In
Greek mythology, 'Anchises' was a son of
Capys and
Themiste (daughter of Ilus, son of Tros) or
Hieromneme, a
naiad. His major claim to fame in Greek mythology is that he was a mortal lover of the goddess
Aphrodite. One version is that Aphrodite pretended to be a
Phrygian princess and seduced him for nearly two weeks of lovemaking. Anchises learned that his lover was a goddess only nine months later, when she revealed herself and presented him with the infant
Aeneas.
Anchises was a prince from
Dardania, a territory neighbouring
Troy. He had a mortal wife named
Eriopis, according to the scholiasts, and he is credited with other children beside Aeneas.
Homer, in the
Iliad, mentions a daughter named
Hippodameia, their eldest ("the darling of her father and mother"), who married her cousin
Alcathous.
Anchises bred his mares with the divine stallions owned by King
Laomedon. However, he made the mistake of bragging about his liaison with Aphrodite, and as a result
Zeus, the king of the gods, hit him with a thunderbolt which left him lame.
After the defeat of Troy in the
Trojan War, the elderly Anchises was carried from the burning city by his son Aeneas, accompanied by Aeneas' wife
Creusa, who died in the escape attempt, and small son
Ascanius. (The subject is depicted in several paintings, including a famous version by
Federico Barocci in the
Galleria Borghese in
Rome.) Anchises himself died and was buried in
Sicily many years later. Aeneas later visited
Hades and saw his father again in the
Elysian Fields.
Homer's ''Iliad'' mentions another 'Anchises', a wealthy native of
Sicyon in Greece and father of
Echepolus.
See also
★
Achish - a royal name or title in the
Bible, perhaps a cognate of Anchises.
★
Julius Caesar and other prominent
Romans claimed to be descended from
Venus (the Roman equivalent of Aphrodite) and Anchises.
References
★
Homer.
Iliad II, 819-21; V, 260-73; XX, 215-40
★
Virgil.
Aeneid
★
Apollodorus.
Bibliotheke III, xii, 2
★
Apollodorus.
Epitome V, 21
★
Ovid.
Metamorphoses XIII, 623-42; XIV, 82-119.
★ Rose, H.J. (1924). Anchises and Aphrodite. The Classical Quarterly, Vol. 18, No. 1. (Jan., 1924), pp. 11-16.