CONTENT WARNING: rape, attempted rape, warfare
[Nestor] rettulit enim sua aetate Caenin Elati filiam fuisse, quae propter pulchritudinem a Neptuno conpressa sit data venia ob iniuriam, ut in virum mutata nullo telo interfici possit. huic cum Pirithous Ixionis filius...nuptui interesset ducta Hippodamia et Eurytus inter Centauros vino incitatus in nuptam novam impetum fecisset, ceteri prosiluere Lapithae atque Centauri nuptias frequentantes. ideoque caedes cum maxima esset exorta plurimique ex utraque parte ob raptum matronarum concidissent et quod inviolabilis ille restaret, ab universis, qui ex caede reliqui fuerunt, novissime impetu facto congestisque in eum arborum truncis spiritum reddere coactum. tamen non immemor deus Neptunu, a quo specisum munus acceperat, supradictum in volucrem nominis sui transfiguravit.
--Lactantius Placidus, Qui dicitur Narrationes Fabularum Ovidiarum liber 12 fab.4
Nestor told a story of a
person from his generation. He said that Caenis was once the daughter of Elatus, who
was assaulted by Neptune because of their beauty, and when given a gift in
restitution, they were transformed into a man who could not be killed by any
weapon.
Caeneus was present when
Pirithous, the son of Ixion got married to Hippodamia. Eurytus, along with
other centaurs, got drunk and tried to assault the bride, and all of the centaurs
and Lapiths started fighting. When everyone was getting killed and a lot of
people from both sides had died because of this abduction attempt, Caeneus alone
remained standing, unharmed. The rest of the [centaur] survivors ganged up on
him, heaping tree trunks upon him to smother him. Neptune did not forget him or
his gift; he turned him into a bird that shared his name.
LACTANTIUS
PLACIDUS
MAP:
Name: Lactantius Placidus
Date: 5th or 6th century CE
Works:
Abridgement of Ovids’ Metamorphoses
Commentary
on Statius’ Thebaid
REGION UNKNOWN
BIO:
Timeline:
Little is known about this Christian author,
but he is known for his commentary on Statius’ Thebaid and an
abridgement of Ovid’s Metamorphoses.
LATE LATIN / BYZANTINE
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