- Amymone
In
Greek mythology , Amymone (the "blameless" one) was a daughter ofDanaus . As the "blameless" Danaid, her name identifies her as, perhaps, identical toHypermnestra ("great wooing" or "high marriage"), also the one Danaid who did not assassinate her Egyptian husband on their wedding night, as her 49 sisters did. (See the myth at the entry forDanaus .)Apollodorus , in his list of names for the Danaids, does mention both Hypermnestra and Amymone, however ("Library" 2.1.5)Poseidon , in archaic times the consort of the two goddesses Demeter and Persephone in Argos, had dried up all the region's springs after the Argolid was awarded to the protection of Hera. It would appear from the myth that Poseidon preceded Hera in the heartland of her cult. But he rescued Amymone from a chthonicsatyr that was about to rape her. To possess her himself, the god revealed the springs ofLerna , a cult site of great antiquity near the shores of the Argolid. To Poseidon she bore Nauplius, "the navigator," who gave his name to the port city of Argos.Amymone, the blameless, was eventually reconciled with her father, and given in marriage to
Lynceus , with whom she founded a race of kings that led to Danae, the mother of Perseus, founder ofMycenae . Thus this founding myth of Argos also asserts that Argos was the metropolis ("mother city") of Mycenae.Amymone/Hypermnestra is represented with a water pitcher, a reminder of the sacred springs and lake of Lerna and of the copious wells that made Argos the "well-watered" and, by contrast, a reminder that her sisters were forever punished in
Tartarus for their murderous crimes by fruitlessly drawing water in pitchers with open bases.External links
* [http://homepage.mac.com/cparada/GML/DANAIDS.html Carlos Parada, "Greek Mythology Link":] Danaids
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