The Abduction of Ganymede
Name: Vatican Mythographers Date: 10th century CE Region: Unknown Citation: Vat. Myth.
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Abduction myths serve two purposes. For modern readers,
they serve as a cautionary tale that all young persons are vulnerable to
exploitation. For ancient readers, however, these beautiful youths’ abductions
were euphemistic stories to help grieving parents cope with the loss of a child
who died before reaching expected social milestones (e.g., entering adulthood
or getting married).
Ganymede, the son of Priam's son Troilius, was the most
beautiful youth and the most talented hunter among the Trojans. When he was
training on Mount Ida, he was snatched up by Jupiter's thunderbird, [the
eagle that once bore the god's thunderbolt]. The youth was
taken up into heaven and assigned to be the Cupbearer of the Gods, a position
that
The Abduction of Ganymede
Ganymedes filius Troili filii Priami cum prima forma ceteris Troianis preferretur et assiduis venationibus in Idae silva exerceretur, ab armigero Jovis, scilicet aquila quae quondam illi fulmina offerebat, in caelum raptus est et factus est pincerna deorum, quod officium prius occupaverat Hebe filia Minois filii Jovis.
Vatican Mythographers [10th century CE?] Little is known about the author or
origin of the collection of myths known as the Vatican Mythographers, but the
work’s first editor Angelo Mai found the collection on a manuscript dating back
to the 10th century CE. This volume is a collection of three different
mythographers who have assembled various Greco-Roman myths; although many of
these myths are basic summaries in Latin, some of them are either analyzed as
allegories or compared to Christian thought.
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