Religion:Horkos

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Short description: Personification in Greek mythology
Horcus
Personifications of Oath
Member of the Family of Eris
AbodeUnderworld (possibly)
Personal information
ParentsEris[1] or
Aether and Gaia[2]
Siblings

Template:Greek myth (personified)

In Greek mythology, the figure of Horkos (/ˈhɔːrkɒs/; Ancient Greek: Ὅρκος [hór.kos], lit. oath)[3] personifies the curse that will be inflicted on any person who swears a false oath.[4] He was the avenger of perjury and the punitive companion of the goddess Dike (Justice).

In Aesop's Fables there is a cautionary tale, numbered 239 in the Perry Index, indicating that retribution is swift where the god is defied.[5] Oath-taking and the penalties for perjuring oneself played an important part in the Ancient Greek concept of justice.

Family

Hesiod's account

Hesiod's Theogony identifies Horkos as the son of Eris ("strife")[6] and brother of various tribulations: Dysnomia ("Anarchy"), Ate ("Ruin") and other malevolent daemons.[7]

"And hateful Eris bore painful Ponos ("Hardship"),
Lethe ("Forgetfulness") and Limos ("Starvation") and the tearful Algos ("Pains"),
Hysminai ("Battles"), Makhai ("Wars"), Phonoi ("Murders"), and Androktasiai ("Manslaughters");
Neikea ("Quarrels"), Pseudea ("Lies"), Logoi ("Stories"), Amphillogiai ("Disputes")
Dysnomia ("Anarchy") and Ate ("Ruin"), near one another,
and Horkos ("Oath"), who most afflicts men on earth,
Then willing swears a false oath."[8][9]

Hyginus' account

In another account, Horcus/ Jusjurandum was the offspring of the primordial deities Aether and Gaia.[10]

From Aether (Air) and Terra/ Gaia (Earth) [were born]: Dolor/ Algos (Pain), Dolus (Guile), Ira/ Lyssa (Anger), Luctus/ Penthus (Lamentation), Mendacium/ Pseudologoi (Lies), Jusjurandum/ Horcus (Oath), Ultio/ Poine (Vengeance), Intemperantia (Intemperance), Altercatio/ Amphillogiai (Altercation), Oblivio/ Lethe (Forgetfulness), Socordia/ Aergia (Sloth), Timor/ Phobos (Fear), Superbia (Arrogance), Incestum (Sacrilege), Pugna/ Hysminai (Combat).[11]

Mythology

In his Works and Days, Hesiod states that the Erinyes (Furies) assisted at the birth of Horkos, "whom Eris bore, to be a plague on those who take false oath", and that the fifth day of each month was especially dangerous as being the day on which he was born.[12] However, according to the moral given in an ethical parable related by Aesop, there is no fixed day on which the god's punishment falls on the wicked.

Aesop's fable concerns a man who had taken a deposit from a friend and, when asked to swear an oath regarding it, left the town hurriedly. A lame man whom he met told his fellow-traveller that he was Horkos on his way to track down wicked people. The man asked Horkos how often he returned to the city they were leaving. "I come back after forty years, or sometimes thirty," Horkos replied. Believing himself to be free from danger, the man returned the following morning and swore that he had never received the deposit. Almost immediately, Horkos arrived to execute the perjurer by throwing him off a cliff. Protesting, the man asked why the god had said he was not coming back for years when in fact he did not grant even a day's reprieve. Horkos replied, "You should also know that if somebody intends to provoke me, I am accustomed to come back again the very same day."

Concepts of justice

A 1610 depiction of a Fury from the Kunsthistorisches Museum

A similar story was told by Herodotus and may even have been the fable's origin.[13] It concerned a man who asked the Delphic oracle's advice about dishonouring such an oath and received the answer that he would profit for the moment but that it would bring about the destruction of him and his heirs - for Horkos has a son 'who is nameless and without hands or feet, swift in pursuit'. Nor can there be any repentance, for intent is no different from action.[14]

The severity of such justice underlines the importance of oath-taking in Ancient Greece, which was undertaken in the name of the gods. To perjure oneself meant waging war on the gods, who even themselves could suffer under the same sanctions.[15] In taking an oath one called down a conditional curse on oneself, to take effect if one lied or broke one's promise.[16] The lasting nature of this curse, and the corresponding benefit of honouring one's word, is also emphasised by Hesiod in discussing the matter: "Whoever wilfully swears a false oath, telling a lie in his testimony, he himself is incurably hurt at the same time as he harms Justice, and in after times his family is left more obscure, whereas the family of the man who keeps his oath is better in after times."[17]

In later times, the role of bringing justice for broken oaths was undertaken by the Furies, specified by Hesiod as the midwives at the birth of Horkos. Justice was also under the protection of the King of the gods, who in this aspect is referred to as Zeus Horkios (guardian of oaths); in circumstances where other divine entities were named, they too took responsibility for retribution.[18]

Notes

  1. Hesiod, Theogony 231
  2. Hyginus, Fabulae Preface
  3. ὅρκος. Liddell, Henry George; Scott, Robert; A Greek–English Lexicon at the Perseus Project.
  4. Hard, Robin; Jennings Rose, Herbert (2004). The Routledge handbook of Greek mythology. Routledge. p. 31. 
  5. Aesopica
  6. Hesiod, Theogony 231
  7. Richard Caldwell, Hesiod's Theogony, Focus Publishing/R. Pullins Company (June 1, 1987). ISBN:978-0-941051-00-2.
  8. Caldwell, p. 42 lines 226-232, with the meanings of the names (in parentheses), as given by Caldwell, p. 40 on lines 212–232.
  9. Hesiod, Theogony 226–232 This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  10. Hyginus, Fabulae Preface
  11. Hyginus, Fabulae Preface This article incorporates text from this source, which is in the public domain.
  12. Evelyn-White, H.G. (trans.) (1914). Works and Days. pp. 804. http://www.theoi.com/Text/HesiodWorksDays.html. 
  13. Francisco Rodríguez Adrados, History of the Graeco-Latin Fable Vol.3 , Brill 2003, pp.275-6
  14. The History of Herodotus VI.86, pp.93-4
  15. Everett L. Wheeler, "Sophistic interpretations and Greek treaties", Princeton University, October 1984
  16. Sommerstein & Torrance, p.1
  17. Hesiod, Works and Days 282-5
  18. Sommerstein & Torrance, pp.295-9

References