Ceryneian Hind Explained

Aka:doe with the golden horns, Golden-horned hind, Ceryneia hind, Cerynitian hind, beast with golden antlers, Parrhasian hind, nimble hind of Maenalus and beast of Maenalus.
Folklore:Greek mythology
Grouping:Legendary creature
Country:Greece
Region:Keryneia, Greece

In Greek mythology, the Ceryneian hind (Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: Κερυνῖτις ἔλαφος Kerynitis elaphos, Latin: Elaphus Cerynitis), was a creature that lived in Ceryneia, Greece and took the form of an enormous female deer, larger than a bull,[1] with golden antlers[2] like a stag,[3] hooves of bronze or brass,[4] and a "dappled hide",[5] that "excelled in swiftness of foot",[6] and snorted fire. To bring it back alive to Eurystheus in Mycenae was the third labour of Heracles.

Other names and descriptions for it were: doe with the golden horns,[7] golden-horned hind, Ceryneia hind, Cerynitian hind, beast with golden antlers,[8] Parrhasian hind,[9] nimble hind of Maenalus[10] and beast of Maenalus.[11] Frazer says that the hind took its name from the river Cerynites, "which rises in Arcadia and flows through Achaia into the sea".

One tradition says that Artemis found a mighty herd of five Ceryneian hinds playing on the base of Parrhasian hill far away from the banks of the "black-pebbled Anaurus" where they always herded. Artemis was so impressed by the hinds that she yoked four of them to her golden chariot with golden bridles, but purposely let one escape to the Ceryneian hill to be a future labour for Heracles. Whilst in Ceryneia, the hind chased farmers from vineyards.

The Ceryneian hind was sacred to Artemis. "The hind is said to have borne the inscription 'Taygete dedicated [me] to Artemis'." Because of its sacredness, Heracles did not want to harm the hind and so hunted it for more than a year, from Oenoe to Hyperborea, to a mountain called Artemisius, (a range which divides Argolis from the plain of Mantinea) before finally capturing the hind near the river Ladon.

Euripides says Heracles slew the hind and brought it to Artemis for propitiation. Another tradition says he captured it with nets while it was sleeping or that he ran it down, while another says he shot and maimed it with an arrow just before it crossed the river Ladon. Once Heracles captured the hind, and only after explaining to Artemis and Apollo ("who would have wrested the hind from him") that he had only hurt the sacred hind out of necessity, was he allowed to take it alive to Eurystheus in Mycenae, thus completing his third labour.

Stag or Hind or female deer

"Pindar says that in his quest of the hind with the golden horns Hercules had seen "the far-off land beyond the cold blast of Boreas. [Hyperborea]" Hence, as the reindeer is said to be the only species of deer of which the female has antlers, Sir William Ridgeway argues ingeniously that the hind with the golden horns was no other than the reindeer."

A doe bearing antlers was unknown in Greece, but the story of the hind is suggestive of reindeer, which, unlike other deer, can be harnessed and whose females bear antlers. The myth relates to the Hyperborea, which may have been the archaic origin of the myth itself, as Robert Graves thought.

Authoritative primary source translations say the creature was a:

Classical Literature Sources

Chronological listing of classical literature sources for the Ceryneian Hind:

See also

Notes and References

  1. Book: Callimachus and Lycophron. William Heinemann; G. R Putnam's Sons. 1921. London; New York. 69. Mair. G. R.. Hymn III (to Artemis). 98 ff.. ark:/13960/t7qn6bw6r.
  2. Book: Apollodorus the Library. G. P. Putnam's Sons. 1921. 1. New York. 191 with the Scholiast. Frazer. Sir James George. The Library 2. 5. 3-4. ark:/13960/t00012x9f.
  3. Book: Quintus Smyrnaeus The Fall Of Troy. William Heinemann Ltd; Harvard University Press. 1984. London; Cambridge, Massachusetts. 271. Way. A. S.. The Fall of Troy, Book VI. 223 ff.. ark:/13960/t2m61f62d. 1913.
  4. Book: Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography And Mythology. Little, Brown, And Company. 1870. Smith. W.. Boston. 395. ark:/13960/t9f47mp93.
  5. Book: Euripides. William Heinemann; G. P. Putnam's Sons. 1930. 3. London; New York. 157. Way. Arthur S.. Madness Of Hercules. 370 ff.. ark:/13960/t6057th3x.
  6. Book: Diodorus of Sicily. William Heinemann Ltd; Harvard University Press. 1967. 2. London; Cambridge, Massachusetts. 385. Oldfather. C. H.. Book 4. 13. ark:/13960/t7qn6bw6r. 1935.
  7. Book: The Odes of Pindar. William Heinemann; The Macmillan Co.. 1915. London; New York. 37 with the Scholiast. Sandys. Sir John. Olympian Odes III 28-42. 28 ff.. ark:/13960/t02z1h76p.
  8. Book: Seneca's Tragedies. William Heinemann; G. P. Putnam's Sons. 1929. 2. London; New York. 285. Miller. Frank Justus. Hercules Oetaeus 1237 ff. ark:/13960/t7fr0065f. 1917.
  9. Book: Seneca's Tragedies. William Heinemann; G. P. Putnam's Sons. 1929. 2. London; New York. 69. Miller. Frank Justus. Agamemnon 829 ff. ark:/13960/t7fr0065f. 1917.
  10. Book: Seneca's Tragedies. William Heinemann Ltd; Harvard University Press. 1938. 1. London; Cambridge, Massachusetts. 21. Miller. Frank Justus. Hercules Furens 222 ff. ark:/13960/t71v5s15x.
  11. Book: Seneca's Tragedies. William Heinemann; G. P. Putnam's Sons. 1939. 2. London; New York. 187. Miller. Frank Justus. Hercules Oetaeus 17 ff. ark:/13960/t7fr0065f.
  12. Book: Aelian On the Characteristics of Animals. William Heinemann Ltd. 1959. 2. Cambridge, Massachusetts. 153. Scholfield. A. F.. On Animals 7. 39. ark:/13960/t7hq6cw1k.