- Pirene (fountain)
Pirene or "Peirene" ( _el. Πειρήνη) is the name of a fountain or spring in
Greek mythology , physically located inCorinth . It was said to be a favored watering-hole ofPegasus , sacred to theMuses . Poets would travel there to drink and receive inspiration.In the second century CE the traveller Pausanias describes Pirene as follows:
On leaving the market-place along the road to Lechaeum you come to a gateway, on which are two gilded chariots, one carrying Phaethon the son of Helius, the other
Helius himself. A little farther away from the gateway, on the right as you go in, is a bronzeHeracles . After this is the entrance to the water of Peirene. The legend about Peirene is that she was a woman who became a spring because of her tears shed in lamentation for her son Cenchrias, who was unintentionally killed byArtemis . The spring is ornamented with white marble, and there have been made chambers like caves, out of which the water flows into an open-air well. It is pleasant to drink, and they say that the Corinthianbronze , when red-hot, is tempered by this water, since bronze the Corinthians have not. Moreover near Peirene are an image and a sacred enclosure ofApollo ; in the latter is a painting of the exploit ofOdysseus against the suitors. [ [http://www.abu.nb.ca/Courses/NTIntro/images/PeirenFounCor.htm Peirene Fountain] , Atlantic Baptist University.]Another story says that the fountain was created by the hoof of Pegasus striking the ground. [Evslin, Bernard. "Gods, Demigods & Demons." Scholastic Inc., 1975.] The legend Pausanias cites is far more widespread.
The Upper Pirene spring, with its own etiological myth, is located on
Acrocorinth , theacropolis of Corinth.References
ee also
*Pirene, a
nymph who accoridng to legend gave the name to the fountain.
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