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EVEMERUS] See also: Greek mythographer, See also: born at Messana, in See also: Sicily (others say at See also: Chios, See also: Tegea, or See also: Messene in Peloponnese), flourished about 300 B.c., and lived at the See also: court of Cassander
.
He is chiefly known by his Sacred See also: History (`lepd (1tvaypadn'i), a philosophical See also: romance, based upon archaic inscriptions which he claimed to have found during his travels in various parts of See also: Greece
.
He particularly relies upon an account of early history which he discovered on a See also: golden pillar in a See also: temple on the See also: island of Panchaea when on a voyage round the See also: coast of See also: Arabia, undertaken at the See also: request of Cassander, his friend and See also: patron
.
There is apparently no doubt that this island is
CH1CH:CH2 CII:CH•CHs
Eugenol
.
Iso.eugenol Vanillin
OCH3
I JOH
CI;.CH : CHI Chavibetol
imaginary
.
In this See also: work he for the first See also: time systematized an old See also: Oriental (perhaps Phoenician) method of interpreting the popular myths, asserting that the gods who formed the chief See also: objects of popular worship had been originally heroes and conquerors, who had thus earned a claim to the veneration of their subjects
.
This See also: system spread widely, and the early Christians especially appealed to it as a confirmation of their belief that See also: ancient See also: mythology was merely an aggregate of fables of human invention
.
See also: Euhemerus was a See also: firm upholder of the Cyrenaic philosophy, and by many ancient writers he was regarded as an atheist
.
His work was translated by See also: Ennius into Latin, but the work itself is lost, and of the See also: translation only a few fragments, and these very See also: short, have come down to us
.
This rationalizing method of interpretation is known as Euhemerism
.
There is no doubt that it contains an See also: element of truth; as among the See also: Romans the gradual deification of ancestors and the See also: apotheosis of emperors were prominent features of religious development, so among See also: primitive peoples it is possible to trace the See also: evolution of See also: family and tribal gods from See also: great chiefs and warriors
.
All theories of See also: religion which give prominence to ancestor worship and the cult of the dead are to a certain extent Euhemeristic
.
But as the See also: sole explanation of the origin of the idea of gods it is not accepted by students of See also: comparative religion
.
It had, however, considerable vogue in See also: France
.
In the 18th century the See also: abbe Banier, in his Mythologie et la See also: fable expliquees See also: par l'histoire, was frankly Euhemeristic; other leading Euhemerists were Clavier, Sainte-Croix, Raoul Rochette, Em
.
See also: Hoffmann and to a great extent See also: Herbert See also: Spencer
.
See See also: Raymond de See also: Block, Evhemere, son livre et sa See also: doctrine (See also: Mons, 1876) ; G
.
N
.
Nemethy, Euhemeri relliquiae (See also: Budapest, 1889) ; Ganss, Quaestiones Euhemereae (See also: Kempen, 186o) ; See also: Otto Sieroka, De Euhemero (1869); Susemihl, Geschichte der griechischen Litteratur in der Alexandrinerzeit, vol. i
.
(See also: Leipzig, 1891) ; and See also: works on comparative religion and mythology
.
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[back] EUGENOL (allyl guaiacol, eugenic acid), C10H1202 |
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