(Translated by https://www.hiragana.jp/)
Idaea - Wikipedia Jump to content

Idaea

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Idaea or Idaia (Ancient Greek: Ἰδαία) is the name of several figures in Greek mythology, it means "she who comes from Ida" or "she who lives on Ida",[1] and is often associated with Mount Ida in Crete, and Mount Ida in the Troad.

Figures

[edit]

Those named Idaea include:

  • Idaea, a nymph, who was the mother, by the river-god Scamander, of King Teucer.[2]
  • Idaea, the daughter of the Scythian king Dardanus, and wife of Phineus, who falsely accused her stepsons, leading to their imprisonment and torture.[3]
  • Idaea, the mother of the Kuretes (Κかっぱοおみくろんυうぷしろんρろーῆτες), the armed dancers who guarded the infant Zeus in a cave on Cretan Mount Ida.[4]
  • Idaea, a nymph who consorted with Zeus and became the mother of Cres, possible eponym of Crete.[5] She may be the same with Idaea, daughter of Minos who mothered Asterion by Zeus also.[6]

Etymology

[edit]

The name is related with Mount Ida. In the Iliad (2.821 etc.), Ida[7] means wooded hill, and recalls the mountain worship in the Minoan mother goddess religion.[8] Three inscriptions in Linear A, which represents the Minoan language, bear just the name i-da-ma-te (AR Zf 1 and 2, and KY Za 2). The inscriptions may refer to the "mother goddess of Ida" (Ἰδαία μάτηρ).[9][10]

Νにゅーotes

[edit]
  1. ^ Grimal, s.v. Idaea, p. 227
  2. ^ Grimal, s.v. Idaea, p. 227; Tripp, s.v. Idaea (2), pp. 315–316; Diodorus Siculus, 4.75.1; Apollodorus, 3.12.1
  3. ^ Grimal, s.v. Idaea p. 227; Tripp, s.v. Idaea (1), p. 315; Apollodorus, 3.15.3; Diodorus Siculus, 4.43.3–4, 4.44.3–4
  4. ^ Diodorus Siculus, 3.61.2, 3.71.2.
  5. ^ Stephanus of Byzantium, s.v. Krētē
  6. ^ Clementine Recognitions 10.21
  7. ^ δでるたαあるふぁ; alternative dialectal form (Ionic):δでるたηいーた Idē.
  8. ^ Nagy, Gregory (1963). "Greek-Like Elements in Linear A". Greek, Roman, and Byzantine Studies (4). Harvard University Press: 200.
  9. ^ F.Schachermeyer(1964) Die Minoische Kultur des alten Kreta, p. 266 . W. Kohlhammer Stuttgart.
  10. ^ Richard Valance

References

[edit]