Template:Short description {{#invoke:other uses|otheruses}}

File:The knight and the mermaid.jpg
The Kiss of the Enchantress (Isobel Lilian Gloag, Template:Circa), inspired by Keats's "Lamia", depicts Lamia as half-serpent, half-woman

Lamia (Template:IPAc-en; Template:Langx), in ancient Greek mythology, was a child-eating monster and, in later tradition, was regarded as a type of night-haunting spirit or "daimon".

In the earliest myths, Lamia was a beautiful queen of ancient Libya who had an affair with Zeus and gave birth to his children. Upon learning of this, Zeus's wife Hera robbed Lamia of her children, either by kidnapping them and hiding them away, killing them outright, or forcing Lamia to kill them.<ref name="diodorus" /> The loss of her children drove Lamia insane, and she began hunting and devouring others' children.<ref>Duris of Samos (d. 280 B. C.), Libyca, quoted by Template:Harvp</ref> Either because of her anguish or her cannibalism, Lamia was transformed into a horrific creature. Zeus gifted Lamia the power of prophecy and the ability to take out and reinsert her eyes, possibly because Hera cursed her with insomnia or the inability to close her eyes.<ref>Bell, Robert E., Women of Classical Mythology: A Biographical Dictionary (New York: Oxford UP, 1991), s.v. "Lamia" (drawing upon Diodorus Siculus 22.41; Suidas "Lamia"; Plutarch "On Being a Busy-Body" 2; Scholiast on Aristophanes' Peace 757; Eustathius on Odyssey 1714).</ref>

The lamiai (Template:Langx) also became a type of phantom, synonymous with the empusai who seduced young men to satisfy their sexual appetite and fed on their flesh afterward. An account of Apollonius of Tyana's defeat of a lamia-seductress inspired the poem "Lamia" by John Keats.

Lamia has been ascribed serpentine qualities, which some commentators believe can be firmly traced to mythology from antiquity; they have found analogues in ancient texts that could be designated as lamiai, which are part-snake beings. These include the half-woman, half-snake beasts of the "Libyan myth" told by Dio Chrysostom, and the monster sent to Argos by Apollo to avenge Psamathe, daughter of King Crotopos.

In previous centuries, Lamia was used in Greece as a bogeyman to frighten children into obedience, similar to the way parents in Spain, Portugal and Latin America used the Coco.

EtymologyEdit

A scholiast to Aristophanes claimed that Lamia's name derived from her having a large throat or gullet ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}; laimós).Template:Refn Modern scholarship reconstructs a Proto-Indo-European stem {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}, "nocturnal spirit", whence also comes lemures.<ref name="eiec">Template:Cite encyclopedia</ref>

Classical mythologyEdit

Aristotle's Nicomachean Ethics (vii.5) refers to the lore of some beastly lifeform in the shape of a woman, which tears the bellies of pregnant mothers and devours their fetuses. An anonymous commentator on the passage states this is a reference to the Lamia, but muddlingly combines this with Aristotle's subsequent comments and describes her as a Scythian of the Pontus (Black Sea) area.Template:Refn<ref name="fisher" />

According to one myth, Hera deprived Lamia of the ability to sleep, making her constantly grieve over the loss of her children, and Zeus provided relief by endowing her with removable eyes. He also gifted her with a shapeshifting ability in the process.<ref name=scholium>Scholium from the Byzantine-Hellenistic period to Aristophanes, Peace 758, quoted by Template:Harvp</ref><ref>Bell, Robert E. (1993), Women of Classical Mythology, drawing upon Diodorus Siculus XX.41; Suidas 'Lamia'; Plutarch 'On Being a Busy-Body' 2; Scholiast on Aristophanes's Peace 757; Eustathius on Odyssey 1714) </ref>

De-mythologizedEdit

Diodorus Siculus (Template:Fl.) gave a de-mythologized account of Lamia as a queen of Libya who ordered her soldiers to snatch children from their mothers and kill them, and whose beauty gave way to bestial appearance due to her savageness. The queen, as related by Diodorus, was born in a cave.<ref name=diodorus>Diodorus Siculus (Template:Fl.), Library of History XX.41, quoted by Template:Harvp</ref><ref name=diodorus-gk>Bekker, Immanuel, ed., Diodorus Siculus, {{#invoke:URL|url}}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:URL with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y | 1 | 2 }} XX.41</ref> Heraclitus Paradoxographus (2nd century) also gave a rationalizing account.Template:Sfnp

Diodorus's rationalization was that the Libyan queen in her drunken state was as if she could not see, allowing her citizens free rein for any conduct without supervision, giving rise to the folk myth that she places her eyes in a vessel.<ref name=diodorus/> Heraclitus's euhemerized account explains that Hera, consort of Zeus, gouged the eyes out of the beautiful Lamia.<ref name=heraclitus>Heraclitus Paradoxographus (2nd century) De Incredibilibus 34, quoted by Template:Harvp</ref>

GenealogyEdit

Lamia was the daughter born between King Belus of Egypt and Lybie, according to one source.Template:Efn<ref name=scholium/><ref>Diodorus Siculus, 20.41.3-6, Scholia to Aristophanes, Wasps 1035; Commentary 37 to Heraclitus the Allegorist</ref>

According to the same source, Lamia was taken by Zeus to Italy, and that Lamos, the city of the man-eating Laestrygonians, was named after her.<ref name=scholium/> A different authority remarks that Lamia was once queen of the Laestrygonians.Template:RefnTemplate:RefnTemplate:Refn

AristophanesEdit

Aristophanes wrote in two plays an identically worded list of foul-smelling objects which included the "Lamia's testicles", thus making Lamia's gender ambiguous.<ref>Aristophanes, The Wasps, 1035; Peace 758, cited by Template:Harvp, p. 91, note 117.</ref>Template:Efn This was later incorporated into Edward Topsell's 17th-century envisioning of the lamia.<ref name="topsell"/>

It is somewhat uncertain if this refers to the one LamiaTemplate:Refn or to "a Lamia" among many, as given in some translations of the two plays;<ref>"a Lamia's groin" (Benjamin Bickley Rogers, 1874), "a foul Lamia's testicles" (Athenian Society, 1912), "sweaty Crotch of a Lamia" (Paul Roche, 2005).</ref> a generic Template:Not a typo is also supported by the definition as some sort of a "wild beast" in the Suda.<ref>"{{#invoke:URL|url}}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:URL with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y | 1 | 2 }}", Suda On Line, tr. David Whitehead. 27 May 2008</ref>

Hellenistic folkloreEdit

As children's bogeyEdit

The "Lamia" was a bogeyman or bugbear term, invoked by a mother or a nanny to frighten children into good behavior.Template:Sfnp<ref name=leinweber-p77>Template:Harvp, "Witchcraft and Lamiae in 'The Golden Ass'" Folklore 105, p. 77.</ref> Such practices are recorded by the 1st century Diodorus,<ref name=diodorus/> and other sources in antiquity.<ref name=scholium/><ref>Tertullian, Against Valentinius (ch. iii)</ref>

Numerous sources attest to the Lamia being a "child-devourer", one of them being Horace.<ref>Template:Harvp, note 114.</ref> Horace in Ars Poetica cautions against the overly fantastical: "[nor should a story] draw a live boy out of a Lamia's belly".Template:Efn<ref>Template:Cite book</ref> Lamia was in some versions thus seen as swallowing children alive, and there may have existed some nurse's tale that told of a boy extracted alive out of a Lamia.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

The Byzantine lexicon Suda (10th century) gave an entry for lamía, with definitions and sources much as already described.<ref>"{{#invoke:URL|url}}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:URL with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y | 1 | 2 }}", Suda On Line, tr. David Whitehead. 1 April 2008</ref> The lexicon also has an entry under mormo ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), stating that Mormo and the equivalent {{#invoke:Lang|lang}} mormolykeionTemplate:Efn are called lamía, and that all these refer to frightful beings.<ref>Template:Citation: "Μορμώ: λέγεται καὶ Μορμώ, Μορμοῦς, ὡς Σαπφώ. καὶ Μορμών, Μορμόνος. Ἀριστοφάνης: ἀντιβολῶ σ', ἀπένεγκέ μου τὴν Μορμόνα. ἄπο τὰ φοβερά: φοβερὰ γὰρ ὑπῆρχεν ἡ Μορμώ. καὶ αὖθις Ἀριστοφάνης: Μορμὼ τοῦ θράσους. μορμολύκειον, ἣν λέγουσι Λαμίαν: ἔλεγον δὲ οὕτω καὶ τὰ φοβερά. λείπει δὲ τὸ ὡς, ὡς Μορμώ, ἢ ἐπιρρηματικῶς ἐξενήνεκται, ὡς εἰ ἔλεγε, φεῦ τοῦ θράσους".</ref><ref>Template:Harvp, p. 91, note 114</ref><ref>"{{#invoke:URL|url}}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:URL with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y | 1 | 2 }}", Suda On Line, tr. Richard Rodriguez. 11 June 2009.</ref>

"Lamia" has as synonyms "Mormo" and "Gello" according to the scholia to Theocritus.Template:Refn

Other bogeys have been listed in conjunction with "Lamia", for instance, the Gorgo ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), the eyeless giant Ephialtes, a Mormolyce ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}} named by Strabo.Template:Refn

As a seductressEdit

In later classical periods, around the 1st century A. D.,<ref name=skene/> the conception of this Lamia shifted to that of a sultry seductress who enticed young men and devoured them.<ref name=dict-grbm>Template:Citation Perseus Project "{{#invoke:URL|url}}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:URL with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y | 1 | 2 }}".</ref><ref name=skene/>

Apollonius of TyanaEdit

A representative example is Philostratus's novelistic biography Life of Apollonius of Tyana.<ref name=dict-grbm/>

It purports to give a full account of the capture of "Lamia of Corinth" by Apollonius, as the general populace referred to the legend.Template:Refn An apparition (phasma {{#invoke:Lang|lang}}<ref name=philostratus/>Template:Refn) which in the assumed guise of a woman seduced one of Apollonius's young pupils.

Here, Lamia is the common vulgar term and empousa the proper term. For Apollonius in speech declares that the seductress is "one of the empousai, which most other people would call lamiai and mormolykeia".Template:Refn<ref name=philostratus-tr-phillimore/> The use of the term lamia in this sense is however considered atypical by one commentator.<ref name=stoneman-p178/>

Regarding the seductress, Apollonius further warned, "you are warming a snake (ophis) on your bosom, and it is a snake that warms you".Template:Sfnp<ref name=philostratus/> It has been suggested from this discourse that the creature was therefore "literally a snake".Template:SfnpTemplate:Efn The empousa admits in the end to fattening up her victim (Menippus of Lycia) to be consumed, as she was in the habit of targeting young men for food "because their blood was fresh and pure".<ref name=philostratus-tr-phillimore/> The last statement has led to the surmise that this lamia/empusa was a sort of blood-sucking vampiress.<ref name=dict-grbm-empusa>Template:Citation Perseus Project "{{#invoke:URL|url}}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:URL with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y | 1 | 2 }}".</ref>

Another aspect of her powers is that this empusa/lamia is able to create an illusion of a sumptuous mansion, with all the accoutrements and even servants. But once Apollonius reveals her false identity at the wedding, the illusion fails her and vanishes.<ref name=philostratus/>

Lamia the courtesanEdit

A longstanding joke makes a word play between Lamia the monster and Lamia of Athens, the notorious hetaira courtesan who captivated Demetrius Poliorcetes (d. 283 BC). The double-entendre sarcasm was uttered by Demetrius's father, among others.Template:Efn<ref>Template:Citation</ref><ref>Plutarch, {{#invoke:URL|url}}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:URL with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y | 1 | 2 }} 19, Perrin, Bernadotte, ed.</ref> The same joke was used in theatrical Greek comedy,<ref>Template:Harvp, citing Lamia O'Sullivan, Lara (2009), pp. 53–79, esp. p. 69</ref> and generally.<ref name=stannish-doran-p117-pejorative-label>Template:Harvp:"This is a pejorative expression, not a formal classification, but it is still meaningful"; "..labeling of a dangerous woman as a lamia was not uncommon.. Aelian records.. a notorious prostitute.. (Miscellany 12.17, 13.8)".</ref> The word play is also seen as being employed in Horace's Odes, to banter Lucius Aelius Lamia the praetor.Template:Efn<ref>Template:Citation</ref>

Golden AssEdit

In Apuleius's The Golden AssTemplate:Efn appear two Thessalian "witches",Template:Refn Meroe and her sister Panthia, who are called lamiae in one instance.<ref>Apul. Met. 1.17. Template:Harvp: "Admittedly, Apuleius' use of the term "Lamiae" is an isolated occurrence. Elsewhere, Meroe and her sister are referred to as witches or sorcerer".</ref>Template:SfnpTemplate:RefnTemplate:Refn

Meroe has seduced a man named Socrates, but when he plots to escape, the two witches raid his bed, thrust a knife in the neck to tap the blood into a skin bag, eviscerate his heart, and stuff the hole back with sponge.<ref>{{#invoke:URL|url}}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:URL with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y | 1 | 2 }}–17 Template:In lang</ref>

Some commentators, despite the absence of actual blood-sucking, find these witches to share "vampiric" qualities of the lamiae (lamiai) in Philostratus's narrative, thus offering it up for comparison.Template:Sfnp

KindredsEdit

Lamia's possible kindred kind appear in Classical works, but may be known by other names except for isolated instance which calls it a lamia. Or they may be simply unnamed or differently named. And those analogues that exhibit a serpentine form or nature have been especially noted.

Poine of ArgosEdit

One such possible lamia is the avenging monster sent by Apollo against the city of Argos and killed by Coroebus. It is referred to as Poine or Ker<ref>Greek Anthology 7.154, cited by Template:Harvp</ref> in classical sources, but later in the Medieval period, one source does call it a lamia (First Vatican Mythographer, Template:C. century).Template:SfnpTemplate:Sfnp

The story surrounds the tragedy of the daughter of King Crotopus of Argos named Psamathe, whose child by Apollo dies and she is executed for suspected promiscuity. Apollo as punishment then sends the child-devouring monster to Argos.

In Statius' version, the monster had a woman's face and breasts, and a hissing snake protruding from the cleft of her rusty-colored forehead, and it would slide into children's bedrooms to snatch them.<ref name=statius>Statius, Thebaid, I. 562–669, quoted by Template:Harvp; Latin text: {{#invoke:URL|url}}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:URL with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y | 1 | 2 }} I; Bailey, D. R. Shackleton tr. (2003) {{#invoke:URL|url}}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:URL with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y | 1 | 2 }}, Book I.</ref> According to a scholiast to Ovid, it had a serpent's body carrying a human face.Template:Sfnp

In Pausanias's version, the monster is called Poinē ({{#invoke:Lang|lang}}), meaning "punishment" or "vengeance", but there is nothing about a snake on her forehead.Template:Sfnp<ref name=pausanias>Pausanias, translated by Jones, W.H.S.; Ormerod, H.A., {{#invoke:URL|url}}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:URL with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y | 1 | 2 }}, 1. 43. 7 - 8</ref>

One evidence this may be a double of the Lamia comes from Plutarch, who equates the word empousa with poinē.<ref>Plutarch, Moralia 1101c, cited by Template:Harvp.</ref>

Libyan mythEdit

A second example is a colony of man-eating monsters in Libya, described by Dio Chrysostom. These monsters had a woman's torso and beastly hands, and "all the lower part was snake, ending in the snake's baleful head".<ref>Dio Chrysostom, Orations, 5.1, 5–27, quoted by Template:Harvp</ref><ref name=dio-05>Cohoon, J. W. tr., ed. {{#invoke:URL|url}}{{#invoke:Check for unknown parameters|check|unknown=Template:Main other|preview=Page using Template:URL with unknown parameter "_VALUE_"|ignoreblank=y | 1 | 2 }} 5 (Loeb Classics).</ref>Template:Refn The idea that these creatures were lamiai seems to originate with Alex Scobie (1977),<ref>Template:Citation, cited by Template:Harvp</ref> and to be accepted by other commentators.Template:Sfnp

Middle AgesEdit

By the Early Middle Ages, lamia (pl. lamiai or lamiae) was being glossed as a general term referring to a class of beings. Hesychius of Alexandria's lexicon (Template:Circa) glossed lamiai as apparitions, or even fish.Template:RefnTemplate:Sfnp Isidore of Seville defined them as beings that snatched babies and ripped them apart.Template:Sfnp

The Vulgate used "lamia" in Isaiah 34:14 to translate "Lilith" of the Hebrew Bible.<ref name=lea/> Pope Gregory I (d. 604)'s exegesis on the Book of Job explains that the lamia represented either heresy or hypocrisy.<ref name=lea>Template:Citation</ref>

Christian writers also warned against the seductive potential of lamiae. In his 9th-century treatise on divorce, Hincmar, archbishop of Reims, listed lamiae among the supernatural dangers that threatened marriages, and identified them with geniciales feminae,<ref>Hincmar, De divortio Lotharii ("On Lothar's divorce"), XV Interrogatio, MGH Concilia 4 Supplementum, 205, as cited by Bernadotte Filotas, Pagan Survivals, Superstitions and Popular Cultures in Early Medieval Pastoral Literature (Pontifical Institute of Mediaeval Studies, 2005, p. 305.</ref> female reproductive spirits.<ref>In his 1628 Glossarium mediae et infimae latinitatis, Du Cange made note of the geniciales feminae, and associated them with words pertaining to generation and genitalia; entry online. Template:Webarchive</ref>

InterpretationsEdit

File:Lamia Waterhouse.jpg
Lamia (second version), with snakeskin on her lap, John William Waterhouse (1909)

This Lamia of Libya has her double in Lamia-Sybaris of the legend around Delphi, both indirectly associated with serpents. Strong parallel with the Medusa has also been noted. These, and other considerations have prompted modern commentators to suggest she is a dragoness.Template:Sfnp<ref>Template:Harvp, as the female counterpart of the Python, also of Delphi; and passim.</ref>

Another double of the Libyan Lamia may be Lamia, daughter of Poseidon. Lamia by Zeus gave birth to a Sibyl according to Pausanias, and this would have to be the Libyan Lamia, yet there is a tradition that Lamia the daughter of Poseidon was the mother of a Sibyl.Template:Sfnp Either one could be Lamia the mother of Scylla mentioned in the Stesichorus (d. 555 BC) fragment, and other sources.Template:RefnTemplate:Refn Scylla is a creature depicted variously as anguipedal or serpent-bodied.

Identification as a serpent-womanEdit

Diodorus Siculus (Template:Fl.), for instance, describes Lamia of Libya as having nothing more than a beastly appearance.<ref name=diodorus/> Diodorus, Duris of Samos and other sources which comprise the sources for building an "archetypal" picture of Lamia do not designate her as a dragoness, or give her explicit serpentine descriptions.<ref>Template:Harvp: "Nothing here explicitly declares.. a serpentine element" (Duris and Scholium), Template:P.; "nothing here, again, speaks directly of a serpentin nature" (Diodorus and Heraclitus Paradoxographus), Template:P..</ref>

In the 1st-century Life of Apollonius of Tyana the female empousa-lamia is also called "a snake",<ref name=philostratus/> which may seem to the modern reader to be just a metaphorical expression, but which Daniel Ogden insists is a literal snake.Template:Sfnp Philostratus's tale was reworked by Keats in his poem Lamia,<ref>Template:Harvp "Vampire"</ref> where it is made clear she bears the guise of a snake, which she wants to relinquish in return for human appearance.

Modern commentators have also tried to establish that she may have originally been a dragoness, by inference.<ref>Template:Harvp: "This is not to say that the notion of an archetypal Lamia preceded the notion of lamiai as a category of monster".</ref>Template:Sfnp Daniel Ogden argues that one of her possible reincarnations, the monster of Argos killed by Coroebus had a "scaly gait", indicating she must have had an anguipedal form in an early version of the story,Template:Sfnp although the Latin text in Statius merely reads inlabi (declension of labor) meaning "slides".<ref name=statius/>

One of the doubles of Lamia of Libya is the Lamia-Sybaris, which is described only as a giant beast by Antoninus Liberalis (2nd century).<ref>Antoninus Liberalis (2nd century), Metamorphoses 8, paraphrasing Nicander, 2nd century B.C., quoted by Template:Harvp</ref>Template:Sfnp It is noted that this character terrorized Delphi, just as the dragon Python had.Template:Sfnp

Close comparison is also made with the serpentine Medusa. Not only is Medusa identified with Libya, she also had dealings with the three Graeae who had the removable eye shared between them. In some versions, the removable eye belonged to the three Gorgons, Medusa and her sisters.Template:Sfnp

HecateEdit

Some commentators have also equated Lamia with Hecate. The basis of this identification is the variant maternities of Scylla, sometimes ascribed to Lamia (as already mentioned), and sometimes to Hecate.<ref>Odyssey 12.124 and scholia, noted by Karl Kerenyi, Gods of the Greeks 1951:38 note 71.</ref>Template:Refn The identification has also been built (using transitive logic) since each name is identified with empousa in different sources.Template:SfnpTemplate:Refn

Stench of a lamiaEdit

A foul odor has been pointed out as a possible common motif or attribute of the lamiai. The examples are Aristophanes's reference to the "lamia's testicles", the scent of the monsters in the Libyan myth which allowed the humans to track down their lair, and the terrible stench of their urine that lingered in the clothing of Aristomenes, which they showered upon him after carving out his friend Sophocles's heart.Template:Sfnp

Mesopotamian connectionEdit

Lamia may originate from the Mesopotamian demoness Lamashtu.Template:Sfnp

Modern ageEdit

File:Other Worlds - November 1949 (first issue).jpg
A lamia-like creature on the cover of Other Worlds, November 1949.

Renaissance writer Angelo Poliziano wrote Lamia (1492), a philosophical work whose title is a disparaging reference to his opponents who dabble in philosophy without competence. It alludes to Plutarch's use of the term in De curiositate, where the Greek writer suggests that the term Lamia is emblematic of meddlesome busybodies in society.<ref>Template:Citation</ref> Worded another way, Lamia was emblematic of the hypocrisy of such scholars.<ref>Template:Citation</ref>

From around the mid-15th century into the 16th century, the lamia came to be regarded exclusively as witches.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

BestiaryEdit

File:Topsell-91.jpg
A 17th-century depiction of Lamia from Edward Topsell's The History of Four-Footed Beasts

In Edward Topsell's History of Four-footed Beasts (1607), the lamia is described as having the upper body (i.e., the face and breasts) of a woman, but with goatlike hind quarters with large and filthy "stones" (testicles) that smell like sea-calves, on authority of Aristophanes. It is covered with scales all over.<ref name="topsell">Topsell, Edward (1607), "Of the lamia, The historie of foure-footed beastes.</ref>

AdaptationsEdit

John Keats's "Lamia" in his Lamia and Other Poems is a reworking of the tale in Apollonius's biography by Philostratus, described above. In Keats's version, the student Lycius replaces Menippus the Lycian. For the descriptions and nature of the Lamia, Keats drew from Burton's The Anatomy of Melancholy.<ref>Keats made a note to this effect at the end of the first page in the fair copy he made: see William E. Harrold, "Keats' 'Lamia' and Peacock's 'Rhododaphne'". The Modern Language Review 61.4 (October 1966:579–584). p. 579 and note with bibliography on this point.</ref> August Enna wrote an opera called Lamia.<ref name=skene/>

A Lamia appears in the 1914 story "An Episode of Cathedral History" by M. R. James.

English composer Dorothy Howell composed a tone poem Lamia which was played repeatedly to great acclaim under its dedicatee Sir Henry Wood at the London Promenade concerts in the 1920s. It has been recorded more recently by Rumon Gamba conducting the BBC Philharmonic Orchestra for Chandos Records in a 2019 release of British tone poems.

The 1982 novel Lamia by Tristan Travis sees the mythological monster relocated to 1970s Chicago, where she takes bloody vengeance on sex offenders while the cops try to figure out the mystery.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Lamia, also known as Ramia, also appears as a boss in the Nintendo DS action role-playing game Deep Labyrinth.<ref>Template:Cite book</ref>

Lamia is the main antagonist in the 2009 horror movie Drag Me to Hell. In the film, Lamia is described as "the most feared of all Demons" and having the head and hooves of a goat. A gypsy curse associated with him has Lamia torment the victim for three days before having its minions drag them into Hell to burn in its fires for all eternity.

A Lamia appears in the BBC series Merlin in series 4. Described as having the blood of both woman and serpent, she draws the life out of men through a kiss in her seductress form before turning into a serpent-like creature. She is killed by Prince Arthur.

Lamia appears as an antagonist in Rick Riordan's The Demigod Diaries, appearing in its fourth short story "The Son of Magic". She is depicted as the daughter of Hecate and as having glowing green eyes with serpentine slits, shriveled-up hands with lizard-like claws on them, and crocodile-like teeth.

In the anime Monster Musume, the character Miia is a lamia.

In Gerald Brom's Lost Gods, Lamia serves as the primary antagonist, depicted as an ancient succubus who prolongs her life by drinking the blood of her children and grandchildren.

Lamias are featured in the progressive rock album The Lamb Lies Down on Broadway by Genesis on the track "The Lamia". They are depicted as female creatures with "snake-like" bodies and seduce the protagonist Rael in an attempt to devour him, but as soon as they "taste" Rael's body, the blood that enters the lamias' bodies causes their death.

Lamia is mentioned several times in the Iron Maiden song "Prodigal Son" from their 1981 album Killers. The band often refer to mythology and mythical beasts in their compositions.

The American TV series Raised by Wolves features a character named Lamia, an android mother, who has removable eyes and the ability to shapeshift.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

The 2024 British fantasy TV series Domino Day, set in modern-day Manchester, features Siena Kelly as the titular lead character, a witch who feeds on the energy of her dating-app hook-ups. She eventually realizes that she is actually a lamia.<ref>{{#invoke:citation/CS1|citation |CitationClass=web }}</ref>

Modern folk traditionsEdit

Template:See also

In modern Greek folk tradition, the Lamia has survived and retained many of her traditional attributes.<ref>Lamia receives a section in Georgios Megas and Helen Colaclides, Folktales of Greece (Folktales of the World) (University of Chicago Prtes) 1970.</ref> John Cuthbert Lawson remarks "the chief characteristics of the Lamiae, apart from their thirst for blood, are their uncleanliness, their gluttony, and their stupidity".<ref name="ReferenceA">Lawson, Modern Greek Folklore and Ancient Greek Religion: A Study in Survivals (Cambridge University Press) 1910:175ff.</ref> The contemporary Greek proverb, "της Λάμιας τα σαρώματα" ("the Lamia's sweeping"), epitomises slovenliness;<ref name="ReferenceA"/> and the common expression, "τό παιδί τό 'πνιξε η Λάμια" ("the child has been strangled by the Lamia"), explains the sudden death of young children.<ref name="ReferenceA"/>

Later traditions referred to many lamiae; these were folkloric monsters similar to vampires and succubi that seduced young men and then fed on their blood.<ref>Template:Cite journal</ref>

Fine artsEdit

In a 1909 painting by Herbert James Draper, the Lamia who moodily watches the serpent on her forearm appears to represent a hetaera. Although the lower body of Draper's Lamia is human, he alludes to her serpentine history by draping a shed snakeskin about her waist. In Renaissance emblems, Lamia has the body of a serpent and the breasts and head of a woman, like the image of hypocrisy.Template:Citation needed

See alsoEdit

Explanatory notesEdit

Template:Notelist

ReferencesEdit

CitationsEdit

Template:Reflist

General and cited referencesEdit

Template:Refbegin

Template:Refend

External linksEdit

Template:Metamorphoses in Greco-Roman mythology