The Mythology Book

(Chris Devlin) #1

77


Theseus defeats the Minotaur in a
scene on a kylix (drinking cup) from
ca.420 bce. Decorated with Theseus’s
heroic deeds, the cup is signed by the
Greek vase painter Aison.

See also: The many affairs of Zeus 42–47 ■ Apollo and the Oracle of Delphi 58–59 ■ Daedalus and Icarus 76–77 ■
Mithras slays the bull 118–19 ■ The epic of Gilgamesh 190–97

ANCIENT GREECE


She begged Daedalus to help her
lover in his quest. To ensure that
Theseus would find his way out
of the maze, Daedalus gave her
a ball of wool for him to attach at
the entrance to the maze and then
unwind as he went deeper in.
After an epic struggle, he killed the
bull and followed Ariadne’s thread
back to safety.

Hasty exit
With Ariadne at his side, Theseus
set sail for Athens, but Athena
intervened, ordering him to leave
Ariadne on the island of Naxos. In
his distress at abandoning his
lover, Theseus forgot to change the
sail to white. Waiting on a cliff top,
Aegeus saw the black-sailed ship
return and in his grief—believing
his son to be dead—hurled himself
into the sea below. The sea has
been the “Aegean” ever since. ■

The bull


None held the bull in higher
regard than the people who
inhabited Crete for several
centuries during the 2nd
millennium bce. In a sense, King
Minos, the mythical first king
of Crete, was a half-bull like the
Minotaur: his father, Zeus, had
taken the form of a bull to rape
his mother, Europa.
The bull cult was at the
center of Minoan culture: art
depicting bulls abounds in the
palace complex of Knossos,
including one in which athletes

This Minoan rhyton (a carved
libation vessel in the shape of an
animal’s head) from ca.1500 bce was
found in a palace in Knossos.

leap over a bull. Excavated in
the early 20th century by British
archaeologist Arthur Evans, the
palace is the most elaborate of
several such complexes on the
island of Crete. Evans called the
culture “Minoan” on account of
the culture’s obsession with the
bull, and due to the mazelike
architecture of the excavated
royal palace, which Evans
referred to as the Labyrinth.

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