Online Encyclopedia

LINUS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V16, Page 737 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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LINUS  , one of a numerous class of heroic figures in

Greek legend, of which other examples are found in
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Hyacinthus and
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Adonis . The connected legend is always of the same character: a beautiful youth, fond of hunting and rural
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life, the favourite of some
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god or goddess, suddenly perishes by a terrible
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death . In many cases the religious background of the legend is preserved by the
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annual ceremonial that commemorated it . At
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Argos this religious character of the Linus myth was best preserved: the secret child of Psamathe by the god Apollo, Linus is exposed, nursed by sheep and torn in pieces by sheep-
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dogs . Every
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year at the festival Arnis or Cynophontis, the
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women of Argos mourned for Linus and propitiated Apollo, who in revenge for his child's death had sent a
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female monster (Poine), which tore the children from their mothers' arms .
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Lambs were sacrificed, all dogs found
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running loose were killed, and women and children raised a lament for Linus and Psamathe (
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Pausanias i . 43 . 7;
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Conon, Narrat . 19) . In the Theban version, Linus, the son of Amphimarus and the muse Urania, was a famous musician, inventor of the Linus
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song, who was said to have been slain by Apollo, because he had challenged him to a contest (Pausanias ix . 29 . 6) .

A later

story makes him the teacher of Heracles, by whom he was killed because he had rebuked his pupil for stupidity (
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Apollodorus ii . 4 . 9) . On Mount Helicon there was a grotto containing his statue, to which sacrifice was offered every year before the sacrifices to the Muses . From being the inventor of musical methods, he was finally transformed by later writers into a composer of prophecies and legends . He was also said to have adapted the Phoenician letters introduced by
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Cadmus to the Greek language . It is generally agreed that Linus and Ailinus are of Semitic origin, derived from the words a% lanu (woe to us), which formed the burden of the Adonis and similar songs popular in the East . The Linus song is mentioned in Homer; the tragedians often use the word ail\ivos as the refrain in mournful songs, and Euripides calls the custom a Phrygian one . Linus, originally the personification of the song of lamentation, becomes, like Adonis, Maneros,
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Narcissus, the representative of the
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tender life of nature and of the vegetation destroyed by the fiery heat of the
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dog-
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star . The chief
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work on the subject is H . Brugsch, Die Adonisklage and das Linoslied (1852); see also article in Roscher's Lexikon der Mythologie; J . G .

Frazer,

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Golden Bough (ti . 224, 253), where, the identity of Linus with Adonis (possibly a corn-spirit) being assumed, the lament is explained as the lamentation of the reapers over the dead corn-spirit; W . Mannhardt, Wald- and Feldculte, ii .

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