DAILY-ASTRONOMER Archives

Daily doses of information related to astronomy, including physics,

DAILY-ASTRONOMER@LISTS.MAINE.EDU

Options: Use Forum View

Use Monospaced Font
Show HTML Part by Default
Show All Mail Headers

Message: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Topic: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]
Author: [<< First] [< Prev] [Next >] [Last >>]

Print Reply
Subject:
From:
Edward Gleason <[log in to unmask]>
Reply To:
Edward Gleason <[log in to unmask]>
Date:
Mon, 19 Jul 2021 08:30:00 -0400
Content-Type:
multipart/related
Parts/Attachments:
THE SOUTHWORTH PLANETARIUM 207-780-4249   www.usm.maine.edu/planet
<http://www.google.com/url?q=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.usm.maine.edu%2Fplanet&sa=D&sntz=1&usg=AFQjCNHulkHuLP13bOG2PkNrPazsGWFs2A>
70 Falmouth Street   Portland, Maine 04103 43.6667° N
 70.2667° W  Altitude:  10 feet below sea level Founded January 1970 Julian
Date:  2459412.18
2020-2021: CXLIX

THE ONCE OR TWICE A WEEK ASTRONOMER
Monday, July 19, 2021
The Myth of Myrtilus

_________________________________
the regular DA returns on September 1st
_________________________________

[image: pelops1RIII.1-0782.jpg]

*Oenomaus: "You're not marrying MY daughter."*

Oenamaus, the Arcadian king who governed Pisa and Elis, had three sons and
one daughter, all of whom he sired on Sterope, daughter of Acrisius.  (Not
to be confused with the Pleiad Sterope, daughter of Atlas.) His sole
daughter, named Hippoodaemia, was, as one would expect in the mythological
realm, so enchantingly beautiful that many men desperately wanted to marry
her. Unfortunately, King Oenamaus desperately wanted her not to marry.
Some say that he heard a prophecy warning him that he would be killed by
his son-in-law. Others claim -distastefully- that Oenomaus had fallen
passionately in love with his own daughter and couldn't bear to have her in
another man's bed.   So, either incestuous desire or simple fear of death
induced the king to devise a scheme that he hoped would prevent Hippodaemia
from ever becoming anyone else's wife.  He challenged any suitor to a
chariot race extending from Zeus's Olympian temple to Ithaca, a distance
that by modern standard measures about 225 kilometers.    Although the
suitor was allowed to use whatever chariot he chose, he was required to
have Hippodaemia accompany him on the race. The king knew that
Hippodaemia's presence would likely distract the love-besotted man.


[image: Classical-People-Oil-Painting-104.jpg]
*Hippodaemia*

If the suitor won the race, he would be permitted to marry Hippodaemia.
However, if Oenamous prevailed, the suitor would  die.   The king allowed
the suitor to have a half-hour head start, during which time the king
offered sacrifices to Zeus.     Despite this "advantage" the king
invariably caught up to the suitors as his chariot was driven by Psylla and
Harpinna, two mares who were swifter than the North Wind, which was
believed to have been their father.

[image: confused-face.jpg]
*Perplexed zoologist*

As if these mares didn't give the king enough of an advantage, Oenamous'
chariot driver  Myrtilus was known to have been the best of them all.  It
is little wonder that the king came abreast of  each of the first twelve
suitors who were brave enough to participate in the chariot race.
 Incidentally, whenever Oenamous' chariot pulled up beside the suitor's
chariot, the king impaled the unfortunate young man with a spear given to
him by the war god Ares, believed by some to have been his father.
Oenamaous derived such delight at these killings that he dismembered their
corpses and adorned his palace with their remains.  All was proceeding
rather swimmingly for the king -if not for the suitors- until the
bloodthirsty monarch openly declared that he would construct a temple of
young male skulls that would "puncture the sky."  During this boast, he
implied that the bone-laden temple would be in honor of himself as opposed
to any of the Olympians, who, admittedly, might not have wanted it,
anyway.    All the same, his audacious declaration drew the attention of
the gods and ultimately led to the King's undoing.

[image: Pelops.jpg]
*  Pelops*

Conveniently, around the same time, a strong and handsome young man named
Pelops appeared in the kingdom.  Those who've paid close attention to these
mythological chronicles might recognize that name.  A member of the house
of Atreus, Pelops was the ill-fated son of Tantalus, the mad king who
killed him and placed his flesh in a stew that he attempted to feed to the
gods.     Most of the Olympians knew at once the contents of the stew and
had pushed the bowls away.  Zeus banished Tantalus to Tartarus where he
suffered the ineluctable torments of burning thirst and ravenous hunger.
Zeus then commanded the fates to resurrect Pelops and ordered Hephaestus to
make him an ivory shoulder to replace the one that Demeter had
absentmindedly eaten. Demeter had been so distraught at her daughter
Persephone's abduction by Hades that she sampled the stew before becoming
aware of its gruesome ingredients.      This prosthetic looked so genuine,
however, that it went largely unnoticed.

Pelops had traveled to Pisa for he had heard both of Hippodaemia's beauty
and of the chariot race challenge.     He was determined to win the race
and the king's daughter.    Prior to his arrival, Pelops had prayed to the
ocean god Poseidon for his assistance.   Poseidon gave him a golden chariot
drawn by horses said to have been so swift that they could have driven the
chariot across the sea without even moistening the axles.     When
Hippodaemia caught sight of the gorgeous Pelops, she fell in love with him
instantly.    She knew that Pelops had accepted her father's chariot race
challenge and was determined to assist this suitor.  She
approached Myrtilus and promised him "any favour of his choosing" if he
would help Pelops win the race.    As we shall see, her phrasing would
prove problematic.

Just before the race, Myrtilus replaced the iron rods connecting his
master's chariot with the horses with one fashioned of wax.       As usual,
the King allowed his opponent a head start, but when he noticed the
swiftness of Pelops' chariot, he ordered Myrtilus to set off almost at
once, as opposed to waiting half an hour.     Had he waited, he would most
certainly have lost the race.  As it was, the king's chariot approached
Pelope once toward the last stretch of the course.    As Oenomaus withdrew
his spear and prepared to attack, the waxen rods came loose and sent the
chariot careening over a cliff.  Although Myrtilus leapt out in time, the
king remained in the chariot and perished in the fall.    Before he struck
the sea, the king, knowing himself to have been betrayed, cursed Myrtilus
in the strongest terms.

As the echo of this curse faded into silence, Pelops halted the chariot and
drew Myrtilus into it.    Pelops, Hippodaemia, who had ridden with Pelops
on her father's orders, and the chariot driver raced across the sea to a
nearby island where they stopped to find potable water.    While Pelops was
searching for a stream, Hippodaemia came running to him in hysterics. Her
clothes were torn and her face bloodied.  "Myrtilus attempted to ravish
me," she declared between convulsive sobs.    When Pelops angrily
confronted Myrtilus, the charioteer insisted that Hippodaemia had promised
him any favor of his choosing in exchange for his assistance.      Despite
this assistance, Pelops remained unmoved and he kicked Myrtilus so hard
that the latter also fell into the sea to his death.

Hermes gathered Myrtilus' body into his arms and hoisted him up into the
sky where he became the constellation we now call Auriga the Charioteer.
 It was said that when Myrtilus was descending to his death he, too,
expended his dying breath to issue an imprecation: a curse not only on
Pelops but on his entire house of Atreus.   He needn't have bothered,
however, for Tantalus' grotesque breach of dinner etiquette had doomed the
house already.


THE SOUTHWORTH PLANETARIUM 207-780-4249   www.usm.maine.edu/planet
<http://www.google.com/url?q=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.usm.maine.edu%2Fplanet&sa=D&sntz=1&usg=AFQjCNHulkHuLP13bOG2PkNrPazsGWFs2A>
70 Falmouth Street   Portland, Maine 04103 43.6667° N
 70.2667° W  Altitude:  10 feet below sea level Founded January 1970 Julian
Date:  2459412.18
2020-2021: CXLIX

THE ONCE OR TWICE A WEEK ASTRONOMER
Monday, July 19, 2021
The Myth of Myrtilus

_________________________________
the regular DA returns on September 1st
_________________________________

[image: pelops1RIII.1-0782.jpg]

*Oenomaus: "You're not marrying MY daughter."*

Oenamaus, the Arcadian king who governed Pisa and Elis, had three sons and
one daughter, all of whom he sired on Sterope, daughter of Acrisius.  (Not
to be confused with the Pleiad Sterope, daughter of Atlas.) His sole
daughter, named Hippoodaemia, was, as one would expect in the mythological
realm, so enchantingly beautiful that many men desperately wanted to marry
her. Unfortunately, King Oenamaus desperately wanted her not to marry.
Some say that he heard a prophecy warning him that he would be killed by
his son-in-law. Others claim -distastefully- that Oenomaus had fallen
passionately in love with his own daughter and couldn't bear to have her in
another man's bed.   So, either incestuous desire or simple fear of death
induced the king to devise a scheme that he hoped would prevent Hippodaemia
from ever becoming anyone else's wife.  He challenged any suitor to a
chariot race extending from Zeus's Olympian temple to Ithaca, a distance
that by modern standard measures about 225 kilometers.    Although the
suitor was allowed to use whatever chariot he chose, he was required to
have Hippodaemia accompany him on the race. The king knew that
Hippodaemia's presence would likely distract the love-besotted man.


[image: Classical-People-Oil-Painting-104.jpg]
*Hippodaemia*

If the suitor won the race, he would be permitted to marry Hippodaemia.
However, if Oenamous prevailed, the suitor would  die.   The king allowed
the suitor to have a half-hour head start, during which time the king
offered sacrifices to Zeus.     Despite this "advantage" the king
invariably caught up to the suitors as his chariot was driven by Psylla and
Harpinna, two mares who were swifter than the North Wind, which was
believed to have been their father.

[image: confused-face.jpg]
*Perplexed zoologist*

As if these mares didn't give the king enough of an advantage, Oenamous'
chariot driver  Myrtilus was known to have been the best of them all.  It
is little wonder that the king came abreast of  each of the first twelve
suitors who were brave enough to participate in the chariot race.
 Incidentally, whenever Oenamous' chariot pulled up beside the suitor's
chariot, the king impaled the unfortunate young man with a spear given to
him by the war god Ares, believed by some to have been his father.
Oenamaous derived such delight at these killings that he dismembered their
corpses and adorned his palace with their remains.  All was proceeding
rather swimmingly for the king -if not for the suitors- until the
bloodthirsty monarch openly declared that he would construct a temple of
young male skulls that would "puncture the sky."  During this boast, he
implied that the bone-laden temple would be in honor of himself as opposed
to any of the Olympians, who, admittedly, might not have wanted it,
anyway.    All the same, his audacious declaration drew the attention of
the gods and ultimately led to the King's undoing.

[image: Pelops.jpg]
*  Pelops*

Conveniently, around the same time, a strong and handsome young man named
Pelops appeared in the kingdom.  Those who've paid close attention to these
mythological chronicles might recognize that name.  Pelops was the
ill-fated son of Tantalus, the mad king who killed him and placed his flesh
in a stew that he attempted to feed to the gods.     Most of the Olympians
knew at once the contents of the stew and had pushed the bowls away.  Zeus
banished Tantalus to Tartarus where he suffered the ineluctable torments of
burning thirst and ravenous hunger.    Zeus then commanded the fates to
resurrect Pelops and ordered Hephaestus to make him an ivory shoulder to
replace the one that Demeter had absentmindedly eaten. Demeter had been so
distraught at her daughter Persephone's abduction by Hades that she sampled
the stew before becoming aware of its gruesome ingredients.      This
prosthetic looked so genuine, however, that it went largely unnoticed.

Pelops had traveled to Pisa for he had heard both of Hippodaemia's beauty
and of the chariot race challenge.     He was determined to win the race
and the king's daughter.    Prior to his arrival, Pelops had prayed to the
ocean god Poseidon for his assistance.   Poseidon gave him a golden chariot
drawn by horses said to have been so swift that they could have driven the
chariot across the sea without even moistening the axles.     When
Hippodaemia caught sight of the gorgeous Pelops, she fell in love with him
instantly.    She knew that Pelops had accepted her father's chariot race
challenge and was determined to assist this suitor.  She
approached Myrtilus and promised him "any favour of his choosing" if he
would help Pelops win the race.    As we shall see, her phrasing would
prove problematic.

Just before the race, Myrtilus replaced the iron rods connecting his
master's chariot with the horses with one fashioned of wax.       As usual,
the King allowed his opponent a head start, but when he noticed the
swiftness of Pelops' chariot, he ordered Myrtilus to set off almost at
once, as opposed to waiting half an hour.     Had he waited, he would most
certainly have lost the race.  As it was, the king's chariot approached
Pelope once toward the last stretch of the course.    As Oenomaus withdrew
his spear and prepared to attack, the waxen rods came loose and sent the
chariot careening over a cliff.  Although Myrtilus leapt out in time, the
king remained in the chariot and perished in the fall.    Before he struck
the sea, the king, knowing himself to have been betrayed, cursed Myrtilus
in the strongest terms.

As the echo of this curse faded into silence, Pelops halted the chariot and
drew Myrtilus into it.    Pelops, Hippodaemia, who had ridden with Pelops
on her father's orders, and the chariot driver raced across the sea to a
nearby island where they stopped to find potable water.    While Pelops was
searching for a stream, Hippodaemia came running to him in hysterics. Her
clothes were torn and her face bloodied.  "Myrtilus attempted to ravish
me," she declared between convulsive sobs.    When Pelops angrily
confronted Myrtilus, the charioteer insisted that Hippodaemia had promised
him any favor of his choosing in exchange for his assistance.      Despite
this assistance, Pelops remained unmoved and he kicked Myrtilus so hard
that the latter also fell into the sea to his death.

Hermes gathered Myrtilus' body into his arms and hoisted him up into the
sky where he became the constellation we now call Auriga the Charioteer.
 It was said that when Myrtilus was descending to his death he, too,
expended his dying breath to issue an imprecation: a curse not only on
Pelops but on his entire house that of Atreus.   He needn't have bothered,
however, for Tantalus' grotesque breach of dinner etiquette had doomed the
house already.

*[image: Auriga-Constellation-History-Location-How-to-View.png]*
*Auriga the Charioteer:* visible in the predawn eastern sky


To subscribe or unsubscribe from the Daily Astronomer:
https://lists.maine.edu/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=DAILY-ASTRONOMER&A=
<https://lists.maine.edu/cgi-bin/wa?SUBED1=DAILY-ASTRONOMER&A=1>


ATOM RSS1 RSS2