Phemonoe

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In Greek mythology, Phemonoe ( /fiˈmɒn.i/;[1] Ancient Greek: Φημονόη) was a Greek poet of the ante-Homeric period. She was said to have been the daughter of Apollo, his first priestess at Delphi,[2] or of his possible son Delphus, and the inventor of the hexameter verses, a type of poetic metre.[3] In some studies, attributed to the phrase "know thyself" (γνῶθι σεαυτόν) found inscribed at the entrance to the Temple of Apollo at Delphi. Some writers seem to have placed her at Delos instead of Delphi;[4] and Servius identifies her with the Cumaean Sibyl.[5] The tradition which ascribed to her the invention of the hexameter, was by no means uniform; Pausanias, for example, as quoted above, calls her the first who used it, but in another passage[6] he quotes an hexameter distich, which was ascribed to the Pleiades, who lived before Phemonoe: the traditions respecting the invention of the hexameter are collected by Fabricius.[7] There were poems which went under the name of Phemonoe, like the old religious poems which were ascribed to Orpheus, Musaeus, and the other mythological bards. Melampus, for example, quotes from her in his book Peri Palmon Mantike ("On Twitches") §17, §18;[8] and Pliny quotes from her respecting eagles and hawks, evidently from some book of augury, and perhaps from a work which is still extant in MS., entitled Orneosophium.[9] There is an epigram of Antipater of Thessalonica, alluding to a statue of Phemonoe, dressed in a .[10]

References[]

  1. ^ Gardner, Dorsey (1887). Webster's Condensed Dictionary. George Routledge and Sons. p. 759. Retrieved 14 April 2018.
  2. ^ Greek Mythology Link (Carlos Parada) - Delphi (Accessed 2007-12-13) Archived 2007-12-07 at the Wayback Machine.
  3. ^ Pausanias 10.5.7, 10.6.7; Strabo, 9 p. 419; Pliny the Elder, H. N. 7.57; Clement of Alexandria, Stromata i. pp. 323, 334; Schol. ad Eurip. Orest. 1094; Eustathius Prol. ad Iliad.; and other authors cited by Fabricius.
  4. ^ Atil. Fort. p. 2690, Putsch.
  5. ^ Virgil. Aeneid, iii. 445.
  6. ^ Pausanias, 10.12.10.
  7. ^ Fabricius, Johann Albert, Bibl. Graec. vol. i. p. 207.
  8. ^ Fabricius. Bibl. Graec. vol. i. p. 116.
  9. ^ Pliny. H. N. x. 3, 8. s. 9; Fabricius. Bibl. Graec. vol. i. pp. 210, 211; Olearii, Dissert. de Poetriis Graecis, Hamb. 1734, 4to.
  10. ^ Brunck, Anal. vol. ii, p. 114, No. 22 ; Anthol. Pal. vi. 208.

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