Marsyas in Wikipedia
In Greek mythology, the satyr Marsyas (gr. Μαρσύας) is a
central figure in two stories involving music: in one, he
picked up the double flute (aulos) that had been abandoned by
Athena and played it;[1] in the other, he challenged Apollo to
a contest of music and lost his hide and life. In Antiquity,
literary sources often emphasise the hubris of Marsyas and the
justice of his punishment.
In one strand of modern comparative mythography, the
domination of Marsyas by Apollo is regarded as an example of
myth that recapitulates a supposed supplanting by the Olympian
pantheon of an earlier "Pelasgian" religion of chthonic heroic
ancestors and nature spirits.[2] Marsyas was a devoté of the
ancient Mother Goddess Rhea/Cybele, and his episodes are sited
by the mythographers in Celaenae (or Kelainai) in Phrygia
(today, the town of Dinar in Turkey), at the main source of
the Meander (the river Menderes).[3]...
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