Online Encyclopedia

STYX

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V25, Page 1060 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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STYX  , in

Greek
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mythology, a
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river which flowed seven times round the
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world of the dead . In the Iliad it is the only river of the underworld; in the Odyssey it is coupled with Cocytus and Pyriphlegethon, which flow into the chief river
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Acheron .
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Hesiod says that Styx was a daughter of Ocean, and that, when
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Zeus summoned the gods to
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Olympus to help him to fight the Titans, Styx was the first to come and her children with her; hence as a
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reward Zeus ordained that the most solemn oath of the gods should be by her and that her children (Emulation, Victory, Power and Force) should always live with him . Again, Hesiod tells us that if any
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god, after pouring a libation of the
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water of Styx, forswore himself, he had to lie in a trance for a
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year without speaking or breathing, and that for nine years after-wards he was excluded from the society of the gods . In
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historical times the Styx was identified with a lofty
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waterfall near Nonacris in
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Arcadia .
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Pausanias (viii . 17, 6) describes the cliff over which the water falls as the highest he had ever seen, and indeed the fall is the highest in
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Greece . The ancients regarded the water as poisonous, and thought that it possessed the power of breaking or dissolving vessels of every material, with the exception of the hoof of a horse or a mule . Considering the undoubted importance attached by the ancients to an oath b}i the water of the Styx (cf . Herodotus vi . 74), and the supposed fatal result of breaking it, it is probable that drinking the water originally formed a necessary
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part of the oath, and that we have to do with the tradition of an ancient
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poison ordeal,
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common amongst barbarous peoples (for the geography and similar ceremonies see Frazer's Pausanias, iv., pp . 250-255) .

The

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people in the neighbourhood, who call it Mavro
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Nero (the Black Water), still think that it is unwholesome, and that no vessel will hold it .

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