Yahoo Web Search

Search results

  1. Sep 23, 2024 · The love between Aphrodite and Adonis is characterized by intense passion and longing. Aphrodite adored Adonis, and their relationship was filled with both joy and heartache. The dynamics of their love illustrate a complex interplay of desire and the fear of loss, which is a recurrent theme in Greek mythology.

    • The Background
    • Aphrodite and Persephone
    • Adonis and Aphrodite
    • Adonis and Aphrodite Sources

    Cenchreis

    Sometime before the birth of Adonis, his grandmother Cenchreis had made the fatal mistake of boasting that her daughter Myrrha was more beautiful than Aphrodite. The goddess didn’t like that one bit, so she punished Cenchreis in the most horrible way: she made her daughter fall in love with her husband, the Assyrian king Theias (although, others say that it was Cinyras, the king of Cyprus). Even though a goddess, Aphrodite couldn’t know back then that this sentence would set in motion a chain...

    Myrrha

    One day, urged by consuming passion and with the help of her nurse, Myrrha sneaked into her father’s bed and made love to him in the dark. This went on for a couple of nights until Theiasfinally brought in a lamp to the room so that he might learn the identity of the young girl so desperately in love with him. Horrified by the discovery that she is none other than his daughter, Theias immediately raised his sword and tried to kill Myrrha, but she managed to escape at the last moment. She fled...

    The Birth of Adonis

    The gods heard Myrrha’s prayers and found a creative way to grant them: they transformed her into a myrrh tree, and her tears momentarily turned into drops of myrrh. Just a few days later, a wild boar passed by the myrrh tree and ominously pierced its trunk with one of its tusks. Miraculously, this caused the tree to crack open, and Myrrha’s unborn baby fell down as a result; this baby-boy was none other than Adonis. The Naiads rushed forth to protect it; they laid him down on the soft leaves...

    Loved by Two Goddesses

    As irony would have it, Aphrodite happened to walk by this myrrh tree at this exact moment. Noticing the absence of a mother and the beautiful face of the baby boy, she decided to take it with herself. She secretly hid it in a chest and entrusted the chest to Persephone. Years passed, and Adonis grew into a handsome youth, more beautiful than any mortal ever beheld by human or divine eyes. And when the time came for Persephoneto give Adonis back to Aphrodite – who was, by this moment, head ov...

    Zeus’ Verdict

    The two goddesses took their disagreement to Zeus. Not wishing to cause himself any problems, Zeus referred the dispute to Calliope, one of the Muses. Following her advice, Zeus decreed that Adonis should spend four months of the year in the Underworld, and four months with Aphrodite; the final four months of the year were left to his own decision. Wanting Adonis only for himself, Aphrodite was only partially happy with this verdict – as Calliope soon found out; namely, in the act of retribut...

    The Succession of the Seasons

    Adonis loved Aphrodite almost as much as she loved him; unsurprisingly, every year he chose to spend his own four months with her. While the two lovers were together, the sunshone brightly and the soil was kind to the people, flowers bloomed and fruits ripened. Adonis’ disappearance could only mean that the time for the harvest of the crops had come; because, during the next four months, while the mortal slept in the embrace of Persephone, winter ruled the world and everything was dead and qu...

    Aphrodite, the Hunter

    For two-thirds of the year, Adonis and Aphrodite were all but inseparable. Aphrodite was so smitten with this handsome mortal that she started neglecting not only Olympus and the heavens but also the care for her own sweet beauty. She became Adonis’ constant companion, roaming through the woods with him and cheering the hounds, her skirt kilted up to her knees in the manner of Artemis. However, as much as she learned to enjoy hunting harmless animals such as the hare or the deer, she kept awa...

    The Wild Boar

    Unfortunately, Adonis didn’t take Aphrodite’s advice seriously. And one day, after his dogs had aroused a wild boar from its hiding place, Adonis pierced it with his spear. However, the boar countered fiercely: it raced after Adonis and sank its deadly tusk in the youth’s groin, stretching him dying on the yellow sand beneath his feet. Now, some say that, in order not to scare him, Aphrodite omitted one crucial detail while warning Adonis: namely, that her lover Ares could transform himself i...

    The Red Rose and the Anemone

    Aphrodite heard Adonis’ groans and rushed to her lover; but, unfortunately, she arrived just a tad too late. While running, she pricked her foot on a white rose and stained the flower with her blood; the rose turned red. It is said that this was the first red rose ever to appear on the earth; it stands for passionate love ever since then. The other flower associated with this story has somewhat darker symbolism. After blaming the merciless Fate for taking Adonis away from her, Aphrodite sprin...

    The most famous retelling of the story of Adonis and Aphrodite can be found in the tenth book of The Metamorphoses; however, Ovid’s version doesn’t include the deal between Persephone and Aphrodite; you can read about it in Apollodorus’ Library. See Also: Theias, Myrrha, Adonis, Aphrodite, Persephone, Cinyras

    • 4 min
  2. Jan 6, 2024 · As Adonis grew into a handsome young man, he caught the eye of the goddess of love and beauty, Aphrodite. She was besotted by his beauty and soon fell deeply in love with him. Adonis, in turn, was enamored with Aphrodite and the two began a passionate love affair.

  3. In this case, Adonis did not meet his lover at birth. Venus , who was the Roman version of Aphrodite, saw him hunting among the forests in Byblos. It was there that she fell in love with Adonis.

  4. As a remedial measure, she sent the child to be looked after by Persephone, the Queen of the Dead in the Underworld. It was also a move to keep him away from interfering eyes. However, Persephone, too, fell dearly in love with Adonis and refused to give him up when Aphrodite came for him.

  5. mythopedia.com › topics › adonisAdonis – Mythopedia

    Mar 10, 2023 · Adonis grew into a handsome young man—so handsome that Aphrodite fell in love with him (as did Persephone, in some traditions). For a time, Adonis enjoyed the company of his divine lover in perfect bliss. But one day, while out hunting, Adonis was gored and killed by a wild boar. Venus and Adonis by Titian (1550s).

  6. People also ask

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › AdonisAdonis - Wikipedia

    In Greek mythology, Adonis (Ancient Greek: Ἄδωνις, romanized: Adōnis; Phoenician: 𐤀𐤃𐤍, romanized: Adón) was the mortal lover of the goddesses Aphrodite and Persephone. He was famous and considered to be the ideal of male beauty in classical antiquity.

  1. People also search for