In
Greek mythology, the 'Symplegades', also known as the 'Cyanean Rocks' or 'Clashing Rocks' were a pair of rocks at the
Bosporus that clashed together randomly. They were defeated by
Jason and the
Argonauts, who would have been lost and killed by the rocks except for
Phineas' advice. Jason let a dove fly between the rocks; it lost only its tail feathers. The Argonauts rowed mightily to get through and lost only part of the stern ornament. After that, the Symplegades stopped moving permanently.
The
Romans called them 'cyaneae insulae'.
Lord Byron refers to the Symplegades in the concluding stanzas of ''
Childe Harold's Pilgrimage'':
:''And from the Alban Mount we now behold
:''Our friend of youth, that ocean, which when we
:''Beheld it last by Calp's rock unfold
:''Those waves, we follow on till the dark Euxine roll'd
:''Upon the blue Symplegades …
The Wandering Rocks
In the ''
Odyssey'' of
Homer the sorceress
Circe tells
Odysseus of the "Wandering Rocks" or "Roving Rocks" that have only been successfully pased by the ''
Argo'' when ''homeward'' bound. These rocks smash ships and the remaining timbers are scattered by the sea or destroyed by flames. The rocks lie on one of two potential routes to
Ithaca; the alternative, which is taken by Odyessus, leads to
Scylla and Charybdis.
The rocks also appear on the homeward journey in ''
Argonautica'' by
Apollonius of Rhodes who also locates them near to Scylla and Charybdis, but beyond them, rather than as an alternative route. The Argonauts manage to safely sail through the rocks with the help of
Thetis and the
Nereids.
The similarities and differences between the Wandering Rocks and the Symplegades has been much debated by scholars, as has potential locations for them. (See also ''
Geography of the Odyssey'') As
Scylla and Charybdis have often been located in the
Straits of Messina this has led some (such as
E. V. Rieu) to suggest the Wandering Rocks were located around
Sicily, with their flames and smoke coming from
Mount Etna. An alternative theory of the geography of the ''Odyssey'' places Circe, the
Sirens, Scylla & Charybdis and the Wandering Rocks, all mentioned in the stories of both Jason and Odysseus,
in north west Greece.
Tim Severin noted that the island of
Seolsa off the coast of
Levkas looked very similar to the rocks from the Argo story, and also that the area is near a geological fault, and hypothesised that due to both its similarity with the legends of the
Symplegades and the stories of the ''Argo'' sailing home via the
Adriatic and
Ionian Seas, the original legend was copied to the area. Severin also supported his theory with locations for Scylla and Charybdis being located on the other side of Levkas, noting the name "
Cape Skilla" is still used for a nearby headland on the mainland.
References
★
Apollonius of Rhodes. ''
Argonautica'' II, 317-340, 549-610; IV 795-979
★
Homer. ''
Odyssey'' XII, 55-72.
★
E. V. Rieu. "Glossary" in ''The Voyage of Argo - The Argonautica - A new translation by E.V. Rieu'' (
London;
Penguin Books,
1959)
★
Tim Severin ''The Ulysses Voyage: The search for the Odyssey'' (
London;
Arrow Books,
1987) pages 200-214
External links
★ http://www.mythweb.com/encyc/entries/symplegades.html
★ http://www.pantheon.org/articles/s/symplegades.html
★ http://livingheritage.org/symplegades.htm
★ http://www.eaudrey.com/myth/Places/symplegades.htm