m (Reverted edit of Janus, changed back to last version by Admin) |
|||
(One intermediate revision by one other user not shown) | |||
Line 6: | Line 6: | ||
==Etymology== | ==Etymology== | ||
The word orthros in Greek means "morning twilight." His name was also spelt Orthos, after another word meaning "straight" or "height." http://www.theoi.com/Ther/KuonOrthros.html | |||
==Family== | ==Family== | ||
Line 41: | Line 39: | ||
[[Category:Greek mythology]] | [[Category:Greek mythology]] | ||
[[Category:Ground beasts]] | [[Category:Ground beasts]] | ||
[[Category:Twelve labours of Herakles]] |
Latest revision as of 15:41, 23 October 2007
In Greek mythology, Orthrus (also called Orthros, Orthos, Orthus, Orth and Orphus) was a two-headed dog, serpent-tailed dog and the brother of Cerberus, both whelped by the chthonic monster Echidna by Typhon.
Etymology
The word orthros in Greek means "morning twilight." His name was also spelt Orthos, after another word meaning "straight" or "height." http://www.theoi.com/Ther/KuonOrthros.html
Family
Orthrus was one among Echidna's fearsome brood listed in Hesiod, Theogony (306ff). He sired with her further chthonic monstrous creatures: the Chimera, the Sphinx (Iliad ix.664), the Lernaean Hydra, and even, Hesiod says, the Nemean lion.
Story
Orthrus was owned by the three-bodied Titan, Geryon. Orthrus and his master, Eurytion, were charged with guarding Geryon's herd of red cattle in the "sunset" land of Erytheia ("red one"), one of the islands of the Hesperides in the far west of the Mediterranean.
Heracles eventually slew Orthrus, Eurytion, and Geryon, before taking the red cattle to complete his tenth labor.
Symbol
Orthros may have once been represented in the heavens as the constellations Canis Major and Minor, two dogs for the two heads of Orthros. The chief star of Canis Major was Seirios, the dog star, whose dawn rising was thought to bring on the scorching heat of mid-summer. Just as Orthros represented the heat of summer, his mate the Khimaira, may have presided over the frosty chill of winter, with her December rising in the form of Capricorn. However nothing survives of this in any extant collection of Greek star myths.
References
- Robert Graves, 1960. The Greek Myths, ch. 34. Graves makes highly speculative connection of these creatures with the calendar.
- Karl Kerenyi, 1951. The Gods of the Greeks, p. 52.