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New Larousse Encyclopedia of Mythology
Introduction by Robert Graves
CRESCENT BOOKS
NEW YORK
New Larousse Encyclopedia of Mythology
Translated by Richard Aldington and Delano Ames and revised by a panel of editorial
advisers from the Larousse Mvthologie Generate edited by Felix Guirand and first published in
France by Auge, Gillon, Hollier-Larousse, Moreau et Cie, the Librairie Larousse, Paris
This 1987 edition published by Crescent Books, distributed by:
Crown Publishers, Inc.,
225 Park Avenue South
New York, New York 10003
Copyright 1959
The Hamlyn Publishing Group
Limited New edition
1968
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval
system, or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying,
recording or otherwise, without the permission of The Hamlyn Publishing Group Limited.
ISBN 0-517-00404-6
Printed in Yugoslavia
Scan begun 20 November 2001
Ended (at this point Goddess knows when)
LaRousse Encyclopedia of Mythology
Introduction by Robert Graves
Perseus and Medusa
With Athene's assistance, the hero has just slain the Gorgon Medusa with a bronze harpe, or
curved sword given him by Hermes and now, seated on the back of Pegasus who has just sprung
from her bleeding neck and holding her decapitated head in his right hand, he turns watch her
two sisters who are persuing him in fury. Beneath him kneels the headless body of the Gorgon
with her arms and golden wings outstretched. From her neck emerges Chrysor, father of the
monster Geryon. Perseus later presented the Gorgon's head to Athene who placed it on Her
shield.
Relief from Melos, British Museum
(Frontpiece)
Orestes and Iphigenia
Orestes brought before the priestess of Artemis at Tauris, where he and Pylades were
captured by the hostile people. Orestes is unaware that the priestess is his sister, Iphigenia,
believed to have been sacrificed by his father Agamemmon at Aulis.
Detail from a Pompeiian mural now in the Museo Nazionale, Naples
CONTENTS
Robert Graves:
Introduction
G.-H. Luquet:
Prehistoric Mythology
The religion of the first men
The cult of the dead
J. Viaud:
Egyptian Mythology
The Ennead of Heliopolis and the family of Osiris
Protective divinities of the Pharaohs and the kingdom
Divinities of River and Desert Divinities of Birth and Death
Men deified and the Pharaoh god
The sacred ani als
F. Guirand:
Assyro-Babylonian Mythology
The ods of Elam
L. Delaporte:
Phoenician Mythology
The ods of Carthage
The Hittite gods
F. Guirand:
Greek Mythology
Prehellenic ythology
The mythology of classical Greece
Sidereal and meteorological gods
Orion: The Pleiades: The Hyades
ods of the inds
ods of the aters
ivinities of the earth
The life of an
The under orld
The heroes
F. Guirand
and
A.-V. Pierre:
Roman Mythology
JohnX.W.P.
Corcoran:
Celtic Mythology
E. Tonnelat:
Teutonic Mythology - Germany and Scandinavia
G. Alexinsky: Slavonic Mythology
F. Guirand:
Finno-Ugric Mythology
P. Masson-Oursel
and
Louise Morin:
Mythology of Ancient Persia
Religion of the Zend-Avesta
A Summary of Moslem Myths
P. Masson-Oursel
and
Louise Morin: Indian Mythology
The Brahmanic Dharma
The eretical har as
Mythology of Hinduism
Ou-I-Tai:
Chinese Mythology
Odette Bruhl:
Japanese Mythology
The reat Legends
The ods
Buddhism in Japan
Max Fauconnet:
Mythology of the Two Americas
orth erica
exico
Central erica
South erica
Acknowledgments
INTRODUCTION
By Robert Graves
Mythology is the study of whatever religious or heroic legends are so foreign to a student's
experience that he cannot believe them to be true. Hence the English adjective 'mythical', meaning
'incredible'; and hence the omission from standard European mythologies, such as this, of all
Biblical narratives even when closely paralleled by myths from Persia, Babylonia, Egypt and
Greece; and of all hagiological legends. Otherwise, the New Larousse Encyclopedia of Mythology
offers a comprehensive and compact Who's Who or Who Was Who of the better known gods,
goddesses, heroes, monsters, demons, angels and saints from all over the world, including certain
Moslem ones. It does not discuss philosophic theory or religious experience, and treats each cult
with the same impersonal courtesy.
Myth has two main functions. The first is to answer the sort of awkward questions that
children ask, such as: 'Who made the world? How will it end? Who was the first man? Where do
souls go after death?' The answers, necessarily graphic and positive, confer enormous power on
the various deities credited with the creation and care of souls--and incidentally on their
priesthoods.
The second function of myth is to justify an existing social system and account for
traditional rites and customs. The Erechtheid clan of Athens, who used a snake as an amulet,
preserved myths of their descent from King Erichthonius, a man-serpent, son of the Smith-god
Hephaestus and foster-son of the Goddess Athene. The Ioxids of Caria explained their veneration
for rushes and wild asparagus by a story of their ancestress Perigune, whom Theseus the
Erechtheid courted in a thicket of these plants; thus incidentally claiming cousinship with the Attic
royal house. The real reason may have been that wild asparagus stalks and rushes were woven
into sacred baskets, and therefore taboo.
Myths of origin and eventual extinction vary according to the climate. In the cold North,
the first human beings were said to have sprung from the licking of frozen stones by a divine cow
named Audumla; and the Northern after-world was a bare, misty, featureless plain where ghosts
wandered hungry and shivering. According to a myth from the kinder climate of Greece, a Titan
named Prometheus, kneading mud on a flowery riverbank, made human statuettes which Athene
- who was once the Eibyan Moon--Goddess Neith - brought to life, and Greek ghosts went to a
sunless, flowerless underground cavern. These afterworlds were destined for serfs or commoners;
deserving nobles could count on warm, celestial mead-halls in the North, and Elysian Fields in
Greece.
Primitive peoples remodel old myths to conform with changes produced by revolutions, or
invasions and, as a rule, politely disguise their violence: thus a treacherous usurper will figure as a
lost heir to the throne who killed a destructive dragon or other monster and, after marrying the
king's daughter, duly succeeded him. Even myths of origin get altered or discarded. Prometheus'
creation of men from clay superseded the hatching of all nature from a world-egg laid by the
ancient Mediterranean Dove-goddess Eurynome - a myth common also in Polynesia, where the
Goddess is called Tangaroa.
A typical case-history of how myths develop as culture spreads: - Among the Akan of
Ghana, the original social system was a number of queendoms, each containing three or more
clans and ruled by a Queen-mother with her council of elder women: descent being reckoned in
the female line, and each clan having its own animal deity. The Akan believed that the world was
born from the-all-powerful Moon-goddess Ngame. who gave human beings souls, as soon as
born, by shooting-lunar rays into them. At some time or other perhaps in the early Middle Ages,
patriarchal nomads from the Sudan forced the Akans to accept a male Creator, a Sky-god named
Odomankoma: hut failed to destroy Ngame's dispensation. A compromise myth was agreed upon:
Odomankoma created the world with hammer and chisel from inert matter, after which Ngame
brought it to life. These Sudanese invaders also worshipped the seven planetary powers ruling the
week - a system originating in Babylonia. (It had spread to Northern Europe, by-passing Greece
and Rome; which is why the names of pagan deities - Tuisto. Woden, Thor and Frigg- arc still
attached to Tuesday, Wednesday. Thursday and Friday.) This extra cult provided the Akan with
seven new deities, and the compromise myth made both them and the clan-gods bisexual.
Towards the end of the fourteenth century A.D., a social revolution deposed Odomankoma in
favour of a Universal Sun-god, and altered the myth accordingly. While Odomankoma ruled, a
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