Empusa
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Empusa or Empousa (Template:IPAc-en;<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Template:Langx; plural: {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} Empusai) is a shape-shifting female being in Greek mythology, said to possess a single leg of copper, commanded by Hecate, whose precise nature is obscure.<ref>An Intermediate Greek-English Lexicon, Liddell and Scott</ref> In Late Antiquity, the empousae have been described as a category of phantoms or spectres, equated with the lamiai and mormolykeia, thought to seduce and feed on young men.
In antiquityEdit
The primary sources for the empousa in Antiquity are Aristophanes's plays (The Frogs and Ecclesiazusae) and Philostratus's Life of Apollonius of Tyana.<ref name=dict-grbm-empusa/>
AristophanesEdit
The Empusa was defined in the Sudas and by Crates of Mallus as a "demonic phantom"Template:Efn<ref name=sudas-empousa/> with shape-shifting abilities.<ref name=sudas-empousa/><ref name=aristoph-ranae-schol-393/> Thus in Aristophanes's plays she is said to change appearance from various beasts to a woman.<ref name=aristophanes-ranae-rogers/>
The Empusa is also said to be one-legged,<ref name=aristoph-ranae-schol-393/> having one brass leg,Template:Efn or a donkey's leg, thus being known by the epithets Onokole (Ὀνοκώλη)<ref name=aristoph-ranae-schol-393/> and Onoskelis (Ὀνοσκελίς) which both mean "donkey-footed".<ref>Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities (1898), Empūsa</ref> A folk etymology construes the name to mean "one-footed" (from Greek *έμπούς, *empous: en-, one + pous, foot).<ref name=aristoph-ranae-schol-393/><ref name=sudas-empousa/>
In Aristophanes's comedy The Frogs, an Empusa appears before Dionysus and his slave Xanthias on their way to the underworld, although this may be the slave's practical joke to frighten his master. Xanthias thus sees (or pretends to see) the empousa transform into a bull, a mule, a beautiful woman, and a dog. The slave also reassures that the being indeed had one brass (copper) leg, and another leg of cow dungTemplate:Efn besides.<ref name=aristophanes-ranae-rogers/>
The Empusa was a being sent by Hecate (as one scholiast noted),<ref name=aristoph-ranae-schol-393/> or was Hecate herself, according to a fragment of Aristophanes's lost play Tagenistae ("Men of the Frying-pan"), as preserved in the Venetus.Template:Efn<ref name=aristoph-ranae-schol-393/>
Life of ApolloniusEdit
By the Late Antiquity in Greece, this became a category of beings, designated as empusai (Lat. empusae) in the plural. It came to be believed that the spectre preyed on young men for seduction and for food.<ref name=dict-grbm-empusa/>
According to the 1st-century Life of Apollonius of Tyana, the empousa is a phantom (phasma) that took on the appearance of an attractive woman and seduced a young philosophy student in order eventually to devour him.<ref name=apoll-vit-IV-25>Apoll. Vit. IV. 25: Template:Harvp, 2, pp. 24–26</ref> In a different passage of the same work, when Apollonius was journeying from Persia to India, he encountered an empousa, hurling insults at it, coaxing his fellow travellers to join him, whereby it ran and hid, uttering high-pitched screams.<ref>Apoll. Vit. II. IV: Template:Harvp, 1, pp. 53</ref>
An empousa was also known to others as lamia or mormolyke.<ref name=apoll-vit-IV-25/> This empousa confessed it was fattening up the student she targeted to feed on him, and that she especially craved young men for the freshness and purity of their blood,<ref name=apoll-vit-IV-25/> prompting an interpretation as blood-sucking vampire by Smith's Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology (1849).<ref name=dict-grbm-empusa/>Template:Refn
Modern Greek folkloreEdit
In modern times, folklore has been collected about a being fitting the description of an empousa: an extremely slender woman with multiple feet, "one of bronze, one a donkey's foot, one an ox's, one a goat's, and one human", but she was referred to as a woman with the lamia-like body and gait. The example was from Arachova (Parnassus) and published by Template:Illm (1871).<ref>Template:Cite book</ref><ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> Schmidt only speculated that oral lore of empousa might survive somewhere locally.Template:Sfnp A field study (Charles Stewart, 1985) finds that empousa is a term that is rarely used in oral tradition, compared to other terms such as gello which has a similar meaning.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>
In fictionEdit
Empusa is a character in Faust, Part Two by Goethe. She appears during the Classical Walpurgis Night as Mephisto is being lured by the Lamiae. She refers to herself as cousin to Mephisto because she has a donkey's foot and he has a horse's.