Legendary Passages #0037 -
The Kings of
Athens -
Cecrops to Erichthonius to Pandion, from the
Library of
Apollodorus.
The next six episodes focus on Theseus and his ancestors. This passage covers the early
Kings all the way to Pandion, father of
Aegeus and grandfather of Theseus.
The first
King of Attica was Cecrops, whom
Athena gave an olive tree. For her the city of Athens was so named.
After Cecrops, Cranaus became king, around the time of
Deucalion's
Flood. And after him was Ericthonius, son of
Hephaestus. Ericthonius married the nymph Praxithea, and they had a son Pandion.
King Pandion had two daughters, Procne and
Philomena. Procne married Tereus, but Tereus seduced Philomena and cut out her toungue. In revenge, Procne killed her son and served him to his father for dinner.
The sons of Pandion were Erectheus and Butes. Erectheus became King, and had a daughter Procris who married Cephalus. Another daughter was
Orithyia, who had sons Zetes and
Calais, both twins and Argonauts, and daughters Celopatra and
Chione, who had a son Eumolpus.
Now Eumolpus had misadventures in
Ethiopia and
Thrace, before coming to Eleusis. He went to war with his grandfather Erectheus, and many died, including both Kings.
Cecrops the second then become king, being the eldest son of Erectheus. Cecrops son was also named Pandion, and his son was Aegeus, and his son was Theseus.
The Kings of Athens
a Legendary
Passage
from THE LIBRARY of APOLLODORUS
trans. by
J. G. FRAZER
[3.
14.1] - [3.15.5]
Cecrops, a son of the soil, with a body compounded of man and serpent, was the first king of Attica, and the country which was formerly called
Acte he named Cecropia after himself. In his time, they say, the gods resolved to take possession of cities in which each of them should receive his own peculiar worship.
So
Poseidon was the first that came to Attica, and with a blow of his trident on the middle of the acropolis, he produced a sea which they now call Erechtheis. After him came Athena, and, having called on Cecrops to witness her act of taking possession, she planted an olive tree, which is still shown in the Pandrosium. But when the two strove for possession of the country,
Zeus parted them and appointed arbiters, not, as some have affirmed, Cecrops and Cranaus, nor yet Erysichthon, but the twelve gods. And in accordance with their verdict the country was adjudged to Athena, because Cecrops bore witness that she had been the first to plant the olive. Athena, therefore, called the city Athens after herself, and Poseidon in hot anger flooded the
Thriasian plain and laid Attica under the sea.
Cecrops married Agraulus, daughter of Actaeus, and had a son Erysichthon, who departed this life childless; and Cecrops had daughters, Agraulus, Herse, and Pandrosus. Agraulus had a daughter Alcippe by
Ares. In attempting to violate Alcippe, Halirrhothius, son of Poseidon and a nymph Euryte, was detected and killed by Ares. Impeached by Poseidon, Ares was tried in the
Areopagus before the twelve gods, and was acquitted.
Herse had by
Hermes a son Cephalus, whom
Dawn loved and carried off, and consorting with him in
Syria bore a son Tithonus, who had a son
Phaethon, who had a son
Astynous, who had a son Sandocus, who passed from Syria to
Cilicia and founded a city
Celenderis, and having married
Pharnace, daughter of Megassares, king of
Hyria, begat Cinyras. This Cinyras in
Cyprus, whither he had come with some people, founded
Paphos; and having there married Metharme, daughter of
Pygmalion, king of Cyprus, he begat Oxyporus and
Adonis, and besides them daughters, Orsedice, Laogore, and Braesia. These by reason of the wrath of
Aphrodite cohabited with foreigners, and ended their life in
Egypt.
And Adonis, while still a boy, was wounded and killed in hunting by a boar through the anger of
Artemis.
Hesiod, however, affirms that he was a son of
Phoenix and Alphesiboea; and
Panyasis says that he was a
...
- published: 01 Sep 2015
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