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PELOPS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V21, Page 76 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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PELOPS  , in

Greek legend, the grandson of
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Zeus, son of
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Tantalus and
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Dione, and
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brother of
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Niobe . His
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father's home was on Mt Sipylus in
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Asia Minor, whence Pelops is spoken of as a Lydian or a Phrygian . Tantalus one day served up to the gods his own son Pelops, boiled and cut in pieces . The gods detected the crime, and none of them would touch the food except
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Demeter (according to others,
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Thetis), who, distracted by the loss of her daughter Persephone,
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ate of the shoulder . The gods restored Pelops to
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life, and the shoulder consumed by Demeter was replaced by one of ivory . Wherefore the descendants of Pelops had a white mark on their shoulder ever after (Ovid, Metam. vi . 404; Virgil, Georgics, iii . 7) . This tale is perhaps reminiscent of human sacrifice amongst the Greeks .
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Poseidon carried Pelops off to
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Olympus, where he dwelt with the gods, till, for his father's sins, he was cast out from heaven . Then, taking much
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wealth with him, he crossed over from Asia to
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Greece . He went to Pisa in Ells as suitor of Hippodameia, daughter of king
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Oenomaus, who had already vanquished in the chariot-
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race and slain many suitors for his daughter's hand .

But by the help of Poseidon, who

lent him winged steeds, or of Oenomaus's charioteer Myrtilus, whom he or Hippodameia bribed, Pelops was victorious in the race, wedded Hippodameia, and became king of Pisa (Hyginus, Fab . 84) . The race of Pelops for his wife may be a reminiscence of the early practice of
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marriage by capture . When Myrtilus claimed his promised
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reward, Pelops flung him into the sea near Geraestus in Euboea, and from his dying curse sprang those crimes and sorrows of the house of Pelops which supplied the Greek tragedians with such fruitful themes (Sophocles, Electra, 505, with Jebb's note): Among the sons of Pelops by Hippodameia were
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Atreus, Thyestes and Chrysippus . From Pisa Pelops extended his sway over the neighbouring
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Olympia, where he celebrated the Olympian games with a splendour unknown before . His power and fame were so
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great that henceforward the whole peninsula was known to the ancients as Peloponnesus, " island of Pelops " (vqa-os, island) . In after times Pelops was honoured at Olympia above all other heroes; a temple was built for him by Heracles, his descendant in the
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fourth generation, in which the
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annual magistrates sacrificed to him a black ram . From the reference to Asia in the tales of Tantalus, Niobe and Pelops it has been conjectured that Asia was the
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original seat of these legends, and that it was only after emigration to Greece that the
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people localized a
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part of the tale of Pelops in their new home . In the time of
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Pausanias the
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throne of Pelops was still shown on the top of Mt Sipylus . The story of Pelops is told in the first Olympian ode of Pindar and in
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prose by Nicolaus Damascenus .

End of Article: PELOPS
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PELOPONNESUS (" Island of Pelops ")
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PELOTA (Sp. " little ball," from Lat. piles)

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