The Mythology Book

(Chris Devlin) #1

7878


DISDAINING HIS


FATHER’S WARNINGS,


THE EXHILARATED


ICARUS SOARED


EVER HIGHER


DAEDALUS AND ICARUS


D


aedalus was an inventor
and was responsible for
a host of innovations: he
equipped ships with masts, sails,
and prows with battering rams to
outpace and outfight rival fleets; he
made lifelike statues and automata
that could think and feel like men;
and he invented new tools for
construction. Originally from
Athens, he worked for King Minos
in Crete and built not only the
Labyrinth that concealed the
Minotaur but also the wooden cow
in which the monster’s mother had
hidden in order to mate with the
king’s prized bull. Minos valued
Daedalus so much that he did
not want to let him of his sight.

IN BRIEF


THEME
Man’s pride and
punishment

SOURCES
Historical Library, Diodorus
Siculus, ca.30 bce; Library,
Pseudo-Apollodorus ca. 10 0 ce;
Metamorphoses, Ovid, 8 ce;
Natural History, Pliny, ca. 78 ce.

SETTING
Crete and the Aegean.

KEY FIGURES
Minos King of Crete; son of
Zeus and Europa.

Daedalus Greek inventor
employed by King Minos.

Icarus Son of Daedalus by
Naucrate, an Egyptian slave.

Cocalos King of Kamikos,
Sicily; Daedalus’s protector.

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79
See also: Theseus and the Minotaur 76–77 ■ Arachne and the spider 115 ■ The epic of Gilgamesh 190–97

Daedalus’s inventions made him
indispensable but dangerous—he
knew the king’s deepest secrets,
and Minos dreaded losing him.
After Daedalus helped Theseus
escape from the Labyrinth, Minos
installed the inventor in a tower
where he lived as a pampered
prisoner, enjoying every luxury
except his freedom. With him was
Icarus, Daedalus’s son by Minos’s
Egyptian slave Naucrate.

Taking wing
Daedalus resolved to flee his gilded
cage. Escape routes from the tower
and off the island were barred, first
by the dizzying drop beneath the
window; then by Minos’s men
below; and lastly by the waves of
the Aegean Sea. Watching from
his window as the birds flew by,

Daedalus realized that the sky was
still open to him as a highway—if
only he could fly.
Daedalus devoted hours of
study to the birds; he examined
the anatomy of their wings and the
aerodynamics of their flight. Day
and night he toiled to construct
two pairs of wings—one pair for
himself and one for his son.
The wings were complex: their
frames had to be strong but flexible
and light, and they had to provide ❯❯

ANCIENT GREECE


Daedalus and Icarus build a wooden
cow for Queen Pasiphaë (far left) in this
floor mosaic from Zeugma, Turkey.
Hidden inside the cow, Pasiphaë mated
with her husband’s bull.

Daedalus’s dark past


Originally from Athens,
Daedalus fled to Crete after
the murder of his nephew
Talos (sometimes identified
as Perdix), who was also his
talented apprentice. Daedalus
was believed to have felt
threatened by Talos’s growing
powers of invention, which
seemed set to outshine his
own. By the age of 12, Talos
had already invented the
potter’s wheel, the chisel, and
the first compass, which he
made out of two pieces of iron
that he pivoted on a pin.
Overcome with jealousy,
Daedalus pushed Talos off the
top of the Acropolis. In Ovid’s
version of the myth, Pallas
Minerva (Athena) witnessed
the incident and intervened
to catch Talos in mid-air,
transforming him into a
partridge—a bird, the poet
notes, that likes to live close to
the ground. Seeking to escape
trial, Daedalus then fled with
his son Icarus to Crete, while
Talos’s mother, Daedalus’s
sister, took her own life.

The
inventions
of Daedalus

Drill

Plumb line

Saw

Axe

Ship’s prow
Glue

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