(Redirected from Asterius):''"Asterius" redirects here. See also
Asterius the Sophist.''
:''This article is about the figure in Greek mythology. For other uses, see
Asterion (disambiguation)''
In
Greek mythology ''Asterion'' denotes two sacred kings of Crete. The first 'Asterion' (Ἀστερίων) or 'Asterius' (Ἀστέριος)
[1] ("ruler of the stars"), son of
Neleus and
Chloris by the Greeks called "king" of
Crete, was the consort of
Europa and stepfather of her sons by
Zeus,
[2] who had to assume the form of the
Cretan bull of the sun to accomplish his role. The sons were
Minos the just king in Crete who judged the
Underworld,
Rhadamanthus, presiding over the
Garden of the Hesperides or in the Underworld, and
Sarpedon, likewise a judge in the Afterlife. He was the son of Tectamus. When he died, Asterion gave his kingdom to Minos, who promptly "banished" his brothers after quarelling with them.
According to
Karl Kerenyi (Kerenyi 1951 p 111; Kerenyi 1976:105) and other scholars, the second 'Asterion', the star at the center of the
labyrinth on Cretan coins, was in fact the
Minotaur, as the compiler of
Bibliotheca (III.1.4) asserts: "And she (
Pasiphaë) gave birth to Asterius, who was called the Minotaur. He had the face of a bull, but the rest of him was human; and Minos, in compliance with certain oracles, shut him up and guarded him in the Labyrinth." "Minotaur" is simply a name of Hellene coining to describe his Cretan iconic bull-man image: see
Minotaur. Coins minted at
Cnossus from the fifth century showed the kneeling bull or the head of a goddess crowned with a wreath of grain
[3] and on the reverse— the "underside"— a scheme of four meander patterns joined at the centre windmill fashion, sometimes with sickle moons or with a star-rosette at the center: "it is a small view of the nocturnal world on the face of the coin that lay downward in the printing process, and is, as it were, oriented downward" (Kerenyi 1976:105).
As long as it is recalled that the myth of Asterion, who appears in no anecdotal Hellenic context, is
Minoan, it will be perceived that the figure of Zeus is an interloper, and that rather than the "stepfather" role to which he has been displaced, Asterion is originally the father of the
Underworld progeny.
There is a short tale written by
Jorge Luis Borges ("
The House of Asterion") telling the story of
Theseus and
Ariadne from the point-of-view of Asterius.
Notes
1. Pseudo-Apollodorus, ''Bibliotheca'' III.1.2-4, and Diodorus Siculus, iv.60.3, give ''Asterius''; Pausanias, ''Description of Greece'' II.31.1, gives ''Asterion''
2. ''Bibliotheca'' III.1.2; Asterius "having died childless" III.1.3; scholiast on ''Iliad'' xii.292.
3. Compare Carme.
References
★
A.B. Cook, ''Zeus'', i.543ff.
★
Karl Kerenyi, 1951. ''The Gods of the Greeks''.
★ Karl Kerenyi, 1976. ''Dionysus: Archetypal Image of Indestructible Life'': p 105
★
Sara Douglass, 2002-6. ''The
Troy Game'' Series. (Asterion referred to as the name of the
Minotaur)