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						<p>Of the sons of Aeolus, Athamas ruled over <placeName key="tgn,7002683" authname="tgn,7002683">Boeotia</placeName> and begat a son Phrixus and a daughter Helle by Nephele.<note anchored="yes" resp="ed" place="unspecified">For the story of Athamas, Phrixus, and Helle, see
							<bibl default="NO">Zenobius, Cent. iv.38</bibl>; <bibl default="NO">Apostolius, Cent. xi.58</bibl>;
							<bibl default="NO">Scholiast on Aristoph. Cl. 257</bibl>; <bibl default="NO">Tzetzes, Scholiast on Lycophron
								22</bibl>; <bibl default="NO">Eustathius on Hom. Il. vii.86, p. 667</bibl>; <bibl default="NO">Scholiast on Hom.
									Il. vii.86</bibl>; <bibl default="NO">Diod. 4.47</bibl>; <bibl default="NO">Hyginus, Fab. 1-3</bibl>;
							<bibl default="NO">Hyginus, Ast. ii.20</bibl>; <bibl default="NO">Lactantius Placidus on Statius, Achill.
								i.65</bibl>; <bibl default="NO">Scriptores rerum mythicarum Latini, ed. Bode, i. pp. 8, 120ff. (First
									Vatican Mythographer 23; Second Vatican Mythographer 134)</bibl>. According to
							Herodotus （<bibl n="Hdt. 7.197" default="NO" valid="yes">Hdt. 7.197</bibl>）, it was a rule
							among the descendants of Phrixus that the eldest son of the family should be sacrificed
							（apparently to Laphystian Zeus） if ever he entered the town-hall;
							hence, to escape the risk of such a fate, many of the family fled to foreign lands.
							Sophocles wrote a tragedy called <title>Athamas</title>, in which he represented the
							king himself crowned with garlands and led to the altar of Zeus to be sacrificed, but
							finally rescued by the interposition of Herakles （<bibl default="NO">Scholiast on Aristoph.
								Cl. 237</bibl>; <bibl default="NO">Apostolius, Cent. xi.58</bibl>; <bibl default="NO"><title>The Fragments of
									Sophocles</title>, ed. A. C. Pearson, i.1ff.</bibl>）. These traditions
							point to the conclusion that in the royal line of Athamas the eldest son was regularly
							liable to be sacrificed either to prevent or to remedy a failure of the crops, and that
							in later times a ram was commonly accepted as a substitute for the human victim. Compare
							<bibl default="NO"><title>The Dying God</title>, pp. 161ff.</bibl></note> And he married a second
							wife, Ino, by whom he had Learchus and Melicertes. But Ino plotted against the children of
							Nephele and persuaded the women to parch the wheat; and having got the wheat they did so
							without the knowledge of the men. But the earth, being sown with parched wheat, did not
							yield its annual crops; so Athamas sent to <placeName key="perseus,Delphi" authname="perseus,Delphi">Delphi</placeName> to inquire how he might be delivered from the dearth. Now Ino
							persuaded the messengers to say it was foretold that the infertility would cease if
							Phrixus were sacrificed to Zeus. When Athamas heard that, he was forced by the inhabitants
							of the land to bring Phrixus to the altar. But Nephele caught him and her daughter up and
							gave them a ram with a golden fleece, which she had received from Hermes, and borne
							through the sky by the ram they crossed land and <pb n="77" />sea. But when they were over
							the sea which lies betwixt Sigeum and the <placeName key="tgn,7010345" authname="tgn,7010345">Chersonese</placeName>, Helle slipped into the deep and was drowned, and the sea was
							called <placeName key="tgn,7002638" authname="tgn,7002638">Hellespont</placeName> after her. But Phrixus came to
							the Colchians, whose king was Aeetes, son of the Sun and of Perseis, and brother of Circe
							and Pasiphae, whom Minos married. He received Phrixus and gave him one of his daughters,
							Chalciope. And Phrixus sacrificed the ram with the golden fleece to Zeus the god of
							Escape, and the fleece he gave to Aeetes, who nailed it to an oak in a grove of Ares. And
							Phrixus had children by Chalciope, to wit, Argus, <placeName key="tgn,7002371" authname="tgn,7002371">Melas</placeName>, Phrontis, and Cytisorus. </p></div1></body></text></group></text></TEI.2>