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In Greek mythology, Areion or Arion (Ancient Greek: Άρείων) is a divinely-bred, extremely swift immortal horse which, according to the Latin poet Sextus Propertius, was endowed with speech. This Areion is not to be confused with the poet Arion of Lesbos (7th century BC), a court musician at the palace of Periander, and a legendary kitharode in antiquity, who was saved by dolphins in a Greek myth. Areion's siring by Poseidon in stallion form vary by author: according to the Pseudo-Apollodorus, the horse was foaled by Demeter while she was "in the likeness of a Fury"; Pausanias reported that, according to Antimachus, the horse was the foal of Gaia, the Earth, herself. In the Epic Cycle Areion was mounted most notably by Adrastus, king of Argos. The earliest literary mention of Areion is in Homer, Iliad, XXIII, 346. Statius also made mention of the horse in Thebaid, VI, 301.
[edit] Pausanias
In support of the lineage they advance, Pausanias reports, the Arcadians cite some verses from the Iliad and the Thebaid. [edit] Statius and AntimachusAccording to the Thebaid, Adrastus flees from Thebes "...wearing mourning clothes and carried by green-maned Areion." Latin scholia assert that these verses indicate that Neptune was Areion's sire. Antimachus of Colophon says that Areion was a child of the Earth:
This fabulous horse, of divine race, had the peculiarity of having a green mane. Heracles, waging war with the Eleans, acquired this horse from Oncus. The son of Zeus would have thus ridden upon Areion when he seized Elis. Thereafter, Heracles gave Areion to Adrastus; this is why Antimachus said of Areion: "Adrastus was the third lord who tamed him." [edit] Pseudo-ApollodorusThe Pseudo-Apollodorus (III, 6, 8) recounts that in the defeat of the Argives, the same battle in which Eteocles and Polynices slew each other, Adrastus alone among the Argive leaders survived, saved by his horse Areion that Demeter, in the likeness of a Fury, had conceived by Poseidon. The scholiasts of the Iliad (XXIII, 347) and of Lycophron (153) attribute to him the same origin. [edit] References[edit] Sources
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