Title: Apollo and Artemis
1Apollo and Artemis
- Children of Zeus and Leto
- Apollo god of prophecy and healing, referred to
as Phoebus (who shines?) - Roman name for Artemis-Diana
- Leto was a Titaness, daughter of Coeus and
Phoebe. - Birth of the twins. Leto persecuted by Hera.
Apollo born on Delos and Artemis on Ortygia,
floating islands. Then islands anchored.
2Apollo of the Hymn to Apollo
- Late 6th century
- Two major partsgt PART 1 Delian part
- -Apollos birth on island of Delos
- PART 2 Pythian part
- -Apollos arrival in Delphi-establishment of
cult
3DELIAN PART
- Leto wanders to find a place to give birth to her
children. Why? - Dialogue between Leto and Delos. Letos oath
- DELOS I welcome the birth of the lord who
shoots from afar. - Leto/childbirth motif/description of Apollos
birth. Was Leto alone? NO, list of goddesses in
line 94ff Homeric Hymn to Apollo (page 26).
Eileithyia, daughter of Zeus and Hera, came after
receiving the gift, a necklace (see in vase).
4- Apollos cult on Delos
- Delight with music and dances. Long-robed
Ionians with their children and wives. Delian
maidens (DELIADES) sing in memory of men and
women of old time, know how to mimic voices and
rhythms of all men. - Apollo to Olympus
5Why wandering?
- What does wandering signify?
- -gradual establishment of the myth.
- Also the idea of the island taking credit for
welcoming the godgtit became the center for
ancient Greek religion. - . The wandering then means that how rules and
regulations and cult was formally established. - Wandering from the point of view of poetics
wandering Leto, wandering gods, wandering POETS.
- READING THE HOMERIC HYMN to Apollo as a way of
understanding performances of epic and lyric
poetry.
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7Compare with Birth of Athena
- Birth of Athena (who emerged from Zeus' head)
with Eileithyia on the right, red-figured
amphora, third quarter of the 6th century BC,
Louvre
8LOUVRE- PARIS- Birth of Athena. Attic
Exaleiptron (black-figured tripod), ca. 570560
BC. Found in Thebes
9Temple of Leto in Delos
10Remains of temple of Apollo in Delos
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13DELPHIAN PART
- The making of an Olympian God
- New quest where to make the temple
- Dialogue between Apollo and Telphousa (a nymph of
a spring in Boiotia, central Greece, north of
Athens). Telphousas trick on the god. Over
sovereignty? Urged him to go to Delphi - Temple-oracle
- Pytho- monster. When Apollo decided to establish
his temple at Delphi he found near a spring a
dragon called Pytho (or Python in other sources).
- Hera gave birth to TYPHAON, on her own, in anger
for Athenas birth by Zeus. Typhaon was brought
up by Pytho. IMPORTANCE OF BIRTH STORIES IN
HOMERIC HYMN - Feminist reading of this part. Dragon/Dragoness
- Pytho a child of Gaia, could pronounce
oraclesgtrival to Apollo - Apollo killed
Pytho.
14- Pythian Apollo, from name of place Pytho, after
the dragon. Motif of heroism (triumph over
monsters becomes part of heroic identity) - Punishment of Telphousa
- Finding priests-
- Cretan ship- Dialogue with the god
- Note dancing in his train the Cretans followed
him to Pytho, they were chanting paeans.
15Delphi-Temple of Apollo
16Delphi- view from the theater
17Delphi- A reconstruction
18Apollo, Athena and HermesToledo Museum of Art
19Apollo and Artemis attacking giants Treasury of
the Siphnians in Delphi Gigantomachy, ca 525 BC
20Apollo and Artemis Pan Painter, ca 490 BC
21Apollo of Piombino Late Archaic ca 480 BC
22Apollo and the Muses Thasos relief, ca 480 BC
23Apollo and a Muse Attic kylix, ca 460 BC
24Seated Apollo Sotades workshop, ca 460 BC
25Apollo before his temple Painter of the Birth of
Dionysos, ca 380-370 BC
26Musical contest of Apollo and Marsyas
Praxiteles, ca 320 BC
27Apollo Sansovino, Andrea, 1502,
28Apollo Caraglio, Gian Jacopo, 1526
29Apollo and Marsyas Tintoretto, 1545
30Apollo and Daphne Bernini, Gian Lorenzo,
1622-1625
31Apollo and DaphneJohn W. Waterhouse
32Apollo and DaphnePOLLAIOLO, Antonio delItalian
painter and sculptor, Florentine school (b.
1431/32, Firenze, d. 1498, RomaTempera on wood,
30 x 20 cmNational Gallery, London
33Nicolas Poussin. Apollo and Muses. 1631-1632. Oil
on canvas. Museo del Prado, Madrid, Spain.