Εμφανίζονται 6 τίτλοι με αναζήτηση: Ομηρικός κόσμος στην ευρύτερη περιοχή: "ΠΙΣΑ Αρχαία πόλη ΑΡΧΑΙΑ ΟΛΥΜΠΙΑ" .
ΠΙΣΑ (Αρχαία πόλη) ΑΡΧΑΙΑ ΟΛΥΜΠΙΑ
Γιος του Ταντάλου, που ήρθε στην Ηλιδα από τη Φρυγία. Εκεί, ύστερα από νίκη του σε αγώνα ιπποδρομίας, πήρε γυναίκα του την κόρη του βασιλιά Οινόμαου Ιπποδάμεια και ανέβηκε στο θρόνο (Ιλ. Β 104).
Ο Πέλοπας από την Ασία πήρε τη βασιλεία από τον Οινόμαο και μετά το θάνατο εκείνου προσάρτησε στο βασίλειό του και την Ολυμπία. Οι Ηλείοι έλεγαν ότι ήταν ο πρώτος που ίδρυσε Ναό του Ερμή στην Πελοπόννησο (Παυσ. 5,1,7). Επίσης διοργάνωσε Ολυμπιακούς Αγώνες λαμπρότερους από όλους τους προηγούμενους (Παυσ. 5,8,2). Οι Ηλείοι τον τιμούσαν περισσότερο από κάθε άλλο ήρωα (Παυσ. 5,13,1).
(Pelops, "Black-face"). A grandson of Zeus and son
of Tantalus and Dione, the daughter of Atlas. Some writers call his mother Euryanassa
or Clytia. He was married to Hippodamia, by whom he became the father of Atreus,
Thyestes, Dias, Cynosurus, Corinthius, Hippalmus (Hippalcmus or Hippalcimus),
Hippasus, Cleon, Argius, Alcathous, Aelius, Pittheus, Troezen, Nicippe, and Lysidice,
known collectively as the Pelopidae. By Axioche or the nymph Danais he is said
to have been the father of Chrysippus. Pelops was king of Pisa in Elis, and from
him the great southern peninsula of Greece was believed to have derived its name
Peloponnesus. According to a tradition which became very general in later times,
Pelops was a Phrygian, who was expelled by Ilus from Phrygia (Ovid, Met.viii.
622), and thereupon migrated with his great wealth to Pisa. Others describe him
as a Paphlagonian, and call the Paphlagonians themselves Pelopeioi. Others again
represent him as a native of Greece; and there can be little doubt that in the
earliest traditions Pelops was described as a native of Greece and not as a foreign
immigrant; in them, also, he is called the tamer of horses and the favourite of
Poseidon. The legends about Pelops consist mainly of (a) the story of his being
cut to pieces and boiled; (b) of his contest with Oenomaus and Hippodamia; and
(c) of his relation to his sons, to which may be added the honours paid to his
remains.
(a) The first tells how Tantalus, the favourite of the gods,
once invited them to a repast, and on that occasion killed his own son, and having
boiled him set the flesh before them that they might eat it. But the immortal
gods, knowing what it was, did not touch it; Demeter alone, being absorbed by
grief for her lost daughter, consumed the shoulder of Pelops. Hereupon the gods
ordered Hermes to put the limbs of Pelops into a caldron, and thereby restore
him to life. When the process was over, Clotho took him out of the caldron, and
as the shoulder consumed by Demeter was wanting, the goddess supplied its place
by one made of ivory; his descendants (the Pelopidae), as a mark of their origin,
were believed to have one shoulder as white as ivory.
(b) As an oracle had declared to Oenomaus that he should be
killed by his son-in-law, he refused giving his daughter Hippodamia in marriage
to any one. But since many suitors appeared, Oenomaus declared that he would bestow
her hand upon the man who should conquer him in the chariot-race, but that he
should kill all who were defeated by him. Among other suitors Pelops also presented
himself; but when he saw the heads of his conquered predecessors stuck up above
the door of Oenomaus he was seized with fear, and endeavoured to gain the favour
of Myrtilus, the charioteer of Oenomaus, promising him half the kingdom if he
would assist him in conquering his master. Myrtilus agreed, and drew out the linchpins
of the chariot of Oenomaus. In the race the chariot of Oenomaus broke down, and
he was thrown out and killed. Thus Hippodamia became the wife of Pelops. But as
Pelops had now gained his object, he was unwilling to keep faith with Myrtilus;
and accordingly, as they were driving along a cliff, he threw Myrtilus into the
sea. As Myrtilus sank he cursed Pelops and his whole race. Pelops returned with
Hippodamia to Pisa in Elis, and soon also made himself master of Olympia, where
he restored the Olympian Games with greater splendour than they had ever been
celebrated before.
(c) Chrysippus was the favourite of his father, and was, in
consequence, envied by his brothers. The eldest two among them, Atreus and Thyestes,
with the connivance of Hippodamia, accordingly murdered Chrysippus, and threw
his body into a well. Pelops, who suspected his sons of the murder, expelled them
from the country. Hippodamia, dreading the anger of her husband, fled to Midea
in Argolis, whence her remains were afterwards conveyed by Pelops to Olympia.
Pelops, after his death, was honoured at Olympia above all
other heroes. His tomb, with an iron sarcophagus, existed on the banks of the
Alpheus, not far from the temple of Artemis, near Pisa. The spot on which his
sanctuary (Pelopion) stood in the Altis was said to have been dedicated by Heracles,
who also offered to him the first sacrifices. The magistrates of the Eleans likewise
offered to him there an annual sacrifice, consisting of a black ram, with special
ceremonies. The name of Pelops was so celebrated that it was constantly used by
the poets in connection with his descendants and the cities they inhabited. Hence
we find Atreus, the son of Pelops, called Pelopeius Atreus, and Agamemnon, the
grandson or great-grandson of Atreus, called Pelopeius Agamemnon. In the same
way Iphigenia, the daughter of Agamemnon, and Hermione, the wife of Menelaus,
are each called by Ovid Pelopeia virgo. Vergil ( Aen.ii. 193) uses the phrase
Pelopea moenia to signify the cities in Peloponnesus which Pelops and his descendants
ruled over; and in like manner Mycenae is called by Ovid Pelopeiades Mycenae.
This text is from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities. Cited Oct 2002 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
Pelops : Perseus Project
Pelops : Various WebPages
Γιος του Πέλοπος και της Ηγησάνδρας, και πατέρας της Ιφιλόχης (Οδ. δ 10).
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