Mathias's standard myth includes that he picked up the Alloy thrown by Athena (the plural of Arlo). Melanippides said that Athena gave up auloi because she saw herself in the mirror while playing, and she thought her bulging cheeks were neither elegant nor commensurate, although Telestes objected to this:
Some people say that Melania Peters belittled the art of flute playing in his Marcias, and his evaluation of Minerva is very clever.
Athena discarded those instruments from her sacred hands; And said contemptuously:
"Go away, you shameful thing-a stain on your body!
Should I give in to this misconduct now? "
Someone answered him,-but Thales of Selinus opposed melanie Peters in his Argo, and he said (he was also talking about Athena):-
In my opinion, this is an almost incredible thing.
The wise pallas, the most sacred goddess,
I think it was picked up in the mountains.
That clever instrument, and then put it
It was thrown away for fear of putting her mouth
Bala, in an untimely form, has become an honor born of fairy and noise.
Macias the monster. When fate gave her a virginity without children and a husband,
How could the chaste Athena be so worried about her beauty? Athena. 6 16e ff .)
Athena dropped Oloy picked up by Mathea because she saw her reflection while playing and thought her cheeks looked out of proportion.
However, Satymayas picked up Oloy of Athena and at some point launched a competition with Apollo. Apollo chose to play the lyre and defeated macias with skill or some tricks. Marsyas thinks he can beat the Olympic athletes. The punishment was that he was hanged and skinned alive. The story of Marsyas is often discussed in the context of new music in Athens. A good example is the passages of Melanippides and Telestes preserved in Athanaeus, which seem to argue about the different corners supporting aulos. However, because Marcia thought he was superior to Apollo, it was also a myth and was used as an example of the danger of arrogance.
Masias was also very attractive in Greek and Roman times, but the focus was no longer on his dispute with Apollo, nor on his getting Oloy from Athena, but more specifically, his punishment at Apollo's hands. This can be clearly seen from the change of interest in Maria's portrait, which shows the interest in depicting Maria's peeling. We also know that the statue of Mathias is located in Rome Square (Horace S. 1.6), and our existing statue of Miron Athens is actually a later Roman replica.
All kinds of mythological lineages are applicable to macias. People often say that he is the son of the elder Olympus, and sometimes he is the son of Hyannis or Egerus. It is said that he also taught the young Mount Olympus (famous for its music production) how to play Oros.
Marsyas can also refer to a river in Phrygia, named after a famous pervert. This part of the myth is described in Herodotus 7.26, Xenophon Anabasi 1.2, and also mentioned in Plato's Euthyd. 285d, Ovid beautifully reiterated, Deformation 6.382, tears of Marsias' companions gathered in the river, which is another example that the Romans are interested in developing Marsias:
Sartre Maas, when he plays the flute.
When my son competed with Apollo's harp,
Lost this bold game, alas!
His life was confiscated; Because they have agreed.
Losers should be the prey of winners.
He cried when Apollo punished him.
"Ah-ah! Why are you tearing me to pieces now?
A flute is not worth my life! "
Just as he was screaming,
The skin of his limbs was also torn,
The whole person became a burning wound,
Nerves, blood vessels and internal organs are exposed.
But all the weeping people in that land, all the shepherds and forests.
Jesus Christ,
All Satya, and him.
My beloved student, Mount Olympus, enjoyed a high reputation in folk music at that time.
All the fairies lamented his tragic fate;
All shepherds roaming in the mountains are
They all cry when they take care of the furry sheep.
All the tears that fell on the fertile land,
Like dripping water
Wet dewdrops fell into her deepest blood vessels-gathered into one source,
Flowing upward from her mysterious and winding cave
Shining in the air kissed by the sun,
The clearest river in Phrygia,
It flows quickly between steep banks, flowing
Sea: Judging from his name,
To this day, people still call it "macias".
refer to
A. Barker's Greek Musical Works: I- Musician and His Art, Cambridge University Press, Cambridge,1984,21n.9,92 n.19.
Music and the image of classical Athens. Cambridge University Press, February and June, 2005, 1 1, 36-7,
Athenaeus, director of Poerxiusi Digital Library, visited on February 20 16 1.
Perseus Digital Library, Ovid, Metamorphosis, 20 16 12 1 visit.
The consultation center is the main window for Liuzhou Library to provide literature retrieval and information consultation services for readers and users. Relying