Epimelides

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Template:Short description Template:Greek myth (nymph) In Greek mythology, Epimelides (Template:Langx) or Epimeliades (Script error: No such module "Lang".) are nymphs who protect herds. Antoninus Liberalis relates a tale in which they compete with Messapian shepherds in dancing. The term may have sometimes also been used to refer to tree nymphs.

Type of nymph

The Epimelides are nymphs who, it was believed, were tasked with protecting herds of animals.[1] Pausanias (2nd century AD), who calls them "Epimeliades", mentions them as one of the three types of nymphs, alongside the Naiads and Dryads.[2]

Other names – Template:Translit (Script error: No such module "Lang".), Template:Translit (Script error: No such module "Lang".), Template:Translit (Script error: No such module "Lang".), and Template:Translit (Script error: No such module "Lang".) – denote nymphs associated with trees, and stem from the word Template:Translit (Script error: No such module "Lang".); given these terms, Template:Ill states that the term "Epimelides" may have at times also been used to refer to tree nymphs.[3]

Antoninus Liberalis

Antoninus Liberalis, citing Nicander (2nd century BC), relates that a group of performing Epimelides arrived in the land of the Messapians. Young local shepherds gathered to see them, leaving behind the animals under their protection, and proclaimed that their dancing abilities were superior to those of the nymphs. The Epimelides, incensed, competed in dancing against their mortal counterparts; but the men, unaware that they had challenged divinities, danced as though they were against other young men, and, being shepherds, their dancing was "without art". The nymphs, on the other hand, danced gracefully and beautifully, and beat their challengers, saying to them: Template:Poem quote The young men were then transformed into trees, and it is said that groans can still be heard emanating from these trees.[4]

According to Jessen, this tale fits with both possible conceptions of these figures, as either nymphs related to herds or nymphs associated with trees.[5] A similar tale appears in Ovid's Metamorphoses, in which a shephard from Apulia mocks the dancing of a group of nymphs, resulting in him being turned into a tree.[6]

Notes

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References

Template:Greek mythology (deities) Template:Authority control

  1. RE, s.v. Epimelides; Larson, pp. 297 n. 17, 360.
  2. RE, s.v. Epimelides; Pausanias, 8.4.2.
  3. RE, s.v. Epimelides.
  4. Antoninus Liberalis, 31 (Celoria, p. 90).
  5. RE, s.v. Epimelides
  6. Celoria, p. 197.