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File:Xenokles lip cup hippalektryon Antikensammlung Berlin.jpg

Boy riding a hippalectryon, black-figure kylix from Attica, 540 to 530 BCE, Altes Museum (Berlin)

A hippalectryon (or hippalektryon, from Greek ἱππαλεκτρυών) is a type of fantastic hybrid creature of Ancient Greek folklore, half-horse and half-rooster, with yellow feathers. The front half is that of a horse, the rear half a rooster's wings, tail and legs.

The oldest representation currently known dates back to the 9th century BCE, and the motif grows most common in the 6th century, notably in vase painting and sometimes as statues, often shown with a rider. It is also featured on some pieces of currency. A few literary works of the 5th century mention the beast, though no myths related to it are currently known.

Etymology[]

The term "hippalectryon", also transcribed "hippalektryon", comes directly from Ancient Greek "ἱππαλεκτρυών", a compound word that comprises ἵππος (híppos, "horse"), and ἀλεκτρυών (alektryốn, "rooster").[1] The name is thus a plain description of the hybrid creature.[2].

Description[]

File:Hippalectryon.svg

In The Birds, Aristophanes describes the hippalectryon as a yellow-feathered, awkward-looking creature.[3] The appearance of the creature is consistent amongst the known artistic representations. It involves a horse front part, including the head, withers and the front legs; the hind part is that of a rooster, including the wings, tail and legs.

A text attributed to Hesychius of Alexandria mentions three different types of hippalectryons: a giant rooster; a giant vulture; and a creature close to griffins as painted on fabrics from Persia.[3]. Some confusion might have arisen, as some texts also refer to hippalectryons as plain horses, a coat-of-arms, or as sea monsters.[2]. Before Aeschylus, no specific term appears to refer to representations of hippalectryons.[4]

Ceramic and sculpture[]

File:Terracotta hippalektryon Louvre CA1792-stitched.jpg

Warrior riding a hippalectryon, terra cotta from Thebes, Greece, 500 to 470 BCE, Louvre museum

The oldest known representation of a hippalectryon is an askos from Knossos, dating back to the 9th century BCE.[3]

Hippalectryons become a common theme from 575 to 480 BCE,[3] often depicted with an unarmed rider, typically a young boy.[5]

The motif might not be an ancient Greek invention: an analysis of Aristophanes' works suggests that it could have originated in the Middle East, and the costumes worn by the people featured on pottery with hippalectryons seem to be Asian,[2] though this particular point is a matter of debate.[3]

Hippalectryons are displayed almost exclusively[5] on black-figure vases from Attica,[1] and could constitute an alternative representation of Pegasus.[1].

Hybrids are a popular and common theme in archaic Greek sculpture and vase painting [5]. Most hybrids appear to have reached Greece from the East, although no early representation of a hippalectryon in Egyptian or Middle Eastern art has yet been found.[5]

Hippalectryons have been found on engraved stones from the Late Period of ancient Egypt. Though they differ from 6th century Attic and Ionic representations, the horse head and the rooster legs and tail are featured.[4]

Numismatics[]

Five coins featuring a hippalectryon, or possibly Pegasus, were found in 1868 in the Volterra treasure, amongst 65 very old pieces of currency [6]Template:,[7].

Symbolism[]

According to a study of Aristophanes' The Frogs, hippalectryons were often painted on shields. A red-figure vase featuring Athena waving a shield sporting a hippalectryon has been found; the theme probably was credited with apotropaic and prophylactic virtues.[3] Roosters are prophylactic as they are a symbol of solar power [8] that routs demons with its singing at sunrise.[4] Horses, especially winged horses, are a funerary symbol as they guide the souls of the dead.[4]. The grotesque and ugly hybrid supposedly induced laughter, thereby driving evil away.[4]

The Hippalectryon described in Aeschylus' Myrmidons was probably sculpted to commemorate a naval high deed. In The Frogs, Aristophanes states that the motif was painted on galleys in ancient times, indicating that it could have been credited with magical powers to protect ships.[4]

Occurrences in Greek texts[]

Hippalectryons are not associated with any known myth or legend.[2] As a consequence, they are scarcely mentioned by Greek authors.[5]

Aeschylus is the first to mention them: in Myrmidons, he describes a ship featuring a "fire-coloured horse-chanticleer".[4] Template:Cquote

Hippalectryon is one of Aristophanes' favourite insults [9]. He uses it in Peace (421 BCE), The Birds (414) and in The Frogs (405), in which Dionysus and Euripides mock Aeschylus for mentioning it.[4]. He furthermore mentions that in his time (end of the 5th century BCE), most inhabitants of Athens had never heard of hippalectryons.[5]

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IN NOVELS In the Percy Jackson and the Olympians series there are Hippalektryons in Gyerons ranch

Popular culture[]

Hippalectyons are seldom mentioned in modern works. There might be an occurrence in Mother Goose English translation, published in 1729:[2] Template:Cquote

Hippalektiones appear in The Battle of the Labyrinth. They are thought to be extinct, but there are some at Geryon's Ranch.

Notes and references[]

Notes[]

  1. 1.0 1.1 1.2 Template:En Hippalectryon on Theoi.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 2.4 Harper's New Monthly Magazine March to May 1882, Kessinger Publishing, LLC, 2005 ISBN 9781419173905 [1].
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 3.3 3.4 3.5 Template:En W. Geoffrey Arnott, Birds in the ancient world from A to Z Routledge, 2007, ISBN 041523851X, ISBN 9780415238519, p.102-103.
  4. 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 4.7 Swets et Zitlinger, « Annales de la Faculté des Lettres de Bordeaux et des Universités du Midi, quatrième série commune aux Iniversités d'Aix, Bordeaux, Montpellier, Toulouse », dans Revue des études anciennes, t. 6, 1904 [2].
  5. 5.0 5.1 5.2 5.3 5.4 5.5 Template:En Hippalektryon par Harvey Alan Shapiro : Art, Myth and Culture. Greek Vases from Southern Collections on Perseus.
  6. Template:FrEdgar Wendling and Joële le Borgne de Lavillandré, L'Euroatlas des monnaies celtes, pre-publication, chapter XII [3].
  7. Template:FrLe trésor de Volterra on Numis-ext.
  8. Hippalectryons are thus described in Juan Eduardo Cirlot, Jack Sage et Herbert Read, A dictionary of symbols, Routledge, 1993 ISBN 978-0415036498, p. 149 [4].
  9. Template:FrMichel Meslin, Cahiers d'anthropologie religieuse 3, 1994, Presses Paris Sorbonne ISBN 2840500221, ISBN 9782840500223, p. 121 [5].

Bibliography[]

  • Template:FrSwets and Zitlinger, « Annales de la Faculté des Lettres de Bordeaux et des Universités du Midi, quatrième série commune aux Universités d'Aix, Bordeaux, Montpellier, Toulouse », in Revue des études anciennes, t. 6, 1904.
  • W. Geoffrey Arnott, Birds in the ancient world from A to Z, Routledge, 2007 ISBN 9780415238519.
  • Juan Eduardo Cirlot, Jack Sage et Herbert Read, A dictionary of symbols, Routledge, 1993 ISBN 978-0415036498.

External links[]

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