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Vergewaltigung der Kassandra? (170 Aufrufe)
Γραικύλος schrieb am 13.01.2025 um 12:30 Uhr (Zitieren)
Philostratos, Heroicus 35, 4:

Die Szene ereignet sich nach der Eroberung Trojas.
Ajax dragged Cassandra out of the temple of Athena when she was kneeling and supplicating the goddess, but did not rape her, or treat her in any way violently as the stories falsely have it; he took her away in his tent, but Agamemnon had seen her and had to have her – for her natural beauty had been crowned by art [πρὸς γὰρ τῇ ὥρᾳ καὶ κατέστεπτο παρὰ τῆς τέχνης] – and took her away from Ajax.

[Philostratus: Heroicus – Gymnasticus – Discourses 1 and 2. Ed. by Jeffrey Rusten Jason König. Cambridge (Mass.)/London 2014, pp. 218 sq.]

Dazu alternativ:
Scholia zu Lykophrons “Alexandra” 1141
When a plague took hold of Locris on account of the rape of Cassandra by Ajax, the goddess ordered that two girls be sent each year to Athena at Troy for a thousand years. And the girls who were sent were killed by the Trojans who threw stones at them as they approached. If any of them escaped and went up in secret to the shrine of Athena, they became priestesses for the rest of their lives. The ones who were killed they burned with wood that grew in the wild and had no fruit, and threw their bones into the sea from Mt. Traron in the Troad. And again the Locrians sent other girls. The story is told by Callimachus.

[Callimachus: Aetia – Iambi – Lyric Poems. Ed. by Dee L. Clayman. Cambridge (Mass.)/London 2022, pp. 126-129]
Re: Vergewaltigung der Kassandra?
Γραικύλος schrieb am 13.01.2025 um 12:54 Uhr (Zitieren)
Hier ist von Ajax dem Lokrer die Rede, nicht von dem Telamonier.
 
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