强盗和残忍的国王

D. Felton
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引用次数: 0

摘要

赫拉克勒斯的大部分作品都没有涉及神话中的怪物,而是涉及凶残的人类或半神,他们以折磨和谋杀不幸经过他们领地的旅行者而闻名。许多这些敌人,如卡库斯、安泰乌斯和西克努斯,都把受害者的头骨作为战利品展示出来。这些故事可能与中石器时代到早期铁器时代的考古发现所证明的猎头仪式相呼应。赫拉克勒斯战胜这些嗜血的角色,就像他战胜怪兽一样,可能不仅代表了“文明”价值观的抽象胜利,也可能反映了早期地中海社会的具体做法——包括在战斗中取头骨和与作物肥力有关的人祭——随着希腊文化的发展,这些习俗被更“人道”的习俗所取代。这些极端关注领土和边界的故事,可能也反映了希腊在地中海及其他地区扩大殖民存在时,希腊人和外国人之间明显的仇外心理。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Brigands and Cruel Kings
Most of Heracles’ parerga involve not mythological monsters but murderous humans or demigods famous for torturing and murdering travelers unfortunate enough to pass through their territories. Many of these antagonists, such as Cacus, Antaeus, and Cycnus, displayed their victims’ skulls as trophies. Such stories may echo headhunting rituals evidenced by archaeological finds from the Mesolithic through the early Iron Age. Heracles’ victories over these bloodthirsty characters, like his victories over monstrous beasts, may thus not only represent the abstract triumph of “civilized” values but also possibly reflect specific practices of early Mediterranean societies—including skull-taking in battle and human sacrifice related to crop fertility—replaced by more “humane” customs as Hellenic culture developed. These stories, with their extreme concerns about territory and boundaries, may also reflect the xenophobia evident between Greeks and foreigners as Greece expanded her colonial presence in the Mediterranean and beyond.
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