Actaeon

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Actaeon,
having surprised Artemis and her train of nymphs
in the bath, is turned into a stag
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Actaeon is the hunter who was torn to pieces by
his own dogs after having been turned into a stag
by Artemis, whom he had
seen unrobed.
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Misfortune
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Actaeon's own death is what made him famous, for
there are almost no accounts of his life, except
that he was trained by the Centaur
Chiron to be a hunter.
And, they say, it was not any crime of his the
cause of his death, but mere mischance.
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Actaeon sees the naked goddess
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For not knowing anything about the secret cave
of Artemis in the vale
of Gargaphia, Actaeon came wandering with his dogs
after a day of hunt, and entered the cave when the
goddess of the wild woods was preparing to bathe in
the waters of the spring Parthenius together with
the nymphs that attended her.
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Artemis uses water
instead of arrows
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When Actaeon came into the cave, the girls, with
loud cries, thronged around
Artemis trying to hide
her body with their own. But
Artemis, standing head
and shoulders over the rest, took up the water and
flung it into Actaeon's face saying:
"Now you are
free to tell that you have seen me all
unrobedif you can tell."
[Artemis to Actaeon.
Ovid,
Metamorphoses
3.192]
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Afraid stag runs away ...
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So soon she had uttered these words, Actaeon
began to turn into a stag, much as the Cretan
Siproites had his sex changed by
Artemis when he saw the
goddes bathing. And when the transformation was
completed, the goddess planted fear within his
heart, and the stag Actaeon fled away.
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... pursued by the hounds
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And his dogs went after him, pursuing him in all
grounds around Mount Cithaeron, between Boeotia and
Attica, and when they finally caught him, they
buried their fangs in his body until there was no
place for further wounds, and Actaeon the stag was
dead.
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Hunter hunted
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That was the misfortune of Actaeon. For not
knowing what he did, he came to be punished and
suffered to be hunted, just as he had hunted.
Because of this deed, some deemed
Artemis to be more
cruel, but others judged her act worthy of her
virginity.
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Arrogant Actaeon
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It has also been told that Actaeon presented
himself as superior to
Artemis as a hunter,
being his boast the reason behind his unfortunate
fate. And again, others say that Actaeon came into
the cave, and tried to ravish the goddess who, in
her anger, made horns grow on his head, turning him
into a stag.
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Preposterous idea
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Still others have said that Actaeon, upon
dedicating the fruits of his hunting to
Artemis, purposed to
marry her at the temple of the goddess.
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Interfering with Zeus'
intentions
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Yet others affirm that what happened to Actaeon
was conceived by Zeus
because Actaeon loved
Semele, the mother of
Dionysus 2.
Artemis then cast a
deer-skin round Actaeon to make sure that his dogs
would kill him, so as to prevent him to marry
Semele.
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The grief of the dogs
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In any case, when Actaeon was gone, the dogs are
said to have sought their master, howling in grief.
Searching for him, it is told, they came to the
cave of the Centaur
Chiron, who made an image
of the unfortunate Actaeon to soothe their grief.
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Lamented death
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The death of Actaeon was much lamented by his
parents. His father Aristaeus migrated to Sardinia,
and Actaeon's mother Autonoe 2 is said to have left
Thebes to live near
Megara, because of her
grief at the death of her son.
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A similar case
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Far away from where Actaeon was killed, Thasius,
son of Anius, son of
Apollo and Rhoeo, was
also reported to have been destroyed by his own
dogs in the island of Delos. The death of this
prince (Anius was king) is the reason why there are
no dogs on Delos.
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Family
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Parentage
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Aristaeus & Autonoe 2
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Aristaeus, the discoverer of honey, is the son
of Apollo and
Cyrene, daughter of
Hypseus 1, son of the river god Peneus. Aristaeus
was taught the arts of healing and of prophecy by
the MUSES. Some say that
after Actaeon's death he migrated to Sardinia. In
any case Aristaeus disappeared and though he never
was seen again he received immortal honours.
Autonoe 2 is one of the daughters of
Cadmus.
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Abolengo
Album - High Resolution Genealogical Charts
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Names in this chart
Actaeon, Agenor 1,
Aphrodite,
Apollo,
Ares, Aristaeus, Autonoe 2,
Belus 1, Cadmus, Creusa
3, Cyrene, Epaphus 1,
Gaia, Harmonia 1, Hypseus
1, Io, Libya, Nymph 7,
Peneus.
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In a Corinthian version of the myth, Actaeon,
son of one Melissus, was loved by the Maenad
Archias. She tried to abduct him, and as she fought
with his father, Actaeon was torn into pieces.
Melissus made a formal protest during the Isthmian
Games, but when the death of his son was not
punished, he threw himself down from a rock, while
calling the wrath of the gods upon the city. As
drought and plague afflicted
Corinth, an oracle
ordained that Poseidon
(the god of the Isthmian Games) be placated, and
Actaeon avenged. As a result, the
MAENADS were expelled
from Corinth, and
Archias, having emigrated to Sicily, founded
Syracuse.
Roscher, Lex. 1. 217. 4
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Actaeon's Dogs
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When Artemis in
the summertime was bathing in a stream, Actaeon sought the
same place for cooling himself and the dogs which he had
exercised in chasing wild beasts. He then caught sight of
the goddess, and to keep him from telling of it, she changed
him into a stag. As a stag, then, he was mangled by his own
hounds.
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Apollodorus,
Library
3.4.4
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Ovid,
Metamorphoses
3.206ff.
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Hyginus,
Fabulae
181
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Acamas 5
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Aello 2
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Aello 2
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Aethon 5
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Agre
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Agre
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Alce
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Amarynthus
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Agriodus
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Argiodus
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Agrius 7
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Alce
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Arcas 2
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Arcena
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Arethusa 4
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Argo
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Asbolus 2
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Aura 1
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Balius 2
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Borax
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Boreas 2
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Bores
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Canache
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Canache
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Charops 2
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Chediaetros
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Corus
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Cyllo
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Cyllopodes
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Cyprius
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Cyprius
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Dinomache
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Dioxippe 3
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Dorceus 1
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Dorceus 1
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Draco
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Dromas
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Dromas
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Dromius
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Echione
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Echnobas
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Eudromus
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Gorgo 2
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Haemon 5
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Harpalicus
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Harpalus 2
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Harpalus 2
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Harpyia
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Harpyia
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Hylactor
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Hylactor
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Hylaeus 2
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Hylaeus 2
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Ichneus
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Ichnobates
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Ichnobates
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Labros
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Labros
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Lacaena
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Lachne
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Lachne
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Lacon
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Lacon
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Ladon 2
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Ladon 2
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Laelaps 1
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Laelaps 1
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Lampus 5
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Leaena
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Leon
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Leucon 2
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Leucon 2
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Lycisca
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Lycisce
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Lynceste
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Lynceus 3
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Machimus
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Melampus 2
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Melampus 2
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Melanchaetes
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Melanchaetes
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Melaneus 3
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Melaneus 3
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Nape
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Nape
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Nebrophonus 2
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Nebrophonus 2
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Obrimus 1
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Ocydrome
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Ocydromus
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Ocypete 3
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Ocythous 1
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Omargus
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Oresitrophos
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Oresitrophos
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Orias
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Oribasus
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Oribasus
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Oxyrrhoe
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Pachylus
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Pamphagus
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Poemenis
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Poemenis
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Pterelas 1
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Pterelas 1
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Sagnos
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Sticte
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Sticte
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Spartus
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Stilbon
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Syrus 2
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Theridamas
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Theridamas
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Theriope
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Theriphone
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Therodanapis
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Theron 1
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Theron 1
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Thoos
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Thous
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Tigris
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Tigris
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Urania 3
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Volatos
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Zephyrus 2
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