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Iphis

 
Wikipedia: Iphis
For other uses of the name Iphis see Iphis.
Isis changing the sex of Iphis. Engraving by Bauer.

Iphis was a name attributed to three individuals:

Contents

Daughter of Ligdus

According to Greek mythology and the Roman poet Ovid, who wrote about transformations in his Metamorphoses, Iphis (or Iphys) was the daughter of Telethusa and Ligdus in Crete. Ligdus had already threatened to kill his pregnant wife's child if it wasn't a boy. Telethusa despairs, but is visited in the middle of the night by the Egyptian goddess Isis, attended by Anubis and Apis, who assures her that all will be well. When Telethusa gives birth to Iphis, she conceals her daughter's sex from her husband and raises her daughter as a boy. Iphis falls in love with another girl, Ianthe. Iphis is deeply in love and prays to Juno to allow her to marry her beloved. When nothing happens, her mother Telethusa brings her to the temple of Isis and prays to the goddess to help her daughter. Isis responds by transforming Iphis into a man. The male Iphis marries Ianthe and the two live happily ever after. Their marriage is presided over by Juno, Venus, and Hymenaios, the god of marriage.[1]

Isis and Telethusa (work by Picart).

The 17th-century publisher Humphrey Moseley once claimed to possess a manuscript of a play based on the Iphis and Ianthe story, by William Shakespeare. Scholars have treated the claim with intense skepticism; the play has not survived.

Cypriot shepherd

Ovid also introduces us to another character from Greek mythology, also named Iphis, a Cypriot shepherd who loved a woman named Anaxarete. Anaxarete scorned him and Iphis killed himself in despair. Because Anaxarete was still unmoved, Aphrodite changed her to stone.[2]

Mistress

As written in Homer's Iliad, Iphis was also a name given to the mistress of Patroclus, Achilles' companion-in-arms.

Modern Literature

Ali Smith's 2007 novel Girl Meets Boy is based on Ovid's story, and is part of the Canongate Myth Series.

References

  1. ^ Ovid. Metamorphoses, Book IX, 666-797.
  2. ^ Ovid. Metamorphoses, Book XIV, 802.

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