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NIOBE

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Originally appearing in Volume V19, Page 706 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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NIOBE  , in

Greek
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mythology, daughter of
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Tantalus and
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Dione, wife of
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Amphion, king of Thebes . Proud of her numerous
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family, six daughters and six sons, she boasted of her superiority to her friend Leto, the
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mother of only two children, Apollo and
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Artemis . As a punishment, Apollo slew her sons and Artemis her daughters . Their bodies
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lay for nine days unburied, for
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Zeus had changed the
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people to stone; on the tenth day they were buried by the gods . Out of pity for her grief, the gods changed Niobe herself into a rock on Mount Sipylus in
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Phrygia, in which form she continued to weep (Homer, Iliad,
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xxiv . 6o2-617 ;
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Apollodorus iii . 5; Ovid, Metam. vi . 146-312) . The names and number of her children, and the time and place of their
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death, are variously given . This " Niobe," described by
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Pausanias (i . 21) and
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Quintus Smyrnaeus' (i . 293-306), both natives of the
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district, was the appearance assumed by a cliff on Sipylus when seen from a distance and from the proper point of view (see Jebb on Sophocles,
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Antigone, 831) .

It is to be distinguished from an archaic figure still visible, carved in the

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northern side of the mountain near
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Magnesia, to•which tradition has given the name of Niobe, but which is really intended for Cybele . According to some, Niobe is the goddess of snow and winter, whose children, slain by Apollo and Artemis, symbolize the ice and snow melted by the sun in spring; according to others, she is an earth-goddess, whose progeny—vegetation and the fruits of the soil—is dried up and slain every summer by the shafts of the sun-
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god . Burmeister regards the legend as an incident in the struggle between the followers of Dionysus and Apollo in Thebes, in which the former were defeated and driven back to
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Lydia . Heffter builds up the story round the dripping rock in Lydia, really representing an
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Asiatic goddess, but taken by the Greeks for an ordinary woman . Enmann, who interprets the name as " she who prevents increase " (in contrast to Leto, who made
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women prolific), considers the main point of the myth to be Niobe's loss of her children . He compares her story withthat of
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Lamia, who, after her children had been slain by Zeus, retired to a lonely cave and carried off and killed the children of others . The appearance of the rock on Sipylus gave rise to the story of Niobe having been turned to stone . The tragedians used her story to point the moral of the instability of human happiness; Niobe became the representative of human nature, liable to pride in prosperity and forgetfulness of the respect and submission due to the gods . The tragic story of Niobe was a favourite subject in literature and
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art . Aeschylus and Sophocles wrote tragedies upon it; Ovid has described it at length in his Metamorphoses . In art, the most famous representation was a 'marble
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group of Niobe and her children, taken by Sosius to Rome and set up in the temple of Apollo Sosianus (Pliny, Nat . Hist.
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xxxvi .

4) . What is probably a

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Roman imitation of this
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work was found in 1583 near the Lateran, and is now in the Uflizi gallery at Florence . In ancient times it was disputed whether the
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original was the work of
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Praxiteles or
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Scopas, and
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modern authorities are not agreed as to its identity with the group mentioned by Pliny . On the whole subject see C.E . Burmeister, De fabula glaze de Niobe ejusque liberis agit (
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Wismar, 1836); L . Curtze, Fabula Niobes Thebanae (Corbach, 1836); W . Heffter in Zeitschrift fiir Gymnasialwesen, ix . (1855) ; C . B . Stark, Niobe and die Niobiden (1863), the standard work; E . Thramer, Pergamos (1888); C . Friederichs, Praxiteles and die Niobegruppe (1865); A .

Mayerhofer and H . Ohlrich, Die Florentiner Niobegruppe (1881 and 1888) ; for the Niobe on Mount Sipylus, see C . B . Stark, Nach dem griechischen Orient (1874); G .

Weber, Le Sipylos et ses monuments (188o) ; W . Ramsay, " Sipylos and Cybele," in Journal of Hellenic Studies, iii . (1882); Frazer's Pausanias, iii . 555; for vase-paintings, see H . Heydemann, Niobe and Niobiden auf griechischen Vasenbildern (1875) . For further literature on the subject, see A . Preuner's mythological bibliography in C . Bursian's Jahresbericht fiber die Fortschritte der klassischen Altertumswissenschaft, vol.
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xxv .

(1891) ; the various derivations of the name and interpretations of the legend are given in Enmann's

article in Roscher's Lexikon der Mythologie . In GREEK ART, fig . 29 (from an Orvieto vase) represents the slaying of the children of Niobe by Apollo and Artemis; fig . 78 (Pl . VI.), Niobe shielding her youngest daughter .

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