In
Greek and
Roman mythology,
Apollo (in
Greek,
Ἀπόλλων—
Apóllōn or
Ἀπέλλων—
Apellōn), is one of the most important
and diverse of the
Olympian
deities. The ideal of the
kouros
(a beardless youth), Apollo has been variously recognized as a god
of light and the sun; truth and prophecy;
archery; medicine and healing; music, poetry, and
the arts; and more. Apollo is the son of
Zeus
and
Leto, and has a
twin
sister, the chaste huntress
Artemis. Apollo
is known in Greek-influenced
Etruscan
mythology as
Apulu. Apollo was worshipped in both
ancient Greek and
Roman religion, as well as in the
modern
Greco-
Roman Neopaganism.
As the
patron of Delphi
(Pythian
Apollo), Apollo was an oracular god —
the prophetic deity of the Delphic
Oracle. Medicine and healing were associated with
Apollo, whether through the god himself or mediated through his son
Asclepius. Apollo was also seen as a god
who could bring ill-health and deadly
plague as well as one who had the ability
to cure. Amongst the god's custodial charges, Apollo became
associated with dominion over
colonists, and as the patron defender
of herds and flocks. As the leader of the
Muses
(
Apollon Musagetes) and director of their choir, Apollo
functioned as the patron god of music and
poetry.
Hermes created the
lyre for him, and the instrument became a
common
attribute of
Apollo. Hymns sung to Apollo were called
paeans.
In Hellenistic times, especially during the third century BCE, as
Apollo Helios he became identified among Greeks with
Helios,
god of the
sun, and his sister Artemis similarly equated with
Selene,
goddess of the
moon. In Latin texts, however, Joseph Fontenrose declared
himself unable to find any conflation of Apollo with
Sol among the
Augustan poets of the first century, not
even in the conjurations of
Aeneas and
Latinus in
Aeneid XII (161–215). Apollo and Helios/Sol
remained separate beings in literary and mythological texts until
the third century CE.
Etymology
The etymology of
Apollo is uncertain. Several instances of
popular etymology are attested
from ancient authors. Thus,
Plato in
Cratylus connects the name with
"redeem", with "purification", and with "simple", in particular in
reference to the Thessalian form of the name, , and finally with
"ever-shooting".
Hesychius
connects the name Apollo with the Doric απελλα, which means
"assembly", so that Apollo would be the god of political life, and
he also gives the explanation σηκος ("fold"), in which case Apollo
would be the god of flocks and herds. It is also possible that
apellai derives from an old form of Apollo which can be
equated with Appaliunas, an Anatolian god whose name possibly means
"father lion" or "father light". The Greeks later associated
Apollo's name with the Greek verb απολλυμι (apollymi) meaning "to
destroy".
It has also been suggested that Apollo comes from the
Hurrian and
Hittite divinity,
Aplu, who was widely evoked during the "plague years". Aplu, it is
suggested, comes from the Akkadian
Aplu Enlil, meaning
"the son of Enlil", a title that was given to the god
Nergal, who was linked to
Shamash, Babylonian god of the sun.
Origins of cult
There are generally two broad opinions on the origins of Apollo:
one derives him from the East, the other connects him to the
Dorians and their
apellai (cf. also the month
Apellaios). In any case,
Walter
Burkert notes that components of various origins are
discernible in his worship: a Dorian Greek, a Cretan-Minoan and a
Syro-Hittite.
According to the first opinion, both Greek and Etruscan
Apollo came to the Aegean
during the
Iron Age (i.e. from c.1100 BCE to c.
800 BCE)
from Anatolia
.
Homer pictures him on the side of the Trojan
, against the
Achaeans, during the Trojan War and he has close affiliations with a
Luwian deity, Apaliunas, who in turn seems to have traveled west
from further east. The
Late
Bronze Age (from 1700–1200 BCE)
Hittite
and
Hurrian Aplu, like the Homeric
Apollo, was a god of
plague, and
resembles the mouse god
Apollo Smintheus.
Here we have an
apotropaic situation, where a god
originally bringing the plague was invoked to end it, merging over
time through fusion with the Mycenaean
healer-god Paieon (PA-JA-WO in Linear B); Paean, in Homer's
Iliad, was the Greek healer of the
wounded gods Ares and Hades. In other writers, the word becomes a
mere epithet of Apollo in his capacity as a god of
healing, but it is now known from Linear B that
Paean was originally a separate deity.
Homer illustrated Paieon the god as well as the song both of
apotropaic thanksgiving or triumph, and
Hesiod also separated the two; in later
poetry Paean was invoked independently as a god of healing. It is
equally difficult to separate Paean or Paeon in the sense of
"healer" from Paean in the sense of "song."
Such songs were originally addressed to Apollo, and afterwards to
other gods,
Dionysus,
Helios,
Asclepius. About the
fourth century BCE, the paean became merely a formula of adulation;
its object was either to implore protection against disease and
misfortune, or to offer thanks after such protection had been
rendered. It was in this way that Apollo had become recognised as
the god of music. Apollo's role as the slayer of the
Python led to his association with battle
and victory; hence it became the Roman custom for a paean to be
sung by an
army on the march and before
entering into battle, when a fleet left the harbour, and also after
a victory had been won.
Apollo's links with oracles again seem to be associated with
wishing to know the outcome of an illness. He is a god of music and
the lyre. Healing belongs to his realm: he was the father of
Asclepius, the god of
medicine. The Muses
are part of his retinue, so that
music,
history,
poetry and
dance all belong to him.
Cult sites
Unusually
among the Olympic deities, Apollo had two cult sites that had
widespread influence: Delos
and Delphi
. In
cult practice, Delian Apollo and Pythian Apollo (the Apollo of
Delphi) were so distinct that they might both have shrines in the
same locality.
Theophoric names
such as
Apollodorus or
Apollonios and cities
named
Apollonia are met with throughout
the Greek world. Apollo's
cult was
already fully established when written sources commenced, about 650
BCE.
Oracular shrines
Apollo had
a famous oracle in Delphi, and other notable
ones in Clarus and Branchidae
. His oracular shrine in Abae
in Phocis
, where he
bore the toponymic epithet Abaeus ( , Apollon Abaios) was
important enough to be consulted by Croesus
(Herodotus, 1.46).His oracular
shrines include:
- In
Abae
in Phocis
- In
Bassae
in the
Peloponnese
- At
Clarus, on the west coast of Asia Minor
; as at Delphi a holy spring which gave off a
pneuma, from which the priests drank.
- In
Corinth
, the Oracle of Corinth came from the town of
Tenea
, from prisoners supposedly taken in the Trojan
War.
- At Khyrse, in Troad,
the temple was built for Apollon
Smintheus
- In
Delos
, there was an oracle to the Delian Apollo, during
summer. The Hieron (Sanctuary) of Apollo adjacent to the
Sacred Lake, was the place where the god was said to have been
born.
- In
Delphi
, the Pythia became filled
with the pneuma of Apollo, said to
come from a spring inside the Adyton.
- In
Didyma
, an oracle
on the coast of Anatolia
, south west of Lydian
(Luwian) Sardis
, in which
priests from the lineage of the Branchidae received inspiration by
drinking from a healing spring located in the temple.
- In
Hierapolis
Bambyce
, Syria (modern Manbij), according to the treatise
De Dea Syria, the sanctuary of
the Syrian Goddess contained a robed and
bearded image of Apollo. Divination was based on spontaneous
movements of this image.
- At
Patara
, in Lycia, there was a seasonal winter oracle of Apollo,
said to have been the place where the god went from Delos.
As at Delphi the oracle at Patara was a woman.
- In
Segesta
in Sicily
Oracles were also given by sons of Apollo.
- In
Oropus
, north of
Athens
, the oracle
Amphiaraus, was said to be the son of
Apollo; Oropus also had a sacred spring.
- in Labadea, east of Delphi, Trophonius, another son of Apollo, killed his
brother and fled to the cave where he was also afterwards consulted
as an oracle.
Festivals
The chief Apollonian festivals were the
Boedromia,
Carneia,
Carpiae,
Daphnephoria,
Delia,
Hyacinthia,
Metageitnia,
Pyanepsia,
Pythia and
Thargelia.
Attributes and symbols
Apollo's most common attributes were the bow and
arrow. Other attributes of his included the
kithara (an advanced version of the common
lyre), the
plectrum and the
sword. Another common emblem was the
sacrificial tripod, representing his
prophetic powers.
The Pythian
Games were held in Apollo's honor every four years at Delphi
. The
bay laurel plant was used in expiatory
sacrifices and in making the
crown of
victory at these games.
The palm was also
sacred to Apollo because he had been born under one in Delos
.
Animals sacred to Apollo included
wolves,
dolphins,
roe deer,
swans,
cicadas
(symbolizing music and
song),
hawks,
ravens,
crows,
snakes (referencing
Apollo's function as the god of prophecy),
mice
and
griffins, mythical eagle–lion hybrids of
Eastern origin.
As god of colonization, Apollo gave oracular guidance on colonies,
especially during the height of colonization, 750–550 BCE.
According
to Greek tradition, he helped Cretan
or Arcadian
colonists found the city of Troy
.
However,
this story may reflect a cultural influence which had the reverse
direction: Hittite cuneiform texts mention a Minor Asian god
called Appaliunas or Apalunas in connection with
the city of Wilusa attested in Hittite
inscriptions, which is now generally regarded as being identical
with the Greek Ilion
by most
scholars. In this interpretation, Apollo’s title of
Lykegenes can simply be read as "born in Lycia", which
effectively severs the god's supposed link with wolves (possibly a
folk etymology).
In literary contexts, Apollo represents harmony, order, and
reason—characteristics contrasted with those of
Dionysus, god of wine, who represents ecstasy and
disorder. The contrast between the roles of these gods is reflected
in the adjectives
Apollonian
and Dionysian. However, the Greeks thought of the two qualities
as complementary: the two gods are brothers, and when Apollo at
winter left for
Hyperborea, he would
leave the Delphic oracle to Dionysus. This contrast appears to be
shown on the two sides of the
Borghese
Vase.
Apollo is often associated with the
Golden Mean. This is the Greek
ideal of
moderation and a
virtue
that opposes
gluttony.
Roman Apollo
The Roman worship of Apollo was adopted from the Greeks. As a
quintessentially
Greek god, Apollo had no
direct Roman equivalent, although later Roman poets often referred
to him as
Phoebus.
There was a tradition
that the Delphic oracle was consulted as early as the period of the
kings of
Rome
during the reign of Tarquinius Superbus. On the
occasion of a pestilence in the 430s BC, Apollo's
first temple at Rome was
established in the Flaminian fields, replacing an older cult site
there known as the "Apollinare". During the
Second Punic War in 212 BC, the
Ludi Apollinares
("Apollonian Games") were instituted in his honor, on the
instructions of a prophecy attributed to one Marcius. In the time
of
Augustus, who considered himself under
the special protection of Apollo and was even said to be his son,
his worship developed and he became one of the chief gods of Rome.
After the
battle of
Actium
, which was fought near a sanctuary of Apollo,
Augustus enlarged Apollo's temple, dedicated a portion of the
spoils to him, and instituted quinquennial games in his honour.
He also
erected a new temple to
the god on the Palatine
hill
. Sacrifices and prayers on the Palatine to
Apollo and
Diana formed the
culmination of the
Secular Games, held
in 17 BCE to celebrate the dawn of a new era.
In art
In art, Apollo is depicted as a handsome beardless young man, often
with a
kithara (as
Apollo Citharoedus) or bow in his hand,
or reclining on a tree (the
Apollo
Lykeios and
Apollo
Sauroctonos types). The
Apollo
Belvedere is a
marble sculpture that was rediscovered in the late 15th
century; for centuries it epitomized the ideals of
Classical Antiquity for Europeans, from
the
Renaissance through the nineteenth
century. The marble is a
Hellenistic or Roman copy of a bronze
original by the Greek sculptor
Leochares,
made between 350 and 325 BC.
The
lifesize so-called "Adonis" (shown at left)
found in 1780 on the site of a villa
suburbana near the Via
Labicana in the Roman suburb of Centocelle and now in the
Ashmolean
Museum
, Oxford, is identified as an Apollo by modern
scholars. It was probably never intended as a
cult object, but was a
pastiche of several fourth-century and later
Hellenistic model types, intended to please a Roman connoisseur of
the second century AD, and to be displayed in his villa.
In the
late second century CE floor mosaic from El Djem
, Roman Thysdrus (right), he is
identifiable as Apollo Helios by his
effulgent halo, though
now even a god's divine nakedness is
concealed by his cloak, a mark of increasing conventions of modesty
in the later Empire.
Another
haloed Apollo in mosaic, from Hadrumentum
, is in the museum at Sousse
. The
conventions of this representation, head tilted, lips slightly
parted, large-eyed, curling
hair cut in
locks grazing the neck, were developed in the third century BCE to
depict
Alexander the Great
(Bieber 1964, Yalouris 1980). Some time after this mosaic was
executed, the earliest depictions of Christ will be beardless and
haloed.
Mythology
Birth
When
Hera discovered that Leto was pregnant and
that Zeus was the father, she banned Leto from giving birth on
"
terra firma", or the mainland, or any
island.
In her wanderings, Leto
found the newly created floating
island of Delos
, which was
neither mainland nor a real island, and she gave birth
there. The island was surrounded by swans. Afterwards, Zeus
secured Delos to the bottom of the ocean. This island later became
sacred to Apollo.
It is also stated that Hera kidnapped
Ilithyia, the goddess of childbirth, to prevent
Leto from going into labor. The other gods tricked Hera into
letting her go by offering her a
necklace,
nine yards (8 m) long, of
amber.
Mythographers agree
that Artemis was born first and then assisted with the birth of
Apollo, or that Artemis was born one day
before Apollo, on the island of Ortygia
and that she helped Leto cross the sea to Delos the
next day to give birth to Apollo. Apollo was born on the
seventh day ( ) of the month Thargelion —according to Delian
tradition— or of the month Bysios— according to Delphian tradition.
The seventh and twentieth, the days of the new and
full moon, were ever afterwards held sacred to
him.
Youth
Four days
after his birth, Apollo killed the chthonic dragon Python, which lived in Delphi
beside the
Castalian
Spring
. This was the spring which emitted vapors
that caused the oracle at Delphi to give her prophesies. Hera sent
the serpent to hunt Leto to her death across the world. In order to
protect his mother, Apollo begged
Hephaestus for a bow and arrows. After receiving
them, Apollo cornered Python in the sacred cave at Delphi. Apollo
killed Python but had to be punished for it, since Python was a
child of
Gaia.
Hera then sent the giant
Tityos to kill Leto.
This time Apollo was aided by his sister Artemis in protecting
their mother. During the battle Zeus finally relented his aid and
hurled Tityos down to
Tartarus. There he
was pegged to the rock floor, covering an area of , where a pair of
vultures feasted daily on his liver.
Admetus
When Zeus struck down Apollo's son Asclepius with a lightning bolt
for resurrecting
Hippolytus
from the dead (transgressing
Themis by
stealing
Hades's subjects), Apollo in revenge
killed the
Cyclops, who had fashioned the
bolt for Zeus. Apollo would have been banished to
Tartarus forever, but was instead sentenced to one
year of
hard labor as punishment,
thanks to the intercession of his mother,
Leto.
During
this time he served as shepherd for King
Admetus of Pherae
in Thessaly. Admetus treated Apollo well, and,
in return, the god conferred great benefits on Admetus.
Apollo helped Admetus win
Alcestis, the
daughter of
King Pelias and later convinced
the
Fates to let Admetus live past his time,
if another took his place. But when it came time for Admetus to
die, his parents, whom he had assumed would gladly die for him,
refused to cooperate. Instead, Alcestis took his place, but
Heracles managed to "persuade"
Thanatos, the god of death, to return her to the
world of the living.
Trojan War
Apollo shot arrows infected with the plague into the Greek
encampment during the
Trojan War in
retribution for
Agamemnon's insult to
Chryses, a priest of Apollo whose daughter
Chryseis had been captured. He demanded her
return, and the Achaeans complied, indirectly causing the anger of
Achilles, which is the theme of the
Iliad.
When
Diomedes injured
Aeneas (
Iliad), Apollo
rescued him. First,
Aphrodite tried to
rescue Aeneas but Diomedes injured her as well.
Aeneas was then
enveloped in a cloud by Apollo, who took him to Pergamos, a sacred
spot in Troy
.
Apollo aided
Paris in the killing
of
Achilles by guiding the arrow of his bow
into
Achilles' heel. One interpretation of
his motive is that it was in revenge for Achilles' sacrilege in
murdering
Troilus, the god's own son by
Hecuba, on the very altar of the god's own
temple.
Niobe
A queen
of Thebes
and wife of
Amphion, Niobe boasted
of her superiority to Leto because she had fourteen children
(Niobids), seven male and seven female,
while Leto had only two. Apollo killed her sons as they
practiced athletics, with the last begging for his life, and
Artemis her daughters. Apollo and Artemis used poisoned arrows to
kill them, though according to some versions of the myth, a number
of the Niobids were spared (
Chloris,
usually). Amphion, at the sight of his dead sons, either killed
himself or was killed by Apollo after swearing revenge.
A
devastated Niobe fled to Mount Sipylos in
Asia
Minor
and turned into stone as she wept. Her tears
formed the river
Achelous. Zeus had turned
all the people of Thebes to stone and so no one buried the Niobids
until the ninth day after their death, when the gods themselves
entombed them.
Consorts and children
Love affairs ascribed to Apollo are a late development in Greek
mythology. Their vivid anecdotal qualities have made some of them
favourites of painters since the Renaissance, so that they stand
out more prominently in the modern imagination.
Female lovers
In
explanation of the connection of Apollon with daphne, the
Laurel whose leaves his priestess
employed at Delphi
, it was told
by Libanius, a fourth-century CE teacher of
rhetoric, that Apollo chased a nymph, Daphne,
daughter of Peneus, who had scorned
him. In
Ovid's telling for a Roman
audience, Phoebus Apollo chaffs Cupid for toying with a man's
weapon suited to a man, whereupon Cupid wounds him with an arrow
with a golden dart; simultaneously, however, Eros had shot a leaden
arrow into Daphne, causing her to be repulsed by Apollo. Following
a spirited chase by Apollo, Daphne prayed to Mother Earth, or,
alternatively, her father — a
river
god — to help her and he changed her into the Laurel tree,
sacred to Apollo.
Apollo had an affair with a human princess named
Leucothea, daughter of
Orchamus and sister of
Clytia. Leucothea loved Apollo who disguised himself
as Leucothea's mother to gain entrance to her chambers. Clytia,
jealous of her sister because she wanted Apollo for herself, told
Orchamus the truth, betraying her sister's trust and confidence in
her. Enraged, Orchamus ordered Leucothea to be buried alive. Apollo
refused to forgive Clytia for betraying his beloved, and a grieving
Clytia wilted and slowly died. Apollo changed her into an incense
plant, either heliotrope or sunflower, which follows the sun every
day.
Marpessa was kidnapped by
Idas but was loved by Apollo as well.
Zeus made her choose between them, and she chose Idas
on the grounds that Apollo, being immortal, would tire of her when
she grew old.
Castalia was a
nymph
whom Apollo loved.
She fled from him and dived into the
spring
at Delphi, at the base of Mt. Parnassos, which was then named after her.
Water from this spring was sacred; it was used to clean the
Delphian temples and inspire poets.
By
Cyrene, Apollo had a son named
Aristaeus, who became the patron god of
cattle,
fruit trees, hunting, husbandry
and
bee-keeping. He was also a
culture-hero and taught humanity dairy skills
and the use of nets and traps in hunting, as well as how to
cultivate olives.
With
Hecuba, wife of King Priam of Troy
, Apollo had
a son named Troilus. An
oracle prophesied that Troy would not be defeated as
long as Troilus reached the age of twenty alive. He was ambushed
and killed by
Achilles.
Apollo also fell in love with
Cassandra,
daughter of Hecuba and Priam, and Troilus' half-sister. He promised
Cassandra the gift of prophecy to seduce her, but she rejected him
afterwards. Enraged, Apollo indeed gifted her with the ability to
know the future, with a curse that she could only see the future
tragedies and that no one would ever believe her.
Coronis, daughter of
Phlegyas, King of the
Lapiths, was another of Apollo's liaisons. Pregnant
with
Asclepius, Coronis fell in love with
Ischys, son of
Elatus.
A crow informed Apollo of the affair. When first informed he
disbelieved the crow and turned all crows black (where they were
previously white) as a punishment for spreading untruths. When he
found out the truth he sent his sister, Artemis, to kill Coronis
(in other stories, Apollo himself had killed Coronis). As a result
he also made the crow sacred and gave them the task of announcing
important deaths. Apollo rescued the baby and gave it to the
centaur Chiron to
raise. Phlegyas was irate after the death of his daughter and
burned the Temple of Apollo at Delphi. Apollo then killed him for
what he did.
In
Euripides' play
Ion, Apollo fathered
Ion by
Creusa, wife of
Xuthus.
Creusa left Ion to die in the wild, but
Apollo asked Hermes to save the child and
bring him to the oracle at Delphi
, where he
was raised by a priestess.
One of his other liaisons was with
Acantha,
the spirit of the
acanthus tree.
Upon her death, Apollo transformed her into a sun-loving
herb.
According to the
Biblioteca, or
"library" of mythology mis-attributed to Apollodorus, he fathered
the
Corybantes on the Muse
Thalia.
Male lovers

Apollo and Hyacinthus
Jacopo Caraglio; 16th c.
Apollo, the eternal beardless
kouros himself,
had the most prominent male relationships of all the
Greek Gods. That might be expected from a god who
was god of the
palaestra, the athletic
gathering place for youth who all competed
in the nude. Many of Apollo's male lovers
suffer tragic deaths resulting from accidents, which account for
their veneration in local sanctuaries as
heroes.
Hyacinth (or Hyacinthus) was
one of his male lovers.
Hyacinthus was a Spartan
prince, beautiful and athletic. The pair
were practicing throwing the
discus
when a discus thrown by Apollo was blown off course by the jealous
Zephyrus and struck Hyacinthus in the head,
killing him instantly. Apollo is said to be filled with grief: out
of Hyacinthus' blood, Apollo created a
flower named after him as a memorial to his
death, and his tears stained the flower petals with
άί
άί, meaning alas. The Festival of Hyacinthus was a
celebration of Sparta.
Another male lover was
Cyparissus, a
descendant of
Heracles. Apollo gave him a
tame deer as a companion but Cyparissus accidentally killed it with
a
javelin as it lay asleep in the undergrowth.
Cyparissus asked Apollo to let his tears fall forever. Apollo
granted the request by turning the sad boy into the
Cypress named after him, which was said to be a
sad tree because the sap forms droplets like tears on the
trunk.
Birth of Hermes
Hermes was born on Mount Cyllene
in Arcadia. The story is told in the
Homeric Hymn to
Hermes. His mother,
Maia, had been secretly impregnated by
Zeus. Maia wrapped the infant in blankets but
Hermes escaped while she was asleep. Hermes ran to
Thessaly, where Apollo was grazing his cattle.
The
infant Hermes stole a number of his cows and took them to a cave in
the woods near Pylos
, covering
their tracks. In the cave, he found a
tortoise and killed it, then removed the insides.
He used one of the cow's intestines and the tortoise shell and made
the first
lyre. Apollo complained to Maia that
her son had stolen his cattle, but Hermes had already replaced
himself in the blankets she had wrapped him in, so Maia refused to
believe Apollo's claim. Zeus intervened and, claiming to have seen
the events, sided with Apollo. Hermes then began to play music on
the lyre he had invented. Apollo, a god of music, fell in love with
the instrument and offered to allow exchange of the cattle for the
lyre. Hence, Apollo became a master of the lyre.
Other stories
Apollo gave the order through the Oracle at Delphi, for
Orestes to kill his mother,
Clytemnestra, and her lover,
Aegisthus. Orestes was punished fiercely by the
Erinyes (the
Furies,
female personifications of
vengeance) for this crime. Relentlessly pursued by
the Furies, Orestes asked for the intercession of
Athena, who decreed that he be tried by a
jury of his
peer, with Apollo
acting as his advocate.
In the
Odyssey,
Odysseus and his surviving crew landed on an island
sacred to Helios the sun god, where he kept sacred cattle. Though
Odysseus warned his men not to (as
Tiresias
and
Circe had told him), they killed and ate
some of the cattle and Helios had
Zeus destroy
the ship and all the men, except
Odysseus.
Apollo also had a
lyre-playing contest with
Cinyras, his son, who
committed suicide when he lost.
Apollo
killed the Aloadae when they attempted to
storm Mt.
Olympus
.
It was also said that Apollo rode on the back of a swan to the land
of the
Hyperboreans during the winter
months, a swan that he also lent to his beloved Hyacinthus to
ride.
Apollo turned
Cephissus into a
sea monster.
Musical contests
Pan
Once
Pan had the audacity to compare
his music with that of Apollo, and to challenge Apollo, the god of
the
kithara, to a trial of skill.
Tmolus, the mountain-god, was chosen to umpire. Pan
blew on his pipes, and with his rustic melody gave great
satisfaction to himself and his faithful follower,
Midas, who happened to be present. Then Apollo struck
the strings of his lyre. Tmolus at once awarded the victory to
Apollo, and all but Midas agreed with the judgment. He dissented,
and questioned the justice of the award. Apollo would not suffer
such a depraved pair of ears any longer, and caused them to become
the ears of a
donkey.
Marsyas
Apollo has ominous aspects aside from his plague-bringing,
death-dealing arrows:
Marsyas was a
satyr who challenged Apollo to a contest of music. He
had found an
aulos on the ground, tossed away
after being invented by
Athena because it
made her cheeks puffy. The contest was judged by the
Muses. After they each performed, both were deemed
equal until Apollo decreed they play and sing at the same time. As
Apollo played the
lyre, this was easy to do.
Marsyas could not do this as he only knew how to use the flute and
could not sing at the same time. Apollo was declared the winner
because of this. Apollo
flayed Marsyas alive
in a cave near
Celaenae in
Phrygia for his
hubris to
challenge a god. He then nailed Marsyas' shaggy skin to a nearby
pine-tree. Marsyas' blood turned into the river
Marsyas.
Another variation is that Apollo played his instrument (the lyre)
upside down. Marsyas could not do this with his instrument (the
flute), and so Apollo hung him from a tree and
flayed him alive.
Graeco–Roman epithets and cult titles
Apollo, like other Greek deities, had a number of
epithets applied to him, reflecting the variety of
roles, duties, and aspects ascribed to the god. However, while
Apollo has a great number of appellations in Greek myth, only a few
occur in
Latin literature, chief
among them
Phoebus
("shining one"), which was very commonly used by both the Greeks
and Romans in Apollo's role as the god of light.
In Apollo's role as healer, his appellations included
Akesios,
Iatros, and
Acestor meaning "healer".
He was also called
Alexicacus ("restrainer of evil") and
Apotropaeus ("he who averts evil"), and was
referred to by the Romans as
Averruncus ("averter
of evils"). As a plague god and defender against rats and locusts,
Apollo was known as
Smintheus ("mouse-catcher")
and
Parnopius ("grasshopper"). The Romans also
called Apollo
Culicarius ("driving away
midges"). In his healing aspect, the Romans
referred to Apollo as
Medicus ("the Physician"),
and a
temple was dedicated to
Apollo Medicus at Rome, probably next to the temple of
Bellona. As a sun-god he was worshiped as
Aegletes, the radiant god.
As a god of archery, Apollo was known as
Aphetoros
("god of the bow") and
Argurotoxos ("with the
silver bow"). The Romans referred to Apollo as
Articenens ("carrying the bow") as well. As a
pastoral shepherd-god, Apollo was known as
Nomios
("wandering"). As the protector of roads and homes he was
Agyieus.
Apollo was also known as
Archegetes ("director of
the foundation"), who oversaw colonies. He was known as
Klarios, from the Doric
klaros
("allotment of land"), for his supervision over cities and
colonies.
He was
known as Delphinios ("Delphinian"), meaning "of
the womb", in his association with Delphoi (Delphi
). At
Delphi, he was also known as
Pythios ("Pythian").
An
aitiology in the
Homeric hymns connects the epitheton to
dolphins.
Kynthios, another
common epithet, stemmed from his birth on Mt.
Cynthus
. He was also known as
Lyceios or
Lykegenes, which
either meant "
wolfish" or "of
Lycia", Lycia being the place where some postulate
that his cult originated.
Specifically as god of prophecy, Apollo was known as
Loxias ("the obscure"). He was also known as
Coelispex ("he who watches the heavens") to the
Romans. Apollo was attributed the epithet
Musagetes as the leader of the
muses, and
Nymphegetes as "
nymph-leader".
Acesius was the epithet of Apollo worshipped in
Elis, where he had a temple in the
agora. This surname, which has the same meaning as
akestor and
alezikakos, characterized the god as
the averter of evil.
Acraephius or
Acraephiaeus was his epithet worshipped in the
Boeotian town of Acraephia, reputedly
founded by his son,
Acraepheus.
Actiacus was his epithet in
Actium
, one of the
principal places of his worship.
Celtic epithets and cult titles
Apollo was worshipped throughout the
Roman
Empire. In the traditionally
Celtic lands he was most often seen as a
healing and sun god. He was often equated with
Celtic gods of similar character.
- As
Apollo Atepomarus
("the great horseman" or "possessing a great horse"), Apollo was
worshipped at Mauvières
(Indre
).
Horses were, in the Celtic world, closely linked to the sun.
- Apollo
Cunomaglus ('hound lord'). A title given to
Apollo at a shrine in Wiltshire
. Apollo Cunomaglus may have been a god of
healing. Cunomaglus himself may originally have been an independent
healing god.
- Apollo Grannus.
Grannus was a healing spring god, later equated with Apollo
- Apollo Maponus. A god known from inscriptions
in Britain. This may a local fusion of Apollo and Maponus.
- Apollo
Moritasgus ('masses of sea water'). An epithet for
Apollo at Alesia, where he was worshipped as god of healing and,
possibly, of physicians.
Reception
Apollo has often featured in postclassical art and literature.
Percy Bysshe Shelley composed a
"Hymn of Apollo" (1820), and the god's instruction of the Muses
formed the subject of
Igor
Stravinsky's
Apollon
musagète (1927–1928).
The name Apollo was given to
NASA
's Apollo Lunar
program in the 1960s.
The
statue of Apollo from the west pediment of the Temple of
Zeus
at Olympia
(currently in the Archaeological Museum of
Olympia
) was depicted on the obverse of the Greek 1000 drachmas banknote of 1987–2001.
Media
References
Further reading
Primary sources
- Homer, Iliad ii.595–600 (c. 700
BCE)
- Sophocles, Oedipus Rex
- Palaephatus, On Unbelievable
Tales 46. Hyacinthus (330 BCE)
- Apollodorus, Library 1.3.3
(140 BCE)
- Ovid, Metamorphoses 10. 162–219
(1–8 CE)
- Pausanias,
Description of Greece 3.1.3, 3.19.4 (160–176 CE)
- Philostratus the Elder,
Images i.24 Hyacinthus (170–245 CE)
- Philostratus the
Younger, Images 14. Hyacinthus (170–245 CE)
- Lucian, Dialogues of the Gods 14
(170 CE)
- First Vatican
Mythographer, 197. Thamyris et Musae
Secondary sources
- M. Bieber, 1964. Alexander the Great in Greek and Roman
Art (Chicago)
- Walter Burkert, 1985. Greek
Religion (Harvard University Press) III.2.5
passim
- Robert Graves, 1960. The Greek
Myths, revised edition (Penguin)
- Miranda J. Green, Dictionary of Celtic Myth and
Legend, Thames and Hudson Ltd, 1997
- Karl Kerenyi, Apollon: Studien
über Antiken Religion und Humanität rev. ed. 1953.
- Karl Kerenyi , 1951 The Gods of the Greeks
- Pauly–Wissowa,
Realencyclopädie der klassischen Altertumswissenschaft:
II, "Apollon". The best repertory of cult sites (Burkert).
- Pfeiff, K.A., 1943. Apollon: Wandlung seines Bildes in der
griechischen Kunst. Traces the changing iconography of
Apollo.
- William Smith ,
Dictionary
of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, 1870, article
on Apollo,
- N. Yalouris, 1980. The Search for Alexander (Boston)
Exhibition.
Notes
- For the iconography of the Alexander–Helios type, see H.
Hoffmann, 1963. "Helios," in Journal of the American Research
Center in Egypt 2, pp. 117–23; cf. Yalouris
1980, no. 42.
- Joseph Fontenrose, "Apollo and Sol in the Latin poets of the
first century BC", Transactions of the American Philological
Association 30 (1939), pp 439–55; "Apollo and
the Sun-God in Ovid", American Journal of Philology
61 (1940) pp 429–44; and "Apollo and Sol in the
Oaths of Aeneas and Latinus" Classical Philology
38.2 (April 1943), pp. 137–138.
- The ἁ suggestion is repeated by Plutarch in Moralia in the sense of "unity".
- Burkert so holds; Greek Religion p.144
- Behind the Name: Meaning, Origin and History of the
Name Apollo
- de Grummond, Nancy Thomson (2006) "Etruscan Myth, Sacred
History, and Legend". (Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania
Museum of Archaeology and Anthropology)
- Mackenzie, Donald A. (2005) "Myths of Babylonia and Assyria"
(Gutenberg)
- Fritz Graf, Apollo, p. 104-113
- Burkert, Greek Religion, 1985 "Apollo", p.144
- Croft, John (2003) wrote in the Ancient Near East mail list hosted by the
University of Chicago that "Apollo does not have a Greek
provenance but an Anatolian one. Luwian Apaliuna seems to have
travelled west from further East. Hurrian Aplu was a god of the
plague, and resembles the mouse god Apollo Smitheus. Hurrian Aplu
itself seems derived from the Babylonian "Aplu" meaning a "son of"
— a title that was given to the Babylonian plague God, Nergal (son
of Enlil)"
- See Paean.
- Burkert 1985:143.
- Lucian (attrib.),
De Dea
Syria 35–37.
- Theoi: "KORONIS"
- Livy 1.56.
- Livy 3.63.7, 4.25.3.
- Livy 25.12.
- Suetonius,
Augustus
18.2; Cassius Dio 51.1.1–3.
- Cassius Dio 53.1.3.
- Inscriptiones Latinae Selectae 5050, translated
by
- Children of the Gods by Kenneth McLeish, page 32.
- ""The love-stories themselves were not told until later."
(Karl Kerenyi,
The Gods of the Greeks 1951:140.
- Libanius, Narrationes.
- Apollodorus, Bibliotheca, 1.3.4. Other ancient sources,
however, gave the Corybantes different parents; see Sir James
Frazer's note on the passage in the
Bibliotheca.
- Man Myth and Magic by Richard Cavendish
- Euripides,
Andromache 901
- Apollonius of Rhodes, iv. 1730;
Biblioteca, i. 9. § 26
- "Acesius". Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography
and Mythology. London, 1880.
- Ovid, Metamorphoses xiii.
715
- Strabo, x. p. 451
- Miranda J. Green, Dictionary of Celtic Myth and
Legend, Thames and Hudson Ltd, 1997
- Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum XIII, 1863–1986; A.
Ross,, Pagan Celtic Britain, 1967; M.J. Green, The
Gods of the Celts, 1986, London
- J. Zwicker, Fontes Historiae Religionis Celticae,
1934–36, Berlin; Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum V, XI,
XII, XIII; J. Gourcest, "Le culte de Belenos en Provence
occidentale et en Gaule", Ogam 6.6
(1954:257–262); E. Thevonot, "Le cheval sacre dans la Gaule de
l'Est", Revue archeologique de l'Est et du Centre-Est (vol
2), 1951; [ ], "Temoignages du culte de l'Apollon gaulois dans
l'Helvetie romaine", Revue celtique (vol 51), 1934.
- W.J. Wedlake, The Excavation of the Shrine of Apollo at
Nettleton, Wiltshire, 1956–1971, Society of Antiquaries of
London, 1982.
- M. Szabo, The Celtic Heritage in Hungary,
(Budapest)1971, Budapest
- Divinites et sanctuaires de la Gaule, E. Thevonat, 1968,
Paris
- La religion des Celtes, J. de Vries, 1963, Paris
- J. Le Gall, Alesia, archeologie et histoire, (Paris)
1963.
- Corpus Inscriptionum Latinarum XIII
- Bank of
Greece. Drachma Banknotes & Coins: 1000 drachmas. – Retrieved on 27 March
2009.
External links
- Apollo at the Greek Mythology Link, by Carlos
Parada