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Search results for alpha,1298 in Adler number:
Headword:
Alkuonides
hêmerai
Adler number: alpha,1298
Translated headword: Alcyon days, Halcyon days, kingfisher days
Vetting Status: high
Translation: [Meaning] those of fine weather.[1]
People differ on their number. For
Simonides in
Pentathla says they are 11, as does
Aristotle in [his book]
Concerning Animals,[2] but Demagoras of
Samos [says] 7, and
Philochorus 9.[3]
Hegesander[4] tells the myth about them in his
Memoirs as follows. They were the daughters of the giant Alkyoneus: Phosthonia,[5] Anthe,[6]
Methone,[7] Alkippa,[8] Palene,[9] Drimo,[10] Asterie.[11] After the death of their father they threw themselves into the sea from Kanastraion, which is the peak of
Pellene, but Amphitrite made them birds, and they were called Alkyones from their father. Windless days with a calm sea are called Alkyonides.
Also [sc. attested is the variant form] "Alkyonian day".[12]
Greek Original:Alkuonides hêmerai: hai eudieinai. peri tou arithmou diapherontai. Simônidês gar en Pentathlois ia# phêsin autas kai Aristotelês en tois peri zôiôn, Dêmagoras de ho Samios z#, kai Philochoros th#. ton de ep' autais muthon Hêgêsandros en tois peri hupomnêmatôn legei houtôs: Alkuoneôs tou gigantos thugateres êsan, Phôsthonia, Anthê, Methônê, Alkippa, Palênê, Drimô, Asteriê. hautai meta tên tou patros teleutên apo Kanastraiou, ho estin akron tês Pellênês, erripsan hautas eis tên thalassan, Amphitritê d' autas ornithas epoiêse, kai apo tou patros Alkuones eklêthêsan. hai de nênemoi kai galênên echousai hêmerai Alkuonides kalountai. kai Alkuoneios hêmera.
Notes:
For a selection of uses of the phrase "halcyon days" see web address 1 below. Note that the initial h-, used in English from Shakespeare's day to our own but not in other languages such as French, is not found here or in most Greek sources (but is found in our texts of some ancient grammarians). It comes from an apparently false etymology of these words from the root for salt,
hal- (see
alpha 1300). The kingfisher was well known for its mournful, lamenting cry, usually derived from the death and metamorphosis of Alkyone (see
alpha 1299), but here associated with the leader of the Giants in the Gigantomachy. Its cry was taken as one of ill-omen (e.g. Apollonius Rhodius,
Argonautica 1.1085).
[1] cf. the
scholia to
Aristophanes,
Birds 250.
[2] The halcyon days were associated with a habit of nesting and incubating for 7 days on either side of the winter solstice, a total of 14 days, described first by the poet
Simonides in a fragment (
PMG 508 Page) from his
Victory Odes for the Pentathlon (this poet was probably the first to try to immortalize in grand choral odes the transitory glory of athletic victory), then by
Aristotle -- quoting
Simonides -- in
History of Animals 542b4-24. During those days, especially around
Sicily, the seas were calm and the weather clear; hence the phrase.
Aristotle's description is the basis of the present entry and those in lexica by
Pausanias the Atticist,
Photius, and others.
[3] Demagoras fr. 3 FHG (4.378);
Philochorus FGrH 328 F186. (For
Philochorus see
phi 441 and generally OCD(4) s.v.) The numbers in the text of the Suda are corrupt and must be emended: the figure in
Simonides and
Aristotle is unambiguously 14.
[4]
Hegesander (or Hegesandros) of
Delphi compiled, in the C2 BC, at least 6 books of unreliable
Memoirs, often cited by
Athenaeus; see OCD(4) s.v. (This is his fr. 46 FHG = 4.422.) Some authorities believe that the nest floated on the calm sea for those days, but others were aware that the kingfisher nests in the sand. Lucian in his
True Histories tells of an imaginary giant kingfisher, but the ancients seem to have thought of the real kingfisher, beloved by Zeus, who calms the weather for its nesting (
Simonides). The Alcyon Sea was so named, according to
Strabo, because this corner of the Gulf of Corinth is both a nesting place for the kingfisher and a stretch sheltered from the wind.
[5] cf.
phi 672.
[6] cf.
alpha 2505.
[7] cf.
mu 434.
[8] cf. already
alpha 1287.
[9] cf.
pi 79, where the name is (correctly) "Pallene".
[10] cf.
delta 1529.
[11] cf.
alpha 4231.
[12] In the Greek,
*)alkuo/neios (almost unattested outside lexicography) rather than
*)alkuoni/s.
Associated internet address:
Web address 1
Keywords: aetiology; comedy; daily life; definition; geography; historiography; imagery; mythology; poetry; proverbs; zoology
Translated by: Robert Dyer on 11 May 2000@13:11:11.
Vetted by:
No. of records found: 1
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