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HESIOD

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V13, Page 408 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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HESIOD  , the

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father of Greek didactic
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poetry, probably flourished during the 8th century B.C . His father had migrated from the Aeolic Cyme in
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Asia Minor to
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Boeotia; and Hesiod and his
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brother Perses were born at Ascra, near mount Helicon (
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Works and Days, 635) . Here, as he fed his father's flocks, he received his commission from the Muses to be their prophet and poet—a commission which he recognized by dedicating to them a tripod won by him in a contest of
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song (see below) at some funeral games at
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Chalcis in Euboea, still in existence at Helicon in the age of
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Pausanias (T'heogony, 20-34, W. and D., 656; Pausanias ix . 38 . 3) . After the
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death of his father Hesiod is said to have
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left his native
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land in disgust at the result of a law-suit with his brother and to have migrated to Naupactus . There was a tradition that he was murdered by the sons of his
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host in the sacred enclosure of the Nemean
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Zeus at Oeneon In Locris (Thucydides 96; Pausanias ix . 31); his remains were removed for
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burial by command of the Delphic oracle to Orchomenus in Boeotia, where the Ascraeans settled after the destruction of their
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town by the Thespians, and where, according to Pausanias, his
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grave was to be seen . Hesiod's earliest poem, the famous Works and Days, and according to Boeotian testimony the only genuine one, embodies the experiences of his daily
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life and
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work, and, interwoven with episodes of fable, allegory, and
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personal
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history, forms a sort of Boeotian shepherd's
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calendar . The first portion is an ethical enforcement of honest labour and dissuasive of strife and idleness (1-383); the second consists of hints and rules as to husbandry (384-764); and the third is a religious calendar of the months, with remarks on the days most lucky or the contrary for rural or nautical employments . The connecting
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link of the whole poem is the author's advice to his brother, who appears to have bribed the corrupt judges to deprive Hesiod of his already scantier
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inheritance, and to whom; as he wasted his substance lounging in the
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agora, the poet more than once returned good for evil, though he tells him there will be a limit to this unmerited kindness . In the Works and Days the episodes which rise above an even didactic level are the " Creation and Equipment of Pandora," the " Five Ages of the
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World " and the much-admired " Description of Winter " (by some critics judged
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post-Hesiodic) .

The poem also contains the earliest known fable in Greek literature, that of " The

Hawk and the Nightingale." It is in the Works and Days especially that we glean indications of Hesiod's rank and condition in life, that of a stay-at-home farmer of the
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lower class; whose
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sole experience of the sea was a single voyage of 40 yds. across the Euripus, and an old-fashioned bachelor whose misogynic views and prejudice against matrimony have been conjecturally traced to his brother Perses having a wife as extravagant as himself . The other poem attributed to Hesiod or his school which has come down in
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great
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part to
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modern times is The Theogony, a work of grander scope, inspired alike by older traditions and abundant
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local associations . It is an attempt to work into
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system, as none had essayed to do before, the floating legends of the gods and goddesses and their offspring . This task Herodotus (ii . 53) attributes to Hesiod, and he is quoted by
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Plato in the Symposium (178 B) as the author of the Theogony . The first to question his claim to this distinction was Pausanias, the geographer (A.D . 200) . The Alexandrian grammarians had no doubt on the subject; and, indications of the hand flat wrote the Works and Days may be found in the severe strictures on
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women, in the high esteem for the
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wealth-giver
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Plutus and in coincidences of verbal expression . Although, no doubt, of Hesiodic origin, in its
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present form it is composed of different recensions and numerous later additions and interpolations . The Theogony consists of three divisions—(1) a cosmogony, or creation; (2) a theogony proper, recounting the history of the dynasties of Zeus and Cronus; and (3) a brief and abruptly terminated heroogony, the starting-point not improbably of the supplementary poem, the tcaraToyos, or " Lists of Women n who wedded immortals, of which all but a few fragments are lost.' The proem (1-116) addressed to the Heliconian and Pierian muses, is considered to have been variously enlarged, altered and arranged by successive rhapsodists . The poet has inter-
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woven several episodes of rare merit, such as the contest of Zeus and the Olympian gods with the Titans, and the description of the prison-house in which the vanquished Titans are confined, with the Giants for keepers and Day and
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Night for janitors (735 seq.) . The only other poem which has come down to us under Hesiod's name is the Shield of Heracles, the opening verses of which are attributed by a nameless grammarian to the
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fourth
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book of Eoiai .

The theme of the piece is the expedition of Heracles and Iolaus against the robber Cycnus; but its

main
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object apparently is to describe the shield of Heracles (141-317)• It is clearly an imitation of the Homeric account of the shield of Achilles (Iliad, xviii . 479) and is now generally considered
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spurious . Titles and fragments of other lost poems of Hesiod have come down to us: didactic, as the
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Maxims of Cheiron; genealogical, as the Aegimius, describing the contest of that mythical ancestor of the
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Dorians with the
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Lapithae; and mythical, as the
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Marriage of Ceyx and the Descent of
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Theseus to Hades .
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Recent
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editions of Hesiod include the 'A76v 'Oµilpov «ai 'Hvu bov, the contest of song between Homer and Hesiod at the funeral games held in honour of King Amphidamas at Chalcis . This little tract belongs to the time of Hadrian, who is actually mentioned as having been present during its recitation, but is founded on an earlier account by the sophist
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Alcidamas (q.v.) . Quotations (old and new) are made from the works of both poets, and, in spite of the sympathies of the audience, the judge decides in favour of Hesiod . Certain
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biographical details of Homer and Hesiod are also given . A strong characteristic of Hesiod's style is his sententious and proverbial philosophy (as in Works and Days, 24-25, 40, 218, 345, 371) . There is naturally less of this in the Theogony, yet there too not a few sentiments take the form of the saw or adage . He has undying fame as the first of didactic poets (see DIDACTIC POETRY), the accredited systematizer of Greek
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mythology and the rough but not unpoetical sketcher of the lines on which Virgil wrought out his exquisitely finished Georgics . On the subject generally, consult G . F .

Schumann, Opuscula, ii . (1857); H . Flach, Die Hesiodischen Gedichte (1874); A . Rzach, Der Dialekt
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des Hesiodos (1876) ; P . O . Gruppe, Die griechischen Kulte and Mythen, i . (1887); O . Friedel, Die Sage vom rode Hesiods (1879), from Jahrbiicher fur classische Philologie (loth suppl .
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Band, 1879); J . Adam, Religious Teachers of
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Greece (1908) . There is a full bibliography of the publications
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relating to Hesiod (1884–1898) by A . Rzach in
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Burma's Jahresbericht 'fiber die Fortschritte der assischen Altertumswissenschaft,
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xxvii .

(,goo) . ' Part of the poem was called Eoiai, because the description of each heroine began with i aid, " or like as." (Sec Bibliography.) There are

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translations of the Hesiodic poems in
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English by Cooke (1728), C . A . Elton (1815), J . Banks (1856), and specially by A . W . Mair, with introduction and appendices (Oxford Library of Translations, 1908) ; in German (metrical version) with valuable introductions and notes by R . Peppmuller (1896) and in other modern
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languages . (J . DA.; J . H .

End of Article: HESIOD
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