APOLLODORUS
The Library of Greek Mythology
Translated with an Introduction and Notes by
ROBIN HARD
OXFORD WORLDS CLASSICS
THE LIBRARY OF GREEK MYTHOLOGY
APOLLODORUS is the name traditionally ascribed to the author of the Library . Although he was formerly identified as Apollodorus of Athens, a distinguished Alexandrian scholar of the second century BC, it is now recognized that the Library must have been written at a later period, probably the first or second century AD. It is not known whether Apollodorus was the authors true name; in any case we know nothing about him. Essentially an editor rather than an original writer, he compiled this brief but comprehensive guide to Greek mythology by selecting and summarizing material from the works of earlier writers. Based in the main on good early sources, it is an invaluable reference work.
ROBIN HARD studied Greek at Aberystwyth and Reading, writing a doctoral thesis on Platos Symposium , and is currently combining writing and translating with the part-time teaching of ancient philosophy and Greek.
CONTENTS
Introduction
Note on the Text and Translation
Select Bibliography
THE LIBRARY OF GREEK MYTHOLOGY
Contents
Genealogical Tables
Map
The Library
Appendix: Some Interpolations and an Unreliable Passage from the Epitome
Explanatory Notes
The Twelve Gods
References to Animals and Transformations
Index of Names
INTRODUCTION
THE Library of Apollodorus is a concise but comprehensive guide to Greek mythology. It covers the full span of mythical history from the origins of the universe and the gods to the Trojan War and its aftermath, and between these limits it tells the story of each of the great families of heroic mythology, and of the various adventures associated with the main heroes and heroines.
This is the only work of its kind to survive from classical antiquity. Although the Greeks developed an extensive and varied mythographical literature in Hellenistic and Roman times, the few handbooks which have been preserved are mostly specialist anthologies, recording myths of the constellations, for instance, or tales of transformation, and many of the stories contained in them are relatively obscure and of late origin. The author of the Library , by contrast, wanted to provide his readers with a general handbook which would offer them an account of the most important myths as related in the earlier tradition (with only the occasional late or recondite variant). Otherwise we possess only two works which are at all comparable. There is a Latin compendium, the Myths (Fabulae) of Hyginus, probably dating to the second century AD, which was based on a Greek predecessor, but conveys its contents in a very imperfect form; it presents summaries of myths and various catalogues in many separate chapters. Although it is a valuable source for myths or versions of myths which would otherwise have been lost, it is disorganized and sadly unreliable, and has to be approached with caution. Secondly, when Diodorus of Sicily was compiling his historical compendium in the first century BC, he departed from the more austere practices of many fellow historians and included a section on the mythical history (or pre-history) of Greece. Although it contains a useful biography of Heracles and other interesting material, Diodorus account of Greek myth is not nearly as complete as that in the Library , and much of it is based on inferior Hellenistic sources.