Aegis

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Closeup of a plaster cast of a Roman sculpture of Athena wearing the Aegis, Classics Department, Jesus College, Cambridge University.

In the Homeric corpus, the "ægis" was the magical breastplate (or shield) of Zeus, which he lent to his daughter Athena in honor of her role in principled warfare. In most accounts, it was described as a goat-skin construction bearing a Gorgon's head at its center. Though it was important to Greek Mythology as a symbolic representation of the Sky God's patronage of his favorite daughter, its precise origins have remained uncertain - a fact that some scholars use to argue for the foreign provenance of Athena's cult and iconography. This position is lent credence by the fact that the majority of artistic depictions of the aegis (as well as many pre-Homeric myths) associate it more strongly with Athena than Zeus, implying that the Homeric usage could have served to naturalize this foreign imagery.

Regardless of its origins, the term "ægis" has entered the English language as a symbolic means of describing the protection or patronage of a powerful, knowledgeable, or benevolent source.[1] Likewise, scholars of religion and classicists have also used it to describe similar artifacts in other mythological traditions, where the Greek word aegis is often applied by extension.

Etymology

The Greek Αιγις has 3 meanings:-

  1. "violent windstorm", from the verb 'αïσσω (stem 'αïγ-) = "I rush or move violently".
  2. "goatskin coat", from treating the word as "something grammatically feminine pertaining to goat (Greek αιξ (stem αιγ-))".
  3. Zeus' shield.

The original meaning may have been #1, and Ζευς 'Αιγιοχος = "Zeus who holds the aegis" may have originally meant "Sky/Heaven, who holds the storm". The transition to the meaning "shield" may have emerged as a folk-etymology among a people familiar with draping an animal skin over the left arm as a shield.[2]

In Greek Mythology

The ægis (Greek Αιγίς), already attested in the Iliad, is the shield or buckler of Zeus, which according to Homer was fashioned for him by Hephaestus, furnished with golden tassels and bearing the Gorgoneion (Medusa's head) in the central boss. According to Edith Hamilton's Mythology: Timeless Tales of Gods and Heroes, the Aegis is Zeus' breastplate, and was "awful to behold."[3] The Attic vase-painters retained an archaic tradition that the tassels had originally been serpents in their representations of the ægis.[4] When the Olympian shakes the ægis, Mount Ida is wrapped in clouds, the thunder rolls and men are smitten with fear.

Thereon the son of Saturn [Cronus]] seized his bright tasselled aegis, and veiled Ida in cloud: he sent forth his lightnings and his thunders, and as he shook his aegis he gave victory to the Trojans and routed the Achaeans.[5]

In general, "Ægis-bearing Zeus" is one of the most common epithets for the Sky God in the Iliad, though, as Gantz suggests this moniker is probably better translated "aegis-riding" (which is compatible with the etymology mentioned above).[6]


Though it has been common practice to unilaterally assert the connection between Zeus and the aegis (likely hearkening back to the extensive use of aigiochos("Aegis-bearing") as an epithet),[7] the artifact is far more often seen in the possession of Athena (and, rarely, Apollo). In the latter case, Zeus sends Apollo to revive the wounded Hector and, holding the ægis, Apollo charges the Achaeans, pushing them back to their ships drawn up on the shore.[8] In the former, virtually all artistic representations of Athena depict her bearing the aegis. Likewise, the Odyssey sees the goddess of wisdom utilizing the aegis without any mention of her divine pater:

Then Minerva [Athena] from her seat on the rafter held up her deadly aegis, and the hearts of the suitors quailed. They fled to the other end of the court like a herd of cattle maddened by the gadfly in early summer when the days are at their longest.[9]

This tradition was sufficiently well established that Euripides, in his play Ion, describes Athena constructing the aegis herself, after slaying a gorgon.[10]

Locating the Aegis

Later Greeks always detected that there was something alien and uncanny about the aegis. It was supposed by Euripides (Ion, 995) that the Gorgon was the original possessor of this goatskin,[11] yet the usual understanding is that the Gorgoneion was added to the aegis, a votive gift from a grateful Perseus.

There is also the origin myth that represents the ægis as a fire-breathing chthonic monster like the Chimera, which was slain and flayed by Athena, who afterwards wore its skin as a cuirass (Diodorus Siculus iii. 70).

Still others say it was the skin of the monstrous giant Pallas whom Athena overcame and whose name she attached to her own (John Tzetzes, On Lycophron, 355).

In a late rendering by Hyginus, (Poetical Astronomy ii. 13) Zeus is said to have used the skin of the goat Amalthea (aigis "goat-skin") which suckled him in Crete, as a shield when he went forth to do battle against the titans.

Herodotus (Histories iv.189) thought he had identified the source of the ægis in Libya, which was always a distant territory of ancient magic for the Greeks:

Athene's garments and ægis were borrowed by the Greeks from the Libyan women, who are dressed in exactly the same way, except that their leather garments are fringed with thongs, not serpents.

Robert Graves in The Greek Myths (1955; 1960) asserts that the ægis in its Libyan sense had been a shamanic pouch containing various ritual objects, bearing the device of a monstrous serpent-haired visage with tusk-like teeth and a protruding tongue which was meant to frighten away the uninitiated. In this context, Graves identifies the aegis as clearly belonging first to Athena.

Another version[citation needed] describes it to have been really the goat's skin used as a belt to support the shield. When so used it would generally be fastened on the right shoulder, and would partially envelop the chest as it passed obliquely round in front and behind to be attached to the shield under the left arm. Hence, by metonymy, it would be employed to denote at times the shield which it supported, and at other times a cuirass, the purpose of which it in part served. In accordance with this double meaning, the ægis appears in works of art sometimes as an animal's skin thrown over the shoulders and arms, and sometimes as a cuirass, with a border of snakes corresponding to the tassels of Homer, usually with the Gorgon's head, the gorgoneion, in the centre. It is often represented on the statues of Roman emperors, heroes, and warriors, and on cameos and vases.

The current modern interpretation is that the Hittite sacral hieratic hunting bag (kursas), a rough and shaggy goatskin that has been firmly established in literary texts and iconography by H.G. Güterbock,[12] is the most likely source of the aegis.[13].

In Egyptian mythology

The ægis also appears in Egyptian mythology. The goddess Bast was sometimes depicted holding a ceremonial sistrum in one hand and an ægis in the other — the ægis usually resembling a collar or gorget embellished with a lion's head.

In Norse mythology

In Norse Mythology, the dwarf Fafnir (best known in the form of a dragon slain by Sigurðr) bears on his forehead the Ægis-helm (ON ægishjálmr), or Ægir's helmet (However, some versions would say that Alberich was the one holding a helm, which are named as Tornkape, and has the power to make the user invisible, also the fat of fafnir makes the skin of siegfreud hard as an armor, except on one point). It may be an actual helmet or a magical sign with a rather poetic name. Ægir is an unrelated Old Norse word meaning "terror" and the name of a destructive giant associated with the sea. "Ægis" is the genitive (possessive) form of ægir and has no relation to the Greek word aigis.

Notes

  1. "Aegis" at Merriam-Webster Online.
  2. Online Etymology Dictionary. See also theoi.com, which notes that "In Greek the word aigis [aegis] has a dual meaning, being both 'stormy' and 'goatish,' hence the close connection between the goat and storms in myth."
  3. Hamilton, 27.
  4. Gantz, 85. Powell summarizes the consensus on the artifact as follows: "The aegis, "goat skin," was an emblem of Zeus's power, a magical object that inspired abject terror in all who beheld it. Perhaps derived from a goatskin shield used in primitive times, it symbolized the storm cloud of the weather god. In art it is shown as a shield with snake-headed tassels; Athena , to whom Zeus lent it, often wears it as a breastplate" (140).
  5. Homer, Iliad, XVII. Samuel Butler's translation, accessed online at classics.mit.edu. Retrieved December 17, 2007.
  6. Gantz, 84.
  7. See theoi.com for a discussion of Zeus's many epithets. See also: Gantz, 84.
  8. "Apollo went before, and kicked down the banks of the deep trench into its middle so as to make a great broad bridge, as broad as the throw of a spear when a man is trying his strength. The Trojan battalions poured over the bridge, and Apollo with his redoubtable aegis led the way. He kicked down the wall of the Achaeans as easily as a child who playing on the sea-shore has built a house of sand and then kicks it down again and destroys it- even so did you, O Apollo, shed toil and trouble upon the Argives, filling them with panic and confusion." Homer, Iliad, XV. Samuel Butler's translation, accessed online at classics.mit.edu. Retrieved December 17, 2007.
  9. Homer, Odyssey, XXII. Samuel Butler's translation, accessed online at classics.mit.edu. Retrieved December 17, 2007. Gantz comments on this episode, suggests that the suitors, seeing the aegis, "recognize her sign" (emphasis added) (85).
  10. Gantz, 85; Euripides, Ion, accessible online at: greek-texts.com. Retrieved December 17, 2007.
  11. Noted by Graves 1960, 9.a; Karl Kerenyi, The Gods of the Greeks 1951, p 50.
  12. Güterbock, Perspectives on Hittite Civilization: Selected Writings (Chicago 1997).
  13. Calvert Watkins "A Distant Anatolian Echo in Pindar: The Origin of the Aegis Again", Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 100 (2000), pp. 1-14. on JSTOR

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Burkert, Walter. Greek Religion: Archaic and Classical. Translated by John Raffan. Oxford: Blackwell, 1985. ISBN 0631112413
  • Clark, Charlotte R. "An Egyptian Bronze Aegis." The Metropolitan Museum of Art Bulletin, New Series 12:3 (November 1953), 78-80.
  • Farnell, Lewis Richard. The Cults of the Greek States (5 vols.). Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1907.
  • Gantz, Timothy. Early Greek Myth: A Guide to Literary and Artistic Sources. Baltimore, MD: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1993. ISBN 080184410X
  • Graves, Robert. The Greek Myths (Complete Edition). London: Penguin Books, 1960/1993. ISBN 0140171991
  • Hamilton, Edith. Mythology: Timeless Tales of Gods and Heroes. New York: Warner Books, 1999. ISBN 0446607258
  • Kerenyi, Karl. The Gods of the Greeks. London & New York: Thames and Hudson, 1951. ISBN 0500270481
  • Murray, A. S. "The Aegis of Athene." The Classical Review 3:6 (June 1889), 283-284.
  • Powell, Barry B. Classical Myth, 2nd ed. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall, 1998. ISBN 0137167148
  • Watkins, Calvert. "A Distant Anatolian Echo in Pindar: The Origin of the Aegis Again." Harvard Studies in Classical Philology 100 (2000), 1-14.

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