Online Encyclopedia

ANTIOPE

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 133 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ANTIOPE  . (1) In

Greek legend, the
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mother of
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Amphion and Zethus, and, according to Homer (Od. xi . 26o), a daughter of the Boeotian
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river-
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god Asopus . In later poems she is called the daughter of Nycteus or Lycurgus . Her beauty attracted
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Zeus, who, assuming the form of a satyr, took her by force (
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Apollodorus iii . 5) . After this she was carried off by Epopeus, king of Sicyon, who would not give her up till compelled by her
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uncle Lycus . On the way home she gave birth, in the neighbour-hood of Eleutherae on Mount
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Cithaeron, to the twins Amphion and Zethus, of whom Amphion was the son of the god, and Zethus the son of Epopeus . Both were
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left to be brought up by herdsmen . At Thebes Antiope now suffered from the persecution of
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Dirce, the wife of Lycus, but at last escaped towards Eleutherae, and there found shelter, unknowingly, in the house where her two sons were living as herdsmen . Here she was discovered by Dirce, who ordered the two young men to tie her to the horns of a wild bull . They were about to obey, when the old herdsman, who had brought them up, revealed his secret, and they carried out the punishment on Dirce instead (Hyginus; Fab .

8) . For this, it is said,

Dionysus, to whose worship Dirce had been devoted, visited Antiope with madness, which caused her to wander restlessly all over
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Greece till she was cured, and married by Phocus of Tithorea, on Mount Parnassus, where both were buried in one
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grave (
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Pausanias ix . 17, X . 32) . (2) A second Antiope, daughter of
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Ares, and
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sister of Hippolyte; queen of the
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Amazons, was the wife of
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Theseus . There are various accounts of the manner in which Theseus became possessed of her, and of her subsequent fortunes . Either she gave herself up to him out of love, when with Heracles he captured Themiscyra, the seat of the Amazons, or she fell' to his lot as a captive (Dipdorus iv . 16) . Or again, Theseus himself invaded the dominion of the Amazons and carried her off, the consequence of which was a
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counter-invasion of
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Attica by the Amazons . After four months of war peace was made, and Antiope left with Theseus as a peace-offering . According to another account, she had joined the Amazons against him because he had been untrue to her in desiring to marry
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Phaedra . She is said to have been killed by another
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Amazon, Molpadia, a
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rival in her affection for Theseus .

Elsewhere it was believed that he had himself killed her, and fulfilled an

oracle to that effect (Hyginus, Fab . 241) . By Theseus she had a son, the well-known Hippolytus (Plutarch, Theseus) .

End of Article: ANTIOPE
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