Online Encyclopedia

SILENUS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 90 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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SILENUS  , a

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primitive Phrygian deity of woods and springs . As the reputed inventor of
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music he was confounded with
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Marsyas . He also possessed the gift of prophecy, but, like Proteus, would only impart information on compulsion; when surprised in a drunken sleep, he could be bound with chains of flowers, and forced to prophesy and sing (Virgil,
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Eel. vi., where he gives an account of the creation of the
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world; cf . Aelian,
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Var. hist. iii . 18) . In Greek
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mythology he is the son of Hermes (or Pan) and a nymph . He is the constant companion of Dionysus, whom he was said to have instructed in the cultivation of the
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vine and the keeping of bees . He fought by his side in the war against the giants and was his companion in his travels and adventures . The story of Silenus was often the subject of Athenian satyric drama . Just as there were supposed to be several Pans and Fauns, so there were many Silenuses, whose
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father was called Papposilenus (" Daddy Silenus "), represented as completely covered with hair and more animal in appearance . The usual attributes of Silenus were the wine-skin (from which he is inseparable), a
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crown of ivy, the Bacchic thyrsus, the ass, and sometimes the
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panther . In
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art he generally appears as a little pot-bellied old man, with a snub nose and a bald head,
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riding on an ass and supported by satyrs; or he is depicted lying asleep on his wine-skin, which he sometimes bestrides .

A more dignified type is the Vatican statue of Silenus carrying the

infant Dionysus, and the marble
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group from the
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villa
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Borghese in the Louvre . See Preller-Rcbert, Griechische Mythologie (1894), pp . 729-735; Talfourd Ely, " A Cyprian
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Terracotta," in the Archaeological Journal (1896) ; A . Baumeister, Denkmdler
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des klassischen Altertums, iii . (1888) . 1 For the abbreviation, cf . Lucas, Prisca (=Priscilla), Sopater (= Sosipater) .

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