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ARCHERY IN LITERATURE MYTHOLOGY Classical Mythology has its roots in ancient Greece and the Roman Empire. There are many famous and infamous archers in mythology. Where do myths come from? Around 400 BC the Greek philosopher Plato coined the word mythologia in order to distinguish between imaginative accounts of divine actions and factual accounts of events. The Greeks of this era lived in an age that was increasingly scientific, and were skeptical of the accounts long told of gods and goddesses. How well do you know their stories? The following are summaries of the stories of mythological archers. Achilles, Apollo and Paris Achilles was the son of King Pelius of Thessaly and the sea nymph Thetis. He was the greatest of Greek warriors. The powerful gods, Zeus and Poseidon each wanted to have a son by the beautiful Thetis, but Prometheus, the fire god, warned them that her offspring would have greater powers than his father. The gods arranged the marriage between Thetis and the mortal Pelius to avoid the emergence of a power greater than theirs. Because of her love for Achilles, his mother tried to make him immortal by dipping him in the river Styx, the river that ran through Hades. Since Thetis had to hold him by his heel, this one spot was left vulnerable. At battle in Troy, Achilles was shot in the heel by an arrow from the bow of Paris. In some Myths, Apollo guided Paris’ bow. Apollo was the son of Zeus and Leto and the twin brother of Artemis, the virgin huntress. He was one of the most important deities of both the Greek and Roman religions and was the god of prophecy, archery and music. One myth tells of the love god, Eros shooting a flurry of arrows in response to taunts from Apollo. The first of Eros’ arrows was a gold-tipped shaft and when it struck Apollo it made him fall immediately in love with Daphne, the daughter of a river god and a huntress. The second arrow had a lead tip and caused Daphne to become indifferent to Apollo. Apollo pursued Daphne relentlessly until she prayed for help and was turned into a laurel tree. Paris was one of fifty sons of King Priam of Troy. According to the Greeks he was responsible for causing the Trojan War. Paris was very handsome and courted Helen, who fled her husband and went to Troy to be with Paris. His unusual attractiveness was believed to be a gift from Aphrodite, the goddess of love. During the long Trojan War, Paris was revealed as a coward, who only escaped with his life through the intervention of Aphrodite. It was an irony of fate that a poisoned arrow shot from Paris’ bow found the one vulnerable spot on the mighty Greek champion Achilles. Paris himself was killed by an arrow prior to the fall of Troy. Artemis Artemis was the daughter of Leto and Zeus, and the twin of Apollo. Artemis is the goddess of the wilderness, the hunt and wild animals, and fertility. Artemis was one of the Olympians and a virgin goddess. Her main vocation was to roam mountain forests and uncultivated land with her nymphs* in attendance hunting for lions, panthers, hinds and stags. Contradictory to the later, she helped in protecting and seeing to their well-being, also their safety and reproduction. She was armed with a bow and arrows which were made by Hephaestus and the Cyclopes (blacksmiths and metalworkers). In one legend, Artemis was born one day before her brother Apollo. Her mother gave birth to her on the island of Ortygia, then, almost immediately after her birth, she helped her mother to cross the straits over to Delos, where she then delivered Apollo. This was the beginning of her role as guardian of young children and patron of women in childbirth. Being a goddess of contradictions, she was the protectress of women in labor, but it was said that the arrows of Artemis brought them sudden death while giving birth. As was her brother, Apollo, Artemis was a divinity of healing, but also brought and spread diseases such as leprosy, rabies and even gout. Orion Orion, one of Poseidon’s unruly sons, was a gigantic and handsome hunter who could walk through the oceans with his feet on the seabed and his head above the waves. Like his giant brother, the one-eyed Polyphemus, Orion was blinded in a quarrel, but his eyes were healed by the radiance of the sun god Helios. There are many differing stories concerning his death, but according to one myth, the love that Eos, goddess of the dawn, felt for Orion was such that it caused divine jealousy until Artemis was persuaded to shoot him with an arrow on behalf of the gods. He was then raised to the stars to form a constellation. Another legend says that Orion tried to rape the virgin goddess, so she killed him with her bow and arrows. Another says she conjured up a scorpion which killed Orion and his dog. Orion became a constellation in the night sky, and his dog became Sirius, the Dog Star. Yet another version says it was the scorpion which stung him and was transformed into the constellation with Orion, the latter being Scorpio. Cupid (Eros) Cupid was the Roman god of love and he was the son of Venus, the goddess of love. He was depicted as a beautiful but wanton boy, armed with a quiver full of “arrowed desires” to inflame love in the hearts of gods and men. Some of his arrows would turn people away from those who fell in love with them. According to one myth, Aphrodite was jealous of Psyche. She was once a mortal princess whose astounding beauty earned the ire of Aphrodite when men turned their worship from goddess to girl. Aphrodite commanded Cupid to make Psyche fall in love with the most hideous of men, but the god himself fell in love with her and carried her away to his secret palace. However Cupid hid his true identity, and commanded her never to look upon his face. Psyche was eventually tricked by her jealous sisters into gazing upon the face of god, and he abandoned her. In her despair, she searched throughout the world for her lost love, and eventually came into the service of Aphrodite. The goddess commanded her perform a series of difficult labours which culminated in a journey to the Underworld. In the end Psyche was reunited with Cupid, given immortality by the god Jupiter, and the couple wed in a ceremony attended by the gods. *Nymphs: In Greek & Roman Mythology, any of numerous minor deities represented as beautiful maidens inhabiting and sometimes personifying features of nature such as trees, waters, and mountains.