Erinyes (Furies)

Orestes Pursued by the Furies by John Singer Sargent (1921).
Museum of Fine Arts BostonPublic DomainOverview
The Erinyesalso known as the “Furies” or “Eumenides,” were the goddesses responsible for punishing wrongdoing and blood-guilt. They appeared above all when someone carried out a crime against a family memberbut they were also invoked in cases of nonfamilial homicideimpietyand perjury.
Born from the blood of Uranus (the primordial god of the sky)the Erinyes were often thought to dwell in the Underworldalong with Hades and his bride Persephone. Their number was originally indeterminatebut later sources listed three Erinyes: TisiphoneAlectoand Megaera.
The Erinyes were much feared in the ancient world. Once they caught the scent of a particularly horrific crimethey were notoriously difficult to placate. In one famous myththe Erinyes pursued Orestes after he had killed his own motherClytemnestratormenting him endlessly until he was finally purified with the help of Apollo and Athena.
Etymology
The etymology of “Erinyes” (Ἐρινύεςtranslit. Erinýes) is uncertain.[1] The name itself is very ancient: it was already attested in the Mycenaean period (ca. 1600–1100 BCE)where it was written in the Linear B script as e-ri-nu.[2]
In antiquitythe Greeks tended to derive the Erinyes’ name from the verb ὀρίνω (orínō“to stir upexcite”) or the noun ἔρις (éris“strife”). Modern scholars are less certain of the name’s origin. Some have suggested an Indo-European derivation from *eri-snh₁-u-meaning “one who provokes struggle,” while others believe that the name is pre-Greek.[3]
It was only at a later period that the Erinyes acquired individual names: Tisiphone (Greek Τισιφόνηtranslit. Tisiphónē)Alecto (Greek Ἀληκτώtranslit. Alēktṓ; sometimes spelled Allecto)and Megaera (Greek Μέγαιραtranslit. Mégaira).[4] The etymologies of these names are much more straightforward and correspond to the vengeful roles of the goddesses: Tisiphone translates to “avenger of murder,” Alecto to “implacable one,” and Megaera to “envious one.”
Pronunciation
English
Greek
ErinysErinyes Ἐρινύς (translit. Erinýs)Ἐρινύες (translit. Erinýes) Phonetic
IPA
[ih-RIN-isih-RIN-ee-eez] /ɪˈrɪn ɪsɪˈrɪn iˌiz/
Alternate NamesTitlesand Epithets
The Erinyes were sometimes referred to by various euphemismsapparently meant to neutralize their dreaded infernal powers. The most famous of these was “Eumenides” (Greek Εὐμενίδεςtranslit. Eumenídes)which translates to something like “well-meaning ones.”[5] But the Erinyes had other euphemistic names or epithets in the ancient Greek worldincluding “Semnae” (Greek Σεμναίtranslit. Semnaí)meaning “august ones,” a title used for the goddesses in Athens,[6] and “Ablabiae” (Greek Ἀβλάβιαιtranslit. Ablábiai)meaning “harmless ones,” a title used in Erythrae.[7]
Though these euphemisms were common by the fifth century BCEit is unclear whether the EumenidesSemnaeand Ablabiae were always identical with the Erinyesor whether they were originally independent goddesses that only later became identified with the dreaded Erinyes.
The Erinyes’ Roman equivalents were called “Furiae” (“frenzied ones,” from which we get the name “Furies”) or “Dirae” (“ominous ones”).
Attributes
Functions and Powers
Though their origins are obscurethe Erinyes were regarded as extremely ancient divinities. They were certainly older than the Olympians and thus represented an earlier world order.[8]
The Erinyes’ function was to punish and avenge crimesincluding disobedience towards parentsdisrespect for eldersperjuryviolation of the laws of hospitalitymistreatment of suppliantsimpiety towards the godsandabove allmurder. As the Erinyes were primarily associated with family crimes and blood-guiltthey exacted the most vicious punishments of all upon those who had murdered a family member (especially an elder family member like a mother or father).

Orestes Pursued by the Furies by William-Adolphe Bouguereau (1862). Chrysler MuseumNorfolkVA.
Google Arts and CulturePublic DomainThe Erinyes had various other functions as well. They carried out cursesespecially those of a parentand also personified those curses;[9] they were invoked as guarantors of oaths;[10] they prevented humans from obtaining too much knowledge about the future;[11] and they punished sinners in the Underworld.[12] In factHeraclitusan early Greek philosopherwrote that the Erinyes had control over all cosmic justice.[13]
The Erinyes were much feared in antiquity due to their terrifying powers. They were able to take away a person’s reasonfor exampleand bring about blindness or madness.[14] Some sources claim that they also had the power to destroy or bestow fertility of any kind.[15]
CharacteristicsSymbolsand Iconography
The Erinyes were often seen as Underworld goddesses and were thus said to live in the Underworld.[16] Eventuallythe number of the Erinyes became standardized at three—TisiphoneAlectoand Megaera—but originally there may have been more.[17] In Athensit is possible that only two were worshipped.[18]
The Erinyes were represented as nightmarish creatures. Aeschylusfor exampleportrayed them as
wingless in appearanceblackaltogether disgusting; they snore with repulsive breathsthey drip from their eyes hateful drops; their attire is not fit to bring either before the statues of the gods or into the homes of men.[19]
The Erinyes were usually regarded as virgin goddesses,[20] but some local variants (such as the Arcadian Demeter Erinys) had divine consorts.
In ancient artthe Erinyes’ attributes included wingssnake hairhunting bootsand a short chiton (a kind of tunic). They were often depicted punishing the dead in the Underworld. Sometimes they carried torches or whipstheir most recognizable symbols.[21]

19th century illustration of two Erinyesafter 4th century BCE Apulian vase painting.
Wikimedia CommonsPublic DomainFamily
Family Tree
Mythology
Alcmaeon
Alcmaeon was the son of Amphiarausone of the heroes who took part in the doomed war of the Seven against Thebes. The conflict broke out when Oedipus’ son Polyneices attempted to reclaim the throne of Thebes after being banished by his brother Eteocles. InitiallyAmphiaraus did not want to take part in the ill-omened expeditionbut his wife Eriphyle convinced him to go (after being bribed by Polyneices). When Amphiaraus was killed in the warhis son Alcmaeon blamed Eriphyle for his death and killed her in revenge.
For the sin of matricidethe Erinyes hounded Alcmaeon and drove him mad. Alcmaeon fledfirst to his grandfather Oicles in Arcadiathen to Phegeus in Psophis. But despite his best effortsAlcmaeon could not be purified of his crime.

The Erinyes Drive Alcmaeon from the Corpse of his MotherEriphyleWhom He Has Killed by Henry Fuseli (1821). KunsthausZurichSwitzerland.
Wikimedia CommonsPublic DomainEventuallyAlcmaeon asked the oracle of Delphi what he needed to do to atone for his sin and free himself of the Erinyes. He was instructed to settle a land that did not yet exist at the time of his mother’s murder. Alcmaeon wandered the world until he found a delta by the Achelous River that had just been formed. There he made his new home and took a wife (though he was killed not much later).[33]
Orestes
Orestes was the son of Agamemnonthe commander-in-chief of the Greek force that conquered Troy. When Agamemnon at last returned from the Trojan Warhe was murdered by his wife Clytemnestra and her lover Aegisthus. Years laterwhen Orestes was fully grownhe avenged his father by killing both Clytemnestra and Aegisthus.
The Erinyes punished Orestes for his matricide just as they had punished Alcmaeon. He was driven madconstantly haunted by the shade of the mother he had murdered in cold blood. In what eventually became the common traditionOrestes ended up in Athens. Therehe was purified by Apollo and Athena and acquitted of his crime in the first-ever murder trial. This trial was dramatized in Aeschylus’ tragedy the Eumenides (fifth century BCE)in which Apollo and Athena defend the haggard Orestes against the prosecuting Erinyes.[34]

Paestan red-figure bell-krater showing Orestes (center) purified at Delphi by Athena (left) and Apollo (right) while the Erinyes stand nearby (far righttop center). Attributed to Pythonca. 330 BCE. British MuseumLondonUK.
JastrowPublic DomainOther Sinners
The Erinyes can be found “behind-the-scenes” in numerous myths besides those of Alcmaeon and Orestes.
When the hero Meleager killed his unclesfor example—the brothers of his mother Aethra—it was to the Erinyes that Aethra prayed for vengeance.[35]
When Medea ran off with Jason and killed her brother Apsyrtus in order to slow down her father’s pursuitshe was tormented by the Erinyes until she was purified by her aunt Circe. But in some traditionsApsyrtus’ Erinyes eventually had their revengecausing Jason to betray Medea and ultimately leading Medea to kill her own children in an attempt to hurt him.[36]
The Erinyes also played a role in the myth of Oedipus. They first entered the scene when Oedipus killed his father (without knowing who he was) and married his mother (also without knowing who she was). Eventuallyafter the truth was revealed and Oedipus was ruinedhe sent the Erinyes against his own sons Eteocles and Polyneices as punishment for dishonoring him. In the endthe Erinyes brought the whole affair to a sad and bloody endwith Oedipus in exilehis mother deadand his sons killed at each others’ hands.[37]
Worship
Temples
The Erinyes had a few sanctuaries in the region of Attica. In Athensthere was a temple of the Erinyes in a grotto near the Areopaguswhere they were known as the Semnae or Semnae Theai (“august goddesses”). This was close to the spot where the Athenians tried murder cases. It was traditional for defendants who had been acquitted of murder to leave offerings for the Erinyes at their temple.[39]
There was also a sanctuary of the Erinyes (as the Eumenides) at Colonusan Attic town not far from Athens. At the center of the sanctuary sat a sacred grove that nobody was allowed to enter.[40]
The Erinyes also had temples at Sicyon[41] and Ceryneia[42] (where they were called the Eumenides) and at Erythrae[43] (where they were known as the Ablabiae). At their temple in Arcadiathey were identified with the agricultural goddess Demeter.[44] They may have also been identified with the Maniae (“Madnesses”) at their temple in Megalopolis (though linking the Erinyes to a negative personification would break the pattern of euphemistic religious titles).[45]
Festivals
Festivals in honor of the Erinyessometimes called Eumenideiawere celebrated in several Greek citiesincluding Athens and Sicyon. These festivals usually involved animal sacrifices (sometimes pregnant victims were specifically chosen)nephaliaand flower garlands.[46]
Pop Culture
The Erinyes (whether known as the Furiesthe Eumenidesor simply the Erinyes) continue to make appearances in modern pop culture.
In literaturethey have featured in T. S. Eliot’s play The Family Reunion (1939)Rick Riordan’s Percy Jackson and the Olympians series (2005–2009)and Neil Gaiman’s graphic novel series The Sandman (1989–). The mythology of the Erinyesespecially as portrayed in Aeschylus’ Eumenideshas also inspired novels by Anthony Powell and Jonathan Littell.
The Erinyes can also be found in visual media. For examplethey appeared in the 1990s TV series Xena: Warrior Princesswhere they were portrayed rather un-classically as three alluring and scantily clad sisters. More recentlythe Furies popped up as characters in the 2020 video game Hades.