NOT ANTINOUS THE GOD
BUT ANTINOUS THE SATURN MOON CRATER
It
is located on one of the moons of Saturn, the moon named for the Titan
sea goddess Tethys, daughter of Uranus and Tellus/Gaea. The Antinous
Crater is located at the bottom of this photo taken by the Cassini probe
in
a flyby. The bigger crater is Penelope.
This crater was named in 1982 after the "OTHER" Antinous — the infamous Antinous of Homer's Odyssey and the Iliad.
That is obvious from the association with Penelope. It is highly
possible that our God Antinous was in fact named for Homer's Antinous.
For the Ancients, names were not a matter of coincidence. A person's
name MEANT something. Nomen est omen — a name is a sign. So why was Antinous given the name of someone who
is generally considered to be a scoundrel?
Homer's Antinous was one of the "Suitors of
Penelope," the group of moochers who showed up at her doorstep while
her husband Odysseus was off fighting the Trojan wars and attempted to
woo her and abscond with as much of Odysseus's fortune as they could
before he returned — if he EVER
returned.
After all, he had been gone for years. Their argument was that he was a "dead beat" spouse
and that he had abandoned Penelope and, at any rate, was most probably dead.
Antinous was the craftiest of the suitors and plied Penelope with
costly gifts.
Then at last — at long last — Odysseus returned in the disguise of a beggar.
Only his
faithful dog recognized him. Penelope did not!
Antinous did not
recognize him either and, thinking he was just a homeless street
schizo, attacked him with a chair to drive him off.
Later on, during an archery tournament, Odysseus "accidentally" shot Antinous and killed him.
As with much of the Odyssey and the Iliad,
it is hard to tell who the "good guys" are and who the "bad guys" are.
Homer's Antinous is not exactly a saint, but he in't really guilty of any
crime either.
Penelope is the guilty one. As so often in Greek mythology, the women
are treacherous and untrustworthy (just think of Pandora). One small
detail which you probably did not learn in school was that Penelope had sex with Homer's Antinous and with ALL the other suitors.
FLAMEN ANTINOALIS ANTONYUS SUBIA explains:
"And the resulting child from that pan-sexual tryst was born a little
monstar with horns and hooves. He was called Pan because he was the son
of Antinous and ALL the
suitors. Penelope couldn't look at him, so she abandoned him, and he
was taken in by Mercury, who absolutely adored the little monster.
"Ah yes, Penelope gave birth to Pan in
Mantinea!"
Mantinea/Bithynia is the ancestral homeland of our own Antinous.
So the name was of regional origin.
But that is not all because, in
actual fact, Homer's Antinous was associated with magic. He was
something of a wizard.
According to legend, Homer's Antinous possessed
the fabled Mirror of Vulcan/Hephaestus, which enabled him to peer into the past and the future.
So
the name Antinous was always associated with myth and magic, even in
ancient times. Hadrian, who was fascinated with all things Greek, would
have recognized the association between young Antinous and the ancient
Greek myth and magic.
As for the fabled Mirror of Vulcan/Hephaestus — that is the stuff of Antinoian myth and magic for a future blog entry ....