Eurotas
Eurotas | |
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King of Laconia[1] | |
Eurotas, from the modern monument of Leonidas I, Thermopylae | |
Consort | Clete |
Issue | Sparta |
Father | Myles |
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Eurotas. |
In Greek mythology, Eurotas (/jʊˈroʊtəs/; Greek: Εὐρώτας) was a king of Laconia, the son of King Myles and grandson of Lelex, eponymous ancestor of the Leleges. He had no male heir, but he did have a daughter Sparta and wife Clete. Eurotas bequeathed the kingdom to his grandson, Lacedaemon, the son of Taygete, after whom Mount Taygetus is named, and Zeus, according to Pausanias.[2] Lacedaemon renamed the state after his wife.
Pausanias says: "It was Eurotas who channelled away the marsh-water from the plains by cutting through to the sea, and when the land was drained he called the river which was left running there the Eurotas."[2] The "cutting through" is seen by Pausanias’ translator and commentator, Peter Levy, S.J., as an explanation of Eurotas (or Vrodamas) Canyon, a ravine north of Skala where the river has cut through the foothills of Taygetus after changing direction to the west of the valley.[3]
Variants
The Bibliotheca gives a slight variant of the mythological generation of Eurotas: the latter is the son of Lelex, born from the ground and Cleocharia.[4]
Eurotas in art
River-gods are typically represented in Greek art, such as coin motifs, as figures with the bodies of bulls and the faces of humans. If only the face appears, they might wear horns and have wavy hair or be accompanied by fish. Claudius Aelianus states that the Eurotas and other rivers are like bulls.[5]
Notes
- ↑ Malkin, Irad (1994). Myth and territory in the Spartan Mediterranean. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. p. 6.
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 Guide to Greece, 3.1.1-3.
- ↑ Pausanias; Peter Levy, S.J. (Translator, Contributor) (1971). Pausanias Guide to Greece. Volume 2, Southern Greece. Penguin Books. p. 10 Note 3.
- ↑ Pseudo-Apollodorus, Bibliotheca 3.10.3.
- ↑ Collignon, Maxime; Harrison, Jane E. (Translator, Contributor) (1899). Manual of Mythology in Relation to Greek Art (New and Cheaper Revised ed.). London: H. Grevel & Co. p. 204. on Aelian, Variae Historiae, 2.33.
Regnal titles | ||
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Preceded by Myles |
King of Sparta Pre-Dorian |
Succeeded by Lacedaemon |
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