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ATHAMAS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V02, Page 825 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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ATHAMAS  , in

Greek
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mythology, king of the Minyae in Boeotian Orchomenus, son of
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Aeolus, king of '
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Thessaly, or of Minyas . His first wife was Nephele, the cloud-goddess, by whom he had two children, Phrixus and Helle (see ARGONAUTS) . Athamas and his second wife Ino were said to have incurred the wrath of
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Hera, because Ina had brought up Dionysus, the son of her
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sister
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Semele, as a girl, to save his
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life . Athamas went mad, and slew one of his sons, Learchus; Inc), to escape the pursuit of her frenzied
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husband, threw herself into the sea with her other son
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Melicertes . Both were afterwards worshipped as marine divinities, Ino as Leucothea, Melicertes as Palaemon (Odyssey V . 333) . Athamas, with the
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guilt of his son's
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murder upon him, was obliged to flee from
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Boeotia . He was ordered by the oracle to settle in a place where he should receive hospitality from wild beasts . This he found at Phthiotis in Thessaly, where he surprised some wolves eating sheep; on his approach they fled, leaving him the bones . Athamas, regarding this as the fulfilment of the oracle, settled there and married a third wife, Themisto . The spot was afterwards called the Athamanian plain (
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Apollodorus i. g; Hyginus, Fab . 1-5; Ovid, Metam. iv .

416,

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Fasti, vi . 485; Valerius
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Flaccus i . 277) . According to a
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local legend, Athamas was king of Halos in Phthiotis from the first (Schol. on Apoll . Rhoditis ii . 513) . After his attempt on the life of Phrixus, which was supposed to have succeeded, the Phthiots were ordered to sacrifice him to
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Zeus Laphystius, in order to appease the anger of the gods . As he was on the point of being put to
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death, Cytissorus, a son of Phrixus, suddenly arrived from Aea with the
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news that Phrixus was still alive . Athamas's life was thus saved, but the wrath of the gods was unappeased, and pursued the
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family . It was ordained that the ei'dest born of the
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race should not enter the council-chamber; if he did so, he was liable to be seized and sacrificed if detected (Herodotus vii . 197) . The legend of Athamas is probably founded on a very old custom amongst the Minyae—the sacrifice of the first-born of the race of Athamas to Zeus Laphystius .

The

story formed the subject of lost tragedies by Aeschylus, Sophocles, Euripides and other Greek and Latin dramatists .

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