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Adonis
Mortal lover of Aphrodite & Persephone
The Adonis Uffizi, made from pentelic marble, 2nd century BC, currently held in the
Uffizi Gallery, Florence, Italy
Symbolanemones, as well as lettuce, fennel, and other fast-growing plants
FestivalsAdonia
Genealogy
ParentsCinyras and Myrrha (by Ovid), Phoenix and Alphesiboea (by Hesiod)
ConsortAphrodite, Persephone
ChildrenGolgos, Beroe
Equivalents
CanaaniteAdon
MesopotamianDumuzid

In Greek mythology, Adonis (Template:Lang-grc; Template:Lang-phn) was the mortal lover of the goddesses Aphrodite and Persephone, who was famous for having achieved immortality. He was widely considered to be the ideal of male beauty in classical antiquity.

The myth goes that adonis was gored by a wild boar during a hunting trip and died in Aphrodite's arms as she wept. His blood mingled with her tears and became the anemone flower. aphrodite declared the Adonia festival to commemorate his tragic death, which was celebrated by women every year in midsummer. During this festival, Greek women would plant "gardens of Adonis", small pots containing fast-growing plants, which they would set on top of their houses in the hot sun. The plants would sprout, but soon wither and die. Then the women would mourn the death of Adonis, tearing their clothes and beating their breasts in a public display of grief.

Antique fresco in Pompeii depicting Adonis, Cupid, and Venus

The Greeks considered Adonis's cult to be of Near Eastern origin. Adonis's name comes from a Canaanite word meaning "lord" and most modern scholars consider the story of Aphrodite and Adonis to be derived from a Levantine version of the earlier Mesopotamian myth of Inanna (Ishtar) and Dumuzid (Tammuz).

In late 19th and early 20th century scholarship of religion, Adonis was widely seen as a prime example of the archetypal dying-and-rising god. His name is often applied in modern times to handsome youths, of whom he is considered the archetype.

Cult

Origin

An ancient Sumerian depiction of the marriage of Inanna and Dumuzid[1]

The worship of Aphrodite and Adonis is probably a Greek continuation of the ancient Sumerian worship of Inanna and Dumuzid.[2][3][4] The Greek name Ἄδωνις (Ádōnis), Greek pronunciation: [ádɔːnis]) is derived from the Canaanite word 𐤀𐤃𐤍 (ʼadōn), meaning "lord",[5][4][6][7][2] although there is no trace of a Semitic deity connected with Adonis or a parallel counterpart.[8][9]

This word is related to Adonai (Template:Lang-he), one of the titles used to refer to the God of the Hebrew Bible and still used in Judaism to the present day.[7] The Syrian name for Adonis is Gauas.[10]

The cult of Inanna and Dumuzid may have been introduced to the Kingdom of Judah during the reign of King Manasseh.[11] Ezekiel 8:14 mentions Adonis under his earlier East Semitic name Tammuz[12][13] and describes a group of women mourning Tammuz's death while sitting near the north gate of the Temple in Jerusalem.[12][13]

The earliest known Greek reference to Adonis comes from a fragment of a poem by the poet Sappho of Lesbos (c. 630 – c. 570 BC),[14] in which a chorus of young girls asks Aphrodite what they can do to mourn Adonis' death.[14] Aphrodite replies that they must beat their breasts and tear their tunics.[14] The cult of Adonis has also been described as corresponding to the cult of the Phoenician god Baal.[2] As Walter Burkert explains:

Women sit by the gate weeping for Tammuz, or they offer incense to Baal on roof-tops and plant pleasant plants. These are the very features of the Adonis legend: which is celebrated on flat roof-tops on which sherds sown with quickly germinating green salading are placed, Adonis gardens... the climax is loud lamentation for the dead god.[15]

The exact date when the worship of Adonis became integrated into Greek culture is still disputed. Walter Burkert questions whether Adonis had not from the very beginning come to Greece along with Aphrodite.[15] "In Greece," Burkert concludes, "the special function of the Adonis legend is as an opportunity for the unbridled expression of emotion in the strictly circumscribed life of women, in contrast to the rigid order of polis and family with the official women's festivals in honour of Demeter."[15] The significant influence of Near Eastern culture on early Greek religion in general, and on the cult of Aphrodite in particular,[16] is now widely recognized as dating to a period of orientalization during the eighth century BC,[16] when archaic Greece was on the fringes of the Neo-Assyrian Empire.[17]

In Cyprus, the cult of Adonis gradually superseded that of Cinyras. W. Atallah suggests that the later Hellenistic myth of Adonis represents the conflation of two independent traditions.[18]

Festival of Adonia

Fragment of an Attic red-figure wedding vase (c. 430–420 BC), showing women climbing ladders up to the roofs of their houses carrying "gardens of Adonis"

The worship of Adonis is associated with the festival of Adonia, which was celebrated by Greek women every year in midsummer.[4][19] The festival, which was evidently already celebrated in Lesbos by Sappho's time in the seventh century BC, seems to have first become popular in Athens in the mid-fifth century BC.[4][5] At the start of the festival, the women would plant a "garden of Adonis", a small garden planted inside a small basket or a shallow piece of broken pottery containing a variety of quick-growing plants, such as lettuce and fennel, or even quick-sprouting grains, such as wheat and barley.[4][20][15] The women would then climb ladders to the roofs of their houses, where they would place the gardens out under the heat of the summer sun.[4][15] The plants would sprout in the sunlight, but wither quickly in the heat.[21] While they waited for the plants to first sprout and then wither, the women would burn incense to Adonis.[15] Once the plants had withered, the women would mourn and lament loudly over the death of Adonis, tearing their clothes and beating their breasts in a public display of grief.[22][15] The women would lay a statuette of Adonis out on a bier and then carry it to the sea along with all the withered plants as a funeral procession.[15][23] The festival concluded with the women throwing the effigy of Adonis and the withered plants out to sea.[15]

Mythology

Birth

While Sappho does not describe the myth of Adonis, later sources flesh out the details.[24] According to the retelling of the story found in the poem Metamorphoses by the Roman poet Ovid (43 BC – 17/18 AD), Adonis was the son of Myrrha, who was cursed by Aphrodite with insatiable lust for her own father, King Cinyras of Cyprus,[25][26][27] after Myrrha's mother bragged that her daughter was more beautiful than the goddess.[25][26] It was to her nurse that, with much reluctance, Myrrha revealed her shameful passion.[28] Sometime later, during a festival in honor of Demeter, the nurse found Cinyras half-passed out with wine and Myrrha's mother nowhere near him. Thus she spoke to him of a girl who truly loved him and desired to sleep with him, giving him a fictitious name and simply describing her as Myrrha's age. Cinyras agreed, and the nurse was quick to bring Myrrha to him. Myrrha left her father's room impregnated.[29] After several couplings, Cinyras discovered his lover's identity and drew his sword to kill her; driven out after becoming pregnant, Myrrha was changed into a myrrh tree but still gave birth to Adonis.[30][31][32] According to classicist William F. Hansen, the story of how Adonis was conceived falls in line with the conventional ideas about sex and gender that were prevalent in the classical world, since the Greeks and Romans believed that women, such as Adonis's mother Myrrha, were less capable of controlling their primal wants and passions than men.[33]

Aphrodite and Persephone

Attic red-figure aryballos painting by Aison (c. 410 BC) showing Adonis consorting with Aphrodite

Aphrodite found the baby,[34] and took him to the underworld to be fostered by Persephone.[34] She returned for him once he was grown[34] and discovered him to be strikingly handsome.[34] However, Persephone too found Adonis to be exceedingly handsome[35] and wanted to keep Adonis[34] for she too fell in love with him;[36][37][38] Zeus settled the dispute by decreeing that Adonis would spend one third of the year with Aphrodite, one third with Persephone, and one third with whomever he chose.[39][34] Adonis chose Aphrodite, and they remained constantly together.[34] Another version states that both goddesses got to keep him for half the year each at the suggestion of the Muse Calliope.[40] Thus was Adonis' life divided between Aphrodite and Persephone, one goddess who loved him beneath the earth, the other above it.[41] In his comical work Dialogues of the Gods, the satirical author Lucian features Aphrodite in several dialogues, in one of which she complains to the moon goddess Selene that Eros made Persephone fall in love with Adonis and now she has to share him with her.[42]

Death

Then, one day, while Adonis was out hunting, he was wounded by a wild boar and bled to death in Aphrodite's arms.[34] In different versions of the story, the boar was either sent by Ares, who was jealous that Aphrodite was spending so much time with Adonis,[43] by Artemis, who wanted revenge against Aphrodite for having killed her devoted follower Hippolytus,[43] or by Apollo, to punish Aphrodite for blinding his son Erymanthus.[44] The story also provides an etiology for Aphrodite's associations with certain flowers.[43] Reportedly, as she mourned Adonis's death, she caused anemones to grow wherever his blood fell,[34][43] and declared a festival on the anniversary of his death.[34] In one late account, his blood transformed into roses instead.[45]

In a very different version from the standard, surviving in the works of fifth century AD grammarian Servius and perhaps originating from the island of Cyprus, Adonis was made to fall in love with a mortal girl named Erinoma by Aphrodite herself at the command of Hera. Erinoma, a virgin girl favoured by Artemis and Athena, rejected his advances, so Adonis crept up stealthily in her bedroom and raped her. Adonis then fled and went into a cave to hide from Zeus, who also loved Erinoma and would surely avenge the violence done against her. Hermes, however, lured him with a trick, as Ares wounded him mortally in the form of a boar. Adonis died, but was eventually restored to life after Aphrodite begged Zeus. Erinoma bore him a son named Taleus.[45][46]

Other loves

Adonis was also said to have been loved by other gods such as Apollo, Heracles and Dionysus. He was described as androgynous, for he acted like a man in his affections for Aphrodite but as a woman for Apollo.[47] "Androgynous" here means that Adonis took on a passive "feminine" role in his love for Apollo.

Heracles' love of Adonis is mentioned in passing by Ptolemy Hephaestion. The text states that due to his love of Adonis, Aphrodite taught Nessos the centaur the trap to ensnare him.[48]

Another tradition states that Dionysus, the Greek god of wine and madness, carried off Adonis.[49][50]

Other versions

The Adonis River (now known as the Abraham River) in Lebanon was said to run red with blood each year during the festival of Adonis.[34]

In Idyll 15 by the early third-century BC Greek bucolic poet Theocritus, Adonis is described as still an adolescent with down on his cheeks at the time of his love affair with Aphrodite, in contrast to Ovid's Metamorphoses, in which he is portrayed as a fully mature man.[51] Pseudo-Apollodorus (Bibliotheke, 3.182) describes Adonis as the son of Cinyras, of Paphos on Cyprus, and Metharme. According to Pseudo-Apollodorus's Bibliotheke, Hesiod, in an unknown work that does not survive, made of him the son of Phoenix and the otherwise unidentified Alphesiboea.[52]

In one version of the story, Aphrodite injured herself on a thorn from a rose bush[43] and the rose, which had previously been white, was stained red by her blood.[43] In another version, an anemone flower grew on the spot where Adonis died, and a red rose where Aphrodite's tears fell.[53] The third century BC poet Euphorion of Chalcis remarked in his Hyacinth that "Only Cocytus washed the wounds of Adonis".[54] According to Lucian's De Dea Syria,[55] each year during the festival of Adonis, the Adonis River in Lebanon (now known as the Abraham River) ran red with blood.[34]

In post-classical literature culture

The medieval French poet Jean de Meun retells the story of Adonis in his additions to the Roman de la Rose, written around 1275.[51] De Muen moralizes the story, using it as an example of how men should heed the warnings of the women they love.[51] In Pierre de Ronsard's poem "Adonis" (1563), Venus laments that Adonis did not heed her warning, but ultimately blames herself for his death, declaring, "In need my counsel failed you."[51] In the same poem, however, Venus quickly finds another shepherd as her lover, representing the widespread medieval belief in the fickleness and mutability of women.[51]

The story of Venus and Adonis from Ovid's Metamorphoses was tremendously influential during the Elizabethan era.[56] In Edmund Spenser's epic poem The Faerie Queene (1590), tapestries depicting the story of Adonis decorate the walls of Castle Joyous.[51] Later in the poem, Venus takes the character Amoretta to raise her in the "Garden of Adonis".[51] Ovid's portrayal of Venus's desperate love for Adonis became the inspiration for many literary portrayals in Elizabethan literature of both male and female courtship.[56]

William Shakespeare's erotic narrative poem Venus and Adonis (1593), a retelling of the courtship of Aphrodite and Adonis from Ovid's Metamorphoses,[57][58] was the most popular of all his works published within his own lifetime.[59][60] Six editions of it were published before Shakespeare's death (more than any of his other works)[60] and it enjoyed particularly strong popularity among young adults.[59] In 1605, Richard Barnfield lauded it, declaring that the poem had placed Shakespeare's name "in fames immortall Booke".[60] Despite this, the poem has received a mixed reception from modern critics.[59] Samuel Taylor Coleridge defended it, but Samuel Butler complained that it bored him, and C. S. Lewis described an attempted reading of it as "suffocating".[59]

The story of Adonis was the inspiration for the Italian poet Giambattista Marino to write his mythological epic L'Adone (1623), which outsold Shakespeare's First Folio.[51] Shakespeare's homoerotic descriptions of Adonis's masculine and Venus's beauty inspired the French novelist and playwright Rachilde (Marguerite Vallette-Eymery) to write her erotic novel Monsieur Vénus (1884), about a noblewoman named Raoule de Vénérande who sexually pursues a young, effeminate man named Jacques who works in a flower shop.[61] Jacques is ultimately shot and killed in a duel, thus following the model of Adonis's tragic death.[61]

As a dying and rising god

Photograph of Sir James George Frazer, the anthropologist who is most directly responsible for promoting the concept of a "dying and rising god" archetype[62][63][64]

The late nineteenth-century Scottish anthropologist Sir James George Frazer wrote extensively about Adonis in his monumental study of comparative religion, The Golden Bough (the first edition of which was published in 1890)[62][65] as well as in later works.[66] Frazer claimed that Adonis was just one example of the archetype of a "dying-and-rising god" found throughout all cultures.[63][62][67] In the mid-twentieth century, some scholars began to criticize the designation of "dying-and-rising god", in some cases arguing that deities like Adonis, previously referred to as "dying and rising", would be better termed separately as "dying gods" and "disappearing gods",[68][69] asserting that gods who "died" did not return, and those who returned never "really" died.[68][69]

Biblical scholars Eddy and Boyd (2007) applied this rationale to Adonis based on the fact that his portion of the year spent in the Underworld with Persephone is not really a death and resurrection, but merely an instance of a living person staying in the Underworld.[70] They further argued that Adonis is not explicitly described as rising from the dead in any extant Classical Greek writings,[70][15] though the fact that such a belief existed is attested by authors in Late Antiquity.[70] For example, Origen discusses Adonis, whom he associates with Tammuz, in his Selecta in Ezechielem ( "Comments on Ezekiel"), noting that "they say that for a long time certain rites of initiation are conducted: first, that they weep for him, since he has died; second, that they rejoice for him because he has risen from the dead (apo nekrôn anastanti)" (cf. J.-P. Migne, Patrologiae Cursus Completus: Series Graeca, 13:800).

Some other scholars have continued to cite Adonis/Tammuz as an example of a dying and rising god, suggesting that the descent into and return from the underworld is a functional analogue for death even if no physical cause of death is depicted.[71][72][73]

See also

Psychology:

References

  1. ^ Lung 2014.
  2. ^ a b c West 1997, p. 57.
  3. ^ Kerényi 1951, p. 67.
  4. ^ a b c d e f Cyrino 2010, p. 97.
  5. ^ a b Burkert 1985, pp. 176–177.
  6. ^ R. S. P. Beekes, Etymological Dictionary of Greek, Brill, 2009, p. 23.
  7. ^ a b Botterweck & Ringgren 1990, pp. 59–74.
  8. ^ Beekes, Robert S.P. (2009) Etymological Dictionary of Greek, Brill. p. 23. "Supposed to be a loan from Semitic (Hebr. adon 'Lord'). But no cult connected with this name is known in the Semitic world, nor a myth parallel to that in Greece".
  9. ^ Burkert, Walter (1991). Greek Religion: Archaic and Classical. Wiley. p. 177. For all that, there is in Semitic tradition no known cult connected with this title which corresponds exactly to the Greek cult, to say nothing of a counterpart to the Greek Adonis myth.
  10. ^ Detienne 1977, p. 137.
  11. ^ Pryke 2017, p. 193.
  12. ^ a b Pryke 2017, p. 195.
  13. ^ a b Warner 2016, p. 211.
  14. ^ a b c West 1997, pp. 530–531.
  15. ^ a b c d e f g h i j Burkert 1985, p. 177.
  16. ^ a b Burkert 1998, pp. 1–6.
  17. ^ Burkert 1998, pp. 1–41.
  18. ^ Atallah 1966
  19. ^ W. Atallah, Adonis dans la littérature et l'art grecs, Paris, 1966.
  20. ^ Detienne 1977.
  21. ^ Cyrino 2010, pp. 97–98.
  22. ^ Cyrino 2010, p. 98.
  23. ^ Detienne 1977, p. xii.
  24. ^ Cyrino 2010, p. 95.
  25. ^ a b Ovid, Metamorphoses 10.298–355
  26. ^ a b Kerényi 1951, p. 75.
  27. ^ Hansen 2004, p. 289.
  28. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 10.356-430
  29. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 10.431-502
  30. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses 10.503
  31. ^ Kerényi 1951, pp. 75–76.
  32. ^ Hansen 2004, pp. 289–290.
  33. ^ Hansen 2004, p. 290.
  34. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l Kerényi 1951, p. 76.
  35. ^ Grimal, s.v. Adonis; Bell, s.v. Aphrodite; Tripp s.v Adonis
  36. ^ Greek anthology Agathias Scholasticus 5.289
  37. ^ Alciphron, Letters to Courtesans 4.14.1
  38. ^ Clement of Alexandria, Exhortations 2.29
  39. ^ Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca 3.14.4
  40. ^ Hyginus, Astronomica 2.7.4
  41. ^ Aelian, On Animals 9.36
  42. ^ Lucian, Dialogues of the Gods Aphrodite and the Moon
  43. ^ a b c d e f Cyrino 2010, p. 96.
  44. ^ According to Nonnus, Dionysiaca 42.1f. Servius on Virgil's Eclogues x.18; Orphic Hymn lv.10; Ptolemy Hephaestionos, i.306u, all noted by Graves. Atallah (1966) fails to find any cultic or cultural connection with the boar, which he sees simply as a heroic myth-element.
  45. ^ a b Servius Commentary on Virgil's Eclogues 10.18
  46. ^ Fontenrose 1981, p. 171.
  47. ^ Ptolemy Hephaestion, New History Book 5 (summary from Photius, Myriobiblon 190)
  48. ^ Ptolemy Hephaestion, New History Book 2 (summary from Photius, Myriobiblon 190)
  49. ^ Phanocles ap.
  50. ^ Plut. Sumpos. iv. 5.
  51. ^ a b c d e f g h Hull 2010, p. 7.
  52. ^ Ps.-Apollodorus, iii.14.4.1.
  53. ^ Roman, L., & Roman, M. (2010). Encyclopedia of Greek and Roman mythology., p. 11, at Google Books
  54. ^ Remarked upon in passing by Photius, Biblioteca 190 (on-line translation).
  55. ^ Kerényi 1951, p. 279.
  56. ^ a b Hull 2010, pp. 7–8.
  57. ^ Lákta 2017, pp. 56–58.
  58. ^ Cyrino 2010, p. 131.
  59. ^ a b c d Lákta 2017, p. 58.
  60. ^ a b c Hiscock 2017, p. unpaginated.
  61. ^ a b Hull 2010, p. 8.
  62. ^ a b c Ehrman 2012, pp. 222–223.
  63. ^ a b Barstad 1984, p. 149.
  64. ^ Eddy & Boyd 2007, pp. 142–143.
  65. ^ Mettinger 2004, p. 375.
  66. ^ Barstad 1984, pp. 149–150.
  67. ^ Eddy & Boyd 2007, pp. 140–142.
  68. ^ a b Smith 1987, pp. 521–527.
  69. ^ a b Mettinger 2004, p. 374.
  70. ^ a b c Eddy & Boyd 2007, p. 143.
  71. ^ Dalley 1989.
  72. ^ Corrente 2012.
  73. ^ Corrente 2019.

Bibliography

  • Media related to Adonis at Wikimedia Commons