Online Encyclopedia

ARISTAEUS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 493 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ARISTAEUS  , a divinity whose

worship was widely spread throughout ancient
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Greece, but concerning whom the myths are somewhat obscure . The account most generally received connects him specially with
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Thessaly . Apollo carried off from Mount
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Pelion the nymph Cyrene, daughter or granddaughter of the
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river-
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god Peneus, and conveyed her to
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Libya, where she gave birth to Aristaeus . From this circumstance the
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town of Cyrene took its name . The child was at first handed over to the care of the Hours, or the nymph Melissa and the centaur Cheiron . He afterwards
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left Libya and went to Thebes, where he received instruction from the Muses in the arts of healing and prophecy, and married Autonoe, daughter of
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Cadmus, by whom he had several children, among others, the unfortunate
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Actaeon . He is said to have visited Ceos, where, by erecting a temple to
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Zeus Icmaeus (the giver of moisture), he freed the inhabitants from a terrible drought . The islanders worshipped him, and occasionally identified him with Zeus, calling him Zeus Aristaeus . After travelling through many of the
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Aegean islands, through Sicily, Sardinia and Magna Graecia, everywhere conferring benefits and receiving divine honours, Aristaeus reached
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Thrace, where he was initiated into the mysteries of Dionysus, and finally disappeared near Mount Haemus . While in Thrace he is said to have caused the
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death of Eurydice, who was bitten by a snake while fleeing from him . Aristaeus was essentially a benevolent deity; he was worshipped as the first who introduced the cultivation of bees (Virgil, Georg. iv . 315-558), and of the
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vine and olive; he was the
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protector of herdsmen and hunters; he warded off the evil effects of the
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dog-
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star; he possessed the arts of healing and prophecy .

He was often identified with Zeus, Apollo and Dionysus . In ancient sculptures and coins he is represented as a

young man, habited like a shepherd, and sometimes carrying a sheep on his shoulders . Coins of Ceos exhibit the head of Aristaeus and Sirius in the form of a dog crowned with rays . Pindar, Pythia, ix . 5-65;
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Apollonius Rhodius, schol. on ii . 498, 500; Diodorus, iv . 81 .

End of Article: ARISTAEUS
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ARISTAGORAS (d. 497 B.c.)

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