- Telesilla
Telesilla (fl.
510 BC ) was a Greekpoet , native ofArgos , and was named one of the nine lyricmuse s.According to the traditional story, when Cleomenes, king of Sparta, invaded the land of the
Argives in510 BC , and slew all the males capable of bearing arms, Telesilla, dressed in men's clothes, put herself at the head of the women and repelled an attack upon the city of Argos. To commemorate this exploit, a statue of the poet, in the act of putting on a helmet, with books lying at her feet, was set up in the temple ofAphrodite at Argos. The festivalHybristica orEndymatia , in which men and women exchanged clothes, also celebrated the heroism of her female compatriots.Herodotus (vi. 76) does not refer to the intervention of Telesilla, but mentions anoracle which predicted that the female should conquer the male, whence the tradition itself may have been derived. Further, the statue seen by Pausanias may not have been intended for Telesilla; it would equally represent Aphrodite, in her character as wife ofAres and a warlike goddess (the books, however, seem out of place). The Hybristica, again, was most probably a religious festival connected with the worship of someandrogynous divinity.Of Telesilla's poems only two lines remain, quoted by the grammarian
Hephaestion , apparently from aParthenion , or song for a chorus of maidens.References
*
Reginald Walter Macan , "Herodotus" iv.-vi., i. 336 foil, and notes.
*Pausanias ii. 20, 8
*Plutarch , "De Virtut. Mulierum", 8
*Clement of Alexandria , Stromata, iv. 19, p. 522
*Theodor Bergk , "Poetae Lyrici Graeci", iii.
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