Online Encyclopedia

TRIPTOLEMUS

Online Encyclopedia
Originally appearing in Volume V27, Page 292 of the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica.
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TRIPTOLEMUS  , in

Greek
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mythology, the inventor of agriculture, first priest of
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Demeter, and founder of the Eleusinian mysteries . His name is probably connected with the " triple ploughing " (rpis, 1roXeiv), recommended in
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Hesiod's
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Works and Days and celebrated at an
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annual festival . It may be noted that in some traditions he is called the son of Dysaules (possibly identical with diaulos, the " double furrow " traced by the ox), and that, according to the Latin poets (e.g . Virgil, Georgics, i . 19), he is the inventor of the plough.' Later, as the
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god of ploughing, he is confounded with
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Osiris, and on a vase-
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painting at St
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Petersburg he is represented leaving
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Egypt in his dragon-
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drawn chariot on his journey round the
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world . According to the best known Attic legend (
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Apollodorus, i . 5, 2) Triptolemus was the son of Celeus, king of
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Eleusis, and Metaneira . Demeter, during her search for her daughter Persephone, arrived at Eleusis in the form of an old woman . Here she was hospitably received by Celeus, and out of gratitude would have made his son Demophon immortal by
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anointing him with
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ambrosia and destroying his mortal parts by fire; but Metaneira, happening to see what was going on, screamed out and disturbed the goddess . Demophon was burnt to
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death, and Demeter, to console his parents, took upon herself the care of Triptolemus, instructed him in everything connected with agriculture, and presented him with a wonderful chariot, in which he travelled all over the world, spreading the knowledge of the precious
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art and the blessings of
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civilization . In another account (Hyginus, Fab . 147) Triptolemus is the son of Eleusinus, and takes the place of Demophon in the above narrative .

Celeus endeavoured to kill him on his return, but Demeter intervened and forced him to surrender his

country to Triptolemus, who named it Eleusis after his
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father and instituted the festival of Demeter called Thesmophoria . In the Homeric hymn to Demeter, Triptolemus. is simply one of the nobles of Eleusis, who was instructed by the goddess in her
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rites and ceremonies . The Attic legend of Eleusis also represented him as one of the judges of the under-world . His adventures on his world-wide
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mission formed the subject of a
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play of the same name by Sopliocles . In works of art Triptolemus appears mounted on a chariot (winged or drawn by dragons, symbols of the fruitfulness of the earth), with Demeter and Persephone handing him the implements of agriculture . His attributes were a
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sceptre of ears of corn, sometimes a drinking-cup, which is being filled by Demeter . His altar and threshing-floor were shown on the Rarian plain near Eleusis; hence he is sometimes called the son of Rarus . See the Homeric hymn to Demeter, 153, 474; Ovid, Melam. v . 642—661; Virgil, Georgics. i . 19, and Servius ad loc . ; Hyginus, Astronom. ii . 14;
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Dion Halic. i .

12;

Preller, Griechische Mythologie (4th ed., 1894) .

End of Article: TRIPTOLEMUS
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