Lykaon (Arcadians)

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Lycaon in a print from 1589

Lykaon ( Greek  Λυκάων ) is king of the Arcadians and son of Pelasgos in Greek mythology . He founded the city of Lykosura , the oldest in the country. He also founded the cult of Lycaean Zeus on Mount Lykaion , where human sacrifices were made in historical times after Plato , and the Lycean fighting games, the most prestigious in Arcadia.

myth

Sons of Lykaon

Lycaon was the father of a numerous line of sons (all personifications of Arcadian cities) who exceeded all men in iniquity and were therefore destroyed by Zeus , except for one ( Nyktimos ). The Deucalionic flood , which Zeus sent to destroy the degenerate human race, was ascribed to their godlessness .

The ancient sources tend to judge the figure of the Lykaon negatively. His services as a city founder and cult donor in Arcadia are particularly emphasized by Pausanias . The following list represents the versions of Apollodorus and Pausanias.

No. Surname founds No
pause.
1 Melaineus 13
2 Thesprotos
3 Helix 8th
4th Nyktimos 1
5 Peuketios
6th Chewing
7th Mekisteus
8th Hopleus
9 Makareus 7th
10 Makednos
11 Horos
12 Polichos
13 On account
14th Euaimon
15th Ankyor
16 Archebates
17th Karteron
18th Aigaion
19th Pallas 2
20th Eumon
21st Kanethos
22nd Prothoos
23 Linos
24 Corethon
25th Mainalos 16
26th Teleboas
27 Physios
28 Phassos
29 Phthios
30th Lykios 24
31 Halipheros 25th
32 Genetor
33 Bucolion
34 Sokleus
35 Phineus
36 Eumetes
37 Harpaleus
38 Portheus
39 Plato
40 Haimon 14th
41 Kynaithos
42 Leon
43 Harpalykos
44 Heraieus 26th
45 Titans
46 Mantinous 18th
47 Kleitor
48 Stymphalos
49 Orchomenos
No. Surname founds No.
Apollo.
1 Nyktimos 4th
2 Pallas Pallantion 19th
3 Oresteus Oresthasion
4th Phigalos Phigaleia
5 Trapezeus Trapezoid ice
6th Daseatos Dasea
7th Makareus Makaria 9
8th Helisson Helisson 3
9 Akakos Akakesion
10 Thoknos Thoknia
11 Orchomenus (son of Lykaon) Orchomenos and Methydrion
12 Hypsos Hypsos
13 Melaineus Melaineai 1
14th Haimon Haimoniai 40
15th Thyraios Thyrion
16 Mainalos Mainalos 25th
17th Tegeates Tegea
18th Mantineus Mantineia 46
19th Kromos Kromoi
20th Charisios Charisia
21st Tricolonos Tricolonoi
22nd Peraithos Peraethenses
23 Aseatas Asea
24 Lykios ? Lykoa 30th
25th Alipheros Aliphera 31
26th Heraieus Heraiea 44
27 Oinotros Oinotria

Versions of the myth

There are several versions of the Lycaon myth, reported very early by Hesiod ( Fragmenta astronomica , in Eratosthenes , Katasterismi ), of which the description in the First Book of Metamorphoses by Ovid is the most famous.

The different versions of the myth are as follows:

  • According to Pausanias , Lykaon was instantly transformed into a wolf after sacrificing a child on the altar of the god Zeus and sprinkling the altar with his blood.
  • According to the library of Apollodorus , Lykaon and many women had fathered 50 sons who exceeded all men in arrogance and nefariness. To test them, Zeus came to them in the form of a poor day laborer. They mixed the entrails of a child into his food, whereupon Zeus in anger knocked over the table with the served meal, which explains the name of the city Trapezous , and killed Lykaon and his sons with a lightning bolt. Only the youngest he spared on the intervention of the earth goddess Ge .
  • After Lycophron , everyone was turned into wolves.
  • After Hyginus , Jupiter came to Lykaon for the sake of his daughter Callisto . In this version only Lykaon is turned into a wolf and his sons are killed with lightning.
  • With Nikolaos of Damascus only Lycaon's sons are nefarious. To test Zeus, they mixed the flesh of a boy with the victim, whereupon everyone who was present at the child's murder was struck by lightning.
  • According to Ovid, it is only Lykaon who puts the meat of a prisoner, partly boiled and partly roasted, in front of Zeus. Zeus then collapses the roof and transforms the fleeing Lykaon into a wolf.
  • According to Eratosthenes, Lykaon slaughtered his grandson, whom Zeus reassembled and made into a constellation.

Trivia

Lycaon is a character in Christoph Ransmayr's The Last World , published in 1988.

literature

Web links

Commons : Lykaon  - collection of images, videos and audio files
  • Lykaon in the Theoi Project (English)

Individual evidence

  1. Pausanias 8,2,1
  2. Plato, Politeia 565d
  3. Libraries of Apollodor 3, 8, 1–3
  4. The list follows: Paul Weizsäcker: Lykaon 3 . In: Wilhelm Heinrich Roscher (Hrsg.): Detailed lexicon of Greek and Roman mythology . Volume 2.2, Leipzig 1897, Col. 2169 f. ( Digitized version ).
  5. ^ Wilhelm Hertz : The werewolf. Contribution to the saga. Kröner, Stuttgart 1862 (out of date).
  6. Pausanias 8,2,3
  7. Libraries of Apollodor 3, 8, 1-6
  8. ^ Hyginus, Fabulae 176
  9. Ovid, Metamorphoses 1, 211-239