- Trophonius
Trophonius (the Latinate spelling) or Trophonios (in the transliterated Greek spelling) was a Greek hero or daimon or
god - it was never certain which one - with a rich mythological tradition and an oracular cult at Lebadaea inBoeotia .Etymology and parallel cults
The name is etymologically derived from "trepho", "to nourish".
Strabo and several inscriptions refer to him asZeus Trephonios. Several otherchthonic Zeus es with similar titles are known from the Greek world, including Zeus "Meilikhios" ("honeyed" or "kindly" Zeus), and Zeus "Chthonios" ("Zeus beneath-the-earth").Similar constructions are also found in the Roman world: for example, a shrine at
Lavinium inLazio was dedicated toAeneas under the title "Iuppiter Indiges" (Jupiter in-the-earth).Trophonius in myth
In
Greek mythology , Trophonius was a son ofErginus . According to the Homeric Hymn toApollo , he built Apollo's temple at theoracle atDelphi with his brother,Agamedes . Once finished, the oracle told the brothers to do whatsoever they wished for six days and, on the seventh, their greatest wish would be granted. They did and were found dead on the seventh day. The saying "those whom the gods love die young" comes from this story.Alternatively, according to Pausanias they built a
treasure chamber (with secret entrance only they knew about) for KingHyprieus ofBoeotia . Using the secret entrance, they stole Hyprieus' fortune. He was aware but did not know who the thief was; he laid a snare. Agamedes was trapped in it; Trophonius cut off his head so that Hyprieus would not know who the body in the snare was. He then fled into the cavern at Lebadaea, and disappeared forever.The cave of Trophonius was not discovered again until the Lebadaeans suffered a plague, and consulted the
Delphic Oracle . ThePythia advised them that an unnamed hero was angry at being neglected, and that they should find his grave and offer him worship forthwith. Several unsuccessful searches followed, and the plague continued unabated until a shepherd boy followed a trail of bees into a hole in the ground. Instead of honey, he found a "daimon", and Lebadaea lost its plague while gaining a popular oracle.The childless Xuthus in
Euripides 's "Ion" consult Trophonius on his way toDelphi .Apollonius of Tyana , a legendary wise man and seer ofLate Antiquity , once visited the shrine and found that, when it came to philosophy, Trophonius was a proponent of sound Pythagorean doctrines.Plutarch 's "De Genio Socratis" relates an elaborate dream-vision concerning the cosmos and the afterlife that was supposedly received at Trophonius's oracle.Trophonius in cult
Pausanias, in his account of Boeotia (9.39), relates many details about the cult of Trophonius. Whoever desired to consult the oracle would live in a designated house for a period of days, bathing in the river Herkyna and living on sacrificial meat. He would then sacrifice, by day, to a series of gods, including
Kronos ,Apollo ,Zeus the king,Hera the Charioteer, andDemeter -Europa. At night, he would a black victim into a pit sacred toAgamedes , drink from two rivers calledLethe andMnemosyne , and then descend into a cave. Here, most consultees were frightened out of their wits, and forgot the experience entirely upon coming up.Afterward, the consultee would be seated upon a chair of Mnemosyne, where the priests of the shrine would record his ravings and compose an oracle out of them.
Trophonius in the classical tradition
"To descend into the cave of Trophonios" became a proverbial way of saying "to suffer a great fright": this saying is alluded to in
Aristophanes 's "Clouds".Several ancient philosophers, including
Heraclides Ponticus , wrote commentaries on the cult of Trophonios that are now sadly lost. Trophonios has been of interest to classical scholars because the rivers ofLethe andMnemosyne have close parallels with theMyth of Er at the end ofPlato 'sRepublic , with a series of Orphic funerary inscriptions on gold leaves, and with several passages about Memory and forgetting inHesiod 'sTheogony .The Hellfire Club once constructed a "Cave of Trophonius" with obscene wall-paintings in which to conduct their revels. The philosopherFriedrich Nietzsche calls himself a "Trophonios" in the preface to his "Daybreak", alluding to his labor in the underground of moral prejudices.External links
* [http://www.theoi.com/Kronos/Trophonios.html Theoi Project - Trophonios]
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