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Electryon
View on WikipediaIn Greek mythology, Electryon (/ɪˈlɛktriən/;[1]Ancient Greek: Ἠλεκτρύων) was a king of Tiryns and Mycenae or Medea in Argolis.[2]
Key Information
Family
[edit]Electryon was the son of Perseus and Andromeda and thus brother of Perses, Alcaeus, Heleus, Mestor, Sthenelus, Cynurus, Gorgophone and Autochthe. He is most commonly married to Anaxo, daughter of his brother Alcaeus and sister of Amphitryon,[3] but was instead married to Eurydice, daughter of Pelops, in some versions of the myth. His wife bore him a daughter Alcmena and many sons: Stratobates, Gorgophonus, Phylonomus, Celaeneus, Amphimachus, Lysinomus, Chirimachus, Anactor, and Archelaus. Electryon had an illegitimate son Licymnius by Midea, a Phrygian woman.[4]
Mythology
[edit]The six sons of Pterelaus, King of the Taphians, descended from Electryon's brother Mestor came to Mycenae to claim a share of kingdom. When Electryon spurned their request, they drove off his cattle; Electryon's sons battled against them, and all but Licymnius (on one side) and Everes (on the other) died. Everes sold the cattle to Polyxenus of Elis. Amphitryon, Electryon's nephew and promised in marriage to Alcmene, bought the cattle and returned them to his uncle, but accidentally killed him as he threw his club at one of the cows. However, there is an earlier tradition that Amphitryon killed him in a fit of anger over some cattle.[5] Electryon's brother Sthenelus seized the throne of Mycenae, charged Amphitryon with murder, and sent him into exile.
Notes
[edit]- ^ Morford, Mark P. O.; Lenardon, Robert J.; Sham, Michael (2015). Classical Mythology (International 10th ed.). Oxford: Oxford University Press. p. I-24. ISBN 978-0-19-999739-8.
- ^ Pausanias, 2.25.9
- ^ Apollodorus, 2.4.5
- ^ "Apollodorus", Benezit Dictionary of Artists, Oxford University Press, 2011-10-31, doi:10.1093/benz/9780199773787.article.b00006221, retrieved 2021-10-14
- ^ Hesiod, The Shield of Heracles, 11f. and 82.
References
[edit]- Apollodorus, The Library with an English Translation by Sir James George Frazer, F.B.A., F.R.S. in 2 Volumes, Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1921. ISBN 0-674-99135-4. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library. Greek text available from the same website.
- Pausanias, Description of Greece with an English Translation by W.H.S. Jones, Litt.D., and H.A. Ormerod, M.A., in 4 Volumes. Cambridge, MA, Harvard University Press; London, William Heinemann Ltd. 1918. ISBN 0-674-99328-4. Online version at the Perseus Digital Library
- Pausanias, Graeciae Descriptio. 3 vols. Leipzig, Teubner. 1903. Greek text available at the Perseus Digital Library.
- Smith, William; Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, London (1873). "Ele'ctryon" , Amphi'tryon
Electryon
View on GrokipediaEtymology
Name Derivation
The name Electryon originates from the Ancient Greek proper noun Ἠλεκτρύων (Ēlektrúōn), a masculine form in the third declension. This name derives primarily from the root ἠλέκτωρ (ēléktōr), an epithet denoting "the beaming sun" or "shining," which evokes connotations of brilliance and radiance in classical Greek usage. Additionally, it shows influence from ἤλεκτρον (ḗlektron), the term for "amber," a naturally lustrous substance prized in antiquity for its golden glow and electrostatic properties, thereby linking the name to themes of incandescent light.[3] In Ancient Greek pronunciation, Ēlektrúōn is rendered as /ɛː.lek.trý.ɔːn/, with a long initial eta (/ɛː/), followed by a trilled rho and a diphthong in the final syllable. The modern English transliteration, Electryon, approximates this as /ɪˈlɛktriən/, adapting the aspirated initial eta to a short 'e' sound and simplifying the Greek ypsilon to 'y' for phonetic familiarity in Romance-influenced scripts.[3] This etymological foundation underscores the name's association with luminosity, drawing from solar and material metaphors common in Greek nomenclature for figures of prominence.Mythological Interpretations
In Greek mythology, the name Electryon (Ἠλεκτρυών) carries symbolic weight tied to its etymological roots in the Ancient Greek terms ἠλέκτωρ ("shining" or "brilliant," often denoting the sun) and ἤλεκτρον ("amber"), evoking images of radiance and preciousness.[3] Electryon's name is distinct from similar forms like Alectryon (Ἀλεκτρυών), a figure transformed into a rooster for failing to stand watch, emphasizing vigilance and dawn rather than heroic brilliance; likewise, it differs from Electryone (Ἠλεκτρυώνη), a solar goddess linked to sunrise and island origins, highlighting Electryon's uniquely masculine, regal heroism in Perseus's lineage.[1]Genealogy
Parentage and Siblings
Electryon was the son of Perseus, the Argive hero renowned for slaying the Gorgon Medusa and founding the Mycenaean dynasty, and Andromeda, the daughter of King Cepheus of Ethiopia whom Perseus rescued from sacrifice to a sea monster.[1] This parentage placed Electryon within the Perseid line, descendants of Zeus through Perseus and Danaë.[1] According to the Bibliotheca attributed to Apollodorus, Electryon's siblings were the brothers Perses (born before the family's arrival in Greece and left with Cepheus), Alcaeus, Sthenelus, Heleus, and Mestor, along with the sister Gorgophone, who married Perieres of Messene.[1] Other ancient traditions expand this list to include the brother Cynurus, credited with leading Argive colonists to Cynuria in the Peloponnese, and the sister Autochthe.[4][5] As one of Perseus' elder sons, Electryon succeeded his father to the throne of Mycenae, continuing the Perseid rule over the region after Perseus fortified the city and others nearby.[1]Marriage and Offspring
Electryon married Anaxo, the daughter of his brother Alcaeus, according to the most common accounts in ancient Greek mythology.[1] This union allied two branches of the Perseid family, strengthening ties within the lineage descending from Perseus. With Anaxo, Electryon fathered a daughter named Alcmene, who would later become renowned as the mother of Heracles, and several sons including Stratobates, Gorgophonus, Phylonomus, Celaeneus, Amphimachus, Lysinomus, Chirimachus, Anactor, and Archelaus.[1] In variant traditions, Electryon's wife is instead identified as Eurydice, a daughter of Pelops, the legendary king of Pisa. This alternative pairing also credits Eurydice with bearing Alcmene, emphasizing a connection to the Pelopid dynasty rather than the immediate Perseid kin. Beyond his legitimate heirs, Electryon had an illegitimate son, Licymnius, born to the Phrygian woman Midea.[1] Licymnius, as the sole survivor among Electryon's male offspring from later family calamities, played a notable role in the continuation of the family line.[1]Kingship and Conflicts
Rule over Mycenae and Tiryns
Electryon succeeded his father Perseus as king, inheriting rule over the prominent cities in the Argolid region.[1] According to ancient accounts, his primary seat of power was Mycenae, a fortified stronghold established by Perseus himself, which served as the central hub of his authority.[1] Some traditions extend his domain to include Tiryns, a nearby fortified ally city known for its massive Cyclopean walls, underscoring the interconnected governance of the Mycenaean heartland.[6] Alternative sources describe him ruling Medea, another site in Argolis, highlighting variations in the mythological geography of his kingship.[6] The economic foundation of Electryon's reign centered on extensive cattle herds, which symbolized the prosperity and agricultural wealth of the Bronze Age-inspired mythic economy in the Peloponnese.[1] These herds represented not only material abundance but also the king's role in maintaining the livelihood and status of his realm, reflecting the pastoral ideals embedded in heroic lineages.[1] As a successor in the Perseus dynasty, Electryon's position reinforced the continuity of hero cult practices in the Argolid, where ancestral kings were venerated for their foundational contributions to regional stability and power.[7] Prior to external incursions, Electryon's rule was characterized by relative peace and administrative steadiness, allowing for the consolidation of his inherited territories without recorded internal strife.[1] This period of stability emphasized his effective oversight of Mycenae and its allies, positioning him as a pivotal figure in the pre-Heraclean mythic history of the Peloponnese.[1]War with the Taphians
The war between Electryon, king of Mycenae, and the Taphians arose from a territorial dispute rooted in familial inheritance claims. The sons of Pterelaus, king of the Taphians, accompanied by Taphian warriors, demanded a share of the kingdom formerly held by Mestor, their maternal grandfather and brother to Electryon, asserting rights through their mother's lineage from the Perseid dynasty.[1] When Electryon disregarded their demands, the Taphians escalated the conflict by raiding and driving away his cattle, prompting a direct confrontation to recover the livestock.[1] In the ensuing battle, Electryon's legitimate sons—Stratobates, Gorgophonus, Phylonomus, Celaeneus, Amphimachus, Lysinomus, Chirimachus, Anactor, and Archelaus—defended against the invading Taphians and the sons of Pterelaus, including Chromius, Tyrannus, Antiochus, Chersidamas, Mestor, and Eueres.[1] The clash resulted in mutual slaughter, with Electryon's sons killing most of the Taphian princes, but the Taphians retaliating decisively and slaying all of Electryon's legitimate sons in the melee.[8] This devastating encounter, described as a challenge leading to reciprocal deaths, decimated both sides and left the cattle in Taphian hands as they withdrew by sea.[1] Among Electryon's family, only the young bastard son Licymnius survived the carnage, as he was too immature to participate in the fighting.[1] On the Taphian side, Eueres, one of Pterelaus' sons who had been assigned to guard the ships, also escaped the slaughter, allowing the surviving Taphians to entrust the stolen cattle to Polyxenus, king of Elis, before further repercussions unfolded.[1] The war thus profoundly weakened Electryon's lineage, stripping him of his heirs and intensifying the broader tensions with the seafaring Taphians.[1]Death and Succession
The Cattle Incident
The cattle incident occurred shortly after Amphitryon, son of Alcaeus and nephew to Electryon, successfully ransomed the king's stolen herd from Polyxenus, ruler of Elis, where the Taphians had sold them following their raid on Mycenae.[1] Upon returning the cattle to Electryon at the palace, chaos ensued as the animals, still unruly from their ordeal, began fighting among themselves.[1] In the primary account from Apollodorus, Amphitryon attempted to separate a particularly aggressive cow from the bull it was charging, hurling his club at the animal to subdue it. The weapon, however, rebounded off the cow's horns and struck Electryon squarely on the head, causing fatal injury.[1] This accidental slaying happened during the handover, just as Electryon was preparing to entrust his kingdom and daughter Alcmene to Amphitryon while planning war against the Taphians (also known as Teleboans) to avenge his sons' deaths in the initial raid.[1] An alternate tradition preserved in Hesiod's Shield of Heracles portrays the killing as intentional, stemming from a heated dispute over the wide-browed oxen, with Amphitryon slaying Electryon deliberately "for the sake of his wide-browed oxen."[9] This version emphasizes Amphitryon's sin against the gods through the act, contrasting the accidental nature in later sources and highlighting the cattle's central role in the fatal confrontation.[9]Aftermath and Throne Dispute
Following Electryon's accidental death at the hands of Amphitryon, his brother Sthenelus seized the throne of Mycenae and Tiryns, capitalizing on the absence of direct male heirs after Electryon's legitimate sons were slain in the war against the Taphians.[10][11] Sthenelus, one of the sons of Perseus and Andromeda alongside Electryon, used the manslaughter as a pretext to assert control over the Argolid kingdoms.[11] Amphitryon, charged with the killing, fled into exile alongside Electryon's daughter Alcmene—his intended bride—and Licymnius, Electryon's surviving son by a Phrygian woman.[11] The group sought refuge in Thebes, where King Creon purified Amphitryon of the bloodguilt, allowing them to settle there temporarily.[11] This rapid power transition introduced short-term instability in the region of Argolis, as Sthenelus consolidated rule by entrusting the nearby stronghold of Midea to Atreus and Thyestes, while banishing potential rivals and disrupting the expected succession through Alcmene's line.[11] The events paved the way for the emergence of new heroic dynasties rooted in the exiled lineage.[11]Role in Broader Mythology
Connection to Heracles
Electryon served as the maternal grandfather of Heracles through his daughter Alcmene, who married Amphitryon and later conceived the hero with Zeus in a divine deception.[1] In the mythological accounts, Alcmene was born to Electryon and his wife Anaxo, establishing a direct lineage from the Argive king to the demigod renowned for his labors.[1] This familial bond underscores Electryon's position in the heroic genealogy, with Heracles inheriting a legacy of strength and divine favor from his grandfather's line.[12] The narrative surrounding Electryon's death played a crucial role in facilitating Alcmene's marriage and Heracles' conception during their exile in Thebes. After Amphitryon accidentally slew Electryon while attempting to recover stolen cattle, the couple fled Mycenae to avoid retribution, settling under the protection of King Creon in Thebes.[1] It was in this Theban refuge that Zeus, disguised as Amphitryon, visited Alcmene, leading to Heracles' birth alongside his half-brother Iphicles.[1] Thus, Electryon's demise indirectly set the stage for the hero's origins, intertwining personal tragedy with the dawn of a greater mythic saga.[12] Symbolically, Electryon embodies the connective thread in the chain of heroes descending from Perseus, bridging the Argive myth cycle centered on Mycenae with the Theban exploits of Heracles. As the son of Perseus and Andromeda, Electryon transmitted the Perseusid lineage—marked by divine intervention and monstrous conquests—to Alcmene and her son, reinforcing themes of generational heroism across regional traditions.[7] This linkage highlights the interconnectedness of Greek heroic narratives, where Electryon's role as progenitor elevates him beyond a mere king to a pivotal figure in the pantheon of divine-human ancestry.[1]Variations Across Sources
Ancient accounts of Electryon exhibit notable discrepancies across key classical texts, particularly regarding his familial ties, demise, and territorial dominion. In Apollodorus' Bibliotheca (2.4.5–6), Electryon is portrayed as the son of Perseus and Andromeda, ruling Mycenae, and marrying Anaxo, daughter of his brother Alcaeus, with whom he fathers Alcmene and several sons, including the bastard Licymnius by the Phrygian princess Midea.[1] This narrative details his conflicts with the Taphians, who raid his cattle, leading to the slaughter of his sons and prompting a retaliatory war. Hesiod's Shield of Heracles (lines 1–77) briefly references Electryon as Alcmene's noble father, slain by his nephew Amphitryon in a dispute over stolen oxen, after which Amphitryon flees to Thebes with Alcmene.[9] Pausanias, in his Description of Greece (2.25.9), shifts the locale, stating that Electryon, father of Alcmena, ruled the Argive town of Medea, of which only foundations remained by his era, with no mention of Mycenae or Tiryns.[6] Variations in Electryon's spouse further highlight source divergences: while Apollodorus specifies Anaxo, certain traditions name Eurydice, daughter of Pelops, king of Pisa, as his wife and Alcmene's mother.[13] His death also differs in intent; Apollodorus and Hesiod describe it as accidental—Amphitryon striking Electryon with a rebounding club while herding cattle—yet some earlier traditions depict it as deliberate, stemming from Amphitryon's rage during the same cattle recovery.[1][9] These inconsistencies extend to his kingdom's extent, contrasting the Mycenaean-Tirynthian domain in Apollodorus with Pausanias' localized rule over Medea, possibly reflecting regional oral traditions or later rationalizations. Scholarly interpretations often view Electryon as a euhemerized figure rooted in Bronze Age Mycenaean kingship, with his lineage from Perseus symbolizing early Argive rulers whose exploits were mythologized in the post-Mycenaean era.[14] Martin P. Nilsson argues that such Perseus-descendant myths preserve dim echoes of Late Bronze Age palace-based hierarchies in the Argolid, blending historical memory with heroic embellishment. Epic poetry, including Homer's Iliad and Odyssey, largely omits Electryon, creating gaps that later mythographers like Apollodorus filled by synthesizing fragmentary local lore, underscoring the fluid evolution of these narratives across archaic and classical periods.[14]References
- https://en.wiktionary.org/wiki/%E1%BC%88%CE%BB%CE%B5%CE%BA%CF%84%CF%81%CF%8D%CF%89%CE%BD
