Silenus
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In Greek mythology, Silenus (Template:IPAc-en; Template:Langx, {{#invoke:IPA|main}}) was a companion and tutor to the wine god Dionysus. He is typically older than the satyrs of the Dionysian retinue (thiasos), and sometimes considerably older, in which case he may be referred to as a Papposilenus. Silen <ref>Template:Cite journal</ref> and its plural sileni refer to the mythological figure as a type that is sometimes thought to be differentiated from a satyr by having the attributes of a horse rather than a goat, though usage of the two words is not consistent enough to permit a sharp distinction.Template:Citation needed
Silenus presides over other daimons and is related to musical creativity, prophetic ecstasy, drunken joy, drunken dances and gestures.<ref>Georgieff, D. 2017. The essence of the Dionysian mysteries. DOI: 10.13140/RG.2.2.36183.06568</ref>
In the decorative arts, a "silene" is a Silenus-like figure, often a "mask" (face) alone.
EvolutionEdit
The original Silenus resembled a folkloric man of the forest, with the ears of a horse and sometimes also the tail and legs of a horse.<ref>Entry "Satyrs and silens", in: The Oxford Classical Dictionary</ref> The later sileni were drunken followers of Dionysus, usually bald and fat with thick lips and squat noses, and having the legs of a human. Later still, the plural "sileni" went out of use and the only references were to one individual named Silenus, the teacher and faithful companion of the wine-god Dionysus.<ref>Kerenyi, p. 177.</ref>
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A notorious consumer of wine, he was usually drunk and had to be supported by satyrs or carried by a donkey. Silenus was described as the oldest, wisest and most drunken of the followers of Dionysus, and was said in Orphic hymns to be the young god's tutor. This puts him in a company of phallic or half-animal tutors of the gods, a group that includes Priapus, Hermaphroditus, Cedalion and Chiron, but also includes Pallas, the tutor of Athena.<ref>Kerenyi, p. 177.</ref>
When intoxicated, Silenus was said to possess special knowledge and the power of prophecy. The Phrygian King Midas was eager to learn from Silenus and caught the old man by lacing with wine a fountain from which Silenus often drank. As Silenus fell asleep, the king's servants seized and took him to their master. An alternative story was that when lost and wandering in Phrygia, Silenus was rescued by peasants and taken to Midas, who treated him kindly. In return for Midas' hospitality Silenus told him some tales and the king, enchanted by Silenus' fictions, entertained him for five days and nights.<ref>J. Thompson (2010). "Emotional Intelligence/Imaginal Intelligence", in: Mythopoetry Scholar Journal 1.</ref> Dionysus offered Midas a reward for his kindness toward Silenus, and Midas chose the power of turning everything he touched into gold. Another story was that Silenus had been captured by two shepherds, and regaled them with wondrous tales.
In Euripides's satyr play Cyclops, Silenus is stranded with the satyrs in Sicily, where they have been enslaved by the Cyclopes. They are the comic elements of the story, a parody of Homer's Odyssey IX. Silenus refers to the satyrs as his children during the play.
Silenus may have become a Latin term of abuse around 211 BC, when it is used in Plautus' Rudens to describe Labrax, a treacherous pimp or leno, as "...a pot-bellied old Silenus, bald head, beefy, bushy eyebrows, scowling, twister, god-forsaken criminal".<ref>Plautus</ref> In his satire The Caesars, the emperor Julian has Silenus sitting next to the gods to offer up his comments on the various rulers under examination, including Alexander the Great, Julius Caesar, Augustus, Marcus Aurelius (whom he reveres as a fellow philosopher-king), and Constantine I.<ref>The Caesars on-line English translation.</ref>
Silenus commonly figures in Roman bas-reliefs of the train of Dionysus, a subject for sarcophagi, embodying the transcendent promises of Dionysian cult.
In Book VI of Pausanias' Description of Greece, his grave is said to be "in the land of the Hebrews".
- Silenus as member of the Dionysian entourage
- Sarcophagus Dionysos Ariadne Glyptothek Munich.jpg
Front side of a Roman sarcophagus, depicting the wedding of Dionysos and Ariadne, with old Silenus figuring in their entourage (sixth figure from the right), 150–160 CE (Glyptothek, Munich)
- Terracotta bell-krater (mixing bowl) MET DP111867.jpg
Papposilenus in a Dionysian procession, bell-krater from Paestum, Magna Graecia, Template:Circa (Metropolitan Museum of Art)
- Borghese Vase-5-Hermitage.jpg
Satyr holding a thyrsus, supporting a drunken ivy-wreathed silenus, from the Borghese Vase, 1st century BC (Louvre)
- Pompeii - Casa del Centenario - Hermaphroditos.jpg
Hermaphroditos with Silenus and a maenad, Roman fresco from the Casa del Centenario, Pompeii
- Pompeii - Hermaphroditus and Silenus.jpg
Hermaphroditus and Silenus. On the right a maenad with thyrsus. Roman fresco from Pompeii, House of M. Epidi Sabini, IX.1.22.
- Bacchus and Silenus BM 1899.2-15.1 n02.jpg
Bacchus pours out wine for a panther, while Silenus plays the lyre, painting from Boscoreale, Campania, Template:Circa (British Museum)
- Roman fresco Villa dei Misteri Pompeii 005.jpg
Silenus playing a lyre, detail of a fresco from the Villa of the Mysteries, Pompeii, Template:Circa
PapposilenusEdit
Papposilenus is a representation of Silenus that emphasizes his old age, particularly as a stock character in satyr play or comedy. In vase painting, his hair is often white, and as in statuettes, Papposilenus has a pot belly, flabby breasts and shaggy thighs. In these depictions, it is often clear that the Papposilenus is an actor playing a part. His costuming includes a body stocking tufted with hair (mallōtos chitōn) that seems to have come into use in the mid-5th century BC.<ref>Albin Lesky, A History of Greek Literature, translated by Cornelis de Heer and James Willis (Hackett, 1996, originally published 1957 in German), p. 226; Guy Hedreen, "Myths of Ritual in Athenian Vase-Paintings of Silens", in: The Origins of Theater in Ancient Greece and Beyond: From Ritual to Drama (Cambridge University Press, 2007), p. 151.</ref>
- Greek - Papposilenos Playing the Double Flute - Walters 541076.jpg
Papposilenus playing an aulos, bronze from 3rd century BC, (Walters Art Museum)
- Papposilenoi Met 25.78.66 n01.jpg
Two papposilenoi as singers at the Panathenaia on an Attic red-figure bell-krater attributed to Polion, Template:Circa
- Altes romano 11.TIF
Actor as Papposilenus, Template:Circa, after 4th century BC original (Altes Museum, Berlin)
WisdomEdit
A theme in Greek philosophy and literature is the wisdom of Silenus, which posits an antinatalist philosophy:
You, most blessed and happiest among humans, may well consider those blessed and happiest who have departed this life before you, and thus you may consider it unlawful, indeed blasphemous, to speak anything ill or false of them, since they now have been transformed into a better and more refined nature. This thought is indeed so old that the one who first uttered it is no longer known; it has been passed down to us from eternity, and hence doubtless it is true. Moreover, you know what is so often said and passes for a trite expression. What is that, he asked? He answered: It is best not to be born at all; and next to that, it is better to die than to live; and this is confirmed even by divine testimony. Pertinently to this they say that Midas, after hunting, asked his captive Silenus somewhat urgently, what was the most desirable thing among humankind. At first he could offer no response, and was obstinately silent. At length, when Midas would not stop plaguing him, he erupted with these words, though very unwillingly: 'you, seed of an evil genius and precarious offspring of hard fortune, whose life is but for a day, why do you compel me to tell you those things of which it is better you should remain ignorant? For he lives with the least worry who knows not his misfortune; but for humans, the best for them is not to be born at all, not to partake of nature's excellence; not to be is best, for both sexes. This should be our choice, if choice we have; and the next to this is, when we are born, to die as soon as we can.' It is plain therefore, that he declared the condition of the dead to be better than that of the living.
- – Aristotle, Eudemus (354 BCE), surviving fragment quoted in Plutarch, Moralia. Consolatio ad Apollonium, sec. xxvii (1st century CE) (S. H. transl.)
This passage is redolent of Theognis' Elegies (425–428). Silenus' wisdom appears in the writings of Arthur Schopenhauer, who endorsed this famous dictum. Via Schopenhauer, Nietzsche discusses the "wisdom of Silenus" in The Birth of Tragedy.
Both Socrates and Aesop were sometimes described as having a physical appearance like that of Silenus, with broad flat faces and fat bellies.<ref>Ulrike Egelhauf-Gaiser, "The Gleaming Pate of the Pastophoros: Masquerade or Embodied Lifestyle?", in: Aspects of Apuleius' Golden Ass, III (Brill, 2012), p. 59, citing passages in Plato and Xenophon.</ref>
- Drunken Silenus, from ancient to modern times
- Drunk papposilenus Louvre CA6530.jpg
Drunk papposilenus supported by two young men, Etruscan red-figure stamnos from Vulci, Template:Circa (Louvre)
- Antalya Museum - Sarkophag 7c Silen.jpg
Silenus detail from a Roman-era marble sarcophagus, 2nd century AD (Antalya Museum)
- Museum El Jem - Mosaic Silen with ass - Detail 1.jpg
Silenus carried toward his donkey (mosaic from Roman Africa, present-day Tunisia)
- Pomponio Amidano - Drunken Silenus on an Ass.jpg
Pomponio Amidano: Drunken Silenus on an Ass, Template:Circa (Blanton Museum of Art, Austin)
- Peter Paul Rubens - The Drunken Silenus - WGA20297.jpg
Peter Paul Rubens: The Drunken Silenus, Template:Circa (Alte Pinakothek, Munich)
Classical traditionEdit
In artEdit
In the Renaissance, a court dwarf posed for the Silenus-like figure astride a tortoise at the entrance to the Boboli Gardens, Florence. Rubens painted The Drunken Silenus (1616–17), now conserved in the Alte Pinakothek, Munich – the subject was also treated by van Dyck and Ribera.
During the late 19th century in Germany and Vienna, symbolism from ancient Greece was reinterpreted through a new Freudian prism. Around the same time, Vienna Secession artist Gustav Klimt uses the irreverent, chubby-faced Silenus as a motif in several works to represent "buried instinctual forces".<ref>Carl Schorske Fin-de-Siècle Vienna – Politics and Culture, 1980, page 221</ref>
- Piero di Cosimo - Bacco scoperto miele.jpg
- Piero di cosimo, disavventure di sileno.jpg
Piero di Cosimo: The Misfortunes of Silenus, Template:Circa (Fogg Museum, Harvard University)
- Peter Paul Rubens - Sleeping Silenus.jpg
Peter Paul Rubens and David Rijckaert II: Sleeping Silenus, Template:Circa (Academy of Fine Arts Vienna)
- Jusepe de Ribera Drunken Silenus.jpg
- Boudard Gruppo del Sileno.jpg
Jean-Baptiste Boudard: Group of the Silen, marble sculpture in the Ducal Park, Parma, 1766
- Dalou Triomphe de Silène CP.jpg
Jules Dalou: Triomphe de Silène, bronze sculpture, Jardin du Luxembourg, Paris, 1897
- Silenius with Some Perfect Ladies of Phrygia Gave a Cocktail Party.jpg
Rupert Bunny: Silenus with Some Perfect Ladies of Phrygia Gave a Cocktail Party, Template:Circa
In literatureEdit
In Gargantua and Pantagruel, Rabelais referred to Silenus as the foster father of Bacchus. In 1884 Thomas Woolner published a long narrative poem about Silenus. In Oscar Wilde's 1890 novel The Picture of Dorian Gray, Lord Henry Wooton turns praise of folly into a philosophy which mocks "slow Silenus" for being sober. In Brian Hooker's 1923 English translation of Edmond Rostand's Cyrano de Bergerac, Cyrano disparagingly refers to the ham actor Montfleury as "That Silenus who cannot hold his belly in his arms."
Professor Silenus is a character in Evelyn Waugh's first novel, Decline and Fall. He features as the disaffected architect of King's Thursday and provides the novel with one of its primary motifs. In the prophetic style of the traditional Greek Silenus he informs the protagonist that life is
a great disc of polished wood that revolves quickly. At first you sit down and watch the others. They are all trying to sit in the wheel, and they keep getting flung off, and that makes them laugh, and you laugh too. It's great fun... Of course at the very centre there's a point completely at rest, if one could only find it.... Lots of people just enjoy scrambling on and being whisked off and scrambling on again.... But the whole point about the wheel is that you needn't get on it at all.... People get hold of ideas about life, and that makes them think they've got to join in the game, even if they don't enjoy it. It doesn't suit everyone...<ref>Michael Gorra (Summer, 1988). "Through Comedy toward Catholicism: A Reading of Evelyn Waugh's Early Novels". Contemporary Literature 29 (2): 201–220.</ref>
Silenus is one of the two main characters in Tony Harrison's 1990 satyr play The Trackers of Oxyrhynchus, partly based on Sophocles' play Ichneutae (5th century BC).
Scientific nomenclatureEdit
Carl Linnaeus used the feminine form Silene as the name of a genus of flowering plant.<ref>Umberto Quattrocchi, CRC World Dictionary of Plant Names, 1999, Template:ISBN, 4:2482</ref>
GalleryEdit
- Statue of Silerius. Exhibition in Taipei 2013.jpg
Statue of Silerius. Exhibition in Taipei 2013
- Silver tetradrachm reverse Naxos Met L.1999.19.69.jpg
Silenus holding a kantharos on a tetradrachm from Naxos, Sicily, 461–450 BC
- Satyr kantharos lyre CdM De Ridder 812.jpg
Silenus holding a kantharos and a lyre. Tondo of an Attic red-figure kylix from Vulci, Etruria, Template:Circa
- Etruscan - Antefix with Head of Silenus - Walters 48354.jpg
Etruscan terracotta antefix with head of Silenus, 4th century BC (Walters Art Museum, Baltimore)
- Bacchus-2.jpg
Statue of Silenus, detail
- Situla 88.3.jpg
Silenus mask, detail from a bronze stamnoid situla, 330–310 BC (Vassil Bojkov Collection, Sofia)
- Phaler Silenus CdM.jpg
Gold phaler (ornament worn by horses) representing Silenus, Syria, 3rd century BC
- Maschera di Papposileno.jpg
Mask of Silen, first half of 1st century BC
- 2 Roman bronze fulcra representing Silenus.jpg
Two Roman bronze fulcra (couch ornaments) representing Silenus, 1st century BC – 1st century AD (Art Institute of Chicago)
- Silenus Eros CdM.jpg
Silenus and Eros fragment from Latium, early 1st century AD (Cabinet des médailles, Paris)
- Mosaic with mask of Silenus.jpg
Mosaic with mask of Silenus
- Statue Silenus Satyr Museum Delos102165.jpg
Statue of Silenus, 2nd century BC (Archaeological Museum of Delos)
- Delos Dionysos.jpg
Statue of Silenus, Archaeological Museum of Delos, detail
FootnotesEdit
Further readingEdit
- Guy Michael Hedreen, 1992. Silens in Attic Black-figure Vase-painting: Myth and Performance (Ann Arbor: University of Michigan) Catalogue of the corpus.
- Karl Kerenyi. The Gods of the Greeks, 1951.
- Over 300 images of Silenus at the Warburg Institute's Iconographic Database Template:Webarchive
- Template:Cite EB1911