Echidna (mythology)

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In the most ancient layers of Greek mythology Echidna (ekhis, meaning "she viper") was called the "Mother of All Monsters". Echidna was described by Hesiod as a female monster spawned in a cave, who mothered with her mate Typhoeus or Typhon every major monster in the Greek myths,

the goddess fierce Echidna who is half a nymph with glancing eyes and fair cheeks, and half again a huge snake, great and awful, with speckled skin, eating raw flesh beneath the secret parts of the holy earth. And there she has a cave deep down under a hollow rock far from the deathless gods and mortal men. There, then, did the gods appoint her a glorious house to dwell in: and she keeps guard in Arima beneath the earth, grim Echidna, a nymph who dies not nor grows old all her days. (Theogony, 295-305)

Usually considered offspring of Tartarus and Gaia, or of Ceto and Phorcys (according to Hesiod) or of Chrysaor and the naiad Callirhoe, or Peiras and Styx (according to Pausanias, who did not know who Peiras was aside from her father), her face and torso of a beautiful woman was depicted as winged in archaic vase-paintings, but always with the body of a serpent (see also Lamia). She is also sometimes described as having two serpent's tails. Karl Kerenyi noted an archaic vase-painting with a pair of echidnas performing sacred rites in a vineyard, while on the opposite side of the vessel, goats were attacking the vines (Kerenyi 1951, p 51f): chthonic Echidna as protector of the vineyard perhaps.

The site of her cave, Arima, Homer calls "the couch of Typhoeus (Iliad, II.783). When she and her mate attacked the Olympians, Zeus beat them back and punished Typhon by sealing him under Mount Etna. However, Zeus allowed Echidna and her children to live as a challenge to future heroes. She was an immortal and ageless nymph to Hesiod (Theogony above), but was killed where she slept by Argus Panopes, the hundred-eyed giant.

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[edit] Echidna and Typhon's offspring

The offspring of Typhon and Echidna were:[citation needed]

  1. Nemean Lion
  2. Cerberus
  3. Orthrus
  4. Ladon
  5. Chimera
  6. Sphinx
  7. Lernaean Hydra
  8. Ethon
  9. Teumessian fox

Some sources[citation needed] also include the Gorgons and the Graeae as her children. Hesiod claims that Sphinx and the Nemean Lion were her children by her son, Orthrus.

According to Herodotus (III.108), Hercules had three children by her:

  1. Agathyrsus
  2. Gelonus
  3. Scytha/Scylla

[edit] Echidna in popular culture

Echidna was a recurring character in the television series Hercules: The Legendary Journeys as she is played by Bridget Hoffman. This version of her is shown as a multi-tentacled reptilian creature.

In the Gargoyles episode "The New Olympians", a snake woman named Ekidna is presumed to be Echidna's descendant.

Echidna appears as a boss monster in Final Fantasy III and Final Fantasy I: Soul of Chaos.

In Gene Wolfe's Book of the Long Sun, Echidna appears as the Great Queen of the gods and the wife of the chief god Pas.

In Tecmo's recent Rygar: The Legendary Adventure, Echidna appears as a titan who was formerly Cleopatra.

In Atlus's Shin Megami Tensei series, Echidna occasionally shows up as a demon.

In Rick Riordan's the Lightning Thief, Echidna sets her son the Chimaera upon the main character in the Gateway Arch.

Echidne of the Snakes [1] is a fairly popular liberal feminist blog, whose pseudonymous author, Echidne, has adopted the persona of a part-human snake goddess.

Echidna is the name of one of the gates of Radiata City in the role-playing game Radiata Stories.

Echidna is a character in the manga/anime Black Cat.

Echidna is tattooed high on the arm of the character Aubrey from Ameila Atwater-Rhodes's Demon In My View.

[edit] See also

  • Echidna, a monotreme mammal of Australia and New Guinea.

[edit] References