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Encyclopedia > Minyades

See Minyan (disambiguation) for other meanings of the term.


In Greek mythology and legendary prehistory of the Aegean region, the Minyans were a group among the original autochthonous inhabitants. Modern archaeologists sometimes apply the term "Minyans" differently, to indicate the very first wave of Indo-European speakers in the 2nd millennium BCE, among the early Bronze Age cultures sometimes identified with the beginning of Middle Helladic culture.


Classical Greek uses of "Minyans"

Hellenic Greeks did not always clearly distinguish the Minyans from the Pelasgian cultures that had preceded them. Greek mythographers gave the Minyans an eponymous founder, Minyas, perhaps as legendary as "Pelasgus" the founding father of the Pelasgians, a broader category of the pre-Greek Aegean peoples. This Minyas was associated with Boeotian Orchomenus, and may have represented a ruling dynasty or a tribe later located in Boeotia.


Heracles, the hero whose exploits always celebrate the new Olympian order over the old traditions, came to Thebes, one of the ancient Mycenaean cities of Greece, and found that the Greeks were paying tribute of 100 (a hecatomb) cattle each year to Erginus, king of the Minyans. Heracles attacked a group of emissaries from the Minyans, and cut off their ears, noses and hands. He then tied them around their necks and told them to take those for tribute to Erginus. Erginus quite understandably made war on Thebes, but Heracles defeated the Minyans with his fellow Thebans after arming them with weapons that had been dedicated in temples. This appalling and blasphemous behavior showed that Bronze Age rules of social decorum were over: Erginus was killed and the Minyans were forced to pay double the previous tribute to the Thebans.


The Argonauts were sometimes referred to as "Minyans" because Jason's mother came from that line, and several of his cousins joined in the adventure.


"Minyans" in modern usage

The beginning of the Middle Helladic period is marked by the immigration of the Minyans. According to Emily Vermeule, this was the first wave of true Hellenes in Greece. Gray "Minyan ware" is an archaeologist's term for a particular style of Aegean pottery associated with the Middle Minoan II chronology (ca 1900 - 1550 BCE).


It is assumed that proto-Greeks were on Crete as early as 1450 BCE, to explain the proto-Greek language that is recorded in the inscriptions called Linear B, and thus that they must have been on the mainland significantly before that. (Beyond that, there is significant debate about the origin of the Greeks. They may have been nomads who migrated from an Indo-European homeland north of the Black Sea.) Though dates are speculative there is broad agreement that the Minyans entered by land from the north at the start of the Early Bronze Age (ca 2500 BCE) and that they expanded to the rest of Greece by the beginning of the Middle Bronze Age, after ca 2000 BCE. These people settled and intermixed with the original Neolithic "Pelasgian" residents.


  Results from FactBites:
 
Minyas - Wikipedia (147 words)
As the ancestor of the Minyans, a number of Boeotian genealogies (see Minyans) lead back to him, according to the classicist H.J. Rose.
His children include Clymene, mother of Phaethon, and three daughters known as the Minyades.
Minyas was also the title of an early Greek epic poem, probably dating to the 6th century B.C.E., which is now lost and whose author is unknown.
Human Women in Greek Myths ~ Harpalyce to Myrrha (3614 words)
Leiriope was the mother of Narcissus (whose myth is actually WRITTEN) and the wife of Cephissus (a river god).
There were actually a bunch of women named Leucippe, one of whom was a Minyad who went insane and had to give up her son to be torn to shreds, but read more about that below.
The Minyades were the daughters of Minyas (king guy): Alcathoe, Leucippe, and Arsippe.
  More results at FactBites »


 

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