- Source: Cassiphone
Cassiphone (; Ancient Greek: Κασσιφόνη, romanized: Kassiphónē, lit. 'fratricide') is a minor figure in Greek mythology, the daughter of the sorceress-goddess Circe and the Trojan War hero Odysseus. She is mentioned in passing in the works of the Hellenistic poet Lycophron and the 12th-century Byzantine scholar John Tzetzes.
Etymology
Cassiphone's name is a compound word that translates to "brother killer", from the words κάσις (kásis) meaning both "brother" and "sister", and φόνος (phónos) meaning "murder, manslaughter".
Mythology
Cassiphone is alluded to in obscure lines in Hellenistic poet Lycophron's Alexandra, with an explanation provided in the commentary of twelfth-century Byzantine scholar John Tzetzes, who is the only one to mention her by name; she is most likely a late classical or Hellenistic invention, whose only purpose is to expand on the myth of Telegonus, the son of Odysseus and Circe. Lycophron writes:
When he is dead, Perge, hill of the Tyrrhenians, shall receive his ashes in the land of Gortyn; when, as he breathes out his life, he shall bewail the fate of his son and his wife, whom her husband shall slay and himself next pass to Hades, his throat cut by the hands of his sister, the own cousin of Glaucon and Apsyrtus.
According to Tzetzes, Cassiphone is the daughter Odysseus had by Circe with whom he spent one year together during his travels to get back home to Ithaca following the end of the Trojan War. The story of the Telegony, the lost sequel to the Odyssey, goes that her full-brother Telegonus left in search of the father he never knew, arrived in Ithaca and there he accidentally ended up killing Odysseus, as he did not recognise him. Telegonus then married Odysseus's widow Penelope, while Circe married Telemachus, Odysseus's son by Penelope.
According to Lycophron and Tzetzes, Circe then used her powers to bring Odysseus back to life, and he proceeded to wed Cassiphone to Telemachus, who was her half-brother. After some time Telemachus killed Circe following a quarrell with her, angered with her for ordering him around, prompting Cassiphone to kill Telemachus in order to avenge her slain mother. Odysseus then died again, this time of grief after witnessing those acts.
See also
Cain
Osiris myth
Perses of Colchis
Footnotes
References
Bibliography
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- Cassiphone
- Telemachus
- Telegonus (son of Odysseus)
- Odysseus
- Telegony
- Fratricide
- Circe
- Perses (brother of Aeetes)
- Harpalyce (daughter of Clymenus)
- Alphesiboea of Psophis