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Encyclopedia Britannica - Main :: EMS-EUD |
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ERINYES (Lat. Furiae) , in Greek mythology, the avenging deities, properly the angry goddesses or goddesses of the curse pronounced upon evil-doers. According to Hesiod (Theog. 185) they were the daughters of Earth, and sprang from the blood of the mutilated Uranus; in Aeschylus (Eum. 321) they are the daughters of Night, in Sophocles (O.C. 40) of Darkness and Earth. Sometimes one Erinys is mentioned, sometimes several; Euripides first spoke of them as three in number, to whom later Alexandrian writers gave the names Alecto (unceasing in anger), Tisiphone (avenger of murder), Megaera (jealous). Their home is the world below, whence they ascend to earth to pursue the wicked. They punish all offences against the laws
rites
special
snakes
hair , carrying scourges, torches or sickles. The identification of Erinyes with Sanskrit Saranyu, the swift-speeding storm
Breal
formula
sees
See C. 0. Muller, Dissertations on the Eumenides of Aeschylus, (Eng. tr., 1835) ; A. Rosenberg, Die Erinyen (1874) ; J. E. Harrison, Prolegomena to the Study of Greek Religion (1903); and Journal of Hellenic Studies, six. p. 205, according to whom the Erinyes were primarily local ancestral ghosts, potent for good or evil after death, earth genii, originally conceived as embodied in the form of snakes
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