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[[Image:Priapus Fresco.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Fresco of Priapus, House of the Vettii, [[Pompeii]].]]
 
[[Image:Priapus Fresco.jpg|thumb|200px|right|Fresco of Priapus, House of the Vettii, [[Pompeii]].]]
In [[Greek mythology]], '''Priapus''' ({{lang-grc|Πρίαπος}}) was a minor rustic fertility god of purely phallic character, protector of [[livestock]], fruit plants, gardens and male [[genitalia]]. ([[Roman mythology|Roman]] equivalent: Mutinus Mutunus.) 
 
  
He was a son of [[Aphrodite]] by  [[Dionysus]], [[Hermes]], or [[Adonis]].<ref>According to a [[Scholium|scholiast]] on [[Lycophron]], noted by Kerenyi 1951.</ref>
+
In [[Greek mythology]], '''Priapus''' (Greek: Πρίαπος) was a minor rustic fertility god, protector of livestock, fruit plants, gardens and male genitalia. He was most famous for this later attribute, which was clearly the focal point of his depictions, as well as the subsequent myths and literature that centered around his largely phallic character. His mother was [[Aphrodite]] and father [[Hermes]] (or [[Dionysus]] depending on the different classical sources).<ref>The identity of his father in the ancient Greco-Roman myths varied from region to region.</ref>  
 +
 
 +
==Origin==
 +
The worship of Priapus seems to have originated east of [[Ancient Greece|ancient Greece]] in the general region surrounding the Hellespont, a narrow strait now known by the [[Europe|European]] name the [[Dardanelles]]. Reverence of phallic deities was widespread in the ancient world and the influence of neighboring phallic gods on the worship of the ithyphallic deity Priapus may have contributed to the growth of the cult. Indeed, Priapus' non-Greek origin is suggested in art and sculpture by the Persian cap that he often wears in artistic depictions.  
  
One of the most famous images of Priapus is that from the [[House of the Vettii]] in [[Pompeii]]; it is a wall fresco in which Priapus is weighing his phallus against a bag full of money and it appears that his phallus is heavier.
+
The ancient Greeks widely believed that Priapus had been born in the city of Lampsacus on the Hellespont. Here sacrifices of [[donkey]]s were made in his honor, probably because of the sexual prowess that the Greeks attributed to this [[animal]]. The people of Lampsacus revered Priapus more than any other god and identified him as a son of Dionysus and Aphrodite.<ref>Pausanias, ''Description of Greece'' IX.312.</ref> By the end of the third century B.C.E., Priapus' image was found on coins in this region.<ref>Hooper, 2.</ref>
  
At [[Mount Helicon|Helicon]] in [[Boeotia]], the travel-writer [[Pausanias (geographer)|Pausanias]] pointed out a statue of Priapus that was "worth seeing".<ref>''Description of Greece'' IX.312.</ref>
+
The influence of Priapus most likely spread beyond the Hellespont and into the remainder of the Greek world due to the conquests of [[Alexander the Great]].<ref>Hooper, 2.</ref> The god's popularity remained strong until well into the Apostolic era, which is attested to by the early Christian apologist [[Arnobius]], who mockingly mentions "the Hellespontian Priapus bearing about among the goddesses, virgin and matron, those parts ever prepared for encounter."<ref> Arnobius, ''Seven Books against the Heathen'' III.10. [http://www.intratext.com/IXT/ENG1008/_P3.HTM (on-line text)] Retrieved December 10, 2007.</ref>
  
Sculptures of Priapus with large, [[erect]] genitalia were placed in gardens and fields to guarantee an abundant crop. For the [[Roman mythology|Romans]], his statue was used as a [[scarecrow]] and his erect [[penis]] was thought to frighten thieves.  [[Epigram]]s collected in ''Priapeia'' ([[Priapus#In literature|treated below]]) show Priapus using [[sodomy]] as a threat toward transgressors of the boundaries he protected like a [[Herma|herm]]:
+
==Mythology==
 +
Priapus was said to be a son of [[Aphrodite]], the goddess of love, or in some cases, [[Chione]], a snow nymph. His father was variously given as [[Hermes]], [[Dionysus]], [[Pan (mythology)|Pan]] or [[Adonis]].<ref>Wyly, 24.</ref> Hera, the wife of Zeus, out of a mix of outrage and jealousy with Aphrodite's promiscuity, cursed Priapus with enormous genitals. His mother promptly abandoned the child, and he was raised by shepherds. Priapus would go on to find favour with Hera later in his adult life, as the queen of the gods went on to appoint him as dancing instructor for her infant son [[Ares]], the eventual god of war.
  
:''"I warn you, my lad, you will be sodomised; you, my girl, I shall futter; for the thief who is bearded, a third punishment remains."''
+
In [[Ovid]]'s ''[[Fasti]]'',<ref>Fasti, 6.319ff.</ref> the nymph Lotis fell into a drunk slumber along with the rest of the gods and goddesses after a great feast, and Priapus used this opportunity to advance upon her. With stealth he approached but before he could ensnare her in a loving embrace, Silenus' donkey alerted the party of his presence with cacophonous braying. Lotis awoke, and a startled Priapus ran away sheepishly; thereafter Priapus slaughtered the donkey for spoiling his opportunity. Ovid's anecdote served to explain why donkeys were sacrificed to Priapus in the city of Lampsacus.<ref>Gaius Julius Hyginus, ''Fabulae'', 160.</ref> Dionysus eventually placed the dead ass in heaven as one of two stars referred to as "The Asses."<ref>Trip, The Meridian Handbook of Classical Mythology, 497.</ref>
:''"... If I do seize you . . . you shall be so stretched that you will think your anus never had any wrinkles."''
 
  
==In literature==
+
In later versions of the story, Lotis is replaced with the virginal [[Hestia]], the goddess responsible for the hearth. This attempted violation of Hestia, the personification of domesticity, perhaps hints towards the immensely disruptive effects of the dionysian and aphrodisiac natures upon family life when combined.<ref>Wyly, 24.</ref>
The Latin collection of ''Priapeia'' shows how poets invented comic and obscene situations for him, giving him more literary prominence than he enjoyed in rites or cult, though masked phallic figures were prominent on many festive occasions, both in Greece and in the wider Roman world.  
 
  
In [[Ovid]]'s ''[[Fasti]]'',<ref>Fasti, 6.319ff.</ref> the [[nymph]] [[Lotis]] fell into a drunk slumber at a feast, and Priapus seized this opportunity to advance upon her.  With stealth he approached, and just before he could embrace her, [[Silenus]]'s donkey alerted the party with "raucous braying". Lotis awoke and pushed Priapus away, but her only true escape was to be transformed into the [[lotus]] flower.  To repay the donkey for spoiling his opportunity, Priapus slaughtered him.  In later versions of the story, Lotis is replaced with the virginal goddess [[Hestia]].  Ovid's anecdote served to explain why donkeys were sacrificed to Priapus in the city of [[Lampsacus]] on the Hellespont, where he was worshipped among the offspring of [[Hermes]].<ref>[[Gaius Julius Hyginus|Hyginus]], ''Fabulae'', 160.</ref>
+
==Iconography and Worship==
  
==Worship==
+
Statues and images of Priapus typically show a well-built, bearded man distinguishable by way of his enormous, erect penis, usually colored red. Crude sculptures of Priapus were often carved from cheap logs by the laity, while more elaborate stone statues and paintings were commissioned by the [[aristocracy]]. Such [[sculpture]]s were placed in gardens and fields in the hopes of guaranteeing abundant crops, as the large phallus was taken to symbolize generation and fecundity. Farmers worshiped Priapus in the hope that he would bestow great bounties of [[grain]]s and [[vegetable]]s upon them. As such, the first fruits of the farm were often sacrificed to him as a sign of gratitude for the agricultural boons he granted. In this function as a bestower of plenty, in addition to presiding over crops, Priapus was also thought to preside over flocks of sheep, vineyards, and the acts of fishing and raising bees. He is also depicted with a pruning knife, illustrating his additional function as pruner of the pear-tree (related to [[Hera]]), and occasionally wears a Persian cap.  
[[Lucian]] (''De saltatione'') tells that in [[Bithynia]] Priapus was accounted a warlike god, a rustic tutor to the infant [[Ares]]. [[Arnobius]] is aware of the importance accorded Priapus in this region near the [[Hellespont]].<ref>In ridiculing the literal aspects of pagan gods given human form, he mentions "the Hellespontian Priapus bearing about among the goddesses, virgin and matron, those parts ever prepared for encounter." (Arnobius, ''Seven Books against the Heathen'' III.10 ([http://www.intratext.com/IXT/ENG1008/_P3.HTM on-line text]).</ref> Also, Pausanias notes:
 
:"''This god is worshipped where goats and sheep pasture or there are swarms of bees; but by the people of Lampsacus he is more revered than any other god, being called by them a son of Dionysus and Aphrodite."''<ref>Pausanias, ''Description of Greece'' IX.312.</ref>
 
  
Richard Payne Knight, ''An Account of the Remains of the Worship of Priapus'', 1786, identified priapus-worship as surviving in Catholic phallic votives offered in parts of Italy in the 18th century. 
+
Statues of Priapus also served as guardians of homes, fields, and crops, providing a "no trespassing" sign, of sorts. In this case, Priapus represented the threat of violent rape, a common punitive measure in the ancient world. [[Epigram]]s inscribed upon these statues, later collected in ''Priapeia'' (see below), show Priapus using sodomy as a warning toward transgressors of the boundaries he protected much like a [[Herma|herm]] (a boundary marker):
  
Priapus is also recognized as a saint in [[Ecclesia Gnostica Catholica]].
+
:''Whosoever steals a rosebud''
 +
:''or absconds with herb or apple,''
 +
:''hateful to both boys and women''
 +
:''let him burst from such a stiffness''
 +
:''as you notice in my middle'' (...)<ref>Hooper, 62.</ref>
  
Generally statues of Priapus would be found guarding homes, fields, and crops. It was a quite literally a no tresspassing or you'll be raped violently sign.
+
For the [[Roman mythology|Romans]], Priapus' statue was also used as a scarecrow or as a rack for a scythe. Lucian reports that in the Roman province of Bithynia, Priapus was more commonly identified as a warlike god due to his mythological function as tutor to the infant [[Ares]].<ref>Kerenyi, 176.</ref>
 +
 +
A number of notable icons depicting Priapus existed throughout ancient Greece and Rome. For instance, the travel-writer Pausanias noted that a statue of Priapus at Mount Helicon in Boeotia was "worth seeing."<ref>''Description of Greece'' IX.312.</ref> One of the most famous images of Priapus that is still extant is that from the House of the Vettii in [[Pompeii]]. This particular image is a wall fresco in which Priapus is weighing his phallus against a bag full of money. By all indications, it appears that his phallus is heavier (see image above).
  
==Modern misconception==
+
==Literature and Interpretations==
{{Main|Ideal beauty in the classical world}}
 
Some scholars have suggested that in the ancient world, large penises were generally considered comical rather than attractive: Priapus' large penis ensured that no woman wanted to sleep with him, whilst his existence as a household god warned potential burglars that, if they were caught and raped ([[rape]] was a common punishment in the ancient world), the rape would be as painful as if it were done by Priapus's over-large penis (''see inscription quoted above''). However, this theory is not supported by all of the literary evidence available. For example in the Satyricon of Petronius, when the heroes arrive in Croton in Sicily, they come across a youth who is exposed and found to be very well endowed. As a result the townspeople (including women) hold him in reverence and literally trip over each other to touch his phallus for good luck. In this instance there does not seem to be any indication that the youth's unnaturally large phallus is regarded with disgust - quite the contrary. It cannot therefore be decidedly concluded what the classical view of penis size may have been. In the case of art and sculpture it seems likely that an average or smaller size was desirable, but this does not exclude the possibility that the public, or the "man on the street" held different views.
 
  
==Priapus in popular culture==
+
The epigrams found upon statues of Priapus were compiled in the ''[[Priapeia]]'', a collection of unknown authorship written in [[Latin]]. This collection illustrates the various ways in which poets invented comic and obscene situations for Priapus, including monologues in which the god congratulates himself for the size and virility of his prodigious member. This collection gave him more literary prominence than he had ever enjoyed in rites or cult. Some scholars used the ''Priapeia'' as primary evidence toward the conclusion that in the ancient world, large penises were generally considered comical rather than attractive. Priapus' large penis, they posited, ensured that no woman wanted to sleep with him, whilst his curious phallus warned potential burglars that their punitive rape would be extremely painful.  
*In ''Fantasy Lover'' by [[Sherrilyn Kenyon]], Priapus is responsible for cursing his half-brother, Julian of Macedon, to an existence as a [[sex slave]] trapped in an ancient scroll as an act of vengeance for fornicating with one of Priapus' sacred virgins.
 
  
*In [[Marvel Comics]], [[Priapus (Marvel Comics)|Priapus]] was a super-villain leader of a cult based on sensual pleasures.
+
However, this theory is not supported by all of the literary evidence available. For example, in the Satyricon of Petronius, when the heroes arrive in Croton in [[Sicily]], they come across a youth who is exposed and found to be very well endowed. As a result the townspeople, including the women, hold him in reverence and literally trip over each other to touch his phallus for good luck. In this instance there does not seem to be any indication that the youth's unnaturally large phallus is regarded with disgust, but rather with much auspiciousness. It cannot therefore be decidedly concluded what the Greek classical view of penis size may have been. In the case of art and sculpture it seems likely that an average or smaller size was preferred, but this does not preclude the possibility that the public held different views. Thus, Priapus' large genitals were just as likely to have been an alluring symbol of fecundity as they were the subject of lighthearted scorn.
  
*Priapus is often referred to in the horror movies directed by [[David Michael Latt]]: ''[[Scarecrow Slayer]]'' and ''[[Scarecrow Gone Wild]]''.
+
==Legacy==
  
==Medical terminology==
+
Although no longer worshipped, Priapus has remained a recurrent subject of allusion in literature, [[mythology]], [[religion]] and even [[medicine]] throughout [[history]]. Richard Payne Knight, in his 1786 work ''An Account of the Remains of the Worship of Priapus'', identified Priapus-worship as surviving in [[Catholic]] phallic votives offered throughout parts of [[Italy]] during the eighteenth century. Priapus is also recognized as a saint by members of the Ecclesia Gnostica Catholica, a branch of Ordo Templi Orientis upholding the philosophy of French author François Rabelais and occultist [[Aleister Crowley]]. In the field of medical science, the rare condition known as priapism, in which a male suffers persistent tumescence of the penis even in the absence of sexual desire, gets its name from Priapus.
The medical condition [[priapism]] gets its name from Priapus.
 
  
 
==Notes==
 
==Notes==
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<div class="references-small" style="-moz-column-count:2; column-count:2;">
 
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==References==
 
==References==
{{commonscat|Priapus}}
+
* Hooper, Richard W. ''The Priapus Poems: Erotic Epigrams from Ancient Rome''. Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1999. ISBN 0-252-02443-5
* Kerenyi, Karl, 1951. ''The Gods of the Greeks'', pp 175&ndash;177.
+
* Kerenyi, Carl. ''The Gods of the Greeks''. Trans. Norman Cameron. London: Thames & Hudson, 1951. ISBN 0500270481
 +
* Parker, W.H. trans. ''Priapeia: Poems for a Phallic God.'' London: Croon Helm, 1988. ISBN 0709940998
 +
* Trip, Edward. ''The Meridian Handbook of Classical Mythology''. New York: Meridian, 1970. ISBN 0452009278
 +
* Wyly, James. ''The Phallic Quest: Priapus and Masculine Inflation''. Toronto: Inner City Books, 1989. ISBN 0-919123-37-6
  
 
[[Category: Philosophy and religion]]
 
[[Category: Philosophy and religion]]
 
[[Category: Religion]]
 
[[Category: Religion]]
 +
[[Category: Biography]]
  
 
{{Credit|141645565}}
 
{{Credit|141645565}}

Latest revision as of 15:17, 29 August 2008


Fresco of Priapus, House of the Vettii, Pompeii.

In Greek mythology, Priapus (Greek: Πρίαπος) was a minor rustic fertility god, protector of livestock, fruit plants, gardens and male genitalia. He was most famous for this later attribute, which was clearly the focal point of his depictions, as well as the subsequent myths and literature that centered around his largely phallic character. His mother was Aphrodite and father Hermes (or Dionysus depending on the different classical sources).[1]

Origin

The worship of Priapus seems to have originated east of ancient Greece in the general region surrounding the Hellespont, a narrow strait now known by the European name the Dardanelles. Reverence of phallic deities was widespread in the ancient world and the influence of neighboring phallic gods on the worship of the ithyphallic deity Priapus may have contributed to the growth of the cult. Indeed, Priapus' non-Greek origin is suggested in art and sculpture by the Persian cap that he often wears in artistic depictions.

The ancient Greeks widely believed that Priapus had been born in the city of Lampsacus on the Hellespont. Here sacrifices of donkeys were made in his honor, probably because of the sexual prowess that the Greeks attributed to this animal. The people of Lampsacus revered Priapus more than any other god and identified him as a son of Dionysus and Aphrodite.[2] By the end of the third century B.C.E., Priapus' image was found on coins in this region.[3]

The influence of Priapus most likely spread beyond the Hellespont and into the remainder of the Greek world due to the conquests of Alexander the Great.[4] The god's popularity remained strong until well into the Apostolic era, which is attested to by the early Christian apologist Arnobius, who mockingly mentions "the Hellespontian Priapus bearing about among the goddesses, virgin and matron, those parts ever prepared for encounter."[5]

Mythology

Priapus was said to be a son of Aphrodite, the goddess of love, or in some cases, Chione, a snow nymph. His father was variously given as Hermes, Dionysus, Pan or Adonis.[6] Hera, the wife of Zeus, out of a mix of outrage and jealousy with Aphrodite's promiscuity, cursed Priapus with enormous genitals. His mother promptly abandoned the child, and he was raised by shepherds. Priapus would go on to find favour with Hera later in his adult life, as the queen of the gods went on to appoint him as dancing instructor for her infant son Ares, the eventual god of war.

In Ovid's Fasti,[7] the nymph Lotis fell into a drunk slumber along with the rest of the gods and goddesses after a great feast, and Priapus used this opportunity to advance upon her. With stealth he approached but before he could ensnare her in a loving embrace, Silenus' donkey alerted the party of his presence with cacophonous braying. Lotis awoke, and a startled Priapus ran away sheepishly; thereafter Priapus slaughtered the donkey for spoiling his opportunity. Ovid's anecdote served to explain why donkeys were sacrificed to Priapus in the city of Lampsacus.[8] Dionysus eventually placed the dead ass in heaven as one of two stars referred to as "The Asses."[9]

In later versions of the story, Lotis is replaced with the virginal Hestia, the goddess responsible for the hearth. This attempted violation of Hestia, the personification of domesticity, perhaps hints towards the immensely disruptive effects of the dionysian and aphrodisiac natures upon family life when combined.[10]

Iconography and Worship

Statues and images of Priapus typically show a well-built, bearded man distinguishable by way of his enormous, erect penis, usually colored red. Crude sculptures of Priapus were often carved from cheap logs by the laity, while more elaborate stone statues and paintings were commissioned by the aristocracy. Such sculptures were placed in gardens and fields in the hopes of guaranteeing abundant crops, as the large phallus was taken to symbolize generation and fecundity. Farmers worshiped Priapus in the hope that he would bestow great bounties of grains and vegetables upon them. As such, the first fruits of the farm were often sacrificed to him as a sign of gratitude for the agricultural boons he granted. In this function as a bestower of plenty, in addition to presiding over crops, Priapus was also thought to preside over flocks of sheep, vineyards, and the acts of fishing and raising bees. He is also depicted with a pruning knife, illustrating his additional function as pruner of the pear-tree (related to Hera), and occasionally wears a Persian cap.

Statues of Priapus also served as guardians of homes, fields, and crops, providing a "no trespassing" sign, of sorts. In this case, Priapus represented the threat of violent rape, a common punitive measure in the ancient world. Epigrams inscribed upon these statues, later collected in Priapeia (see below), show Priapus using sodomy as a warning toward transgressors of the boundaries he protected much like a herm (a boundary marker):

Whosoever steals a rosebud
or absconds with herb or apple,
hateful to both boys and women
let him burst from such a stiffness
as you notice in my middle (...)[11]

For the Romans, Priapus' statue was also used as a scarecrow or as a rack for a scythe. Lucian reports that in the Roman province of Bithynia, Priapus was more commonly identified as a warlike god due to his mythological function as tutor to the infant Ares.[12]

A number of notable icons depicting Priapus existed throughout ancient Greece and Rome. For instance, the travel-writer Pausanias noted that a statue of Priapus at Mount Helicon in Boeotia was "worth seeing."[13] One of the most famous images of Priapus that is still extant is that from the House of the Vettii in Pompeii. This particular image is a wall fresco in which Priapus is weighing his phallus against a bag full of money. By all indications, it appears that his phallus is heavier (see image above).

Literature and Interpretations

The epigrams found upon statues of Priapus were compiled in the Priapeia, a collection of unknown authorship written in Latin. This collection illustrates the various ways in which poets invented comic and obscene situations for Priapus, including monologues in which the god congratulates himself for the size and virility of his prodigious member. This collection gave him more literary prominence than he had ever enjoyed in rites or cult. Some scholars used the Priapeia as primary evidence toward the conclusion that in the ancient world, large penises were generally considered comical rather than attractive. Priapus' large penis, they posited, ensured that no woman wanted to sleep with him, whilst his curious phallus warned potential burglars that their punitive rape would be extremely painful.

However, this theory is not supported by all of the literary evidence available. For example, in the Satyricon of Petronius, when the heroes arrive in Croton in Sicily, they come across a youth who is exposed and found to be very well endowed. As a result the townspeople, including the women, hold him in reverence and literally trip over each other to touch his phallus for good luck. In this instance there does not seem to be any indication that the youth's unnaturally large phallus is regarded with disgust, but rather with much auspiciousness. It cannot therefore be decidedly concluded what the Greek classical view of penis size may have been. In the case of art and sculpture it seems likely that an average or smaller size was preferred, but this does not preclude the possibility that the public held different views. Thus, Priapus' large genitals were just as likely to have been an alluring symbol of fecundity as they were the subject of lighthearted scorn.

Legacy

Although no longer worshipped, Priapus has remained a recurrent subject of allusion in literature, mythology, religion and even medicine throughout history. Richard Payne Knight, in his 1786 work An Account of the Remains of the Worship of Priapus, identified Priapus-worship as surviving in Catholic phallic votives offered throughout parts of Italy during the eighteenth century. Priapus is also recognized as a saint by members of the Ecclesia Gnostica Catholica, a branch of Ordo Templi Orientis upholding the philosophy of French author François Rabelais and occultist Aleister Crowley. In the field of medical science, the rare condition known as priapism, in which a male suffers persistent tumescence of the penis even in the absence of sexual desire, gets its name from Priapus.

Notes

  1. The identity of his father in the ancient Greco-Roman myths varied from region to region.
  2. Pausanias, Description of Greece IX.312.
  3. Hooper, 2.
  4. Hooper, 2.
  5. Arnobius, Seven Books against the Heathen III.10. (on-line text) Retrieved December 10, 2007.
  6. Wyly, 24.
  7. Fasti, 6.319ff.
  8. Gaius Julius Hyginus, Fabulae, 160.
  9. Trip, The Meridian Handbook of Classical Mythology, 497.
  10. Wyly, 24.
  11. Hooper, 62.
  12. Kerenyi, 176.
  13. Description of Greece IX.312.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Hooper, Richard W. The Priapus Poems: Erotic Epigrams from Ancient Rome. Chicago: University of Illinois Press, 1999. ISBN 0-252-02443-5
  • Kerenyi, Carl. The Gods of the Greeks. Trans. Norman Cameron. London: Thames & Hudson, 1951. ISBN 0500270481
  • Parker, W.H. trans. Priapeia: Poems for a Phallic God. London: Croon Helm, 1988. ISBN 0709940998
  • Trip, Edward. The Meridian Handbook of Classical Mythology. New York: Meridian, 1970. ISBN 0452009278
  • Wyly, James. The Phallic Quest: Priapus and Masculine Inflation. Toronto: Inner City Books, 1989. ISBN 0-919123-37-6

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