Misplaced Pages

Laelaps (mythology)

Article snapshot taken from Wikipedia with creative commons attribution-sharealike license. Give it a read and then ask your questions in the chat. We can research this topic together.
Greek mythological dog
This article duplicates the scope of other articles, specifically Teumessian fox. Please discuss this issue and help introduce a summary style to the article. (September 2023)
Laelaps, detail from a painting of Procris's death

Laelaps /ˈli ˌlæps/ (Ancient Greek: Λαῖλαψ, gen.: Λαίλαπος meaning "hurricane" or "furious storm") was a Greek mythological dog that never failed to catch what it was hunting.

Mythology

In one version of Laelaps' origin story, it was a gift from Zeus to Europa. The hound was passed down to King Minos, who gave it as a reward to the Athenian princess Procris. She obtained it by sleeping with him, after drugging him with a drink from the Circean root, which came from a plant of the milkweed family. In another version of her story, she received the animal as a gift from the goddess Artemis.

Procris' husband Cephalus decided to use the hound to hunt the Teumessian fox, a fox that could never be caught. This was a paradox: a dog that always caught its prey versus a fox that could never be caught. The chase went on until Zeus, perplexed by their contradictory fates, turned both to stone and cast them into the stars as the constellations Canis Major (Laelaps) and Canis Minor (the Teumessian fox).

See also

Notes

  1. "Laelaps in the Merriam-Webster Medical Dictionary".
  2. Liddell, Henry; Scott, Robert, eds. (1940). "Λαῖλαψ, n.". A Greek-English Lexicon. Clarendon Press.
  3. Apollodorus; Hard, Robin; Apollodorus (1997). The library of Greek mythology. Oxford World's Classics. Oxford: Oxford University Press. pp. 134, 241. ISBN 978-0-19-953632-0.
  4. Apollodorus, 2.4.7
  5. DK Publishing (2012). Nature Guide Stars and Planets. Penguin. p. 275. ISBN 978-1-4654-0353-7.

References

External links

Metamorphoses in Greek mythology
Animals
Avian
Non-avian
Pygmalion and Galatea
Apollo and Daphne
Io
Base appearance
Humanoids
Inanimate objects
Landforms
Opposite sex
Plants
Voluntary
Other
False myths


Stub icon

This article relating to Greek mythology is a stub. You can help Misplaced Pages by expanding it.

Categories: