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Cretan Eileithyia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  11 February 2009

R. F. Willetts
Affiliation:
University of Birmingham

Extract

The links between Eileithyia, an earlier Minoan goddess, and a still earlier neolithic prototype are, relatively, firm. The explanation is as simple as it is important. The continuity of her cult depends upon the unchanging concept of her function. Eileithyia was the goddess of childbirth; and the divine helper of women in labour has an obvious origin in the human midwife. To Homer she is ‘goddess of the pains of birth’. When Leto gave birth to Apollo in Delos, was in attendance, and so were a number of other goddesses who bathed the god-child and wrapped him in his swaddling-clothes.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © The Classical Association 1958

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References

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2 H. Ap. 115–22.

3 Allen-Halliday, , Homeric Hymns (2nd ed.) p. 219Google Scholar; Baur, , Philol. viii, Sup., pp. 481Google Scholar f. Farnell, , Cults of the Greek States, ii. 613–14Google ScholarThomson, , Studies in Ancient Greek Society, i (2nd ed.), 245Google Scholar. For the plural see Il. 11. 270, 19. 119. On the votive terracottas to Eileithyia at Lato in Crete see Demargne in B.C.H. liii. 382.Google Scholar

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10 The village (Kalyvia Sochas) is therefore presumably the site of the sanctuary mentioned by Pausanias: Prott, Von, Ath. Mitt. xxix. 8Google Scholar; B.S.A. xvi. 12Google Scholar; Nilsson, , Griech. Feste, p. 334, Min.-Myc. Rel., p. 520, n. 50.Google Scholar

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2 Ibid. I. xvi. 2. 31, 15. 35.

3 Ibid. 3. 18, 4A 13.

4 Ibid. 5. 48.

5 Ibid. 5. 75.

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14 Str. 10. 476; Paus. 1. 18. 5; Hsch. s.v. Also, as an epithet of Eileithyia, (Ruf. Onom. 229), with which cf. = inner membrane surrounding the foetus: Sor. 1. 58, Gal. U.P. 15. 4, Hippiatr. 14, Emp. 71. In Od. 3. 444 a bowl in which the blood of victims was caught.

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