- Arion (mythology)
In
Greek mythology , Arion or Areion (Ancient Greek: Άρείων) is a divinely-bred, extremely swift immortal horse that, according to the Latin poetSextus Propertius , was also endowed with speech. Arion's siring byPoseidon in stallion form vary by author: according to the Pseudo-Apollodorus, the horse was foaled byDemeter while she was "in the likeness of a Fury"; Pausanias reported that, according toAntimachus , the horse was the foal of Gaia, theEarth , herself. In theEpic Cycle Arion was mounted most notably by Adrastus, king ofArgos .The earliest literary mention of Arion is in
Homer , "Iliad ", XXIII, 346.Statius also made mention of the horse in "Thebaid", VI, 301.Pausanias
Pausanias says [Pausanias, "Description of Greece", VIII:
Arcadia , chapter 25.7.]:"Demeter, they say, had by Poseidon a daughter, whose name they are not permitted to divulge to the uninitiated, and a horse called Areion. For this reason they say that they were the first Arcadians to give the surname Hippius ['guide of the horses'] to Poseidon."
In support of the lineage they advance, Pausanias reports, the Arcadians cite some verses from the "Iliad" and the "Thebaid".
tatius and Antimachus
According to the "Thebaid", Adrastus flees from Thebes "...wearing mourning clothes and carried by green-maned Areion." Latin scholia assert that these verses indicate that Neptune was Arion's sire.
Antimachus of Colophon says that Arion was a child of the Earth::"Adrastus, son of
Talaus , descendant ofCretheus ,:The very first of the Danai to drive his famous horses,:Swift Caerus and Areion ofThelpusa ,:Whom near the grove of Oncean Apollo:Earth herself sent up a marvel for mortals to see."This fabulous horse, of divine race, had the peculiarity of having a green mane.
Heracles , waging war with the Eleans, acquired this horse fromOncus . The son ofZeus would have thus ridden upon Arion when he seizedElis . Thereafter, Heracles gave Arion to Adrastus; this is why Antimachus said of Arion: "Adrastus was the third lord who tamed him."Pseudo-Apollodorus
The Pseudo-Apollodorus (III, 6, 8) recounts that in the defeat of the
Argives , the same battle in whichEteocles andPolynices slew each other, Adrastus alone among the Argive leaders survived, saved by his horse Arion that Demeter, in the likeness of a Fury, had conceived by Poseidon. The scholiasts of the "Iliad" (XXIII, 347) and ofLycophron (153) attribute to him the same origin.Notes
References
* The Pseudo-Apollodorus, "Bibliotheca", (III, 6, 8).
* Pausanias, "Description of Greece", (VIII, 25, 7-9).
* Sextus Propertius, "Elegies" (II, 34).
* Statius, "Thebaid" (IV, 43; VI, 424 and following verses).External links
* [http://www.theoi.com/Ther/HipposAreion.html Theoi Project - Hippos Areion]
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