Online Encyclopedia

CHARON

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V05, Page 948 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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CHARON  , in

Greek
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mythology, the son of
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Erebus and Nyx (
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Night) . It was his duty to ferry over the
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Styx (or
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Acheron) those souls of the deceased who had duly received the
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rites of
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burial, in payment for which service he received an obol, which was placed in the mouth of the corpse . It was only exceptionally that he carried living passengers (Aeneid, vi . 295 ff.) . As ferryman of the dead he is not mentioned in Homer or
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Hesiod, and in this character is probably of
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Egyptian origin . He is represented as a morose and grisly old man in a black sailor's cape . By the Etruscans he was also supposed to be a kind of executioner of the powers•of the nether
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world, who, armed with an enormous hammer, was associated with Mars in the slaughter of
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battle . Finally he came to be regarded as the image of
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death and the world below . As such he survives in the Charos or Charontas of the
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modern Greeks—a black
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bird which darts down upon its prey, or a winged horseman who fastens his victims to the saddle and bears them away to the realms of the dead . See J . A . Ambrosch, De Charonte Etrusco (1837), a learned and exhaustive monograph; B .

Schmidt, Volksleben der Neugriechen (1871), i . 222-251; O . Waser, Charon, Charun, Charos, mythologischarchaologische Monographie (1898) ; S . Rocco, " Sull' origine del Mito di Caronte," in Rivista di stories antica, ii . (1897), who considers Charon to be an old name for the sun-
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god Helios embarking during the night for the East .

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