×

注意!页面内容来自https://mythopedia.com/topics/orpheus/,本站不储存任何内容,为了更好的阅读体验进行在线解析,若有广告出现,请及时反馈。若您觉得侵犯了您的利益,请通知我们进行删除,然后访问 原网页

Greek Musician

Orpheus

Orpheus by George de Forest Brush (1890)

Orpheus by George de Forest Brush (1890).

Museum of Fine Arts BostonPublic Domain

Overview

Orpheusthe “father of songs,” was a musician and hero of Greek mythology. He was the son of the Thracian mortal Oeagrus (or of the god Apollo) and one of the nine Muses.

Orpheus was a larger-than-life musician: his songs had the ability to move animalsrocksand treesand Orpheus himself was regarded not only as a musical innovator but also an important religious figure. In one of his exploitsOrpheus sailed with the Argonautswhom he saved from the Sirens by drowning out their lethal song with his own.

The main myth of Orpheus involved his love of Eurydicewho died right after she and Orpheus were married. Orpheus descended to the Underworld to rescue her from death but ultimately failed to bring her back. After returning to the land of the living alonehe serenaded the world with his tragic song until he was finally killed by a band of Thracian women or maenads.

Who were Orpheus’ parents?

Orpheus’ father was either a Thracian man named Oeagrus orin an alternative genealogythe god Apollowho was closely associated with artmusicand inspiration. His mother was usually said to have been one of the nine Muses.

Fresco of Apollo

Augustan fresco showing Apollo with a kithara from the House of the Scalae Caci on the Palatine Hill in Rome

Palatine MuseumRome / Dody escouade deltaPublic Domain

What were Orpheus’ attributes?

Orpheus was imagined as a handsome young man clothed in elaborate Thracian garb. His most important attribute was no doubt his lyrewhich he played with unparalleled skill. Sometimes Orpheus was represented in natural scenessurrounded by wild animals that his music had tamed.

Nymphs Listening to the Songs of Orpheus by Charles François Jalabert

Nymphs Listening to the Songs of Orpheus by Charles François Jalabert (1853)

The Walters Art MuseumPublic Domain

How did Orpheus die?

In the best-known traditionOrpheus wandered the world aimlessly after he lost his beloved Eurydiceplaying his haunting and beautiful music wherever he went.

He was eventually torn apart by the women of Thrace or by the maenads—crazed female worshippers of Dionysus (according to one sourcehe angered the women by neglecting their companyhaving decided to mourn Eurydice for the rest of his days).

Thracian Girl Carrying the Head of Orpheus on his Lyre by Gustave Moreau (1865)

Thracian Girl Carrying the Head of Orpheus on his Lyre by Gustave Moreau (1865)

Musée d'OrsayParisPublic Domain

Orpheus and Eurydice

Orpheus fell deeply in love with a nymph named Eurydice. But on the day of their weddingEurydice was bitten by a venomous snake and died.

HeartbrokenOrpheus descended to the Underworld to restore his beloved Eurydice to the land of the livingbut he ultimately failed in his quest. In this famous mythHades told Orpheus that he could have Eurydice backbut only if he did not turn around as she followed him out of the Underworld. UnfortunatelyOrpheus did look backand Eurydice was lost forever.

Orpheus and Eurydiceattributed to Filippo Pedrini

Orpheus and Eurydiceattributed to Filippo Pedrini (18th or 19th century)

The Metropolitan Museum of ArtPublic Domain

Etymology

Different etymologies for Orpheus’ name have been proposed since antiquity. An old folk etymologyrecorded by the Roman mythographer Fulgentiusderives the name from the Greek oraio-phōnēmeaning “best voice.”[1]

Modern scholars have suggested that the name “Orpheus” is related to the Indo-European *orbho- or *h₃órbʰosmeaning “orphan” ormore metaphorically“bereftabandoned.”[2] The -eus at the end of the name is a suffix attested in some Greek names as early as the Bronze Age and indicates something like “one who has to do with.”[3] ThusOrpheus’ name roughly translates to “he who has something to do with being orphaned/bereft”—likely a reflection of the loss of his beloved Eurydice.

Pronunciation

  • English
    Greek
    OrpheusὈρφεύς
  • Phonetic
    IPA
    [AWR-fee-uhs-fyoos]/ˈɔr fi əs-fyus/

Titles and Epithets

One of the first epithets to be connected with Orpheus was onomaklyton“famous of name.”[4] In the fifth century BCEthe poet Pindar referred to Orpheus as aoidan patēr“father of songs,” and euainētos“well-praised.”[5] Orpheus also had other epithetsincluding chrysolyrēs“of the golden lyre,” and paian“healer.”

Attributes and Iconography

Orpheus’ most important attribute was his musical prowesswhich far transcended normal human abilities. His music was said to have had power over all thingsanimate and inanimate alike:

While with his songsOrpheusthe bard of Thrace,

allured the treesthe savage animals,

and even the insensate rocksto follow him...[6]

Orpheus was regarded as a great musical innovatorthe inventor of epiclyricand other forms of poetry and song. He was also sometimes credited as the inventor of other important artsincluding medicine,[7] writing,[8] and agriculture.[9]

Orpheus by Veneziano-1528

Orpheus by Agostino Veneziano (1528).

Metropolitan Museum of ArtPublic Domain

FinallyOrpheus was also a religious and prophetic figure closely associated with Dionysusthe god of wine and madness. He was the mythological inventor of initiation rites in general. More specificallyhoweverhe was the founder of the mysterious Orphic Mysteriesand many ancient religious poems (such as the Orphic Hymns and the Orphic Argonautica) were attributed to him.[10]

Orpheus was a popular figure in ancient artwhere he was usually represented as a boyish young man with a lyreoften surrounded by the wild animals and forces of nature that his music was supposedly able to tame.[11]

Family

Orpheus was usually said to have been the son of the Muse Calliope and a mortal man named Oeagrus.[12] But some sources made Orpheus’ father the god Apollo,[13] while others made his mother the Muse Polymnia,[14] the Naiad Menippe,[15] or one of the nine daughters of Pierus.[16]

In some traditionsOrpheus’ brother was Linusanother mythological poet. Linus made the mistake of trying to teach music to the impatient Heracleswho killed him one day in a fit of rage.[17]

In most sourcesOrpheus’ love interest (andfor less than a dayhis wife) is called Eurydice,[18] though one source names her as Agriope.[19]

According to Diodorus of SicilyOrpheus was the father of the prophet and philosopher Musaeuswho was associated with the religious mysteries of Attica.[20]

Mythology

Origins

In most traditionsOrpheus came from the wintery region of Thracelocated to the northeast of mainland Greece. But other traditions placed his hometown in northern Greece—for examplein the town of Bisaltia[21] or in Pimpleia (located in the foothills of Mount Olympusthe home of the Greek gods).[22]

As a young manOrpheus quickly proved himself an inordinately gifted musician (hardly a surprise for the son of a Muse). He was sometimes said to have received the lyre as a gift from Apollo himselfand to have improved on the instrument by increasing the number of strings to nine (in honor of the nine Muses).[23] Orpheus traveled the worldlearning about the gods and spreading knowledge about their worship.[24] According to some sourceshe voyaged as far as Egypt.[25]

The Voyage of the Argonauts

According to one popular traditionOrpheus sailed with the Argonautsa band of Greek heroes who accompanied Jason in his quest for the Golden Fleece.[26] Orpheus proved a great help to the other heroesproviding them with musical accompaniment to guide their rowing as well as entertainment. 

When the Argonauts needed to sail by the Sirenssea monsters who lured sailors to their death with their enchanting songOrpheus played his lyre so beautifully that he drowned out the Sirens and saved the crew.

Orpheus and Eurydice

The myth of Orpheus and Eurydicethough quite ancientis best known through the works of the relatively later Roman poets Virgil and Ovid (around the end of the first century BCE and the beginning of the first century CE).[27]

According to Virgil and Ovid (and a handful of others)Orpheus and Eurydice fell in love and were married. But on their wedding dayEurydice was bitten by a venomous snake and died (at the timeshe was either fleeing from an unwanted suitor or dancing with the nymphs).

Understandably heartbrokenOrpheus resolved to bring Eurydice back from the Underworld. Armed only with his lyrehe was one of the few mortals in Greek mythology to ever pass through the Underworld alive; the shocking beauty of his music stilled even Cerberusthe terrifying three-headed guard dog of Hades.

Orpheus Leading Eurydice from the Underworld by Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot (1861)

Orpheus Leading Eurydice from the Underworld by Jean-Baptiste-Camille Corot (1861).

Museum of Fine ArtsHoustonPublic Domain

Orpheus’ journey and his music so moved Hades and Persephonethe king and queen of the Underworldthat they permitted Orpheus to take Eurydice back with him to the land of the living—but only if Orpheus did not turn around while leading her up. As Orpheus was leaving the Underworldhe began to worry that Hades had deceived him. To reassure himselfhe peeked behind his shoulderonly to see Eurydice snatched away forever because he had disobeyed the gods of the Underworld:

And now with homeward footstep he had passed

All perils scathlessandat length restored,

Eurydice to realms of upper air

Had well-nigh wonbehind him following—

So Proserpine had ruled it—when his heart

A sudden mad desire surprised and seized—

Meet fault to be forgivenmight Hell forgive.

For at the very threshold of the day,

Heedlessalas! and vanquished of resolve,

He stoppedturnedlooked upon Eurydice

His own once more. But even with the look,

Poured out was all his labourbroken the bond

Of that fell tyrantand a crash was heard

Three times like thunder in the meres of hell.[28]

There appear to have been different versions of this myth. In oneretold by the philosopher Platothe gods actually did trick Orpheus when he descended to the Underworld to bring back his wife. Instead of giving him the real Eurydicethe gods presented Orpheus with a phantom—a punishmentsays Platofor Orpheus' cowardice in being unwilling to die for his wife.[29]

Death

There is no standard version of how Orpheus died. In most traditionshe was unable to stop mourning the loss of his wife. Thushe wandered the world playing sad melodies on his lyre until he was eventually torn apart by a band of Thracian women or Dionysian maenads.

Death of Orpheus-silver kantharos

Silver kantharos showing the death of Orpheus (ca. 420–410 BCE).

Vassil Bojkov CollectionCC BY-SA 4.0

But various sources had different ideas about why Orpheus was killed. In one versionOrpheus had offended Dionysus somehow (either by denying his divinityneglecting to honor him in his musicor spying on his mysteries)so Dionysus sent his maenad worshippers to murder him.[30]

In other sourcesit was the female sex as a whole that Orpheus had offended. When he lost EurydiceOrpheus either shunned women completely (in favor of homosexual relationships)became a vicious and outspoken misogynistor convinced the husbands of the women of Thrace to accompany him on his wanderings. Because of thishe was killed by a band of angry women.[31]

In the version of the myth recorded by Platoon the other handOrpheus’ death was punishment for his cowardice: because he would not die for a womanhe ultimately met his end at the hands of women.[32]

Another strange version of the myth makes Aphrodite responsible for Orpheus’ death. When Aphrodite and Persephone both competed for the affections of the handsome AdonisZeus ordered Orpheus’ mother Calliope to resolve their dispute. 

When Calliope ruled that each should possess Adonis for half of the yearAphrodite was dissatisfied and punished Calliope by devising a creative way to get her son Orpheus killed: she caused all the women of Orpheus’ native Thrace to fall in love with him at once. When the women each tried to take Orpheus for herself at the same timethey tore him limb from limb.[33]

In one final versionOrpheus was not killed by women at all but by Zeuswho struck him down with a lightning bolt as punishment for teaching mortals the mysteries of the gods (possibly writing).[34]

However varied these different accounts of Orpheus’ deathmost of them involved him being brutally torn apart. Many sources told of how his headstill singing sweetly or even delivering fateful oraclesfloated down to the island of Lesbos. 

After being buried (by either the Thraciansthe Lesbiansor the Muses)the gods honored Orpheus by turning his lyre into a constellation.[35] His tomb was said to have been located either in Thrace,[36] Macedon,[37] or Lesbos.[38]

Orpheus Mosaic-Palermo C3

Roman floor mosaic showing Orpheus surrounded by animals (3rd century CE). Regional Archaeological Museum of PalermoPalermoItaly.

Giovanni Dall'OrtoCC0

Worship

Orphic Literature

As the most important musician of mythOrpheus came to be regarded as the author of a body of philosophical and theological poems—what is known today as “Orphic literature.” Orpheus’ role as the founder of Greek mystery cults begins with these poems.

It goes without saying that none of the ancient Orphic literature was actually written by the mythical (and probably largely fictional) Orpheus. The earliest Orphic literature probably dated to around the end of the sixth century BCEand very little of it survives today. Much of what is known of this early literature comes from the writings of Plato in the early fourth century BCE[39] and from the Derveni Papyrusa fragmentary commentary on an Orphic poem from the late fourth century BCE (discovered in 1962).

The bulk of Orphic literature deals with theogony—that isthe birth of the gods and the cosmos.[40] The Orphic theogonies tended to differ from more traditional Greek theogoniessuch as that of Hesiodon important points. For examplethe Orphic theogonies placed obscure figures such as NyxAetherProtogonusand Phanes ahead of the earliest Hesiodic gods. 

Orphic literature also seemed to describe not one Dionysus but twowith the first Dionysus born of Zeus and his daughter Persephone before being killed and eaten by the Titans.

Other Orphic literature (such as the Katabasis) was eschatologicaldealing with questions of death and the fate of the soul. Still other texts (such as the Teletae) outlined specific rites and rituals through which initiates into mystery cults (especially the Eleusinian Mysteries) could live a blessed life and secure eternal bliss for their immortal souls.

Some Orphic literature dates from a much later period. The Orphic Hymnsfor exampleare a corpus of 87 poems composed between the third century BCE and the second century CE. They address numerous gods—some familiar (ZeusDionysusetc.)and others quite obscure (AetherSabaziusetc.)—and appear to have been used in actual rituals.

Even later than the Orphic Hymns are the Orphic Argonautica and the Lithica. The Orphic Argonautica is presented as an eyewitness account of the voyage of the Argonauts as told by Orpheus himself. It makes various references to Orphic cosmogony. The Lithica is a strange poem that describes the secret qualities of stones.

Orphic (and Other) Mysteries

There appear to have been societies in ancient Greece that used the Orphic literature ascribed to the mythical Orpheus as a guide to their lives and religious practices. These Orphic Mysteries (sometimes also called “Orphism” or “Orphic religion”) were thus “basically Orphic literature.”[41]

Followers of Orpheus (sometimes called Orpheotelestaeor “Orphic ritualists”) were already well known by the Classical period (479–323 BCE)being mentioned in the writings of Plato and other contemporary authors.[42] They were known for certain distinctive practicesincluding vegetarianism andin some casesabstinence from sex. They also used rituals to ensure a blissful afterlife for their immortal souls.

The Orphic Mysteries influenced and sometimes became confused with other ancient mystery cults. These included the Dionysian or Bacchic Mysterieswhich were long believed to have borrowed important elements from the Orphic Mysteries;[43] the Eleusinian Mysterieswhose beliefs in the immortality of the soul closely resembled those of the Orphics; and Pythagoreanismwhichlike Orphismprescribed life rules such as vegetarianism.[44]

Pop Culture

Orpheus continues to exert a major presence in modern pop culture. The myth of his love for Eurydice was turned into several operas and ballets by composers such as Igor Stravinsky andmore recentlyHarrison Birtwistle and John Robertson.

In literatureOrpheus has appeared in numerous works. Rainer Maria Rilke’s Sonnets to Orpheus (1922) remains well known. Margaret Atwood’s Orpheus and Eurydice cycle of poems (1976–86) and Sarah Ruhl’s Eurydice (2003) retell the myth from Eurydice’s perspective. 

Other authors have adapted the myth to new settings: Poul Andersonfor exampletransposed the tale to a futuristic science fiction setting in his 1972 novelette Goat Song. Orpheus also features in Neil Gaiman’s The Sandman graphic novel series (1989–2015)where he is the son of Morpheusthe embodiment of dreams.

There are several famous cinematic and dramatic retellings of the Orpheus myth as well. Marcel Camus’ 1959 film Black Orpheusadapted from Vinicius de Moraes' play Orfeu da Conceição (1956)sets the myth in twentieth-century Rio de Janeiro during Carnaval. Jean Cocteau’s Orphic Trilogyconsisting of the films The Blood of a Poet (1930)Orpheus (1950)and Testament of Orpheus (1959)is also based on the Orpheus myth.

More recentlythe myth of Orpheus and Eurydice was retold in Anaïs Mitchell’s 2010 musical Hadestown.

References

Notes

  1. FulgentiusMythologies 3.10.

  2. Pierre ChantraineDictionnaire étymologique de la langue grecque (Paris: Klincksieck1974)3:829.

  3. Leonard R. PalmerThe Greek Language (Atlantic HighlandsNJ: Humanities Press1980)249.

  4. Ibycusfrag. 17 Diehl.

  5. PindarPythian Ode 4.176–77.

  6. OvidMetamorphoses 11.1–3trans. Brookes More. Cf. ApollodorusLibrary 1.3.2.

  7. PausaniasDescription of Greece 9.30.4.

  8. AlcidamasOdysseus 24.

  9. In SpartaOrpheus was associated with the worship of Demeterthe goddess of agriculture (PausaniasDescription of Greece 3.14.5). Agricultural themes also underlie many of the Orphic Hymns.

  10. Seefor exampleEuripidesRhesus 943ff; AristophanesFrogs 1032; PlatoProtagoras 315affRepublic 2.365eff; DemosthenesAgainst Aristogeiton 11; Diodorus of SicilyLibrary of History 1.231.96.2–63.65.64.25.35.77.3; PausaniasDescription of Greece 2.30.29.30.410.7.2; ApollodorusLibrary 1.3.2.

  11. See Maria-Xeni Garezou“Orpheus,” in Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicaevol. 7 (Zurich: Artemis1992)81–105.

  12. Apollonius of RhodesArgonautica 1.23ff; ApollodorusLibrary 1.3.2; HyginusFabulae 14; CononNarrations 45; John Tzetzes on Lycophron’s Alexandra 831. Cf. Pindarfrag. 126.9; PlatoSymposium 179dand Diodorus of SicilyLibrary of History 4.25.2who name Oeagrus as Orpheus’ father but do not give the name of his mother.

  13. ApollodorusLibrary 1.3.2.

  14. Scholia on Apollonius of Rhodes’ Argonautica 1.23.

  15. PausaniasDescription of Greece 9.30.4.

  16. John TzetzesChiliades 1.306–7.

  17. ApollodorusLibrary 1.3.2. Other sourceshowevergave Linus different parents.

  18. Lament for Bion 124; VirgilGeorgics 4.454ff; OvidMetamorphoses 10.8ff; PausaniasDescription of Greece 9.30.6; ApollodorusLibrary 1.3.2; HyginusFabulae 251; etc. The earliest sources to mention the myth of Orpheus and his wife (Euripides and Plato) do not give her name.

  19. Hermesianaxfrag. 7.

  20. Diodorus of SicilyLibrary of History 4.25.1.

  21. John TzetzesChiliades 1.305.

  22. StraboGeography 7.8.17. Cf. Apollonius of RhodesArgonautica 1.23ffwhere Oeagrus and Calliope are married in Pimpleia.

  23. EratosthenesCatasterisms 24; HyginusAstronomica 2.7.12.7.3.

  24. For some locales said to have been visited by Orpheus during his travelsseefor examplePausaniasDescription of Greece 2.30.13.13.13.14.1.

  25. Diodorus of SicilyLibrary of History 4.25.3.

  26. PindarPythian Ode 4.176ff; Apollonius of RhodesArgonautica 1.23ff; ApollodorusLibrary 1.9.16; HyginusFabulae 14; Orphic Argonautica; etc. Cf. PherecydesFHG 1 F 63who claimed that the musician who sailed with the Argonauts was Philammonnot Orpheus.

  27. VirgilGeorgics 4.454ff; OvidMetamorphoses 10.1ff. See also PausaniasDescription of Greece 9.30.6; ApollodorusLibrary 1.3.2; HyginusFabulae 251; etc. Cf. Diodorus of SicilyLibrary of History 4.25.4who tells a similar story but does not say whether Orpheus managed to retrieve Eurydice or not.

  28. VirgilGeorgics 4.480–93trans. J. B. Greenough.

  29. PlatoSymposium 179d–80a; cf. PlatoRepublic 10.620a. What Plato means by his reference to Orpheus’ cowardice is unclear.

  30. AeschylusBassarids (fragments); EratosthenesCatasterisms 24; HyginusAstronomica 2.6.42.7.1.

  31. OvidMetamorphoses 11.1ff; HyginusAstronomica 2.7.5; PausaniasDescription of Greece 9.30.5; CononNarrations 45.

  32. PlatoSymposium 179d–80a.

  33. HyginusAstronomica 2.7.4.

  34. AlcidamasOdysseus 24; PausaniasDescription of Greece 9.30.5. Cf. Diogenes Laertiusprologue to Lives of the Eminent Philosophers.

  35. E.g.EratosthenesCatasterisms 24; HyginusAstronomica 2.7.

  36. AlcidamasOdysseus 24; AristotlePeplus frag. 48 Rose.

  37. Diogenes Laertiusprologue to Lives of the Eminent Philosophers.

  38. HyginusAstronomica 2.7.4.

  39. PlatoCratylus 402b–cPhilebus 66cLaws 2.669d.

  40. There were at least three versions of the Orphic theogonies: the Rhapsodic Theogony and two Orphic Theogonies.

  41. Fritz Graf“Orphism,” in The Oxford Classical Dictionary4th ed.ed. Simon HornblowerAntony Spawforthand Esther Eidinow (Oxford: Oxford University Press2012)1050.

  42. PlatoCratylus 400cffIon 536bRepublic 364bff. Cf. EuripidesHippolytus 953ff; AristophanesFrogs 1032; etc.

  43. See esp. HerodotusHistories 2.81.

  44. On the Orphic Mysteriessee esp. Ivan M. LinforthThe Arts of Orpheus (Berkeley: University of California Press1941); W. K. C. GuthrieOrpheus and Greek Religion (London: Methuen1952); and Martin L. WestThe Orphic Poems (Oxford: Clarendon Press1983).

Primary Sources

InterestinglyOrpheus is never named in the earliest Greek texts (the epics of Homer and Hesiod); he appears for the first time in a fragment of the sixth-century BCE poet Ibycus (see above). In most surviving sources from the Classical period (490–323 BCE)moreoverreferences to the myth of Orpheus remain fairly vague. The fullest treatments of the myth do not appear until much laterin Roman poems of the late first century BCE or the early first century CE.

Greek

  • Pindar: Orpheus is mentioned among the Argonauts in Pythian Ode 4 (462 BCE).

  • Aeschylus: There are references to Orpheus and his miraculous musical skills in some of Aeschylus’ surviving tragediessuch as the Agamemnon.

  • Euripides: There are references to Orpheus and his powers scattered throughout Euripides’ playsincluding MedeaIphigenia in Aulisthe Bacchaeand Cyclops (all mid to late fourth century BCE).

  • Plato: There are numerous references to Orpheus and the Orphic Mysteries in Plato’s philosophical dialogues (fourth century BCE)including IonPhilebusthe Republicand Laws. In Book 10 of the RepublicPlato describes an idiosyncratic version of the myth of Orpheus and Eurydice (see above).

  • Aristophanes: Orpheus is named in the Frogs (406 BCE) as an important religious teacher.

  • Apollonius of Rhodes: Orpheus features in the Argonautica (third century BCE) as one of the Argonauts who helped Jason in his quest for the Golden Fleece.

  • Orphic Hymns: Composed between the third century BCE and the second century CEthe 87 Orphic Hymns were dedicated to various Greek gods and were said to represent the religious knowledge of Orpheus himself.

  • Lament for Bion: A poem from the second or first century BCE (sometimes speciously attributed to Moschus) with references to Orpheus and the death of Eurydice. This is the earliest source to give the name of Orpheus’ wife as Eurydice (see above).

  • Diodorus of Sicily: The Library of Historya work of universal history covering events from the creation of the cosmos to Diodorus’ own time (mid-first century BCE)contains references to Orpheus.

  • Strabo: Orpheus and his myths are mentioned a few times in the Geographya late first-century BCE geographical treatise and an important source for many local Greek mythsinstitutionsand religious practices from antiquity.

  • Pausanias: Orpheus’ mythology and religious importance are mentioned in the Description of Greecea second-century CE travelogue andlike Strabo’s Geographyan important source for local myths and customs.

  • Apollodorus: The myths of Orpheus are summarized in the Librarya mythological handbook from the first century BCE or the first few centuries CE.

  • Lithica: A fourth-century CE poem on the special qualities of rocksattributed to Orpheus.

  • Orphic Argonautica: A work of the fifth or sixth century CE describing the voyage of the Argonautspresented as an eyewitness account by Orpheus himself.

Roman

  • Horace: There are references to Orpheus in some of Horace’s poetrynotably the fourth poem of his third book of Odes (late first century BCE).

  • Virgil: The myth of Orpheus and Eurydice is told in Book 4 of the Georgics (29 BCE).

  • Ovid: The myth of Orpheus and Eurydiceand of Orpheus’ subsequent deathis told in Books 10 and 11 of the Metamorphoses (ca. 8 CE).

  • Hyginus: The Fabulae and Astronomica (first or second century CE) both contain references to Orpheus.

  • Fulgentius: The Mythologiesa Latin mythological handbook (fifth or sixth century CE)contains sections on Orpheus.

Secondary Sources

  • GantzTimothy. Early Greek Myth: A Guide to Literary and Artistic Sources. 2 vols. BaltimoreMD: Johns Hopkins University Press1996.

  • GarezouMaria-Xeni. “Orpheus.” In Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae ClassicaeVol. 781–105. Zurich: Artemis1992.

  • GrafFritz. “Orpheus: A Poet Among Men.” In Interpretations of Greek Mythologyedited by Jan Bremmer80–106. New York: Routledge1987.

  • GrafFritz. “Orpheus.” In The Oxford Classical Dictionary4th ed.edited by Simon HornblowerAntony Spawforthand Esther Eidinow1049–50. Oxford: Oxford University Press2012.

  • GravesRobert. The Greek Myths. London: Penguin1955.

  • GuthrieW. K. C. Orpheus and Greek Religion. London: Methuen1952.

  • KerényiKároly. The Heroes of the Greeks. London: Thames and Hudson1974.

  • LinforthIvan M. The Arts of Orpheus. Berkeley: University of California Press1941.

  • RoseH. J. A Handbook of Greek Mythology. London: Methuen1929.

  • SegalCharles. Orpheus: The Myth of the Poet. BaltimoreMD: Johns Hopkins University Press1989.

  • SmithWilliam. “Orpheus.” In A Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology. London: Spottiswoode and Company1873. Perseus Digital Library. Accessed September 202021. https://www.perseus.tufts.edu/hopper/text?doc=Perseus%3Atext%3A1999.04.0104%3Aalphabetic+letter%3DO%3Aentry+group%3D8%3Aentry%3Dorpheus-bio-1.

  • WardenJohned. Orpheus: The Metamorphoses of a Myth. Toronto: University of Toronto Press1982.

  • WestMartin L. The Orphic Poems. Oxford: Clarendon Press1983.

  • WroeAnn. Orpheus: The Song of Life. New York: Overlook Press2012.

Citation

KapachAvi. “Orpheus.” MythopediaJune 302023. https://mythopedia.com/topics/orpheus/.

KapachAvi. “Orpheus.” Mythopedia30 Jun. 2023. https://mythopedia.com/topics/orpheus/. Accessed on 15 Jul. 2025.

KapachA. (2023June 30). Orpheus. Mythopedia. https://mythopedia.com/topics/orpheus/

Authors

  • Avi Kapach

    Avi Kapach is a writerscholarand educator who received his PhD in Classics from Brown University

    Avi Kapach Profile Photo