Difference between revisions of "Harpy" - New World Encyclopedia

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[[Category:Mythical creatures]]
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[[Image:Harpyie.JPG|thumb|right|400px|A [[medieval]] depiction of a Harpy as a bird-woman.]]
  
{{Infobox Paranormalcreatures
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'''Harpy''' is the singular form for the [[mythical creature]]s called '''Harpies''' in [[Greek mythology]], winged-beasts that were sent down by [[Zeus]] to punish, most famously the [[prophet]] [[Phineus]]. They were sometimes referred to as "the hounds of Zeus" for such actions.<ref name=hamilton> Edith Hamilton, ''Mythology'' (Little, Brown and Company, 1942, ISBN 0316341142).</ref> Like many other second-tier Greek creatures, the Harpies were more prominent in [[art]] works than in mythological literature, and while they may occasionally be used in popular culture today, they are most widely remembered for their part in the [[legend]]ary adventures of [[Jason and the Argonauts]].  
|Creature_Name  = Harpy
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{{toc}}
|Image_Name    = Harpy.PNG
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Harpies are not seen as representing actual physical creatures, their characteristics—[[immortality]] and destructive cruelty—reflect attributes that we have not well understood in ourselves as [[human being]]s.
|Image_Caption  = A image of a harpy in mythology, with wings disclosed
 
|AKA            = Baby Stealer
 
|Country        = [[World]]
 
|Habitat        = Land and air
 
|First_Reported = [[1903]]
 
|Last_Sighted  = Present day
 
|Status        = Unconfirmed
 
}}
 
'''Harpy''' (from [[Latin]]: Harpyia, [[Greek]]: Άρπυια, Harpuia) in [[Greek mythology]], the '''Harpies''' (''snatchers''<ref>The unelided form ''arepuia'' is inscribed on a [[black-figure pottery|black-figured vessel]] in Berlin illustrated in [[Jane Ellen Harrison]], ''Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion'', 1903, fig.18. The major painted decor of the vase is the slaying of the [[Gorgon]].</ref> ) were mainly winged death-spirits (Harrison 1903, p 176ff), best known for constantly stealing all food from [[Phineas]]. The literal meaning of the word seems to be "whirlwinds".
 
  
The Harpy could also bring life. A Harpy was the mother by the West Wind [[Zephyros]] of the horses of [[Achilles]] (''[[Iliad]]'' xvi. 160). In this context Jane Harrison adduced the notion in [[Virgil]]'s ''[[Georgics]]'' that mares became gravid by the wind alone, marvelous to say (iii.274).
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==Etymology==
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The word '''Harpy''' in [[English language|English]] comes from Old French ''harpie'' from the [[Latin]] ''Harpyia,'' which in turn derives from the [[Greek language|Greek]] ''Άρπυια,'' or Harpuia. Originally the word translated as "snatchers."<ref>[https://www.etymonline.com/word/harpy Harpy] ''Etymology Online''. Retrieved December 14, 2022. </ref> However, in modern English, Harpy can also be defined as "whirlwinds."<ref> J. A. H. Murray (ed.), ''Oxford English Dictionary'' (Oxford University Press, 1971, ISBN 019861117X). </ref>
  
Though [[Hesiod]] (''Theogony'') calls them two "lovely-haired" creatures,  Harpies as beautiful winged bird-women are a late development, in parallel with the transformation of the "[[Siren]], a creature malign though seductive in Homer, but gradually softened by the Athenian imagination into a sorrowful death angel" (Harrison p 177).. On a vase in the Berlin Museum (Harrison, fig 19), a harpy has a small figure  of a hero in each claw, but her head is recognizably a [[Gorgon]], with goggling eyes, protruding tongue and fangs.
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==Description==
  
==Mythology==
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[[Image:Harpyje.jpg|thumb|right|300px|Harpy in [[Ulisse Aldrovandi]], ''Monstrorum Historia,'' Bologna, 1642]]  
[[Image:Harpyie.JPG|thumb|right|350px|A [[medieval]] depiction of a Harpy as a bird-woman.]]
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Harpies were often described as [[bird]]-like creatures, no smaller than an [[eagle]] but usually not much larger. They had the hooked claws and beaks of a bird, but also left an over-powering stench where ever they went. Later, the Harpies were depicted as having the head of a [[human being]], similar to [[gorgon]]s and [[siren]]s as composite creatures; they were usually described as female. They are often associated with the wind and air, and thus are sometimes seen as representing the duality of the air: calm and graceful at times, but also capable of great destruction and chaos. As the gods, and the wind, Harpies were considered [[immortality|immortal]].
 
 
The Harpies were sisters of [[Iris (mythology)|Iris]], daughters of [[Typhon]] and [[Echidna]].  
 
 
 
Phineas, a [[Monarch|king]] of [[Thrace]], had the gift of [[prophesy]]. Zeus, angry that Phineas revealed too much, punished him by putting him on an island with a [[buffet]] of [[food]] which he could never eat. The Harpies always arrived and stole the food out of his hands right before he could satisfy his hunger, and befouled the remains. This continued until the arrival of [[Jason]] and the Argonauts. The [[Boreads]], sons of [[Boreas]], the North Wind, who also could fly, succeeded in driving the Harpies and killing one of them, as a request from [[Iris (mythology)|Iris]], who promised that Phineas would not be bothered by the Harpies again, and "the dogs of great Zeus" returned to their "cave in Minoan Crete". Thankful for their help, Phineas told the Argonauts how to pass the [[Symplegades]]. (''[[Argonautica]]'', book II; [[Ovid]] XIII, 710; [[Virgil]] III, 211, 245).
 
 
 
In this form they were agents of punishment who abducted people and tortured them on their way to [[Tartarus]]. They were vicious, cruel and violent. They lived on [[Strophades]]. They were usually seen as the personifications of the destructive nature of wind. The Harpies in this tradition, now thought of as three sisters instead of the original two, were: [[Aello]] ("storm swift"), [[Celaeno]] ("the dark") &mdash; also known as [[Podarge]] ("fleet-foot") &mdash; and [[Ocypete]] ("the swift wing").  
 
 
 
[[Aeneas]] encountered Harpies on the Strophades as they repeatedly made off with the feast the [[Trojans]] were setting.  [[Celaeno]] cursed them, saying the Trojans will be so hungry they will eat their tables before they reach the end of their journey. The Trojans fled in fear.
 
 
 
==Heraldry==
 
In the [[Middle Ages]], the harpy, often called the "virgin eagle", became a popular [[charge (heraldry)|charge]] in [[heraldry]], particularly in [[East Frisia]], seen on, among others, the [[coat-of-arms|coats-of-arms]] of [[Reitburg]], [[Liechtenstein]], and the [[Cirksena]]s.
 
  
 
==Theories of origin==
 
==Theories of origin==
R.D. Barnett suggests in "Ancient Oriental Influences on Archaic Greece" &mdash; an essay in ''The Aegean and the Near East,'' Saul S. Weinberg, ed. (Locust Valley, N.Y.,1956) &mdash; that the Harpies were originally adapted from the ornaments on bronze caldrons from [[Urartu]]:
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As with many ancient Greek creatures, there is no widespread consensus on how the idea of the Harpy originated. It has been suggested that the Harpies were originally adapted from the ornaments on [[bronze]] cauldrons from [[Urartu]].<ref> R. D. Barnett, "Ancient Oriental Influences on Archaic Greece" in Saul S. Weinberg (ed.) ''The Aegean and the Near East'' (Locust Valley, NY: J.J. Augustin, 1956).</ref> Other scholars point out that this theory is based upon the idea that the Harpies were bird monsters with human heads, which was not true in the original myths.
  
:These made such an impression in Greece that they seem to have given rise to the siren type in archaic Greek art, and as they appeared to flutter at the rim of such noble cooking vessels, apparently gave rise to the familiar Greek legend of Phineus and the Harpies, who are thus depicted in Greek art. The very name of Phineus, the victim of their persecutions, may be nothing but a corruption of the name of a king of Urartu, Ishpuinish or Ushpina (ca. 820 B.C.E.), who was perhaps associated by the Greek merchants with these vessels <ref>[http://rbedrosian.com/Gmyth.htm Greek Mythology - Myths Concerning Aia]</ref>.  
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Originally the Harpies were conceived as spirits of the wind, the personification of a nature occurrence that is frequent in ancient cultures. The sky was a significant place for the ancient Greeks, and much like the deeper parts of the [[ocean]], it was revered because it was inaccessible. [[Mount Olympus]], the realm of the gods, was located high in the sky and so the [[atmosphere]] and [[weather]] became associated as the whims of the gods. Therefore, it is conceivable that the idea of the Harpies could have come from the consistently shifting winds. It was not until later that the Harpies were given a physical form, for the sake of story telling.  
  
Other scholars point out that this theory is based upon the idea that the Harpies were bird monsters with human heads, which was not true in the original myths.  
+
In their winged human form, the Harpies are no different from a large number of Greek divinities and as such would not need a special explanation for how they came to be. The later bird composite form is considered by most authors to have been confusion with an early depiction of the [[Siren]]s as bird women.  
  
In their winged human form, the Harpies are no different from a large number of Greek divinities and as such would not need a special explanation for how they came to be. The later bird composite form is considered by most authors to have been a confusion with an early depiction of the [[Sirens]] as bird women.
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==Mythology==
 +
{{readout||right|250px|Since they carried out punishments decreed by the Gods, the Harpies were known as "The Hounds of Zeus"}}
 +
A Harpy was the mother by the West Wind [[Zephyros]] of the horses of [[Achilles]] (''[[Iliad]]'' xvi. 160). The Harpies were sisters of [[Iris (mythology)|Iris]], daughters of [[Typhon]] and [[Echidna]], and were consistently viewed as those who carried out the punishments decreed by the Gods, granting their nick-names as "The Hounds of Zeus." They lived on [[Strophades]] islands.
  
==Harpies in fiction==
+
Phineas, a [[Monarch|king]] of [[Thrace]], had the gift of [[prophesy]]. [[Zeus]], angry that Phineas revealed too much, punished him by putting him on an island with a [[buffet]] of [[food]] which he could never eat. The Harpies always arrived and stole the food out of his hands right before he could satisfy his hunger, and befouled the remains. In this form they were agents of [[punishment]] who [[abduction|abducted]] people and [[torture]]d them on their way to [[Tartarus]]. They were vicious, cruel, and violent, and were usually seen as the personifications of the destructive nature of wind. The Harpies in this tradition, now thought of as three sisters instead of the original two, were: [[Aello]] ("storm swift"), [[Celaeno]] ("the dark") — also known as [[Podarge]] ("fleet-foot") — and [[Ocypete]] ("the swift wing").
The familiar figures of harpies, with their composite form and violent nature, are much employed in video games and other products of market-directed culture.
+
[[Image:508px-Phineus Boreads Louvre G364.jpg|thumb|300 px|The winged Boreads (left and right) rescuing Phineas (seated) from the Harpies. Side A from an Attic red-figure column-krater, ca. 460 B.C.E..]]
  
Harpies appear in [[Dante]]'s [[Divine Comedy]], in Canto XIII of the Inferno, where they hound suicides. They also appear, clearly in reference to Dante, in [[The Amber Spyglass]], the third book of [[Philip Pullman]]'s [[His Dark Materials]], when Lyra and Will journey to the land of the dead to rescue Lyra's friend Roger. The harpies have their traditional Greek role of escorting the spirits of the dead in Pullman's book, and Lyra persuades them to help guide the dead out of limbo/hell to peace.
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This continued until Jason and the Argonauts arrived on the island. The [[Boreads]], sons of [[Boreas]] (the North Wind), who also could fly, succeeded in driving away the Harpies and killing one of them. However, at the request of [[Iris (mythology)|Iris]], the remaining Harpies were allowed to leave safely, in return for the promise that Phineas would not be bothered by the Harpies again. Thankful for the Argonauts' help, Phineas told them how to pass the [[Symplegades]]. <ref>''Argonautica,'' book II; Ovid XIII, 710; Virgil III, 211, 245)</ref>
  
In [[William Shakespeare's]] "[[The Tempest]]", the spirit Ariel disguises himself as a harpy to deliver the message of his master Prospero.
+
[[Aeneas]] also encountered the Harpies on the Strophades as they repeatedly made off with the feast the [[Troy|Trojans]] were setting. [[Celaeno]] cursed them, saying the Trojans would be so hungry they would eat their tables before they reached the end of their journey. The Trojans did not fare as well as the Greeks and soon fled in fear.<ref name=hamilton/>
  
In [[The Last Unicorn (film)]], a Harpy, captured by Mommy Fortuna, resembles a giant vulture with the breasts of a woman. The Harpy's name is [[Celaeno]](spelled Celeno in this work), "The Darkness", a lesser known harpy of greek mythology. The Film is based on the novel [[The Last Unicorn]] by Award Winning Fantasy Author, [[Peter S. Beagle]] which features a more traditional harpy.
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==Art and heraldry==
 +
[[File:Coacirksena.jpg|thumb|300px|Coat of arms Cirksena]]
 +
Harpies were often peripheral creatures in [[art]]work, showing up on [[pottery]] and in [[mural]]s. More often than not, they were seen being driven away by the Boreads; sometimes they were depicted as horrific tormentors of those who angered the gods. During the European [[Renaissance]], they were often [[sculpture|sculpted]], and were sometimes seen in [[hell]]ish landscapes in association with [[demon]]s and monstrous creatures.
  
A Harpy guards the area above the volcano in the 8-bit computer game [[Magicland Dizzy]].
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Harpies also became popular in [[heraldry]]. In the [[Middle Ages]], the Harpy, often called the "virgin eagle," became a popular [[charge (heraldry)|charge]]. Defined as a [[vulture]] with the head and breast of a woman, its reputation was one of bloodthirstiness. It became popular particularly in [[East Frisia]], seen on, among others, the [[coat-of-arms|coats-of-arms]] of [[Reitburg]], [[Liechtenstein]],<ref>[https://www.worldhistory.org/image/16028/coat-of-arms-of-liechtenstein/ Coat of Arms of Liechtenstein] ''World History Encyclopedia''. Retrieved December 14, 2022.</ref> and the Cirksena family.
  
Harpy is [[Monster in My Pocket]] #21. In the [[video game]], they appear in threes at the stage 4 [[construction site]].
+
==Literature and pop culture==
 +
Both [[Dante]] and [[William Shakespeare]] used Harpies in their works. In the ''[[Divine Comedy]],'' in Canto XIII of the ''Inferno,'' harpies hound those who have committed [[suicide]], while in ''[[The Tempest]],'' the spirit Ariel disguises himself as a Harpy to deliver the message of his master Prospero. Other more contemporary authors have used Harpies as well, such as [[Peter S. Beagle]], who wrote "[[The Last Unicorn]]" in which the Harpy's [[immortality]] is noted:
 +
<blockquote>When the unicorn chides Mommy Fortuna for taunting the Harpy, saying, "Do not boast, old woman. Your death sits in that cage, and she hears you." Mommy Fortuna is untroubled: "Oh, she'll kill me one day or another. But she will always remember that I caught her, and I held her prisoner. So there's my immortality, eh?"<ref>[https://www.imdb.com/title/tt0084237/ The Last Unicorn (film), 1982] ''IMDb''. Retrieved December 14, 2022.</ref></blockquote>
  
In [[Warcraft 3]], the expansion and [[World of Warcraft]] the harpies are a fierce and barbarous race living in tribes. See also [[Races in the Warcraft universe#Harpies|Harpies]] at the Warcraft race page.
+
The figures of Harpies, with their composite form and violent nature, are much employed in video games and other products of market-directed culture.
  
In the [[MMOG]] [[EVE Online]], the '''Harpy''' is a so-called Assault Frigate for the Caldari race, designed as a very powerful railgun platform with strong defenses.
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==Notes==
 
+
<references />
In the TV show [[Charmed]] Harpies are powerful female demons. The ones seen have dark skin and are dressed in black with long black talon like finger nails. They have super-strength and can shoot small energy blasts from their hands.
 
 
 
In the [[Yu-Gi-Oh!]] trading card game, there is a set of attractive harpy monsters known as "[[Harpie Lady]]", which originated from [[Mai Valentine]]'s deck in the manga and anime. They were originally sex themed in the Japanese uncut versions.
 
 
 
In [[God of War]], the Harpies are a small, frequently encountered enemy, and servants of Ares.
 
 
 
In [[Tiberian Sun]], the Harpy is a light helicopter used by NOD.
 
 
 
In the PC game, [[Guild Wars Nightfall]], the Skree are race of bird-people based on the Harpies.
 
 
 
In the [[Castlevania]] series of games (most notably Symphony of the Night and later installments following that games formula) Harpies often appear as enemies, usually in the Clock Tower area of the game.
 
 
 
In the [[Serious Sam]] series of PC and console games the Harpy appears throughout various stages of the game as a standard airborne enemy creature that slash and have a projectile attack.
 
 
 
In the PC game, [[King's Quest V: Absence Makes the Heart Go Yonder!]] King Graham encounters harpies on an island en route to Mordack's castle, Graham escapes being eaten by them when he plays a [[lyre]] for the creatures, whom then change their minds and fight over the instrument.
 
 
 
==Harpies in reality==
 
The [[American Harpy Eagle]] is a real bird named after the mythological animal.
 
  
 
==References==
 
==References==
<references />
+
*Apollodorus, Robin Hard (Translator).  ''The Library of Greek Mythology.'' Oxford University Press, 1998. ISBN 0192839241
 
+
*Graves, Robert. ''The Greek Myths: Complete Edition.'' Penguin, 1993. ISBN 0140171991
==See also==
+
*Hamilton, Edith. ''Mythology.'' Little, Brown and Company, 1942. ISBN 0316341142
*[[Sirens]] (for comparable dire bird-women in Greek mythology)
+
* Murray, J. A. H. (ed.). ''Oxford English Dictionary''. Oxford University Press, 1971. ISBN 019861117X
*[[Tantalus]] (for another Greek character punished with never being allowed to quench his hunger or thirst)
+
*Vinycomb, John. ''Fictitious and Symbolic Creatures in Art with Special Reference to Their Use in British Heraldry.'' Kessinger Publishing, 2004. ISBN 0766182487
{{commonscat|Harpies}}
+
*Weinberg, Saul S. (ed.). 'The Aegean and the Near East''. Locust Valley, NY: J.J.Augustin, 1956.
 
 
 
 
  
 
{{Credits|Harpy|115618645|}}
 
{{Credits|Harpy|115618645|}}

Latest revision as of 22:03, 14 December 2022

A medieval depiction of a Harpy as a bird-woman.

Harpy is the singular form for the mythical creatures called Harpies in Greek mythology, winged-beasts that were sent down by Zeus to punish, most famously the prophet Phineus. They were sometimes referred to as "the hounds of Zeus" for such actions.[1] Like many other second-tier Greek creatures, the Harpies were more prominent in art works than in mythological literature, and while they may occasionally be used in popular culture today, they are most widely remembered for their part in the legendary adventures of Jason and the Argonauts.

Harpies are not seen as representing actual physical creatures, their characteristics—immortality and destructive cruelty—reflect attributes that we have not well understood in ourselves as human beings.

Etymology

The word Harpy in English comes from Old French harpie from the Latin Harpyia, which in turn derives from the Greek Άρπυια, or Harpuia. Originally the word translated as "snatchers."[2] However, in modern English, Harpy can also be defined as "whirlwinds."[3]

Description

Harpy in Ulisse Aldrovandi, Monstrorum Historia, Bologna, 1642

Harpies were often described as bird-like creatures, no smaller than an eagle but usually not much larger. They had the hooked claws and beaks of a bird, but also left an over-powering stench where ever they went. Later, the Harpies were depicted as having the head of a human being, similar to gorgons and sirens as composite creatures; they were usually described as female. They are often associated with the wind and air, and thus are sometimes seen as representing the duality of the air: calm and graceful at times, but also capable of great destruction and chaos. As the gods, and the wind, Harpies were considered immortal.

Theories of origin

As with many ancient Greek creatures, there is no widespread consensus on how the idea of the Harpy originated. It has been suggested that the Harpies were originally adapted from the ornaments on bronze cauldrons from Urartu.[4] Other scholars point out that this theory is based upon the idea that the Harpies were bird monsters with human heads, which was not true in the original myths.

Originally the Harpies were conceived as spirits of the wind, the personification of a nature occurrence that is frequent in ancient cultures. The sky was a significant place for the ancient Greeks, and much like the deeper parts of the ocean, it was revered because it was inaccessible. Mount Olympus, the realm of the gods, was located high in the sky and so the atmosphere and weather became associated as the whims of the gods. Therefore, it is conceivable that the idea of the Harpies could have come from the consistently shifting winds. It was not until later that the Harpies were given a physical form, for the sake of story telling.

In their winged human form, the Harpies are no different from a large number of Greek divinities and as such would not need a special explanation for how they came to be. The later bird composite form is considered by most authors to have been confusion with an early depiction of the Sirens as bird women.

Mythology

Did you know?
Since they carried out punishments decreed by the Gods, the Harpies were known as "The Hounds of Zeus"

A Harpy was the mother by the West Wind Zephyros of the horses of Achilles (Iliad xvi. 160). The Harpies were sisters of Iris, daughters of Typhon and Echidna, and were consistently viewed as those who carried out the punishments decreed by the Gods, granting their nick-names as "The Hounds of Zeus." They lived on Strophades islands.

Phineas, a king of Thrace, had the gift of prophesy. Zeus, angry that Phineas revealed too much, punished him by putting him on an island with a buffet of food which he could never eat. The Harpies always arrived and stole the food out of his hands right before he could satisfy his hunger, and befouled the remains. In this form they were agents of punishment who abducted people and tortured them on their way to Tartarus. They were vicious, cruel, and violent, and were usually seen as the personifications of the destructive nature of wind. The Harpies in this tradition, now thought of as three sisters instead of the original two, were: Aello ("storm swift"), Celaeno ("the dark") — also known as Podarge ("fleet-foot") — and Ocypete ("the swift wing").

The winged Boreads (left and right) rescuing Phineas (seated) from the Harpies. Side A from an Attic red-figure column-krater, ca. 460 B.C.E.

This continued until Jason and the Argonauts arrived on the island. The Boreads, sons of Boreas (the North Wind), who also could fly, succeeded in driving away the Harpies and killing one of them. However, at the request of Iris, the remaining Harpies were allowed to leave safely, in return for the promise that Phineas would not be bothered by the Harpies again. Thankful for the Argonauts' help, Phineas told them how to pass the Symplegades. [5]

Aeneas also encountered the Harpies on the Strophades as they repeatedly made off with the feast the Trojans were setting. Celaeno cursed them, saying the Trojans would be so hungry they would eat their tables before they reached the end of their journey. The Trojans did not fare as well as the Greeks and soon fled in fear.[1]

Art and heraldry

Coat of arms Cirksena

Harpies were often peripheral creatures in artwork, showing up on pottery and in murals. More often than not, they were seen being driven away by the Boreads; sometimes they were depicted as horrific tormentors of those who angered the gods. During the European Renaissance, they were often sculpted, and were sometimes seen in hellish landscapes in association with demons and monstrous creatures.

Harpies also became popular in heraldry. In the Middle Ages, the Harpy, often called the "virgin eagle," became a popular charge. Defined as a vulture with the head and breast of a woman, its reputation was one of bloodthirstiness. It became popular particularly in East Frisia, seen on, among others, the coats-of-arms of Reitburg, Liechtenstein,[6] and the Cirksena family.

Literature and pop culture

Both Dante and William Shakespeare used Harpies in their works. In the Divine Comedy, in Canto XIII of the Inferno, harpies hound those who have committed suicide, while in The Tempest, the spirit Ariel disguises himself as a Harpy to deliver the message of his master Prospero. Other more contemporary authors have used Harpies as well, such as Peter S. Beagle, who wrote "The Last Unicorn" in which the Harpy's immortality is noted:

When the unicorn chides Mommy Fortuna for taunting the Harpy, saying, "Do not boast, old woman. Your death sits in that cage, and she hears you." Mommy Fortuna is untroubled: "Oh, she'll kill me one day or another. But she will always remember that I caught her, and I held her prisoner. So there's my immortality, eh?"[7]

The figures of Harpies, with their composite form and violent nature, are much employed in video games and other products of market-directed culture.

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Edith Hamilton, Mythology (Little, Brown and Company, 1942, ISBN 0316341142).
  2. Harpy Etymology Online. Retrieved December 14, 2022.
  3. J. A. H. Murray (ed.), Oxford English Dictionary (Oxford University Press, 1971, ISBN 019861117X).
  4. R. D. Barnett, "Ancient Oriental Influences on Archaic Greece" in Saul S. Weinberg (ed.) The Aegean and the Near East (Locust Valley, NY: J.J. Augustin, 1956).
  5. Argonautica, book II; Ovid XIII, 710; Virgil III, 211, 245)
  6. Coat of Arms of Liechtenstein World History Encyclopedia. Retrieved December 14, 2022.
  7. The Last Unicorn (film), 1982 IMDb. Retrieved December 14, 2022.

References
ISBN links support NWE through referral fees

  • Apollodorus, Robin Hard (Translator). The Library of Greek Mythology. Oxford University Press, 1998. ISBN 0192839241
  • Graves, Robert. The Greek Myths: Complete Edition. Penguin, 1993. ISBN 0140171991
  • Hamilton, Edith. Mythology. Little, Brown and Company, 1942. ISBN 0316341142
  • Murray, J. A. H. (ed.). Oxford English Dictionary. Oxford University Press, 1971. ISBN 019861117X
  • Vinycomb, John. Fictitious and Symbolic Creatures in Art with Special Reference to Their Use in British Heraldry. Kessinger Publishing, 2004. ISBN 0766182487
  • Weinberg, Saul S. (ed.). 'The Aegean and the Near East. Locust Valley, NY: J.J.Augustin, 1956.

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