Styx Explained

Type:Greek
Styx
God Of:Goddess and underworld river
Abode:Underworld
Member Of:The Oceanids
Parents:Oceanus and Tethys
Consort:Pallas
Children:Bia, Kratos, Nike, Zelus
Siblings:Oceanids, Potamoi

In Greek mythology, Styx (; Greek, Ancient (to 1453);: Στύξ in Greek, Ancient (to 1453); pronounced as /stýks/; lit. "Shuddering"[1]), also called the River Styx, is a goddess and river of the Underworld. Her parents were the Titans Oceanus and Tethys, and she was the wife of the Titan Pallas and the mother of Zelus, Nike, Kratos, and Bia. She sided with Zeus in his war against the Titans, and because of this, to honor her, Zeus decreed that the solemn oaths of the gods be sworn by the water of Styx.[2]

Family

According to the usual account, Styx was the eldest of the Oceanids, the many daughters of the Titan Oceanus, the great world-encircling river, and his sister-wife, the Titaness Tethys.[3] However, according to the Roman mythographer Hyginus, she was the daughter of Nox ("Night", the Roman equivalent of Nyx) and Erebus (Darkness).[4]

She married the Titan Pallas and by him gave birth to the personifications Zelus (Glory, Emulation), Nike (Victory), Kratos (Strength, Dominion), and Bia (Force, Violence).[5] The geographer Pausanias tells us that, according to Epimenides of Crete, Styx was the mother of the monster Echidna, by an otherwise unknown Perias.[6]

Although usually Demeter was the mother, by Zeus, of the underworld-goddess Persephone, according to the mythographer Apollodorus, it was Styx.[7] However, when Apollodorus relates the famous story of the abduction of Persephone, and the search for her by her angry and distraught mother, as usual, it is Demeter who conducts the search.[8]

Mythology

Oath of the gods

Styx was the oath of the gods. Homer calls Styx the "dread river of oath".[9] In both the Iliad and the Odyssey, it is said that swearing by the water of Styx, is "the greatest and most dread oath for the blessed gods". Homer has Hera (in the Iliad) say this when she swears by Styx to Zeus, that she is not to blame for Poseidon's intervention on the side of the Greeks in the Trojan War, and he has Calypso (in the Odyssey) use the same words when she swears by Styx to Odysseus that she will cease to plot against him. Also Hypnos (in the Iliad) makes Hera swear to him "by the inviolable water of Styx".[10]

Examples of oaths sworn by Styx also occur in the Homeric Hymns.[11] Demeter asks the "implacable" water of Styx to be her witness, as she swears to Metaneira,[12] Leto swears to the personified Delos by the water of Styx, calling it the "most powerful and dreadful oath that the blessed gods can swear",[13] while Apollo asks Hermes to swear to him on the "dread" water of Styx.[14]

Hesiod, in the Theogony, gives an account of how this role for Styx came about. He says that, during the Titanomachy, the great war of Zeus and his fellow Olympians against Cronus and his fellow Titans, Zeus summoned "all the deathless gods to great Olympus" and promised, to whosoever would join him against the Titans, that he would preserve whatever rights and offices each had, or if they had none under Cronus, they would be given both under his rule. Styx, upon the advice of her father Oceanus, was the first to side with Zeus, bringing her children by Pallas along with her. And so in return Zeus appointed Styx to be "the great oath of the gods, and her children to live with him always."[15]

According to Hesiod, Styx lived at the entrance to Hades, in a cave "propped up to heaven all round with silver pillars".[16] Hesiod also tells us that Zeus would send Iris, the messenger of the gods, to fetch the "famous cold water" of Styx for the gods to swear by,[17] and describes the punishments which would follow the breaking of such an oath:[18]

The Roman poet Ovid has Jove (the Roman equivalent of Zeus) swear by the waters of Styx when he promises Semele:and was then obliged to follow through even though he realized to his horror that Semele's request would lead to her death.[19] Similarly Phoebus (here identified with Sol, the Roman equivalent of the Greek Helios) promised his son Phaethon whatever he desired, which also resulted in the boy's death.[20]

River

The goddess Styx, like her father Oceanus, and his sons the Potamoi, was also a river, in her case, a river of the Underworld. According to Hesiod, Styx was given one-tenth of her father's water, which flowed far underground, and came up to the surface to pour out from a high rock:

In the Iliad the river Styx forms a boundary of Hades, the abode of the dead, in the Underworld.[21] Athena mentions the "sheer-falling waters of Styx" needing to be crossed when Heracles returned from Hades after capturing Cerberus,[22] and Patroclus's shade begs Achilles to bury his corpse quickly so that he might "pass within the gates of Hades" and join the other dead "beyond the River".[23] So too in Virgil's Aeneid, where the Styx winds nine times around the borders of Hades, and the boatman Charon is in charge of ferrying the dead across it.[24] More usually, however, Acheron is the river (or lake) which separates the world of the living from the world of the dead.[25]

In the Odyssey, Circe says that the Underworld river Cocytus is a branch of the Styx.[26] In Dante's Inferno, Phlegyas ferries Virgil and Dante across the foul waters of the river Styx which is portrayed as a marsh comprising the Hell's Fifth Circle, where the angry and sullen are punished.[27]

By metonymy, the adjective stygian (/ˈstɪdʒiən/) came to refer to anything unpleasantly dark, gloomy, or forbidding.[28] [29]

Other

In the Homeric Hymn 2 to Demeter Persephone names Styx as one of her "frolicking" Oceanid-companions when she was abducted by Hades.[30]

According to the Achilleid, written by the Roman poet Statius in the 1st century AD, when Achilles was born his mother Thetis tried to make him immortal by dipping him in the river Styx; however, he was left vulnerable at the part of the body by which she held him: his left heel.[31] And so Paris was able to kill Achilles during the Trojan War by shooting an arrow into his heel.

In the second-century Metamorphoses of Apuleius, one of the impossible trials which Venus imposed on Psyche was to fetch water from the Styx.[32] Apuleius has the water guarded by fierce dragons (dracones), and from the water itself came fearsome cries of deadly warning. The sheer impossibility of her task caused Psyche to become senseless, as if turned into stone.[33] Jupiter's eagle admonishes Psyche saying:

The Arcadian Styx

Styx, along with the underworld rivers Cocytus and Acheron, were associated with waterways in the upper world.[34] For example, according to Homer, the river Titaressus, a tributary of the river Peneius in Thessaly, was a branch of the Styx.[35] However Styx has been most commonly associated with an Arcadian stream and waterfall (the Mavronéri) that runs through a ravine on the North face of mount Chelmos and flows into the Krathis river.[36] The fifth-century BC historian Herodotus, locates this stream - calling it "the water of Styx" - as being near Nonacris a town (in what was then ancient Arcadia and now modern Achaea) not far from Pheneus, and says that the Spartan king Cleomenes, would make men take oaths swearing by its water. Herodotus describes it as "a stream of small appearance, dropping from a cliff into a pool; a wall of stones runs round the pool".[37] Pausanias reports visiting the "water of the Styx" near Nonacris (which at the time of his visit, in the second century AD, was already a partially-buried ruins), saying that:

According to Aelian, Demeter caused the water of this Arcadian Styx "to well up in the neighbourhood of Pheneus".[38] An ancient legend apparently also connected Demeter with this Styx. According to Photius, a certain Ptolemy Hephaestion (probably referring to Ptolemy Chennus) knew of a story, "concerning the water of the Styx in Arcadia", which told how an angry Demeter had turned the Styx's water black.[39] According to James George Frazer, this "fable" provided an explanation for the fact that, from a distance, the waterfall appears black.[40]

Water from this Styx was said to be poisonous and able to dissolve most substances.[41] The first-century natural philosopher Pliny, wrote that drinking its water caused immediate death,[42] and that the hoof of a female mule was the only material not "rotted" by its water.[43] According to Plutarch the poisonous water could only be held by an ass's hoof, since all other vessels would "be eaten through by it, owing to its coldness and pungency."[44] While according to Pausanias, the only vessel that could hold the Styx's water (poisonous to both men and animals) was a horse's hoof.[45] There were ancient suspicions that Alexander the Great's death was caused by being poisoned with the water of this Styx.[46]

The Arcadian Styx may have been named so after its mythological counterpart, but it is also possible that this Arcadian stream was the model for the mythological Styx.[47] The latter seems to be the case, at least, for the Styx in Apuleius's Metamorphoses, which has Venus, addressing Psyche, give the following description:[48] That Apuleius has his "black spring" being guarded by dragons, also suggests a connection between his Styx and two modern local names for the waterfall: the Black Water (Mavro Nero) and the Dragon Water (Drako Nero).[49]

Moon

On 2 July 2013, "Styx" officially became the name of one of Pluto's moons.[50] The other moons of Pluto (Charon, Nix, Hydra, and Kerberos) also have names from Greco-Roman mythology related to the underworld.

See also

Bibliography

Ancient sources

Modern sources

Notes and References

  1. West 2003, p. 53 n. 11.
  2. Jost, s.v. Styx; Antoni, s.v. Styx; Grimal, s.v. Styx; Tripp, s.v. Styx; Parada, s.v. Styx; Smith, s.v. Styx.
  3. Grimal, s.v. Styx; Hesiod, Theogony 361 - 362, 775 - 776; Apollodorus, 1.2.2. Compare with Epimenides, fr. 7 Fowler [= ''[[FGrHist]] F6B = Vorsokr. 3B9], and Homeric Hymn 2 to Demeter (which both have Styx as the daughter of Oceanus without mentioning Tethys); Callimachus, Hymn to Zeus 33 - 36.
  4. Jost, s.v. Styx; Grimal, s.v. Styx; Hyginus, Fabulae 1.2 - 1.5.
  5. Gantz, pp. 25 - 26; Hesiod, Theogony 383 - 385; Apollodorus, 1.2.4; Compare with Hyginus, Fabulae 1.1 - 17.1 - 2, which gives the offspring of Pallas and Styx as Scylla, Force, Envy, Power, Victory, Fountains, and Lakes.
  6. Gantz, p. 22; Fowler 2013, p. 9; Pausanias, 8.18.2 [= [[Epimenides]], fr. 7 Fowler] [= ''[[FGrHist]] F6B = Vorsokr. 3B9]. Other authors give other parents for Echidna, see Hesiod, Theogony 270 - 300 (where, according to Athanassakis, p. 44, her parents are "likely" Ceto and Phorcys); Apollodorus, 2.1.2 (Echidna is the daughter of Tartarus and Gaia).
  7. Gantz, p. 64; Apollodorus, 1.3.1. For Demeter as mother, see, for example, Hesiod, Theogony 912 - 913; Homeric Hymn 2 to Demeter, 1 - 5; Pausanias, 8.37.9. Compare with Hyginus, Fabulae 26.1, which has Proserpina as the daughter of Jove and Ceres.
  8. Gantz, pp. 64 - 67; Apollodorus, 1.5.
  9. Iliad 2.755.
  10. [Homer]
  11. Gantz, p. 29.
  12. Homeric Hymn 2 to Demeter 259.
  13. Homeric Hymn 3 to Apollo, 83 - 86.
  14. Homeric Hymn 4 to Hermes, 518 - 520.
  15. Gantz, pp. 29, 45; Hesiod, Theogony 389 - 402. Compare with Apollodorus, 1.2.5. West 1966, p. 272, points out that this story of Styx being the first to come to Zeus' aid, by bringing her children, including Nike (Victory) and Kratos (Strength), to Zeus' side, is an aetiological myth explaining both why the gods swear by Styx, and why Victory and Strength reside for evermore with Zeus. West suggests that this myth can be imagined as having come about thought the following though process. "Why do the gods swear by Styx? Because Zeus so ordained. Why did he do so? In reward for some service performed for him by Styx. In what connexion? Most likely in connexion with the Titanomachy, for that was when Zeus most needed help. Then did she fight for him? Hardly in person: but she might have sent her children to fight for him. Then who can they have been, that he needed there help? Why, Victory and Strength; those were the gods he needed."
  16. Tripp, s.v. Styx; Smith, s.v. Styx; Hesiod, Theogony 775 - 779.
  17. [Hesiod]
  18. Although Hesiod does provide consequences for the breaking of such an oath, Gantz, p. 29, says that "one might have thought it unbreakable".
  19. Compare with Hyginus, Fabulae 179; Nonnus, Dionysiaca 8.178 - 406, which relate the same story of Semele's death, though with no mention of Zeus having sworn to grant anything Semele wished for.
  20. [Ovid]
  21. Gantz, pp. 124 - 125; Hard, p. 109.
  22. [Homer]
  23. [Homer]
  24. Tripp, s.v. Styx; Virgil, Aeneid 6.317 - 326, 6.384 - 390, 6.434 - 439.
  25. Hard, p. 109, p. 113; Gantz, pp. 124 - 125. The first mention of Acheron as the river the dead must cross is found in Alcaeus, fr. 38A Campbell [= P. Oxy. 1233 fr. 1 ii 8–20 + 2166(b)1 = fr. 38A Lobel-Page = fr. 78 Diehl]; compare with Sappho fr. 95 Campbell [= fr. 95 Lobel-Page = fr. 97 Diehl] where this is implied. See also for example Aeschylus, Seven Against Thebes 854 - 860; Sophocles, Antigone 806 - 816; Euripides, Alcestis 435 - 444; Pausanias, 10.28.1; Plato, Phaedo 113d etc.
  26. Hard, p. 109; Gantz, p. 29; Tripp, s.v. Styx; Homer, Odyssey 10.513 - 515.
  27. Dante, Inferno 7.106 - 130, 8.15 - 24.
  28. Web site: Definition of STYGIAN . merriam-webster.com . en.
  29. Web site: Stygian English meaning . dictionary.cambridge.org.
  30. Gantz, p. 29; Homeric Hymn 2 to Demeter, 418 - 423.
  31. Burgess, p. 9; Statius, Achilleid 1.133 - 134, 269 - 270, 480 - 481; compare with Hyginus, Fabulae 107 which says that Achilles' heel "was said to be vulnerable" but with no mention of him being dipped in the river Styx.
  32. Tripp, s.v. Psyche; Frazer on Pausanias 8.17.6; Apuleius, Metamorphoses 6.13.
  33. [Apuleius]
  34. Hard, p. 110.
  35. Tripp, s.v. Styx; Homer, Iliad 2.751 - 755; Pausanias, 8.18.2; Strabo, 7 fr. 15.
  36. Hard, p. 110; Grimal, s.v. Styx; Herodotus, 6.74 n.1; Frazer on Pausanias 8.17.6 (which gives a detailed description of Frazer's visit to the fall of the Styx in 1895).
  37. Hard, p. 110; Herodotus, 6.74. See also Pliny, Natural History 31.26; Plutarch, Alexander 77.2.
  38. [Claudius Aelianus|Aelian]
  39. [Photius I of Constantinople|Photius]
  40. [James George Frazer|Frazer]
  41. Grimal, s.v. Styx.
  42. [Pliny the Elder|Pliny]
  43. [Pliny the Elder|Pliny]
  44. [Plutarch]
  45. [Pausanias (geographer)|Pausanias]
  46. Mayor, pp. 54, 57 - 58. As Arrian, Anabasis of Alexander 7.27, and Plutarch, Alexander 77.2 tell us, there were some who claimed that Aristotle had provided the poisonous water. See, for example, Pliny, Natural History 30.149, which also claims that Aristotle had "discovered" the poisonous nature of the water of Styx.
  47. See for example Reclus, p. 230, who, when describing this Arcadian Styx, assumes the latter saying: "out of this sometimes sombre and sometimes gracious torrent, the ancients made the muddy Styx of the lower world, whose murky floods were forever stirred by the fatal ferryman, Charon". However according to Hard, p. 110, "There is no way of telling whether the traditional conception of the infernal river was influenced by knowledge of the Arcadian Styx and its falls, or whether, conversely, the Arcadian Styx was first given that name because its chilly falls resembled this of the Styx in Hesiod's description".
  48. [James George Frazer|Frazer]
  49. [James George Frazer|Frazer]
  50. Web site: . Names for New Pluto Moons Accepted by the IAU After Public Vote . 2 July 2013 . 2 July 2013.