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Priapus

In Greek mythology, Priapus (/prˈpəs/;[1] Ancient Greek: Πρίαπος, Príapos) is a minor rustic fertility god, protector of livestock, fruit plants, gardens and male genitalia. Priapus is marked by his oversized, permanent erection, which gave rise to the medical term priapism. He became a popular figure in Roman erotic art and Latin literature, and is the subject of the often humorously obscene collection of verse called the Priapeia.

Priapus
God of fertility, vegetables, nature, livestock, fruit, beekeeping, sex, genitals, masculinity, and gardens
Fresco of Priapus, House of the Vettii, Pompeii
SymbolDonkey, flowers, fruit, vegetables, fish, bees
Personal information
ParentsAphrodite and Dionysus;
Hermes and Aphrodite;
Dionysus and Chione;
Zeus and Aphrodite
Pan
SiblingsCharites, Eros, Hermaphroditos, Hymenaios, Pan, satyrs
Roman equivalentMutunus Tutunus

Mythology

Relationship with other deities

Priapus was described in varying sources as the son of Aphrodite by Dionysus;[2] as the son of Dionysus and Chione;[3] as perhaps the father or son of Hermes;[4] or as the son of Zeus or Pan.[5] According to legend, Hera cursed him with inconvenient impotence (he could not sustain an erection when the time came for sexual intercourse), ugliness and foul-mindedness while he was still in Aphrodite's womb, in revenge for the hero Paris having the temerity to judge Aphrodite more beautiful than Hera.[6] In another account, Hera's anger and curse were because the baby had been fathered by her husband Zeus.[7] The other gods refused to allow him to live on Mount Olympus and threw him down to Earth, leaving him on a hillside. He was eventually found by shepherds and was brought up by them.

Priapus joined Pan and the satyrs as a spirit of fertility and growth, though he was perennially frustrated by his impotence. In a ribald anecdote told by Ovid,[8] he attempted to rape the goddess Hestia but was thwarted by an ass, whose braying caused him to lose his erection at the critical moment and woke Hestia. The episode gave him a lasting hatred of asses and a willingness to see them killed in his honour.[9] The emblem of his lustful nature was his permanent erection and his large penis. Another myth states that he pursued the nymph Lotis until the gods took pity on her and turned her into a lotus plant.[10]

Other works

As well as the collection known as the Priapeia mentioned above, Priapus was a frequent figure in Latin erotic or mythological verse.

In Ovid's Fasti,[11] the nymph Lotis fell into a drunken slumber at a feast, and Priapus seized this opportunity to advance upon her. With stealth he approached, and just before he could embrace her, Silenus's donkey alerted the party with "raucous braying". Lotis awoke and pushed Priapus away, but her only true escape was to be transformed into the lotus tree. To punish the donkey for spoiling his opportunity, Priapus bludgeoned it to death with his gargantuan phallus. When the same story is recounted later in the same book, Lotis is replaced with the virginal goddess Hestia, who avoids being changed into a tree as the other Olympians come to her rescue.[12] Ovid's anecdote served to explain why donkeys were sacrificed to Priapus in the city of Lampsacus on the Hellespont, where he was worshipped among the offspring of Hermes.[13]

Once, a donkey that had been given human speech by Dionysus challenged Priapus to a contest about which between them had the better penis. Priapus won the contest, and then killed the donkey, which was put by Dionysus among the stars.[14][15][16]

Worship and attributes

 
Priapus depicted with the attributes of Mercury in a fresco found at Pompeii
 
Bronze Bust of Priapus, Roman 100 BC found in the Villa di Papiri in Herculaneum

The first extant mention of Priapus is in the eponymous comedy Priapus, written in the 4th century BC by Xenarchus. Originally worshipped by Greek colonists in Lampsacus in Asia Minor, the cult of Priapus spread to mainland Greece and eventually to Italy during the 3rd century BC.[17] Lucian (De saltatione) tells that in Bithynia Priapus was accounted as a warlike god, a rustic tutor to the infant Ares, "who taught him dancing first and war only afterwards," Karl Kerenyi observed.[18] Arnobius is aware of the importance accorded Priapus in this region near the Hellespont.[19] Also, Pausanias notes:

This god is worshipped where goats and sheep pasture or there are swarms of bees; but by the people of Lampsacus he is more revered than any other god, being called by them a son of Dionysus and Aphrodite.[20]

In later antiquity, his worship meant little more than a cult of sophisticated pornography.[21]

Outside his "home" region in Asia Minor, Priapus was regarded as something of a joke by urban dwellers. However, he played a more important role in the countryside, where he was seen as a guardian deity. He was regarded as the patron god of sailors and fishermen and others in need of good luck, and his presence was believed to avert the evil eye.[22]

Priapus does not appear to have had an organized cult and was mostly worshiped in gardens or homes, though there are attestations of temples dedicated to the god. His sacrificial animal was the ass, but agricultural offerings (such as fruit, flowers, vegetables and fish) were also very common.[17]

Long after the fall of Rome and the rise of Christianity, Priapus continued to be invoked as a symbol of health and fertility. The 13th century Lanercost Chronicle, a history of northern England and Scotland, records a "lay Cistercian brother" erecting a statue of Priapus (simulacrum Priapi statuere) in an attempt to end an outbreak of cattle disease.[23]

In the 1980s, D. F. Cassidy founded the St. Priapus Church as a modern church centred on worship of the phallus.[24][25]

Patron of merchant sailing

Priapus' role as a patron god for merchant sailors in ancient Greece and Rome is that of a protector and navigational aide. Recent shipwreck evidence contains apotropaic items carried on board by mariners in the forms of a terracotta phallus, wooden Priapus figure, and bronze sheath from a military ram. Coinciding with the use of wooden Priapic markers erected in areas of dangerous passage or particular landing areas for sailors, the function of Priapus is much more extensive than previously thought.[26]

Although Priapus is commonly associated with the failed attempts of rape against the nymphs Lotis and Vesta in Ovid's comedy Fasti[27] and the rather flippant treatment of the deity in urban settings, Priapus' protection traits can be traced back to the importance placed on the phallus in ancient times (particularly his association with fertility and garden protection).[26] In Greece, the phallus was thought of to have a mind of its own, animal-like, separate from the mind and control of the man.[28] The phallus is also associated with "possession and territorial demarcation" in many cultures, attributing to Priapus' other role as a navigational deity.[26]

Marriage ceremony of firstborn conception

Throughout the ancient Mediterranean, Middle East and even into India, images of Priapus (or Hermes, or some other phallic deity) with a phallus were used in deflowering rituals of newlywed virgin brides. Though the bride would later consumate the marriage with her husband, the deity was said to impregnate her with her firstborn child. In early times, this child begotten of the deity was sometimes then offered to the deity as a sacrifice, just as the first fruits of all kinds were offered to the deity who provided them. Though the Romans gave up human sacrifice, they still held this ceremony of firstborn conception. As Christianity equated the priapic deities with the devil, this was perceived as the practice of sacrificing one's firstborn child to the devil. [29]

Depictions

 
Gallo-Roman bronze statuette (ca 1st century AD) of Priapus (or a Genius cucullatus?) discovered in Picardy, northern France, made in two parts, with the top section concealing a giant phallus.

Priapus' iconic attribute was his priapism (permanently erect penis); he probably absorbed some pre-existing ithyphallic deities as his cult developed. He was represented in a variety of ways, most commonly as a misshapen gnome-like figure with an enormous erect phallus. Statues of Priapus were common in ancient Greece and Rome, standing in gardens. The Athenians often conflated Priapus with Hermes, the god of boundaries, and depicted a hybrid deity with a winged helmet, sandals, and huge erection.[10]

Another attribute of Priapus was the sickle which he often carries in his right hand. This too was used to threaten thieves, doubtless with castration:[30][31] Horace (Sat. 1.8.1–7) writes:[32]

Olim truncus eram ficulnus, inutile lignum,
cum faber, incertus scamnum faceretne Priapum,
maluit esse deum. deus inde ego, furum aviumque
maxima formido; nam fures dextra coercet
obscenoque ruber porrectus ab inguine palus;
ast importunes volucres in vertice harundo
terret fixa vetatque novis considere in hortis.
"Once I was a trunk of fig, a useless piece of wood,
when a carpenter, unsure whether he should make a bench or a Priapus,
decided to make a god. So I am a god, of thieves and birds
a very great scarer; for my right hand curbs thieves,
as does the red pole which projects from my indecent groin;
but as for the importunate birds, the reed fixed on my head
terrifies them and forbids them to settle in the new gardens."

A number of epigrams, apparently written as if to adorn shrines of Priapus, were collected in the Priapeia. In these, Priapus frequently threatens sexual assault against potential thieves:[33]

Percidere, puer, moneo; futuere, puella;
   barbatum furem tertia poena manet.
"I warn you, boy, you will be screwed; girl, you will be laid with;
   a third penalty awaits the bearded thief."
Femina si furtum faciet mihi virve puerve,
   haec cunnum, caput hic praebeat, ille nates.
"If a woman steals from me, or a man, or a boy,
   let the first give me her cunt, the second his head, the third his buttocks."
per medios ibit pueros mediasque puellas
   mentula; barbatis non-nisi summa petet.
"My dick will go through the middle of boys and the middle of girls,
   but with bearded men it will aim only for the top."

A number of Roman paintings of Priapus have survived. One of the most famous images of Priapus is that from the House of the Vettii in Pompeii. A fresco depicts the god weighing his phallus against a large bag of coins. In nearby Herculaneum, an excavated snack bar has a painting of Priapus behind the bar, apparently as a good-luck symbol for the customers.[citation needed]

Modern derivations

Medical terminology

The medical condition priapism derives its name from Priapus, alluding to the god's permanently engorged penis.

Natural history

  • The group of worm-like marine burrowing animals known as the Priapulidea, literally "penis worms", also derives its name from Priapus.
  • Mutinus caninus, a woodland fungus, draws its first name from Priapus's Roman name, due to its phallic shape.

See also

References

Notes

  1. ^ "Priapus". Collins Dictionary. n.d. Retrieved 24 September 2014.
  2. ^ Diodorus Siculus, Bibliotheca historica, 4.6.1; Pausanias, Description of Greece 9.31.2; Tibullus, Poems, 1.4.7;
  3. ^ Scholia on Theocritus, 1. 21
  4. ^ Kerenyi, Gods of the Greeks, 1951, p. 175, noting G. Kaibel, Epigrammata graeca ex lapidibus collecta, 817, where the other god's name, both father and son of Hermes, is obscured; Hyginus (Fabulae 160) makes Hermes the father of Pan.
  5. ^ "Priapus". The Oxford Companion to World Mythology. David Leeming. Oxford University Press, 2004.
  6. ^ An elaboration on a scholium on Apollonius of Rhodes' Argonautica i. Kereny remarks of the jealousy of Hera in this case, "a cheap theme, and certainly not an ancient one" (Kerenyi 1951, p.176).
  7. ^ "Priapus." Suda On Line. Tr. Ross Scaife. 10 August 2014. Entry.
  8. ^ Ovid, Fasti, vi.319ff
  9. ^ "Priapus." Who's Who in Classical Mythology, Routledge. 2002.
  10. ^ a b "Priapus." Bloomsbury Dictionary of Myth. 1996.
  11. ^ Fasti, 2.391ff.
  12. ^ Ovid, Fasti 6.319–344.
  13. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae, 160.
  14. ^ Hyginus, Astronomica 2.23.3
  15. ^ Feldman, Louis H. (1996). Studies in Hellenistic Judaism. Brill. p. 203. ISBN 90-04-10418-6.
  16. ^ Eratosthenes; Hyginus (2015). Constellation Myths: With Aratus's 'Phaenomena'. Translated by Robin Hard. Oxford University Press. p. 67. ISBN 978-0-19-871698-3.
  17. ^ a b Robert Christopher Towneley Parker. "Priapus". The Oxford Classical Dictionary. Ed. Simon Hornblower and Anthony Spawforth. Oxford University Press 2003.
  18. ^ Kerenyi, Gods of the Greeks, 1951, p. 154, also pp. 175–77.
  19. ^ In ridiculing the literal aspects of pagan gods given human form, he mentions "the Hellespontian Priapus bearing about among the goddesses, virgin and matron, those parts ever prepared for encounter." (Arnobius, Seven Books against the Heathen III.10 (on-line text).
  20. ^ Pausanias, Description of Greece 9.31.2.
  21. ^ Mark P.O. Morford, Robert J. Lenardon, Michael Sham. (2011, 9th ed.). "Classical Mythology" (New York, NY.: Oxford University Press) ISBN 978-0-19-539770-3
  22. ^ "Priapus." Encyclopædia Britannica. 2007
  23. ^ Yves Bonnefoy, Roman and European Mythologies, pp. 139–142. University of Chicago Press, 1992. ISBN 0-226-06455-7
  24. ^ J. Gordon Melton (1996, 5th ed.). Encyclopedia of American Religions (Detroit, Mich.: Gale) ISBN 0-8103-7714-4 p. 952.
  25. ^ Andy Nyberg, "St. Priapus Church: The Organized Religion", The Advocate, Sep. 1983, pp. 35–37.
  26. ^ a b c Neilson III, Harry R. 2002. "A terracotta phallus from Pisa Ship E: more evidence for the Priapus deity as protector of Greek and Roman navigators." The International Journal of Nautical Archaeology 31.2: 248–253.
  27. ^ Fantham, Elaine. 1983. "Sexual Comedy in Ovid's Fasti: Sources and Motivation." Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 87: 185.
  28. ^ Csapo, Eric. 1997. "Riding the Phallus for Dionysus: Iconology, Ritual, and Gender-Role De/Construction." Phoenix 51.3/4: 260.
  29. ^ Walker, Barbara G. (1996). The Women's Encyclopedia of Myths and Secrets. Edison, New Jersey: Castle Books. pp. 311–313. ISBN 0785807209.
  30. ^ deMause, Lloyd (ed.) (1976), The History of Childhood, p. 46.
  31. ^ For the sickle used for the castration of sacrificial animals, see Burkert, Walter (1983) Homo Necans: The Anthropology of Ancient Greek Ritual and Myth, translated by Peter Bing, p. 68, quoting Martial 3.24.
  32. ^ Moul, V. A. (2016). "The Source for Priapus in Cowley’s Ode “To The Royal Society” (1667)", p. 3.
  33. ^ Craig A. Williams, Roman Homosexuality: Ideologies of Masculinity in Classical Antiquity, p. 21. Oxford University Press US, 1999. ISBN 0-19-512505-3

Bibliography

  • Brown, Emerson, Jr. "Hortus Inconclusus: The Significance of Priapus and Pyramus and Thisbe in the Merchant's Tale". Chaucer Review 4.1 (1970): 31–40.
  • “Priapus and the Parlement of Foulys”. Studies in Philology 72 (1975): 258–74.
  • Coronato, Rocco. “The Emergence of Priapism in the Two Gentlemen of Verona”. In Proteus: The Language of Metamorphosis, ed. Carla Dente, George Ferzoco, Miriam Gill and Marina Spunta. Aldershot: Ashgate, 2005, chapter 8, 93–101.
  • Delord, Frédéric. "Priapus". 2009. In A Dictionary of Shakespeare's Classical Mythology (2009–), ed. Yves Peyré.
  • in Autour de King Lear, ed. A. Lafont and M.-C. Munoz, with F. Delord. Montpellier: IRCL, February 2009.
  • Érubescences et turgescences dans l’imaginaire shakespearien et la culture de la Renaissance, thèse dactylographiée (Ph.D). Montpellier : Université Montpellier III – Paul Valéry, 2008.
  • Franz, David O. "Leud Priapians and Renaissance Pornography". SEL: Studies in English Literature 1500–1900 12, n°1 (winter 1972): 157–72.
  • Morel, Philippe. "Priape à la Renaissance: Les guirlandes de Giovanni da Udine à la Farnésine". Revue de l’Art 69 (1985): 13–28.
  • Peyré, Yves. "Priape dénaturé: Remarques sur les Apotheseos…Deorum Libri Tres de Georges Pictor et leur adaptation anglaise par Stephen Batman". Influences latines en Europe (Cahiers de l’Europe Classique et Néo-Latine). Toulouse: Travaux de l’Université de Toulouse – Le Mirail, A.23 (1983): 61–87.

External links

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  The dictionary definition of Priapus at Wiktionary

  • Chisholm, Hugh, ed. (1911). "Priāpus" . Encyclopædia Britannica (11th ed.). Cambridge University Press.
  • Britannica Online Encyclopedia
  • Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology 2013-10-15 at the Wayback Machine
  • Priapos: Greek & Mysian God of Gardens and Fertility – Theoi Project

priapus, ancient, city, asia, minor, karabiga, genus, anemones, actinia, greek, mythology, ancient, greek, Πρίαπος, príapos, minor, rustic, fertility, protector, livestock, fruit, plants, gardens, male, genitalia, marked, oversized, permanent, erection, which,. For the ancient city in Asia Minor see Karabiga For the genus of sea anemones see Actinia In Greek mythology Priapus p r aɪ ˈ eɪ p e s 1 Ancient Greek Priapos Priapos is a minor rustic fertility god protector of livestock fruit plants gardens and male genitalia Priapus is marked by his oversized permanent erection which gave rise to the medical term priapism He became a popular figure in Roman erotic art and Latin literature and is the subject of the often humorously obscene collection of verse called the Priapeia PriapusGod of fertility vegetables nature livestock fruit beekeeping sex genitals masculinity and gardensFresco of Priapus House of the Vettii PompeiiSymbolDonkey flowers fruit vegetables fish beesPersonal informationParentsAphrodite and Dionysus Hermes and Aphrodite Dionysus and Chione Zeus and AphroditePanSiblingsCharites Eros Hermaphroditos Hymenaios Pan satyrsRoman equivalentMutunus Tutunus Contents 1 Mythology 1 1 Relationship with other deities 1 2 Other works 2 Worship and attributes 2 1 Patron of merchant sailing 2 2 Marriage ceremony of firstborn conception 3 Depictions 4 Modern derivations 4 1 Medical terminology 4 2 Natural history 5 See also 6 References 6 1 Notes 6 2 Bibliography 7 External linksMythology EditRelationship with other deities Edit Priapus was described in varying sources as the son of Aphrodite by Dionysus 2 as the son of Dionysus and Chione 3 as perhaps the father or son of Hermes 4 or as the son of Zeus or Pan 5 According to legend Hera cursed him with inconvenient impotence he could not sustain an erection when the time came for sexual intercourse ugliness and foul mindedness while he was still in Aphrodite s womb in revenge for the hero Paris having the temerity to judge Aphrodite more beautiful than Hera 6 In another account Hera s anger and curse were because the baby had been fathered by her husband Zeus 7 The other gods refused to allow him to live on Mount Olympus and threw him down to Earth leaving him on a hillside He was eventually found by shepherds and was brought up by them Priapus joined Pan and the satyrs as a spirit of fertility and growth though he was perennially frustrated by his impotence In a ribald anecdote told by Ovid 8 he attempted to rape the goddess Hestia but was thwarted by an ass whose braying caused him to lose his erection at the critical moment and woke Hestia The episode gave him a lasting hatred of asses and a willingness to see them killed in his honour 9 The emblem of his lustful nature was his permanent erection and his large penis Another myth states that he pursued the nymph Lotis until the gods took pity on her and turned her into a lotus plant 10 Other works Edit As well as the collection known as the Priapeia mentioned above Priapus was a frequent figure in Latin erotic or mythological verse In Ovid s Fasti 11 the nymph Lotis fell into a drunken slumber at a feast and Priapus seized this opportunity to advance upon her With stealth he approached and just before he could embrace her Silenus s donkey alerted the party with raucous braying Lotis awoke and pushed Priapus away but her only true escape was to be transformed into the lotus tree To punish the donkey for spoiling his opportunity Priapus bludgeoned it to death with his gargantuan phallus When the same story is recounted later in the same book Lotis is replaced with the virginal goddess Hestia who avoids being changed into a tree as the other Olympians come to her rescue 12 Ovid s anecdote served to explain why donkeys were sacrificed to Priapus in the city of Lampsacus on the Hellespont where he was worshipped among the offspring of Hermes 13 Once a donkey that had been given human speech by Dionysus challenged Priapus to a contest about which between them had the better penis Priapus won the contest and then killed the donkey which was put by Dionysus among the stars 14 15 16 Worship and attributes Edit Priapus depicted with the attributes of Mercury in a fresco found at Pompeii Bronze Bust of Priapus Roman 100 BC found in the Villa di Papiri in Herculaneum The first extant mention of Priapus is in the eponymous comedy Priapus written in the 4th century BC by Xenarchus Originally worshipped by Greek colonists in Lampsacus in Asia Minor the cult of Priapus spread to mainland Greece and eventually to Italy during the 3rd century BC 17 Lucian De saltatione tells that in Bithynia Priapus was accounted as a warlike god a rustic tutor to the infant Ares who taught him dancing first and war only afterwards Karl Kerenyi observed 18 Arnobius is aware of the importance accorded Priapus in this region near the Hellespont 19 Also Pausanias notes This god is worshipped where goats and sheep pasture or there are swarms of bees but by the people of Lampsacus he is more revered than any other god being called by them a son of Dionysus and Aphrodite 20 In later antiquity his worship meant little more than a cult of sophisticated pornography 21 Outside his home region in Asia Minor Priapus was regarded as something of a joke by urban dwellers However he played a more important role in the countryside where he was seen as a guardian deity He was regarded as the patron god of sailors and fishermen and others in need of good luck and his presence was believed to avert the evil eye 22 Priapus does not appear to have had an organized cult and was mostly worshiped in gardens or homes though there are attestations of temples dedicated to the god His sacrificial animal was the ass but agricultural offerings such as fruit flowers vegetables and fish were also very common 17 Long after the fall of Rome and the rise of Christianity Priapus continued to be invoked as a symbol of health and fertility The 13th century Lanercost Chronicle a history of northern England and Scotland records a lay Cistercian brother erecting a statue of Priapus simulacrum Priapi statuere in an attempt to end an outbreak of cattle disease 23 In the 1980s D F Cassidy founded the St Priapus Church as a modern church centred on worship of the phallus 24 25 Patron of merchant sailing Edit Priapus role as a patron god for merchant sailors in ancient Greece and Rome is that of a protector and navigational aide Recent shipwreck evidence contains apotropaic items carried on board by mariners in the forms of a terracotta phallus wooden Priapus figure and bronze sheath from a military ram Coinciding with the use of wooden Priapic markers erected in areas of dangerous passage or particular landing areas for sailors the function of Priapus is much more extensive than previously thought 26 Although Priapus is commonly associated with the failed attempts of rape against the nymphs Lotis and Vesta in Ovid s comedy Fasti 27 and the rather flippant treatment of the deity in urban settings Priapus protection traits can be traced back to the importance placed on the phallus in ancient times particularly his association with fertility and garden protection 26 In Greece the phallus was thought of to have a mind of its own animal like separate from the mind and control of the man 28 The phallus is also associated with possession and territorial demarcation in many cultures attributing to Priapus other role as a navigational deity 26 Marriage ceremony of firstborn conception Edit Throughout the ancient Mediterranean Middle East and even into India images of Priapus or Hermes or some other phallic deity with a phallus were used in deflowering rituals of newlywed virgin brides Though the bride would later consumate the marriage with her husband the deity was said to impregnate her with her firstborn child In early times this child begotten of the deity was sometimes then offered to the deity as a sacrifice just as the first fruits of all kinds were offered to the deity who provided them Though the Romans gave up human sacrifice they still held this ceremony of firstborn conception As Christianity equated the priapic deities with the devil this was perceived as the practice of sacrificing one s firstborn child to the devil 29 Depictions Edit Gallo Roman bronze statuette ca 1st century AD of Priapus or a Genius cucullatus discovered in Picardy northern France made in two parts with the top section concealing a giant phallus Priapus iconic attribute was his priapism permanently erect penis he probably absorbed some pre existing ithyphallic deities as his cult developed He was represented in a variety of ways most commonly as a misshapen gnome like figure with an enormous erect phallus Statues of Priapus were common in ancient Greece and Rome standing in gardens The Athenians often conflated Priapus with Hermes the god of boundaries and depicted a hybrid deity with a winged helmet sandals and huge erection 10 Another attribute of Priapus was the sickle which he often carries in his right hand This too was used to threaten thieves doubtless with castration 30 31 Horace Sat 1 8 1 7 writes 32 Olim truncus eram ficulnus inutile lignum cum faber incertus scamnum faceretne Priapum maluit esse deum deus inde ego furum aviumquemaxima formido nam fures dextra coercetobscenoque ruber porrectus ab inguine palus ast importunes volucres in vertice harundoterret fixa vetatque novis considere in hortis Once I was a trunk of fig a useless piece of wood when a carpenter unsure whether he should make a bench or a Priapus decided to make a god So I am a god of thieves and birdsa very great scarer for my right hand curbs thieves as does the red pole which projects from my indecent groin but as for the importunate birds the reed fixed on my headterrifies them and forbids them to settle in the new gardens A number of epigrams apparently written as if to adorn shrines of Priapus were collected in the Priapeia In these Priapus frequently threatens sexual assault against potential thieves 33 Percidere puer moneo futuere puella barbatum furem tertia poena manet I warn you boy you will be screwed girl you will be laid with a third penalty awaits the bearded thief Femina si furtum faciet mihi virve puerve haec cunnum caput hic praebeat ille nates If a woman steals from me or a man or a boy let the first give me her cunt the second his head the third his buttocks per medios ibit pueros mediasque puellas mentula barbatis non nisi summa petet My dick will go through the middle of boys and the middle of girls but with bearded men it will aim only for the top A number of Roman paintings of Priapus have survived One of the most famous images of Priapus is that from the House of the Vettii in Pompeii A fresco depicts the god weighing his phallus against a large bag of coins In nearby Herculaneum an excavated snack bar has a painting of Priapus behind the bar apparently as a good luck symbol for the customers citation needed Modern derivations EditMedical terminology Edit The medical condition priapism derives its name from Priapus alluding to the god s permanently engorged penis Natural history Edit The group of worm like marine burrowing animals known as the Priapulidea literally penis worms also derives its name from Priapus Mutinus caninus a woodland fungus draws its first name from Priapus s Roman name due to its phallic shape See also EditPriapeia Tintinnabulum Ancient Rome Latin obscenity Sexuality in ancient Rome Karabiga Turkey formerly known as Priapus Richard Payne Knight OrchisReferences EditNotes Edit Priapus Collins Dictionary n d Retrieved 24 September 2014 Diodorus Siculus Bibliotheca historica 4 6 1 Pausanias Description of Greece 9 31 2 Tibullus Poems 1 4 7 Scholia on Theocritus 1 21 Kerenyi Gods of the Greeks 1951 p 175 noting G Kaibel Epigrammata graeca ex lapidibus collecta 817 where the other god s name both father and son of Hermes is obscured Hyginus Fabulae 160 makes Hermes the father of Pan Priapus The Oxford Companion to World Mythology David Leeming Oxford University Press 2004 An elaboration on a scholium on Apollonius of Rhodes Argonautica i Kereny remarks of the jealousy of Hera in this case a cheap theme and certainly not an ancient one Kerenyi 1951 p 176 Priapus Suda On Line Tr Ross Scaife 10 August 2014 Entry Ovid Fasti vi 319ff Priapus Who s Who in Classical Mythology Routledge 2002 a b Priapus Bloomsbury Dictionary of Myth 1996 Fasti 2 391ff Ovid Fasti 6 319 344 Hyginus Fabulae 160 Hyginus Astronomica 2 23 3 Feldman Louis H 1996 Studies in Hellenistic Judaism Brill p 203 ISBN 90 04 10418 6 Eratosthenes Hyginus 2015 Constellation Myths With Aratus s Phaenomena Translated by Robin Hard Oxford University Press p 67 ISBN 978 0 19 871698 3 a b Robert Christopher Towneley Parker Priapus The Oxford Classical Dictionary Ed Simon Hornblower and Anthony Spawforth Oxford University Press 2003 Kerenyi Gods of the Greeks 1951 p 154 also pp 175 77 In ridiculing the literal aspects of pagan gods given human form he mentions the Hellespontian Priapus bearing about among the goddesses virgin and matron those parts ever prepared for encounter Arnobius Seven Books against the Heathen III 10 on line text Pausanias Description of Greece 9 31 2 Mark P O Morford Robert J Lenardon Michael Sham 2011 9th ed Classical Mythology New York NY Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0 19 539770 3 Priapus Encyclopaedia Britannica 2007 Yves Bonnefoy Roman and European Mythologies pp 139 142 University of Chicago Press 1992 ISBN 0 226 06455 7 J Gordon Melton 1996 5th ed Encyclopedia of American Religions Detroit Mich Gale ISBN 0 8103 7714 4 p 952 Andy Nyberg St Priapus Church The Organized Religion The Advocate Sep 1983 pp 35 37 a b c Neilson III Harry R 2002 A terracotta phallus from Pisa Ship E more evidence for the Priapus deity as protector of Greek and Roman navigators The International Journal of Nautical Archaeology 31 2 248 253 Fantham Elaine 1983 Sexual Comedy in Ovid s Fasti Sources and Motivation Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 87 185 Csapo Eric 1997 Riding the Phallus for Dionysus Iconology Ritual and Gender Role De Construction Phoenix 51 3 4 260 Walker Barbara G 1996 The Women s Encyclopedia of Myths and Secrets Edison New Jersey Castle Books pp 311 313 ISBN 0785807209 deMause Lloyd ed 1976 The History of Childhood p 46 For the sickle used for the castration of sacrificial animals see Burkert Walter 1983 Homo Necans The Anthropology of Ancient Greek Ritual and Myth translated by Peter Bing p 68 quoting Martial 3 24 Moul V A 2016 The Source for Priapus in Cowley s Ode To The Royal Society 1667 p 3 Craig A Williams Roman Homosexuality Ideologies of Masculinity in Classical Antiquity p 21 Oxford University Press US 1999 ISBN 0 19 512505 3 Bibliography Edit Brown Emerson Jr Hortus Inconclusus The Significance of Priapus and Pyramus and Thisbe in the Merchant s Tale Chaucer Review 4 1 1970 31 40 Priapus and the Parlement of Foulys Studies in Philology 72 1975 258 74 Coronato Rocco The Emergence of Priapism in the Two Gentlemen of Verona In Proteus The Language of Metamorphosis ed Carla Dente George Ferzoco Miriam Gill and Marina Spunta Aldershot Ashgate 2005 chapter 8 93 101 Delord Frederic Priapus 2009 In A Dictionary of Shakespeare s Classical Mythology 2009 ed Yves Peyre O the difference of man and man IV ii 26 References et differences genitales dans King Lear in Autour de King Lear ed A Lafont and M C Munoz with F Delord Montpellier IRCL February 2009 Erubescences et turgescences dans l imaginaire shakespearien et la culture de la Renaissance these dactylographiee Ph D Montpellier Universite Montpellier III Paul Valery 2008 Franz David O Leud Priapians and Renaissance Pornography SEL Studies in English Literature 1500 1900 12 n 1 winter 1972 157 72 Morel Philippe Priape a la Renaissance Les guirlandes de Giovanni da Udine a la Farnesine Revue de l Art 69 1985 13 28 Peyre Yves Priape denature Remarques sur les Apotheseos Deorum Libri Tres de Georges Pictor et leur adaptation anglaise par Stephen Batman Influences latines en Europe Cahiers de l Europe Classique et Neo Latine Toulouse Travaux de l Universite de Toulouse Le Mirail A 23 1983 61 87 External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Priapus Listen to this article 12 minutes source source This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 7 January 2010 2010 01 07 and does not reflect subsequent edits Audio help More spoken articles The dictionary definition of Priapus at Wiktionary Chisholm Hugh ed 1911 Priapus Encyclopaedia Britannica 11th ed Cambridge University Press Britannica Online Encyclopedia Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology Archived 2013 10 15 at the Wayback Machine Priapos Greek amp Mysian God of Gardens and Fertility Theoi Project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Priapus amp oldid 1143288126, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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