Phaëton
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- For people and things named after the mythological figure, see Phaeton.
In Greek mythology, Phaëton or Phaethon (Greek Φαέθων "shining"), was the son of Helios (Phoebus, the "shining one", an epithet later assumed by Apollo), or of Clymenus by Merope or Clymene.
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[edit] Myth
In an alternate genealogy, Eos bore Cephalus a son, named Phaëthon but Aphrodite stole him away while he was no more than a child, to be the night-watchman at her most sacred shrines. The Cretans called him Adymus, by which they meant the morning and evening star (Hesiod, Theogony, 986; Solinus, xi:9; Nonnus, Dionysiaca, xi:131 and xii:217).
The myth stated that Phaeton bragged to his friends that his father was the sun-god. His friends refused to believe him and so Phaeton went to his father Helios, who swore by the river Styx to give him anything he should ask for. Phaeton wanted to drive his chariot (the sun) for a day. Though Helios tried to talk him out of it, Phaeton was adamant. When the day came, Phaeton panicked and lost control of the white horses that drew the chariot. First it veered too high, so that the earth grew chill. Then it dipped too close, and the vegetation dried and burned. He accidentally turned most of Africa into desert; burning the skin of the Ethiopians black. Eventually, Zeus was forced to intervene by striking the runaway chariot with a lightning bolt to stop it, and Phaëthon plunged into the river Eridanos.
[edit] Phaëton in other stories
Fragments of Euripides' tragedy on this subject, Phaethon survive. In reconstructing the lost play and discussing the fragments, James Diggle has discussed the treatment of the Phaeton myth (Diggle 2004).
Perhaps the most famous version of the myth is given us through Ovid in his Metamorphoses (Book II). Ovid is emphasizing that Phaeton seeks assurance that his mother, Clymene, is telling the truth about his father.
Dante refers to the episode in both the Inferno and Paradiso Canto XVII of his Divine Comedy.
The motif of the fallen star must have been familiar in Israel, for Isaiah referred to it in admonishing the king of Babylon for his pride (Isaiah 14:12ff). The Jewish Encyclopedia reports that "it is obvious that the prophet in attributing to the Babylonian king boastful pride, followed by a fall, borrowed the idea from a popular legend connected with the morning star." The falling-star image reappears in John's Apocalypse without a name. In the 4th century, Jerome's translation of the "morning star" as "Lucifer" carried the fallen-star myth-element into Christian mythology. For fuller details, see Lucifer and Azazel.
[edit] Based on the Phaëton story
The story is the basis for a symphonic poem by French composer Camille Saint-Saëns as well as a movement of a piece for solo Oboe by English composer Benjamin Britten.
Phaëton is also the name of an opera (or, more properly, a "tragédie lyrique") by Jean-Baptiste Lully. It was dedicated to and performed for his friend and patron Louis XIV, King of France, in 1683. The text (or "livret") is by Lully's favorite collaborator, Philippe Quinault. Like all French baroque opera, it contains brilliant spectacles of scenery and stagecraft, such as cloud machines for the climactic scene at the end of the fifth and final act, where Jupiter (the French always prefer the Roman names) strikes down Phaëton's faltering chariot.
Phaeton is the name of a hypothetical planet posited to once have existed between the orbits of Mars and Jupiter whose destruction supposedly led to the formation of asteroid belt.
3200 Phaethon is an astronomical object discovered in 1983 that passes very close to the Sun. It may be an asteroid or a burnt-out comet.
Ben Jonson mentions him in his 'Masque of Blackness' as something which 'fired the world'.
[edit] References
- Graves, Robert, 1955. The Greek Myths
- Diggle, James, 2004. Euripides: Phaethon in series Cambridge Classical Texts and Commentaries (no. 12)
[edit] External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to: |
- George Stubbs's 'The Fall of Phaeton' at the Lady Lever Art Gallery
- Comet Phaethon's Ride, by Bob Kobres