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Chryse Is
Chryse Is
Mythology[edit]
Astynome was sent by her father for protection, or, according to others, to attend the celebration of a
festival of Artemis in Hypoplacian Thebe or in Lyrnessus where she was taken as prisoner
by Achilles. According to some, she was the wife of Eetion, king of Lyrnessus (usually described as
the ruler of nearby Cilician Thebe) who was killed by the son of Peleus during his campaigns against
the allies of Troy.[3]
In the first book of the Iliad, during the distribution of the booty brought by Achilles, she was given to
Agamemnon by unanimous decision in view of his kingly office. As a war prize, Agamemnon who
admitted that she was finer than his own wife Clytemnestra, enslaved Chryseis and refused to allow
her father to ransom her even though the priest of Apollo offered the Mycenaean king gifts of gold
and silver.[4] Apollo then sent a plague sweeping through the Greek armies and Agamemnon was
forced to give Chryseis back in order to end it. He sent Odysseus to return the maiden to Chryses.
Agamemnon compensated himself for this loss by taking Briseis from Achilles, an act that offended
Achilles who refused to take further part in the Trojan War.[5][6]
After the attack on Rhesus and his Thracian armies, Chryses came to the Greeks to thank them for
returning his daughter, Astynome. Because of this kindness, and because he knew that his daughter
had been properly treated, he brought her back for Agamemnon to have.[7] A later Greek legend,
preserved in Hyginus' Fabulae, states that she had a son named after her father by Agamemnon. In
the city of Thebes in Asia Minor, Chryseis gave birth to Chryses and declared him to be a son of
Apollo. This took place when she was released shortly as a prisoner and allowed to return to her
hometown.
Few years later, when the children of Agamemnon, Orestes and Iphigenia took refuge in the Island
of Sminthos, now the home of Chryseis and her family, she proposed to surrender the fugitives to
King Thoas. Her son Chryses learning them as his half-siblings helped them to kill the Taurian king.
In medieval literature, Chryseis is developed into the character Cressida.
See also[edit]
I Modi, a work of art which depicts her
References[edit]
1. ^ Scholia on the
Iliad; Hesychius, Lexicon; Malalas, Chronographia 100; Eustathius of
Thessalonica, Commentary on the Iliad 1.123.9 van der Valk.
2. ^ John Tzetzes. Antehomerica, 353-355
3. ^ Dictys Cretensis. Trojan War Chronicle, 2.17 & 2.19
4. ^ Dictys Cretensis. Trojan War Chronicle, 2.28
5. ^ Homer. Iliad, 1.378
6. ^ Eustathius ad Homer. Iliad, pp. 77, 118
7. ^ Dictys Cretensis. Trojan War Chronicle, 2.47
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Categories:
Characters in the Iliad
Fictional Greek and Roman slaves
Women of the Trojan war
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This page was last edited on 19 December 2018, at 16:58 (UTC).
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