Greek religion and Greek mythology, Pasiphaë (/pəˈsɪfi/;[1] Greek: Πασιφάη, translit. Pasipháē derived from πάσι (archaic dative plural) "for all" and φάος/φῶς phaos/phos "light")[2] was a queen of Crete, and was often referred to as goddess of witchcraft and sorcery. The daughter of Helios and the Oceanid nymph Perse, Pasiphaë is notable as the mother of the Minotaur. She conceived the Minotaur after mating with the Cretan Bull while hidden within a hollow cow that the Athenian inventor Daedalus built for her, after Poseidon cursed her to fall in love with the bull, due to her husband, Minos, failing to sacrifice the bull to Poseidon as he had promised.

Pasiphaë
Sorceress goddess
Pasiphaë sits on a throne, a Roman mosaic from Zeugma Mosaic Museum
AbodeCrete
Personal information
ParentsHelios and Perse or Crete
SiblingsCirce, Aeetes, Aloeus, Perses, Phaethon, the Heliades, the Heliadae and others
ConsortMinos, Cretan Bull
ChildrenAcacallis, Ariadne, Androgeus, Glaucus, Deucalion, Phaedra, Xenodice, Catreus and the Minotaur.

Family

Parentage

Pasiphaë was the daughter of god of the Sun, Helios,[3][4][5][6] and the Oceanid nymph[7] Perse.[8][9][10] She was thus the sister of Aeëtes, Circe and Perses of Colchis. In some accounts, Pasiphaë's mother was identified as the island-nymph Crete herself.[11][12] Like her doublet[clarification needed] Europa, the consort of Zeus, her origins were in the East, in her case at the earliest-known Kartvelian-speaking polity of Colchis (Egrisi (Georgian: ეგრისი, now in western Georgia[13][14][15][16]).

Marriage and children

Pasiphaë was given in marriage to King Minos of Crete. With Minos, she was the mother of Acacallis, Ariadne, Androgeus, Glaucus, Deucalion,[17] Phaedra, Xenodice, and Catreus.

After lying down with the Cretan Bull, she gave birth to the "star-like" Asterion, who became known as the Minotaur.

Mythology

 
Daedalus presents the artificial cow to Pasiphaë: Roman fresco in the House of the Vettii, Pompeii, 1st century CE.

Birth of the Minotaur

Minos was required to sacrifice "the fairest bull born in its herd" to Poseidon each year. One year, an extremely beautiful bull was born, Minos refused to sacrifice this bull, and sacrificed another, inferior bull instead. As punishment, Poseidon cursed his wife Pasiphaë to experience lust for the white, splendid bull.

Ultimately, Pasiphaë went to Daedalus and asked him to help her mate with the bull. Daedalus then created a hollow wooden cow covered with real cow-skin, so realistic that it fooled the Cretan Bull. Pasiphaë climbed into the structure, allowing the bull to mate with her. Pasiphaë fell pregnant and gave birth to a half-human half-bull creature that fed solely on human flesh. The child was named Asterius, after the previous king, but was commonly called the Minotaur ("the bull of Minos").[18][19][20]

The myth of Pasiphaë's coupling with the bull and the subsequent birth of the Minotaur was the subject of Euripides's lost play the Cretans, of which few fragments survive. Sections include a chorus of priests presenting themselves and addressing Minos, someone (perhaps a wetnurse) informing Minos of the newborn infant's nature (informing Minos and the audience, among others, that Pasiphaë breastfeeds the Minotaur like an infant), and a dialogue between Pasiphaë and Minos where they argue over which between them is responsible.[21] Pasiphaë's speech defending herself is preserved, an answer to Minos' accusations (not preserved) in which she excuses herself on account of acting under the constraint of divine power, and insists that the one to blame is actually Minos, who angered the sea-god.[22]

PASIPHAË:

If I had sold the gifts of Kypris,
given my body in secret to some man,
you would have every right to condemn me
as a whore. But this was no act of the will;
I am suffering from some madness brought on
by a god.
It’s not plausible!
What could I have seen in a bull
to assault my heart with this shameful passion?
Did he look too handsome in his robe?
Did a sea of fire smoulder in his eyes?
Was it the red tint of his hair, his dark beard?[23]

Mythological scholars and authors Ruck and Staples remarked that "the Bull was the old pre-Olympian Poseidon".[24]

Variations on the myth

Pseudo-Apollodorus mentions a slightly differing reason for why Poseidon cursed Pasiphaë; citing that Minos wanted to be king, and he called upon Poseidon to send him a bull in order to prove to the kingdom that he had received sovereignty from the gods. Upon calling on Poseidon, Minos failed to sacrifice the bull, as Poseidon wished, causing the god to grow angry with him.

According to sixth century BC author Bacchylides, the curse was instead sent by Aphrodite[25] and Hyginus says this was because Pasiphaë had neglected Aphrodite's worship for years.[26] In yet another version, Aphrodite cursed Pasiphaë (as well as several of her sisters) with unnatural desires as a revenge against her father Helios,[27] for he had revealed to Aphrodite's husband Hephaestus her secret affair with Ares, the god of war, earning Aphrodite's eternal hatred for himself and his whole race.[28][29]

 
Pasiphaë nursing the infant Minotaur, red-figure kylix found at Etruscan Vulci, 4th century BC.

In some more obscure traditions, it was not Poseidon's bull but Minos' father Zeus disguised as one who made love to Pasiphaë and sired the Minotaur.[30] An ancient Greek lexicon mentions a tradition where Zeus and Pasiphaë are the parents of the Egyptian god Amun, who was identified with Zeus.[31]

Pasiphaë's Curse

In other aspects, Pasiphaë, like her niece Medea, was a mistress of magical herbal arts in the Greek imagination. The author of Bibliotheke records the fidelity charm she placed upon Minos, who would ejaculate serpents, scorpions, and centipedes killing any unlawful concubine; but Procris, with a protective circean herb, lay with Minos with impunity.[32]

In another version, this unexplained disease that tormented Minos killed all his concubines and prevented him and Pasiphaë from having any children (the scorpions and serpents did not otherwise harm Pasiphaë, as she was an immortal child of the Sun). Procris then inserted a goat's bladder into a woman, told Minos to ejaculate the scorpions in there, and then sent him to Pasiphaë. The couple was thus able to conceive eight children.[5] Records indicate, this became the first modern documentation of a sheath or condom.[33]

 
Pasiphae entering the hollow cow by Giulio Romano (15th century)

Daedalus and Icarus

In one version of the story, Pasiphaë supplied Daedalus and his son Icarus with a ship in order to escape Minos and Crete.[34] In another, she helped him hide until he fashioned wings made of wax and bird feathers.[35]

Variations about Pasiphaë's death

While Pasiphaë is an immortal goddess in some texts, other authors treated her as a mortal woman, like Euripides who in his play Cretans has Minos sentence her to death (her eventual fate is unclear, as no relevant fragment survives). In Virgil's Aeneid, Aeneas sees her when he visits the Underworld, describing Pasiphae residing in the Mournful Fields, a place inhabited by sinful lovers.[36]

Personae of Pasiphaë

In the general understanding of the Minoan myth,[37] Pasiphaë and Daedalus'[38] construction of the wooden cow allowed her to satisfy her desire[39] for the Cretan Bull. Through this interpretation she was reduced from a near-divine figure (daughter of the Sun) to a stereotype of grotesque bestiality and the shocking excesses of lust and deceit.[40]

Pasiphaë appeared in Virgil's Eclogue VI (45–60), in Silenus' list of suitable mythological subjects, on which Virgil lingers in such detail that he gives the sixteen-line episode the weight of a brief inset myth.[41]

In Ovid's Ars Amatoria Pasiphaë is framed in zoophilic terms:

Pasiphae fieri gaudebat adultera tauri—"Pasiphaë took pleasure in becoming an adulteress with a bull."[42]

Pasiphaë is often included on lists among women ruled by lust; other women include Phaedra, Byblis, Myrrha and Scylla. Scholars see her as a personified sin of bestiality.[43]

Ars amatoria shows Pasiphaë's jealousy of the cows, primping in front of a mirror while she laments that she is not a cow and killing of her rivals.[43]

She curses ev'ry beauteous cow she sees;[44]

Cult of Pasiphaë

 
Pasiphaë and the Cretan Bull on a cow-filled field (13th century)

On divination

In mainland Greece, Pasiphaë was worshipped as an oracular goddess at Thalamae, one of the original koine of Sparta. The geographer Pausanias describes the shrine as small, situated near a clear stream, and flanked by bronze statues of Helios and Pasiphaë. His account also equates Pasiphaë with Ino and the lunar goddess Selene.

Cicero writes in De Divinatione 1.96 that the Spartan ephors would sleep at the shrine of Pasiphaë, seeking prophetic dreams to aid them in governance. According to Plutarch,[45] Spartan society twice underwent major upheavals sparked by ephors' dreams at the shrine during the Hellenistic era. In one case, an ephor dreamed that some of his colleagues' chairs were removed from the agora, and that a voice called out "this is better for Sparta"; inspired by this, King Cleomenes acted to consolidate royal power. Again during the reign of King Agis, several ephors brought the people into revolt with oracles from Pasiphaë's shrine promising remission of debts and redistribution of land.

Celestial deity

In Description of Greece, Pausanias equates Pasiphaë with Selene, implying that the figure was worshipped as a lunar deity.[46] However, further studies on Minoan religion indicate that the sun was a female figure, suggesting instead that Pasiphaë was originally a solar goddess, an interpretation consistent with her depiction as Helios' daughter.[47] Poseidon's bull may in turn be vestigial of the lunar bull prevalent in Ancient Mesopotamian religion.[48]

Nowadays, Pasiphaë and her son, the Minotaur, are associated with the astrological sign of Taurus.

Other representations

 
Pasiphae, a moon of Jupiter, photographed by the Haute-Provence Observatory

In art

The myth of Pasiphaë and the Cretan Bull became widely depicted in art throughout history.[citation needed] Pasiphaë was most often depicted with a bull near her, signifying the connection to the myth.[citation needed]

Scientific representation

One of Jupiter's 79 moons, discovered in 1908, is named after Pasiphaë, the woman of the myth of the Minotaur.

Literary representation

Pasiphaé is mentioned in Canto 12 of Dante Alighieri's Inferno. When Dante encounters the Minotaur he describes the unnatural and deceptive manner of the beast's conception.

Fiona Benson's third collection of poetry, Ephemeron, contains a long section entitled Translations from the Pasiphaë in which she retells the Minotaur myth from the point of view of the bull-child's mother.

In popular culture

 
Daedalus constructing the wooden cow which Pasiphaë uses to mate with the Cretan Bull (17th cent)
 
Pasiphaë and the Cretan Bull (18th cent.) by Gustave Moreau
  • Pasiphaë appears in the BBC One fantasy drama series Atlantis. Here she seems to be the main antagonist. As Ariadne's domineering stepmother, she disapproves of her attraction to Jason and tries to kill the hero several times. Her sister, Circe, seems to hold a grudge against her and asks Jason to help kill her. The last episode of season 1 (Touched by the Gods Part 2) revealed that she is the mother of Jason. She thought he died after she cursed her husband and they fled to our world. She is portrayed by Sarah Parish.[49]
  • Pasiphaë is a major antagonist in Rick Riordan's 2013 fantasy novel The House of Hades. In this novel, she is portrayed as an immortal sorceress and former wife of the late King Minos. Having grown bitter towards the gods after the events of the Minoan myth, Pasiphaë allies with the goddess Gaea and her giant army to overthrow the Olympian gods. She is confronted and defeated by Hazel Levesque, a demigod daughter of Pluto, who had been trained in sorcery by the goddess Hecate. In this novel, it is revealed that the Labyrinth is tied to her life force as much as Daedalus's, thereby rendering the infamous inventor's sacrifice in the previous series useless.[50]
  • Pasiphaë appears in Madeline Miller's 2018 novel Circe, the sister of the book's protagonist Circe, the daughter of Helios and Perse. A witch just like her, she and Circe have an antagonistic and sour relationship; after Pasiphaë has intercourse with the Cretan Bull, she calls in Circe to assist her in the Minotaur's birth though the two sisters hardly reconcile their differences. It's also heavily implied she entered an incestuous affair with her brother Perses, here presented as her twin.[51]
  • Pasiphaë appears in Jennifer Saint's novel Ariadne as a supporting character, featuring heavily in the novel's first section which explores the myth of the Minotaur. Her pregnancy by the Cretan bull widely affects the perception of the Cretan people of the ruling family with both Ariadne and Phaedra making references to the local gossip and admonitions of their mother's infidelity and bestiality. The punishment she endured for Minos's actions at the hands of Poseidon and her reaction to it is explored as one of the key feminist themes of the novel.[citation needed]

Genealogy

See also

Notes

  1. ^ Wells, John C. (2009). "Pasiphae, Pasiphaë". Longman Pronunciation Dictionary. London: Pearson Longman. ISBN 978-1-4058-8118-0.
  2. ^ An attribute of the Moon, as Pausanias remarked in passing (i.43.96): compare Euryphaessa; if Pasipháē is an ancient conventional Minoan epithet translated into Greek, it would be a "loan translation", or calque.
  3. ^ Apollonius Rhodius, Argonautica 3.999
  4. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 9.735
  5. ^ a b Antoninus Liberalis, Metamorphoses 41
  6. ^ Seneca, Phaedra 112
  7. ^ Hesiod, Theogony 355
  8. ^ Apollodorus, Library 1.9.1
  9. ^ Gaius Julius Hyginus, Fabulae preface
  10. ^ Cicero, De Natura Deorum 48.4
  11. ^ Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca historica 4.60.4
  12. ^ John Tzetzes, Chiliades 4.361
  13. ^ David Marshall Lang. The Georgians. p. 59. Frederick A. Praeger. New York (1966).
  14. ^ Antiquity 1994. p. 359. The Great Soviet Encyclopedia: Значение слова "Колхи" в Большой Советской Энциклопедии
  15. ^ The Cambridge Ancient History, John Anthony Crook, Elizabeth Rawson, p. 255
  16. ^ David Marshall Lang. The Georgians. p. 75, 76-88. Frederick A. Praeger. New York (1966).
  17. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 14
  18. ^ Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheke 3.1.4
  19. ^ Diodorus Siculus, Historic Library 4.77.1
  20. ^ Philostratus the Elder, Imagines 1.16.1
  21. ^ Johan Tralau, Cannibalism, Vegetarianism, and the Community of Sacrifice: Rediscovering Euripides' Cretans and the Beginnings of Political Philosophy, the University of Chigago Press Journals [1].
  22. ^ Sansone, David. “Euripides, Cretans Frag. 472e.16—26 Kannicht.” Zeitschrift Für Papyrologie Und Epigraphik, vol. 184, Dr. Rudolf Habelt GmbH, 2013, pp. 58–65.
  23. ^ Euripides, Cretans Fr. 472e K, translation by P. T. Rourke via Diotíma.
  24. ^ Ruck and Staples 1994:213.
  25. ^ Bacchylides "frag 26".
  26. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 40
  27. ^ Libanius, Progymnasmata 2.21
  28. ^ Seneca, Phaedra 124
  29. ^ Scholia on Euripides' Hippolytus 47.
  30. ^ Porphyry, On Abstinence from Animal Food 3.16
  31. ^ Lexicon of Greek Language s.v. Ἄμμων
  32. ^ Apollodorus, Bibliotheca 3.15.1
  33. ^ Peel, John; Finch, B. E.; Green, Hugh (March 1965). "Contraception through the Ages". Population Studies. 18 (3): 330. doi:10.2307/2173294. JSTOR 2173294.
  34. ^ Diodorus Siculus, Historic Library 4.77.5
  35. ^ Diodorus Siculus, Historic Library 4.77.7
  36. ^ Virgil, Aeneid 6.447
  37. ^ Specific astrological or calendrical interpretations of the mystic mating of the "wide-shining" daughter of the Sun with a mythological bull, transformed into an unnatural curse in Hellene myth, are prone to variability and debate.
  38. ^ Daedalus was of the line of the chthonic king at Athens Erechtheus.
  39. ^ Greek myth characteristically emphasizes the accursed unnaturalness of a mystical marriage conceived literally as merely carnal: a fragment of Bacchylides alludes to "her unspeakable sickness" and Hyginus (in Fabulae 40) to "an unnatural love for a bull".
  40. ^ This was the commonplace of brief notices of Pasiphaë among Latin poets, too, Rebecca Armstrong notes, in Cretan Women: Pasiphae, Ariadne, and Phaedra in Latin Poetry (Oxford University Press) 2006:169. Ruck and Staples (1994:9) argue that "the suspension of linear chronology" is a common feature in Greek myths.
  41. ^ Armstrong 2006:171.
  42. ^ Ovid, Ars Amatoria 1.9.33
  43. ^ a b Blumenfeld-Kosinski, Renate (1996). "The Scandal of Pasiphae: Narration and Interpretation in the "Ovide moralisé"". Modern Philology. 93 (3): 307–326. doi:10.1086/392321. ISSN 0026-8232. JSTOR 438324. S2CID 162197853.
  44. ^ "The Love Books of Ovid Index". www.sacred-texts.com. Retrieved 2021-12-04.
  45. ^ Plutarch, Parallel Lives Agis and Cleomenes.
  46. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece 3.26.1
  47. ^ Goodison, L. “From Tholos Tomb to Throne Room: Perceptions of the Sun in Minoan Ritual”. In: R. LAFFINEUR and R. HÄGG (eds.). Potnia: Deities and Religion in the Aegean Bronze Age. 2001. pp. 77-88.
  48. ^ . Archived from the original on 2015-12-08. Retrieved 2015-11-30.
  49. ^ "Pasiphae - Atlantis, Series 1, BBC".
  50. ^ Riordan, Rick (2013). The House of Hades. New York City: Disney-Hyperion. ISBN 978-1-4231-4672-8.
  51. ^ Miller, Madeline (2018). Circe. New York City: Little, Brown and Company. ISBN 978-0-316-55634-7.

References

Ancient

  • 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.
  • Bacchylides in Bacchylides, Corinna. Greek Lyric, Volume IV: Bacchylides, Corinna, and Others. Edited and translated by David A. Campbell. Loeb Classical Library 461. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 1992.
  • Euripides, Cretans fragments in Fragments: Aegeus-Meleager. Edited and translated by Christopher Collard, Martin Cropp. Loeb Classical Library 504. Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2008.
  • Apollonius Rhodius, Argonautica translated by Robert Cooper Seaton (1853–1915), R. C. Loeb Classical Library Volume 001. London, William Heinemann Ltd, 1912. Online version at the Topos Text Project.
  • Apollodorus, Apollodorus, The Library, with an English Translation by Sir James George Frazer, F.B.A., F.R.S. in 2 Volumes. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1921. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Pausanias, Pausanias Description of Greece with an English Translation by W.H.S. Jones, Litt.D., and H.A. Ormerod, M.A., in 4 Volumes. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1918. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca Historica. Vol 1-2. Immanel Bekker. Ludwig Dindorf. Friedrich Vogel. in aedibus B. G. Teubneri. Leipzig. 1888-1890. Greek text available at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Antoninus Liberalis, The Metamorphoses of Antoninus Liberalis translated by Francis Celoria (Routledge 1992). Online version at the Topos Text Project.
  • Philostratus the Elder, Imagines, translated by A. Fairbanks, Loeb Classical Library No, 256. Harvard University Press, Cambridge, Massachusetts. 1931. ISBN 978-0674992825. Internet Archive
  • Plutarch, and Bernadotte Perrin. Plutarch's Lives. Cambridge, Mass: Harvard University Press, 1967.
  • Vergil, Aeneid. Theodore C. Williams. trans. Boston. Houghton Mifflin Co. 1910. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library.
  • Ovid, Metamorphoses. Translated by A. D. Melville; introduction and notes by E. J. Kenney. Oxford: Oxford University Press. 2008. ISBN 978-0-19-953737-2.
  • Ovid, The Amores, Ars Amatoria, Remedia Amoris and Medicamina Faciei Femineae of Publius Ovidius Naso, translated out of the Latin by J. Lewis May, illustrated by Jean De Bosschere, privately printed for Rarity Press, New York, 1930. Online version available at sacred-texts.com.
  • Marcus Tullius Cicero, Nature of the Gods from the Treatises of M.T. Cicero translated by Charles Duke Yonge (1812–1891), Bohn edition of 1878. Online version at the Topos Text Project.
  • Hyginus, Gaius Julius, The Myths of Hyginus. Edited and translated by Mary A. Grant, Lawrence: University of Kansas Press, 1960.
  • Seneca, Tragedies, translated by Miller, Frank Justus. Loeb Classical Library Volumes. Cambridge, Massachusetts, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1917.
  • Tzetzes, John, Book of Histories, Book II-IV translated by Gary Berkowitz from the original Greek of T. Kiessling's edition of 1826. Online version available at Theoi.com

Modern

External links

  •   Media related to Pasiphae at Wikimedia Commons
  • PASIPHAE from the Theoi Project
  • PASIPHAE from greekmythology.com

pasiphaë, moon, jupiter, pasiphae, moon, confused, with, pasithea, ancient, greek, religion, greek, mythology, greek, Πασιφάη, translit, pasipháē, derived, from, πάσι, archaic, dative, plural, φάος, φῶς, phaos, phos, light, queen, crete, often, referred, godde. For the moon of Jupiter see Pasiphae moon Not to be confused with Pasithea In ancient Greek religion and Greek mythology Pasiphae p e ˈ s ɪ f i iː 1 Greek Pasifah translit Pasiphae derived from pasi archaic dative plural for all and faos fῶs phaos phos light 2 was a queen of Crete and was often referred to as goddess of witchcraft and sorcery The daughter of Helios and the Oceanid nymph Perse Pasiphae is notable as the mother of the Minotaur She conceived the Minotaur after mating with the Cretan Bull while hidden within a hollow cow that the Athenian inventor Daedalus built for her after Poseidon cursed her to fall in love with the bull due to her husband Minos failing to sacrifice the bull to Poseidon as he had promised PasiphaeSorceress goddessPasiphae sits on a throne a Roman mosaic from Zeugma Mosaic MuseumAbodeCretePersonal informationParentsHelios and Perse or CreteSiblingsCirce Aeetes Aloeus Perses Phaethon the Heliades the Heliadae and othersConsortMinos Cretan BullChildrenAcacallis Ariadne Androgeus Glaucus Deucalion Phaedra Xenodice Catreus and the Minotaur Contents 1 Family 1 1 Parentage 1 2 Marriage and children 2 Mythology 2 1 Birth of the Minotaur 2 2 Variations on the myth 2 3 Pasiphae s Curse 2 4 Daedalus and Icarus 2 5 Variations about Pasiphae s death 3 Personae of Pasiphae 4 Cult of Pasiphae 4 1 On divination 4 2 Celestial deity 5 Other representations 5 1 In art 5 2 Scientific representation 5 3 Literary representation 6 In popular culture 7 Genealogy 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 10 1 Ancient 10 2 Modern 11 External linksFamily EditParentage Edit Pasiphae was the daughter of god of the Sun Helios 3 4 5 6 and the Oceanid nymph 7 Perse 8 9 10 She was thus the sister of Aeetes Circe and Perses of Colchis In some accounts Pasiphae s mother was identified as the island nymph Crete herself 11 12 Like her doublet clarification needed Europa the consort of Zeus her origins were in the East in her case at the earliest known Kartvelian speaking polity of Colchis Egrisi Georgian ეგრისი now in western Georgia 13 14 15 16 Marriage and children Edit Pasiphae was given in marriage to King Minos of Crete With Minos she was the mother of Acacallis Ariadne Androgeus Glaucus Deucalion 17 Phaedra Xenodice and Catreus After lying down with the Cretan Bull she gave birth to the star like Asterion who became known as the Minotaur Mythology Edit Daedalus presents the artificial cow to Pasiphae Roman fresco in the House of the Vettii Pompeii 1st century CE Birth of the Minotaur Edit Minos was required to sacrifice the fairest bull born in its herd to Poseidon each year One year an extremely beautiful bull was born Minos refused to sacrifice this bull and sacrificed another inferior bull instead As punishment Poseidon cursed his wife Pasiphae to experience lust for the white splendid bull Ultimately Pasiphae went to Daedalus and asked him to help her mate with the bull Daedalus then created a hollow wooden cow covered with real cow skin so realistic that it fooled the Cretan Bull Pasiphae climbed into the structure allowing the bull to mate with her Pasiphae fell pregnant and gave birth to a half human half bull creature that fed solely on human flesh The child was named Asterius after the previous king but was commonly called the Minotaur the bull of Minos 18 19 20 The myth of Pasiphae s coupling with the bull and the subsequent birth of the Minotaur was the subject of Euripides s lost play the Cretans of which few fragments survive Sections include a chorus of priests presenting themselves and addressing Minos someone perhaps a wetnurse informing Minos of the newborn infant s nature informing Minos and the audience among others that Pasiphae breastfeeds the Minotaur like an infant and a dialogue between Pasiphae and Minos where they argue over which between them is responsible 21 Pasiphae s speech defending herself is preserved an answer to Minos accusations not preserved in which she excuses herself on account of acting under the constraint of divine power and insists that the one to blame is actually Minos who angered the sea god 22 PASIPHAE If I had sold the gifts of Kypris given my body in secret to some man you would have every right to condemn me as a whore But this was no act of the will I am suffering from some madness brought on by a god It s not plausible What could I have seen in a bull to assault my heart with this shameful passion Did he look too handsome in his robe Did a sea of fire smoulder in his eyes Was it the red tint of his hair his dark beard 23 Mythological scholars and authors Ruck and Staples remarked that the Bull was the old pre Olympian Poseidon 24 Variations on the myth Edit Pseudo Apollodorus mentions a slightly differing reason for why Poseidon cursed Pasiphae citing that Minos wanted to be king and he called upon Poseidon to send him a bull in order to prove to the kingdom that he had received sovereignty from the gods Upon calling on Poseidon Minos failed to sacrifice the bull as Poseidon wished causing the god to grow angry with him According to sixth century BC author Bacchylides the curse was instead sent by Aphrodite 25 and Hyginus says this was because Pasiphae had neglected Aphrodite s worship for years 26 In yet another version Aphrodite cursed Pasiphae as well as several of her sisters with unnatural desires as a revenge against her father Helios 27 for he had revealed to Aphrodite s husband Hephaestus her secret affair with Ares the god of war earning Aphrodite s eternal hatred for himself and his whole race 28 29 Pasiphae nursing the infant Minotaur red figure kylix found at Etruscan Vulci 4th century BC In some more obscure traditions it was not Poseidon s bull but Minos father Zeus disguised as one who made love to Pasiphae and sired the Minotaur 30 An ancient Greek lexicon mentions a tradition where Zeus and Pasiphae are the parents of the Egyptian god Amun who was identified with Zeus 31 Pasiphae s Curse Edit In other aspects Pasiphae like her niece Medea was a mistress of magical herbal arts in the Greek imagination The author of Bibliotheke records the fidelity charm she placed upon Minos who would ejaculate serpents scorpions and centipedes killing any unlawful concubine but Procris with a protective circean herb lay with Minos with impunity 32 In another version this unexplained disease that tormented Minos killed all his concubines and prevented him and Pasiphae from having any children the scorpions and serpents did not otherwise harm Pasiphae as she was an immortal child of the Sun Procris then inserted a goat s bladder into a woman told Minos to ejaculate the scorpions in there and then sent him to Pasiphae The couple was thus able to conceive eight children 5 Records indicate this became the first modern documentation of a sheath or condom 33 Pasiphae entering the hollow cow by Giulio Romano 15th century Daedalus and Icarus Edit In one version of the story Pasiphae supplied Daedalus and his son Icarus with a ship in order to escape Minos and Crete 34 In another she helped him hide until he fashioned wings made of wax and bird feathers 35 Variations about Pasiphae s death Edit While Pasiphae is an immortal goddess in some texts other authors treated her as a mortal woman like Euripides who in his play Cretans has Minos sentence her to death her eventual fate is unclear as no relevant fragment survives In Virgil s Aeneid Aeneas sees her when he visits the Underworld describing Pasiphae residing in the Mournful Fields a place inhabited by sinful lovers 36 Personae of Pasiphae EditIn the general understanding of the Minoan myth 37 Pasiphae and Daedalus 38 construction of the wooden cow allowed her to satisfy her desire 39 for the Cretan Bull Through this interpretation she was reduced from a near divine figure daughter of the Sun to a stereotype of grotesque bestiality and the shocking excesses of lust and deceit 40 Pasiphae appeared in Virgil s Eclogue VI 45 60 in Silenus list of suitable mythological subjects on which Virgil lingers in such detail that he gives the sixteen line episode the weight of a brief inset myth 41 In Ovid s Ars Amatoria Pasiphae is framed in zoophilic terms Pasiphae fieri gaudebat adultera tauri Pasiphae took pleasure in becoming an adulteress with a bull 42 Pasiphae is often included on lists among women ruled by lust other women include Phaedra Byblis Myrrha and Scylla Scholars see her as a personified sin of bestiality 43 Ars amatoria shows Pasiphae s jealousy of the cows primping in front of a mirror while she laments that she is not a cow and killing of her rivals 43 She curses ev ry beauteous cow she sees 44 Cult of Pasiphae Edit Pasiphae and the Cretan Bull on a cow filled field 13th century On divination Edit In mainland Greece Pasiphae was worshipped as an oracular goddess at Thalamae one of the original koine of Sparta The geographer Pausanias describes the shrine as small situated near a clear stream and flanked by bronze statues of Helios and Pasiphae His account also equates Pasiphae with Ino and the lunar goddess Selene Cicero writes in De Divinatione 1 96 that the Spartan ephors would sleep at the shrine of Pasiphae seeking prophetic dreams to aid them in governance According to Plutarch 45 Spartan society twice underwent major upheavals sparked by ephors dreams at the shrine during the Hellenistic era In one case an ephor dreamed that some of his colleagues chairs were removed from the agora and that a voice called out this is better for Sparta inspired by this King Cleomenes acted to consolidate royal power Again during the reign of King Agis several ephors brought the people into revolt with oracles from Pasiphae s shrine promising remission of debts and redistribution of land Celestial deity Edit In Description of Greece Pausanias equates Pasiphae with Selene implying that the figure was worshipped as a lunar deity 46 However further studies on Minoan religion indicate that the sun was a female figure suggesting instead that Pasiphae was originally a solar goddess an interpretation consistent with her depiction as Helios daughter 47 Poseidon s bull may in turn be vestigial of the lunar bull prevalent in Ancient Mesopotamian religion 48 Nowadays Pasiphae and her son the Minotaur are associated with the astrological sign of Taurus Other representations Edit Pasiphae a moon of Jupiter photographed by the Haute Provence ObservatoryIn art Edit The myth of Pasiphae and the Cretan Bull became widely depicted in art throughout history citation needed Pasiphae was most often depicted with a bull near her signifying the connection to the myth citation needed Scientific representation Edit One of Jupiter s 79 moons discovered in 1908 is named after Pasiphae the woman of the myth of the Minotaur Literary representation Edit Pasiphae is mentioned in Canto 12 of Dante Alighieri s Inferno When Dante encounters the Minotaur he describes the unnatural and deceptive manner of the beast s conception Fiona Benson s third collection of poetry Ephemeron contains a long section entitled Translations from the Pasiphae in which she retells the Minotaur myth from the point of view of the bull child s mother In popular culture Edit Daedalus constructing the wooden cow which Pasiphae uses to mate with the Cretan Bull 17th cent Pasiphae and the Cretan Bull 18th cent by Gustave MoreauPasiphae appears in the BBC One fantasy drama series Atlantis Here she seems to be the main antagonist As Ariadne s domineering stepmother she disapproves of her attraction to Jason and tries to kill the hero several times Her sister Circe seems to hold a grudge against her and asks Jason to help kill her The last episode of season 1 Touched by the Gods Part 2 revealed that she is the mother of Jason She thought he died after she cursed her husband and they fled to our world She is portrayed by Sarah Parish 49 Pasiphae is a major antagonist in Rick Riordan s 2013 fantasy novel The House of Hades In this novel she is portrayed as an immortal sorceress and former wife of the late King Minos Having grown bitter towards the gods after the events of the Minoan myth Pasiphae allies with the goddess Gaea and her giant army to overthrow the Olympian gods She is confronted and defeated by Hazel Levesque a demigod daughter of Pluto who had been trained in sorcery by the goddess Hecate In this novel it is revealed that the Labyrinth is tied to her life force as much as Daedalus s thereby rendering the infamous inventor s sacrifice in the previous series useless 50 Pasiphae appears in Madeline Miller s 2018 novel Circe the sister of the book s protagonist Circe the daughter of Helios and Perse A witch just like her she and Circe have an antagonistic and sour relationship after Pasiphae has intercourse with the Cretan Bull she calls in Circe to assist her in the Minotaur s birth though the two sisters hardly reconcile their differences It s also heavily implied she entered an incestuous affair with her brother Perses here presented as her twin 51 Pasiphae appears in Jennifer Saint s novel Ariadne as a supporting character featuring heavily in the novel s first section which explores the myth of the Minotaur Her pregnancy by the Cretan bull widely affects the perception of the Cretan people of the ruling family with both Ariadne and Phaedra making references to the local gossip and admonitions of their mother s infidelity and bestiality The punishment she endured for Minos s actions at the hands of Poseidon and her reaction to it is explored as one of the key feminist themes of the novel citation needed Genealogy EditPasiphae s family treeGaiaUranusHyperionTheiaOceanusTethysHeliosPerseCirceAeetesPASIPHAEPersesAloeusSee also EditPolyphonte another woman in Greek mythology cursed to fall in love with an animal a bear History of zoophilia Solar deity Lunar deityNotes Edit Wells John C 2009 Pasiphae Pasiphae Longman Pronunciation Dictionary London Pearson Longman ISBN 978 1 4058 8118 0 An attribute of the Moon as Pausanias remarked in passing i 43 96 compare Euryphaessa if Pasiphae is an ancient conventional Minoan epithet translated into Greek it would be a loan translation or calque Apollonius Rhodius Argonautica 3 999 Ovid Metamorphoses 9 735 a b Antoninus Liberalis Metamorphoses 41 Seneca Phaedra 112 Hesiod Theogony 355 Apollodorus Library 1 9 1 Gaius Julius Hyginus Fabulae preface Cicero De Natura Deorum 48 4 Diodorus Siculus Bibliotheca historica 4 60 4 John Tzetzes Chiliades 4 361 David Marshall Lang The Georgians p 59 Frederick A Praeger New York 1966 Antiquity 1994 p 359 The Great Soviet Encyclopedia Znachenie slova Kolhi v Bolshoj Sovetskoj Enciklopedii The Cambridge Ancient History John Anthony Crook Elizabeth Rawson p 255 David Marshall Lang The Georgians p 75 76 88 Frederick A Praeger New York 1966 Hyginus Fabulae 14 Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheke 3 1 4 Diodorus Siculus Historic Library 4 77 1 Philostratus the Elder Imagines 1 16 1 Johan Tralau Cannibalism Vegetarianism and the Community of Sacrifice Rediscovering Euripides Cretans and the Beginnings of Political Philosophy the University of Chigago Press Journals 1 Sansone David Euripides Cretans Frag 472e 16 26 Kannicht Zeitschrift Fur Papyrologie Und Epigraphik vol 184 Dr Rudolf Habelt GmbH 2013 pp 58 65 Euripides Cretans Fr 472e K translation by P T Rourke via Diotima Ruck and Staples 1994 213 Bacchylides frag 26 Hyginus Fabulae 40 Libanius Progymnasmata 2 21 Seneca Phaedra 124 Scholia on Euripides Hippolytus 47 Porphyry On Abstinence from Animal Food 3 16 Lexicon of Greek Language s v Ἄmmwn Apollodorus Bibliotheca 3 15 1 Peel John Finch B E Green Hugh March 1965 Contraception through the Ages Population Studies 18 3 330 doi 10 2307 2173294 JSTOR 2173294 Diodorus Siculus Historic Library 4 77 5 Diodorus Siculus Historic Library 4 77 7 Virgil Aeneid 6 447 Specific astrological or calendrical interpretations of the mystic mating of the wide shining daughter of the Sun with a mythological bull transformed into an unnatural curse in Hellene myth are prone to variability and debate Daedalus was of the line of the chthonic king at Athens Erechtheus Greek myth characteristically emphasizes the accursed unnaturalness of a mystical marriage conceived literally as merely carnal a fragment of Bacchylides alludes to her unspeakable sickness and Hyginus in Fabulae 40 to an unnatural love for a bull This was the commonplace of brief notices of Pasiphae among Latin poets too Rebecca Armstrong notes in Cretan Women Pasiphae Ariadne and Phaedra in Latin Poetry Oxford University Press 2006 169 Ruck and Staples 1994 9 argue that the suspension of linear chronology is a common feature in Greek myths Armstrong 2006 171 Ovid Ars Amatoria 1 9 33 a b Blumenfeld Kosinski Renate 1996 The Scandal of Pasiphae Narration and Interpretation in the Ovide moralise Modern Philology 93 3 307 326 doi 10 1086 392321 ISSN 0026 8232 JSTOR 438324 S2CID 162197853 The Love Books of Ovid Index www sacred texts com Retrieved 2021 12 04 Plutarch Parallel Lives Agis and Cleomenes Pausanias Description of Greece 3 26 1 Goodison L From Tholos Tomb to Throne Room Perceptions of the Sun in Minoan Ritual In R LAFFINEUR and R HAGG eds Potnia Deities and Religion in the Aegean Bronze Age 2001 pp 77 88 Bull Mythology Archived from the original on 2015 12 08 Retrieved 2015 11 30 Pasiphae Atlantis Series 1 BBC Riordan Rick 2013 The House of Hades New York City Disney Hyperion ISBN 978 1 4231 4672 8 Miller Madeline 2018 Circe New York City Little Brown and Company ISBN 978 0 316 55634 7 References EditAncient Edit 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 Bacchylides in Bacchylides Corinna Greek Lyric Volume IV Bacchylides Corinna and Others Edited and translated by David A Campbell Loeb Classical Library 461 Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 1992 Euripides Cretans fragments in Fragments Aegeus Meleager Edited and translated by Christopher Collard Martin Cropp Loeb Classical Library 504 Cambridge MA Harvard University Press 2008 Apollonius Rhodius Argonautica translated by Robert Cooper Seaton 1853 1915 R C Loeb Classical Library Volume 001 London William Heinemann Ltd 1912 Online version at the Topos Text Project Apollodorus Apollodorus The Library with an English Translation by Sir James George Frazer F B A F R S in 2 Volumes Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1921 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Pausanias Pausanias Description of Greece with an English Translation by W H S Jones Litt D and H A Ormerod M A in 4 Volumes Cambridge MA Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1918 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Diodorus Siculus Bibliotheca Historica Vol 1 2 Immanel Bekker Ludwig Dindorf Friedrich Vogel in aedibus B G Teubneri Leipzig 1888 1890 Greek text available at the Perseus Digital Library Antoninus Liberalis The Metamorphoses of Antoninus Liberalis translated by Francis Celoria Routledge 1992 Online version at the Topos Text Project Philostratus the Elder Imagines translated by A Fairbanks Loeb Classical Library No 256 Harvard University Press Cambridge Massachusetts 1931 ISBN 978 0674992825 Internet Archive Plutarch and Bernadotte Perrin Plutarch s Lives Cambridge Mass Harvard University Press 1967 Vergil Aeneid Theodore C Williams trans Boston Houghton Mifflin Co 1910 Online version at the Perseus Digital Library Ovid Metamorphoses Translated by A D Melville introduction and notes by E J Kenney Oxford Oxford University Press 2008 ISBN 978 0 19 953737 2 Ovid The Amores Ars Amatoria Remedia Amoris and Medicamina Faciei Femineae of Publius Ovidius Naso translated out of the Latin by J Lewis May illustrated by Jean De Bosschere privately printed for Rarity Press New York 1930 Online version available at sacred texts com Marcus Tullius Cicero Nature of the Gods from the Treatises of M T Cicero translated by Charles Duke Yonge 1812 1891 Bohn edition of 1878 Online version at the Topos Text Project Hyginus Gaius Julius The Myths of Hyginus Edited and translated by Mary A Grant Lawrence University of Kansas Press 1960 Seneca Tragedies translated by Miller Frank Justus Loeb Classical Library Volumes Cambridge Massachusetts Harvard University Press London William Heinemann Ltd 1917 Tzetzes John Book of Histories Book II IV translated by Gary Berkowitz from the original Greek of T Kiessling s edition of 1826 Online version available at Theoi comModern Edit Kerenyi Karl The Gods of the Greeks 1951 Graves Robert The Greek Myths 1955 1960 Ruck Carl A P and Danny Staples The World of Classical Myth 1994 Smith William Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology London 1873 Past piiae External links Edit Media related to Pasiphae at Wikimedia Commons PASIPHAE from the Theoi Project PASIPHAE from greekmythology com Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Pasiphae amp oldid 1157941862, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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