| advertise add site services publishers database health videos | ![]() | about toolbar stats live show health store more stuff JOIN/LOGIN |
John Berardi - Fitness Mythology johnberardi.com | Christine Page MD | 2012, astrology, alchemy, mythology christinepage.com | Bowen Mythology usbowen.com | Death - the last taboo: Death is the beginning of Mythology by Tony deathonline.net |
For other uses, see Iapetus.
In Greek mythology, Iapetus, also Iapetos or Japetus (Greek: Ἰαπετός), was a Titan, the son of Uranus and Gaia, and father (by an Oceanid named Clymene or Asia) of Atlas, Prometheus, Epimetheus, and Menoetius and through Prometheus, Epimetheus and Atlas an ancestor of the human race. [edit] Myth of IapetusIapetus ("the Piercer") is the one Titan mentioned by Homer in the Iliad (8.478–81) as being in Tartarus with Cronus. He is a brother of the Titan Lord, Cronus. He was the one who ruled the Underworld during the Golden Age. Iapetus' wife is normally a daughter of Oceanus and Tethys named Clymene or Asia. In Hesiod's Works and Days Prometheus is addressed as "son of Iapetus", and no mother is named. However, in Hesiod's Theogony, Klymene is listed as Iapetus' wife and the mother of Prometheus. In Aeschylus's play Prometheus Bound, Prometheus is son of the goddess Themis with no father named (but still with at least Atlas as a brother). However, in Horace's Odes, in Ode 1.3 Horace describes how "audax Iapeti genus/ Ignem fraude mala gentibus intulit"; "The bold offspring of Iapetus [i.e. Prometheus]/ brought fire to peoples by wicked deceit". Since mostly the Titans indulge in marriage of brother and sister, it might be that Aeschylus is using an old tradition in which Themis is Iapetus' wife but that the Hesiodic tradition preferred that Themis and Mnemosyne be consorts of Zeus alone. Nevertheless, it would have been quite within Achaean practice for Zeus to take the wives of the Titans as his mistresses after throwing down their husbands. Pausanias (8.27.15) writes:
Buphagus is a tributary of the river Alpheus, Thornax is a mountain between Sparta and Sellasia, and Pholoe is a mountain between Arcadia and Elis. Stephanus of Byzantium quotes Athenodorus of Tarsus:
This may be the same Anchiale who appears in the Argonautica (1.1120f):
[edit] Iapetus and JaphethIapetus has (for example, by John Milton) been equated with Japheth (יֶפֶת), the son of Noah, based on the similarity of their names and on old Jewish traditions, that held Japheth as the ancestor of the Greeks, the Slavs, the Italics, the Teutons etc. (see Josephus, Antiquities of the Jews). The myth of Deucalion opposes this allegation. (Similarly Ham, son of Noah was equated with "Jupiter Ammon", i.e. the Egyptian god Amun.) [edit] External links
| ||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
| ↑ top of page ↑ | about thumbshots |