PELOPS

In Greek mythology, 'Pelops' (Greek 'Πέλοψ', from ''pelios'': dark; and ''ops'': face, eye) was venerated at Olympia, where his cult developed into the founding myth of the Olympic Games, the most important expression of unity, not only for the Peloponnesus, "land of Pelops", but for all Hellenes. At the sanctuary at Olympia, chthonic night-time libations were offered each time to "dark-faced" Pelops in his sacrificial pit (''bothros'') before they were offered to the sky-god Zeus (Burkert 1983:96).

Contents
Genealogy
Tantalus' savage banquet
Courting Hippodamia
Curse of the Pelopides
Pelop's ''cultus''
Pelops (son of Agamemnon)
Notes
Spoken-word myths - audio files
Ancient sources
Modern sources
External links

Genealogy


Pelops was a son of Tantalus and Dione. Of Phrygian or Lydian birth, he departed his homeland for Greece, and won the crown of Pisa (or Olympia) from King Oenomaus. Pelops was credited with numerous children, begotten on his wife Hippodameia, daughter of Oenomaus. Pelops' sons include Pittheus, Alcathous, Dias, Pleisthenes, Atreus, Thyestes, Copreus, and Hippalcimus. Pelops and Hippodameia also had several daughters, some of whom married into the House of Perseus, such as Astydameia (who married Alcaeus), Nicippe (who married Sthenelus), and Eurydice (who married Electryon). By the nymph Axioche, Pelops was father of Chrysippus.

Tantalus' savage banquet


Pelops' father was Tantalus, king at Mount Sipylus in Anatolia. Wanting to make an offering to the Olympians, Tantalus cut Pelops into pieces and made his flesh into a stew, then served it to the gods. Demeter, deep in grief after the abduction of her daughter Persephone by Hades, absentmindedly accepted the offering and ate the left shoulder. The other gods sensed the plot, however, and held off from eating of the boy's body. Pelops was ritually reassembled and brought back to life, his shoulder replaced with one made of ivory made for him by Hephaestus. Pindar mentioned this tradition in his First Olympian Ode, only to reject it as a malicious invention.
After his resurrection, Pelops was more beautiful than before; Poseidon fell in love with him, took him to Olympus, and made the youth his lover, teaching him to drive the divine chariot. Later, Zeus threw Pelops out of Olympus, angry that his father, Tantalus, had stolen the food of the gods, given it to his subjects, and revealed the secrets of the gods.

Courting Hippodamia


Having grown to manhood Pelops wanted to marry Hippodamia. King Oenomaus her father, fearful of a prophecy that claimed he would be killed by his son-in-law, had killed thirteen suitors of Hippodamia after defeating them in a chariot race. Pelops came to ask for her hand and prepared to race Oinomaus. Worried about losing, he went to the seaside and invoked Poseidon, his former lover.[1] Reminding Poseidon of their love ("Aphrodite's sweet gifts"), he asked Poseidon for help. Smiling, Poseidon caused a chariot drawn by winged horses to appear.[2] Still unsure of himself, Pelops (or alternatively, Hippodamia herself) convinced Oinomaos' charioteer, Myrtilus, a son of Hermes, (by promising him half of Oinomaos' kingdom and the first night in bed with Hippodamia), to help him win. The night before the race, while Myrtilus was putting Oinomaos' chariot together, he replaced the bronze linchpins attaching the wheels to the chariot axle with fake ones made of beeswax. The race started, and went on for a long time. But just as Oinomaos was catching up to Pelops and readying to kill him, the wheels flew off and the chariot broke apart. Myrtilus survived, but Oinomaos was dragged to death by his horses. Pelops then killed Myrtilus after the latter attempted to rape Hippodamia.
Walter Burkert notes[3] that though the story of Hippodamia's abduction figures in the Hesiodic Catalogue of Women and on the chest of Cypselus (ca. 570 BCE) that was conserved at Olympia, and though preparations for the chariot-race figured in the pediment of the great temple of Zeus at Olympia, the myth of the chariot race only became important at Olympia with the introduction of chariot racing in the twenty-fifth Olympiad (680 BCE). G. Devereux connected the abduction of Hippodamia with animal husbandry taboos of Elis,[4] and the influence of Elis at Olympia that grew in the seventh century.

Curse of the Pelopides


As Myrtilus died, he cursed Pelops for his ultimate betrayal. This was one of the sources of the curse that destroyed his family (two of his sons, Atreus and Thyestes killed a third, Chrysippus, who was his favorite son and was meant to inherit the kingdom; Atreus and Thyestes were banished by him together with Hippodamia, their mother, who then hanged herself) and haunted Pelops' children, grandchildren, and great-grandchildren including Atreus, Thyestes, Agamemnon, Aegisthus, Menelaus and Orestes.

Pelop's ''cultus''


The shrine of Pelops at Olympia, the ''Pelopion'' "drenched in glorious blood"[5], described by Pausanias[6] stood apart from the temple of Zeus, next to Pelops' grave-site by the ford in the river. It was enclosed with a circle of stones. Pelops was propitiated at night, with the offering of a black ram. His remains were contained in a chest near the sanctuary of Artemis Kordax (Pausanmias 6.22.1), though in earlier times a gigantic shoulder blade was shown; during the Trojan War, John Tzetzes said, Pelops' shoulder-blade was brought to Troy by the Greeks because the Trojan prophet Helenus claimed the Pelopids would be able to win by doing so.[7]. Pausanias was told the full story:[8] the shoulder-blade of Pelops was brought to Troy from Pisa, the rival of Elis; on the return, the bone was lost in a shipwreck, but afterwards recovered by a fisherman, miraculously caught in his net.
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Pelops (son of Agamemnon)


There is another 'Pelops' in Greek mythology. This was a son of Agamemnon and Cassandra. This Pelops, carrying the ancestral name, and his twin brother Teledamus (destined to have been "far-ruling"), the very emblems of the Pelopides, were murdered in their infancy by the usurper Aegisthus.

Notes



1. Pindar, First Olympian Ode. 71.
2. Cicero, Tusculanae Disputationes''2.27.67 (noted in Kerenyi 1959:64).
3. Burkert, ''Homo Necans'' 1983, p 95f.
4. G. Devereux, "The abduction of Hippodameia as 'aiton' of a Greek animal husbandry rite" ''SMSR'' '36' (1965), pp3-25. Burkert, in following Devbereux's thesis attests Herodotus iv.30, Plutarch's Greek Questions 303b and Pausanias 5.5.2.
5. Pindar, First Olympian Ode.
6. Pausanias, 5.13.1-3.
7. Adrienne Mayor, ''The First Fossil Hunters: Paleontology in Greek and Roman Times'' (Princeton University Press, 2000) discusses the uses made of giant fossil bones in Greek cult and myth.
8. Pausanias 5.13.4>


Spoken-word myths - audio files


Pelops myths as told by story tellers
Bibliography of reconstruction: Homer, ''Odyssey,'' 11.567 (7th c. BCE); Pindar, ''Olympian Odes,'' 1 (476 BCE); Euripides, ''Orestes,'' 12-16 (408 BCE); Apollodorus, ''Epitomes'' 2: 1-9 (140 BCE); Ovid, ''Metamorphoses,'' VI: 213, 458 (8 CE); Hyginus, ''Fables,'' 82: Tantalus; 83: Pelops (1st c. CE); Pausanias, ''Description of Greece,'' 2.22.3 (160 - 176 CE)
Bibliography of reconstruction: Pindar, ''Olympian Ode,'' I (476 BCE); Sophocles, (1) ''Electra,'' 504 (430 - 415 BCE) & (2) ''Oenomaus,'' Fr. 433 (408 BCE); Euripides, ''Orestes,'' 1024-1062 (408 BCE); Apollodorus, ''Epitomes'' 2, 1-9 (140 BCE); Diodorus Siculus, ''Histories,'' 4.73 (1st c. BCE); Hyginus, ''Fables,'' 84: Oinomaus; ''Poetic Astronomy,'' ii (1st c. CE); Pausanias, ''Description of Greece,'' 5.1.3 - 7; 5.13.1; 6.21.9; 8.14.10 - 11 (ca. 160 - 176 CE); Philostratus the Elder ''Imagines,'' I.30: Pelops (170 - 245 CE); Philostratus the Younger, ''Imagines,'' 9: Pelops (ca. 200 - 245 CE); First Vatican Mythographer, 22: Myrtilus; Atreus et Thyestes; Second Vatican Mythographer, 146: Oenomaus
Bibliography of reconstruction: Pindar, ''Olympian Ode,'' I (476 BCE); Apollodorus ''Library and Epitome'' 3.5.5 (140 BCE); Hyginus, ''Fables,'' 85. Chrysippus; 243. Women who Committed Suicide (1st c. CE); Pausanias, ''Description of Greece,'' 9.5.5-10, 6.20.7 (c. 160 - 176 CE); Athenaeus, ''The Deipnosophists,'' Book XIII, 602 (c. 200 CE); Clement of Alexandria, ''Exhortation to the Greeks,'' ii, 34, 3 - 5 (150 - 215 CE)

Ancient sources



Ovid, ''Metamorphoses'' VI, 403-11

Apollodorus, Epitome II, 3-9; V, 10

Pindar, Olympian Ode I

Sophocles, ''Electra'' 504 and ''Oinomaos'' Fr. 433

Euripides, ''Orestes'' 1024-1062

Diodorus Siculus, Histories 4.73

Hyginus, Fables: 84 - Oenomaus

Pausanias, Description of Greece 5.1.3-7, 5.13.1, 6.21.9, 8.14.10-11

Philostratus, Imagines 1.30 - Pelops

Philostratus the Younger, Imagines 9 - Pelops

★ First Vatican Mythographer, 22 Myrtilus,

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