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Merope (daughter of Oenopion)

Character in Greek mythology


Character in Greek mythology

FieldValue
nameMerope
image
motherHelike
titlePrincess of Chios
spouseOrion (fiancé)
fatherKing Oenopion or King Minos

Family

Merope was a daughter of King Oenopion, who was a legendary ruler of Chios and son of Princess Ariadne. He was said to have brought winemaking to the island. Merope's mother was the nymph Helike. She was a sister to Melas, Talus, Euanthes, Salagus and Athamas.

Merope and Orion

The story of Oenopion's daughter differs somewhat in different ancient sources. The hunter Orion married a lovely woman called Side and when she was punished by Hera, he walked to Chios over the Aegean, and Oenopion welcomed him with a banquet.

Merope was beloved by Orion but he did not have the approval of Oenopion. Orion got drunk and slept with or assaulted Merope. In revenge, Oenopion stabbed out Orion's eyes, and then threw him off the island.

Theories

The story of Orion and Merope varies. One source refers to Merope as the wife of Oenopion and not his daughter. Another refers to Merope as the daughter of King Minos, who was a father of Merope's grandmother.

The Hungarian mythographer Károly Kerényi, one of the founders of the modern study of mythology, wrote about Merope in Gods of the Greeks. Kerényi portrays Orion as a giant born outside his mother. He placed great stress on the variant in which Merope is the wife of Oenopion. He sees this as the remnant of a lost form of the myth in which Merope was Orion's mother (converted by later generations to his stepmother).

Notes

References

References

  1. [[Parthenius of Nicaea. Parthenius]], [https://topostext.org/work/550#20 20]
  2. [[Pausanias (geographer)
  3. [[Catasterismi. Pseudo-Eratosthenes]]'', [[Catasterismi]]'' fr. 32 with [[Hesiod]] as the authority
  4. Kerenyi, ''Gods of the Greeks'', pp. 201–204; for Merope as the wife of Oenopion, he cites the scholiast on [[Nicander]], ''Theriaca'' 15. Frazer's notes to Apollodorus.
  5. Kerényi believes the story of Hyrieus to be original, and that the pun on Orion/''ourion'' was made for the myth, rather than the other way around.
  6. link. (2007-09-29 . ''[[Milwaukee Journal Sentinel]]''.)
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