Centaurs
Centaur, Greek Kentauros, in Greek mythology, a race of creatures, part horse and
part man, dwelling in the mountains of Thessaly and Arcadia. Traditionally they
were the offspring of Ixion, king of the
neighbouring Lapiths, and were best
known for their fight (centauromachy) with the
Lapiths, which resulted from their attempt to carry off the bride of Pirithous,
son and successor of Ixion. They lost the battle and were driven from Mount Pelion. In later Greek times they were often
represented drawing the chariot of the wine god Dionysus or bound and ridden by
Eros, the god of love, in allusion to their drunken and amorous habits.
Centaurs may best be explained as the
creation of a folktale in which wild inhabitants of the mountains and savage
spirits of the forests were combined in half-human, half-animal form. In early
art they were portrayed as human beings in front, with the body and hindlegs
of a horse attached to the back; later, they were men only as far as the waist.
They fought using rough branches of trees as weapons.
Their general character was that of wild,
lawless, and inhospitable beings, the slaves of their animal passions. (The
Centaur Chiron was not typical in this respect.) An exception was the kind and wise centaur Chiron, the teacher of the Greek heroes Jason and Achilles.
Edited by : Jennifer Jude Ann
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