Hostname: page-component-cd9895bd7-lnqnp Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-23T11:08:50.195Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Myth and the polis in Bacchylides' Eleventh Ode*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 February 2012

Douglas Cairns
Affiliation:
University of Edinburgh

Abstract

Bacchylides' eleventh epinician ends not with renewed praise of the victor but with an extension to the ode's main myth which forges a link between the Arcadian cult of Artemis founded by Proetus and his daughters and the foundation of the victor's home city of Metapontum by Achaean colonists identified with the heroic captors of Troy. The culmination of the ode in praise of a successful colonial foundation, it is argued, is the key to the principles on which Bacchylides has selected and moulded the mythological elements that he deploys in the rest of the ode. Proetus' foundation of Tiryns resolves the civil strife which threatened to destroy Argos and commends colonization as a means of social and political progress; while the cult of Artemis at Lousoi, founded to expiate the Proetids' offence against Hera, emphasizes the role of marriage in maintaining the strength and solidarity of the community. The emphasis in both these myths on the divine intervention which rectifies human error links them to the experience of the victor and to the theme of the proper cultivation of the gods that is emphasized in the ode's conclusion. In constructing mythical narratives that are exemplary for the victor and his community, Bacchylides departs from mythological tradition in significant respects and in ways which suggest that the ode's argument reflects both the victor's status in the community and perhaps also the circumstances of its own performance.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Society for the Promotion of Hellenic Studies 2005

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Adamesteanu, D. (1974) La Basilicata antica. Storia e monumenti (Cava dei Tirreni)Google Scholar
Bagordo, A. and Zimmermann, B. (2000) Bakchylides. 100 Jahre seit seiner Wiederentdeckung (Munich)Google Scholar
Bornmann, F. (1968) Callimachi Hymnus in Dianam (Florence)Google Scholar
Brelich, A. (1969) Paides e parthenoi (Rome)Google Scholar
Burkert, W. (1983) Homo Necans (Berkeley)Google Scholar
Burnett, A.P. (1985) The Art of Bacchylides (Cambridge, MA)Google Scholar
Buxton, R.G.A. (1982) Persuasion in Greek Tragedy. A Study of Peitho (Cambridge)Google Scholar
Carey, C. (1980) ‘Bacchylides experiments: Ode 11’, Mnemosyne 33, 225–43CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Carter, J.C (1994) ‘Sanctuaries in the chora of Metaponto’, in Alcock, S.E. and Osborne, R. (eds), Placing the Gods (Oxford) 161–98CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Juliis, H.M (2001) Metaponto (Bari)Google Scholar
De Siena, A. (2001a) Metaponto. Archeologia di una colonia greca (Taranto)Google Scholar
De Siena, A. (2001b) ‘Profilo storico-archeologico’, in De Siena (2001a) 744Google Scholar
Dillon, M. (2002) Girls and Women in Classical Greek Religion (London)Google Scholar
Dörig, J. (1962) ‘Lysippe und Iphianassa’, MDAI(A) 77, 7291Google Scholar
Dougherty, C. (1993) The Poetics of Colonization (Oxford)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dowden, K. (1989) Death and the Maiden. Girls' Initiation Rites in Greek Mythology (London)Google Scholar
Fearn, D. (2003a) Bacchylides: Politics and Poetic Tradition (diss., Oxford)Google Scholar
Fearn, D. (2003b) ‘Mapping Phleious: politics and myth-making in Bacchylides 9’, CQ 53, 347–67CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Figueira, T.J (1993) Excursions in Epichoric History (Lanham, MD)Google Scholar
Fowler, R.L (2000) Early Greek Mythography 1 (Oxford)Google Scholar
Friedländer, P. (1905) Argolica (Berlin)Google Scholar
Garner, R. (1992) ‘Countless deeds of valour: Bacchylides 11’, CQ 42, 523–5CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Golden, M. (1998) Sport and Society in Ancient Greece (Cambridge)Google Scholar
Hadzisteliou-Price, T. (1978) Kourotrophos. Cults and Representations of the Greek Nursing Deities (Leiden)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hamilton, R. (1974) Epinikion (The Hague)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Henrichs, A. (1974) ‘Die Proitiden im hesiodeischen Katalog’, ZPE 15, 297301Google Scholar
Hurst, A. (1983) ‘Temps du récit chez Pindare (Pyth. 4) et Bacchylide (11)’, MH 40, 154–68Google Scholar
Huxley, G. (1973) ‘The date of Pherecydes of Athens’, GRBS 14, 137–43Google Scholar
Jacoby, F. (1947) ‘The first Athenian prose writer’, Mnemosyne 13, 1364Google Scholar
Jeanmaire, H. (1939) Couroi et courètes. Essai sur l'éducation spartiate et sur les rites d'adolescence dans l'antiquité hellénique (Lille)Google Scholar
Johnston, S.I (1999) Restless Dead. Encounters between the Living and the Dead in Ancient Greece (Berkeley)Google Scholar
Jost, M. (1985) Sanctuaires et cultes d'Arcadie (Paris)Google Scholar
Jost, M. (1992) ‘La Legende de Mélampus en Argolide et dans le Péloponnèse’, in Piérart, M. (ed.), Polydipsion Argos (BCH Suppl. 22, Paris) 173–84Google Scholar
Jurenka, H. (1898) Die neugefundenen Lieder des Bakchylides (Vienna)Google Scholar
Kenyon, F.G (1897) The Poems of Bacchylides (London)Google Scholar
Köhnken, A. (1976) ‘Hemerasien- oder Pythiensieg? Zu Bakchylides, ep. 11’, WürzJbb 2, 4951Google Scholar
Krummen, E. (1990) Pyrsos Hymnon. Festliche Gegenwart und mythisch-rituelle Tradition als Voraussetzung einer Pindarinterpretation (Berlin)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Löffler, I. (1963) Die Melampodie (Meisenheim am Gian)Google Scholar
MacFarlane, K. (1998) ‘Bacchylides absolvens: the defeat of Alexidamus in Bacchylides 11’, in Bews, J.P., Storey, I.C. and Boyne, M.R. (eds), Celebrado. Thirtieth Anniversary Essays at Trent University (Peterborough, Ontario) 42–9Google Scholar
Maehler, H. (1982) Die Lieder des Bakchylides 1: Die Siegeslieder (2 vols, Leiden)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Maehler, H. (2004) Bacchylides. A Selection (Cambridge)Google Scholar
Mann, C. (2000) ‘Der Dichter und sein Auftraggeber. Die Epinikien Bakchylides' und Pindars als Träger von Ideologien’, in Bagordo and Zimmermann (2000) 2946Google Scholar
Meiser, O. (1904) Untersuchungen zur Mythologie bei Bakchylides (Munich)Google Scholar
Merkelbach, R. (1973) ‘Bakchylides auf einen Sieger in den HMEPAΣIA zu Lousoi’, ZPE 11, 257–60Google Scholar
Mertens, D. (2001) ‘L'architettura’, in De Siena (2001a) 4570Google Scholar
Mertens-Horn, M. (2001) ‘La scultura di marmo’, in De Siena (2001a) 7188Google Scholar
Mitsopoulos-Leon, V. (1993) ‘The statue of Artemis at Lousoi: some thoughts’, in Palagia, O. and Coulson, W. (eds), Sculpture from Arcadia and Laconia (Oxford) 33–9Google Scholar
Morgan, C. (1999) ‘Cultural sub-zones in early Iron Age and Archaic Arkadia?’, in Nielsen, T.H. and Roy, J. (eds), Defining Ancient Arcadia (Copenhagen) 382456Google Scholar
Nielsen, T. H. and Roy, J. (1998) ‘The Azanians of northern Arcadia’, C&M 49, 544Google Scholar
Nilsson, M.P. (1906) Griechische Feste von religiöser Bedeutung mit Ausschluβ der attischen (Leipzig)Google Scholar
Nilsson, M.P. (1967) Geschichte der griechischen Religion (Munich)Google Scholar
Olbrich, G. (1976) ‘Ein Heiligtum der Artemis Metapontina?’, PP 31, 376408Google Scholar
Pfeijffer, I.L (1998) ‘Athletic age categories in victory odes’, Nikephoros 11, 2138Google Scholar
Power, T. (2000) ‘The parthenoi of Bacchylides 13’, HSCP 100, 6781Google Scholar
Pretzler, M. (1999) ‘Die antiken Quellen zum Raum Pheneos-Lousoi’, in K. Tausend (1999) 3683Google Scholar
Prinz, F. (1979) Grundungsmythen und Sagenchronologie (Munich)Google Scholar
Reichel, W. and Wilhelm, A. (1901) ‘Das Heiligthum der Artemis zu Lousoi’, ÖJh 4, 189Google Scholar
Rengakos, A. (2000) ‘Zu Bakchylides' Erzähltechnik’, in Bagordo and Zimmermann (2000) 101–12Google Scholar
Robert, C. (1917) ‘ἡ ίστορία παρὰ Фερεκύδηι’, Hermes 52, 308–13Google Scholar
Robert, C. (1926) Die griechische Heldensage (Berlin)Google Scholar
Scanlon, T.H. (2002) Eros and Greek Athletics (Oxford)CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schwartz, J. (1960) Pseudo-Hesiodea (Leiden)Google Scholar
Seaford, R. (1987) ‘The tragic wedding’, JHS 107, 106–30CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seaford, R. (1988) ‘The eleventh ode of Bacchylides: Hera, Artemis, and the absence of Dionysus’, JHS 108, 118–36CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seaford, R. (1996) Euripides. Bacchae (Warminster)Google Scholar
Segal, C.P. (1998) ‘Bacchylides reconsidered: epithets and the dynamic of lyric narrative’, in Aglaia (Lanham, MD) 251–80 (revised from QUCC 22 (1976) 99–130)Google Scholar
Shapiro, H.A. (1993) Personification in Greek Art (Zürich)Google Scholar
Stern, J. (1965) ‘Bestial imagery in Bacchylides' Ode 11’, GRBS 6, 275–82Google Scholar
Stiglitz, J. (1967) Die grossen Göttinnen Arkadiens (Vienna)Google Scholar
Suárez de la Torre, E. (2000) ‘Bemerkungen zu den Mythen bei Bakchylides’, in Bagordo and Zimmermann (2000) 6985Google Scholar
Tausend, K. (1993) ‘Lousoi in archaischer Zeit’, ÖJh 62 Beiblatt, 1326Google Scholar
Tausend, K. (ed.) (1999) Pheneos und Lousoi. Untersuchungen zu Geschichte und Topographie Nordostarkadiens (Grazer altertumskundliche Studien 5, Frankfurt am Main)Google Scholar
Tausend, S. (1999) ‘Sportstätten und Agone in Lousoi und Pheneos’, in K. Tausend (1999) 370–9Google Scholar
Thummer, E. (19681969) Pindar. Die isthmischen Gedichte (Heidelberg)Google Scholar
Vian, F. (1965) ‘Mélampus et les Proitides’, REA 67, 2530CrossRefGoogle Scholar
West, M.L (1985) The Hesiodic Catalogue of Women (Oxford)Google Scholar
Zancani, Montuoro P. (1975) ‘I labirinti di Francavilla ed il culto di Athena’, RAAN 50, 125–40Google Scholar