Acestes or Egestes (Greek Ακέστης) was, in Roman mythology, the son of the Sicilian river-god Crinisus by a Dardanian or Trojan
woman named Egesta or Segesta.[1]
According to Servius, this woman Egesta or Segesta was sent by her father,
Hippotes or Ipsostratus, to Sicily, that she might not be devoured by the monsters, which
infested the territory of Troy, and which had been sent into the land, because the Trojans had
refused to reward Poseidon and Apollo for having built the
walls of their city.[2] When Egesta arrived in Sicily, the
river-god Crinisus in the form of a bear or a dog sired with her a son named Acestes, who was
afterwards regarded as the hero who had founded the town of Segesta.[3]
A slight variation on the tradition has it that Acestes welcomed Aeneas when he arrived in
Sicily. The funeral games of Aeneas' father Anchises were held
there. Those of Aeneas' folk who wished to voyage no further were allowed to remain behind with Acestes and together with
Acestes' people they founded the city of Acesta, that is Segesta.
Mythological tradition of Dionysius
The tradition of Acestes in Dionysius,[4] who calls him Aegestus (Αίγεστος), is different, for according to him, the
grandfather of Aegestus quarreled with Laomedon, who slew him and gave his daughters to some
merchants to convey them to a distant land. A noble Trojan however embarked with them, and married one of them in Sicily, where
she subsequently gave birth to a son, Aegestus. During the war against Troy Aegestus obtained permission from Priam to return and take part in the contest, and afterwards returned to Sicily, where Aeneas on his arrival was hospitably received by him and Elymus, and built for
them the towns of Aegesta and Elyme. The account of Dionysius seems to be nothing but a
rationalistic interpretation of the genuine legend.[5]
Arrow of Acestes
In the Aeneid, Acestes participates in a trial of skill in which he shoots his
arrow which then bursts into flame as a sign from Jupiter of Acestes' deserved honor.
References
- ^ Virgil, Aeneid i. 195, 550, v. 36, 711, &c.
- ^
Schmidt, Leonhard (1867), "Acestes", in Smith, William,
Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and
Mythology, vol. 1, Boston, pp. 7
- ^ Comp. Schol. ad Lycophr. 951, 963
- ^ Dionysius, i. 52
- ^ As to the inconsistencies in Virgil's account of Acestes, see Heyne,
Excurs. 1, on Aen. v.
This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology by
William Smith (1867).
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