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- This page is about the mythological figure; for the bivalve genus, see Hecuba; for the asteroid, see 108 Hecuba
[edit] Hecuba in Mythology
Hecuba (also Hekabe; Ancient Greek: Ἑκάβη) was a queen in Greek mythology, the wife of King Priam of Troy. She was of Phrygian birth; her father was Dymas, and her mother (Eunoë) was said to be a daughter of the god of the River Sangarius, the principal river of ancient Phrygia.
In the Iliad Hecuba appears as the mother of Hector, and laments his death in a well-known speech in Book 24 of the epic.
With the god Apollo, Hecuba had a son named Troilus. An oracle prophesied that Troy would not be defeated as long as Troilus reached the age of twenty alive. He was killed by Achilles during the Trojan War.[1]
Polydorus, Priam's youngest son by Hecuba, was sent with gifts of jewelry and gold to the court of King Polymestor to keep him safe during the Trojan War. The fighting grew vicious and Priam was frightened for the child's safety. After Troy fell, Polymestor threw Polydorus to his death to take the treasure for himself. Hecuba, though she was enslaved by the Achaeans when the city fell, eventually avenged her son.
In another tradition, Hecuba went mad upon seeing the corpses of her children Polydorus and Polyxena. Dante described this episode, which he derived from Italian sources:
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~ Inferno XXX: 13-20
A third story of her fate says that she was given to Odysseus as a slave, but as she snarled and cursed at him, the gods turned her into a dog, allowing her to escape.
[edit] Hecuba in arts and literature
- Central character of the play Hecuba by Euripides
- Character in the play The Trojan Women, also by Euripides
- Mentioned in Act II Scene 2 of Hamlet, by William Shakespeare
- Character in the play The Trojan War Will Not Take Place, by Jean Giraudoux
- Character in King Priam by Michael Tippett (1958-61)
- Central character of Cortege of Eagles by Martha Graham (1967)
- Mentioned in "Fortune plango vulnera" of Carmina Burana
- Referenced in Critique of Pure Reason by Immanuel Kant
[edit] References
- ^ Giovanni Boccaccio’s Famous Women translated by Virginia Brown 2001, pp. 66-67; Cambridge and London, Harvard University Press; ISBN 0-674-01130-9