Oreithyia

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Rape of the oreithyia on an Apulian oinochoe , approx. 360 BC BC ( Louvre , Paris)

Oreithyia ( Greek  Ὠρείθυια "storming in the mountains") is a nymph of Greek mythology . Homer mentions a nereid Oreithyia , but this does not appear in the names of the Nereids listed by Hesiod and in the library of Apollodorus .

Her name shows her more as a kind of "wind bride". This also corresponds to the fact that she was kidnapped by Boreas , the north wind from whose homeland Thrace was kidnapped, who fathered four children with her: two sons Kalaïs and Zete and two daughters Cleopatra and Chione .

In Attic mythology, she appears as the daughter of Erechtheus , a mythical Athenian king, and Praxithea . This makes Boreas the “son-in-law” of the Athenians. When an oracle advised the Athenians, threatened by Persian invasion, to call their son-in-law for help and therefore pray to Boreas, it actually destroyed 480 BC. The north wind the fleet of the Persians. The grateful Athenians built a sanctuary to Boreas and Oreithyia on Ilisus , where, according to legend, the robbery had taken place.

literature

Web links

Commons : Oreithyia  - collection of images, videos and audio files

Individual evidence

  1. Homer Iliad 18:48
  2. Hesiod Theogony 240ff.
  3. Libraries of Apollodor 1.11f
  4. a b Herodotus Histories 7.189
  5. Virgil Georgika 4463
  6. Libraries of Apollodor 3.199
  7. Plato Phaedrus 229
  8. Pausania's description of Greece 1.19.5, 3.15.1-4
  9. Apollonius Rhodius Argonautika 1.212