| |||||||||
| Deities of Greek mythology | |
|---|---|
| |
Personified concepts: | |
Eris, a Greek word meaning 'Strife' and also a goddess personifying that quality, her name being translated into Latin as Discordia. Her opposite is Concordia.
In Hesiod's Work and Days 11–24, two different goddesses named Eris 'Strife' are distinguished:
In Hesiod's Theogany (226–232) Strife the daugther of Night is less kindly spoken of as she brings forth other personifications as her children:
The other Strife is presumably she who appears in Homer's Iliad Book 4 as sister of Ares and so presumably daughter of Zeus and Hera:
Zeus sends her to rouse the Achaeans in Book 11 of the same work.
The most famous tale of Eris ('Strife') recounts her initiating the Trojan War. The goddesses Hera, Athena and Aphrodite had been invited along with the rest of Olympus to the forced wedding of Peleus and Thetis, who would become the parents of Achilles, but Eris had been snubbed because of her troublemaking inclinations.
She therefore (in a fragment from the Cypria as part of a plan hatched by Zeus and Themis) tossed into the party the Apple of Discord, a golden apple inscibed Kallisti – "For the most beautiful one", or "To the Prettiest One" – provoking the goddesses to begin quarreling about the appropriate recipient. The hapless Paris, Prince of Troy, was appointed to select the most beautiful. Greek mythological morality being what it was, each of the three goddesses immediately attempted to bribe Paris to choose her. Hera offered political power, Athena skill in battle, and Aphrodite the most beautiful woman in the world, Helen, wife of Menelaus of Sparta. Paris was a red-blooded young man, and while the length of time he meditated on this problem is not recorded, he did eventually award the apple to Aphrodite.
In Nonnus' Dionysiaca, 2.356, when Typhon prepares to battle with Zeus:
Eris has been adopted as the matron deity of the modern Discordian religion. In the process, however, she has lightened up considerably in comparison to the rather malevolent Graeco-Roman original.
Eris is also a genus of jumping spiders. See Eris (genus).