The term "chimera" has come to describe any mythical or
fictional creature with parts taken from various animals, to describe anything composed of disparate parts or perceived as wildly imaginative, implausible, or dazzling. In other words a chimera can be a hybrid creature.
Family
According to
Hesiod, the Chimera's mother was a certain ambiguous "she", which may refer to Echidna, in which case the father would presumably be
Typhon, though possibly (unlikely) the
Hydra or even
Ceto was meant instead.[4] However, the mythographers
Apollodorus (citing Hesiod as his source) and
Hyginus both make the Chimera the offspring of Echidna and Typhon.[5] Hesiod also has the
Sphinx and the
Nemean lion as the offspring of
Orthus, and another ambiguous "she", often understood as probably referring to the Chimera, although possibly instead to
Echidna, or again even
Ceto.[6]
Description
Homer described the Chimera in the Iliad, saying that "she was of divine stock not of men, in the fore part a lion, in the hinder a serpent, and in the midst a goat, breathing forth in terrible wise the might of blazing fire."[7] Hesiod and Apollodorus gave similar descriptions: a three-headed creature with a lion in front, a
fire-breathing goat in the middle, and a serpent in the rear.[8]
Killed by Bellerophon
According to Homer, the Chimera, who was reared by Araisodarus (the father of
Atymnius and Maris, Trojan warriors killed by
Nestor's sons
Antilochus and Trasymedes), was "a bane to many men".[9] As told in the Iliad, the hero
Bellerophon was ordered by the king of
Lycia to slay the Chimera (hoping the monster would kill Bellerophon). Still, the hero, "trusting in the signs of the gods", succeeded in killing the Chimera.[10]Hesiod adds that Bellerophon had help in killing the Chimera, saying, "her did
Pegasus and noble Bellerophon slay".[11]
Apollodorus gave a more complete account of the story.
Iobates, the king of
Lycia, had ordered Bellerophon to kill the Chimera (who had been killing cattle and had "devastated the country") since he thought that the Chimera would instead kill Bellerophon, "for it was more than a match for many, let alone one".[12] But the hero mounted his winged horse
Pegasus (which had sprung from the blood of the
Medusa)[13] "and soaring on high shot down the Chimera from the height."[14]
Iconography
Although the Chimera was, according to Homer, situated in foreign Lycia,[15] her representation in the arts was wholly Greek.[16] An autonomous tradition that did not rely on the written word was represented in the visual repertory of the Greek vase painters. The Chimera first appeared early in the repertory of the
proto-Corinthian pottery painters, providing some of the earliest identifiable mythological scenes that may be recognized in
Greek art. After some early hesitation, the Corinthian type was fixed in the 670s BC; the variations in the pictorial representations suggest multiple origins to Marilyn Low Schmitt.[17] The fascination with the monstrous devolved by the end of the seventh century into a decorative Chimera motif in Corinth,[18] while the motif of Bellerophon on Pegasus took on a separate existence alone. A separate Attic tradition, where the goats breathe fire and the animal's rear is serpentine, begins with the confidence that Marilyn Low Schmitt is convinced that there must be unrecognized or undiscovered local precursors.[19] Two vase painters employed the motif so consistently they were given the pseudonyms the Bellerophon Painter and the Chimaera Painter.
Similar creatures
A fire-breathing lioness was one of the earliest solar and war deities in
Ancient Egypt (representations from 3000 years prior to the Greeks), and influences are feasible. The lioness represented the war goddess and protector of both cultures that would unite as Ancient Egypt.
Sekhmet was one of the dominant deities in upper Egypt and
Bast in lower Egypt. As the
divine mother, and more especially as protector, for Lower Egypt, Bast became strongly associated with
Wadjet, the patron goddess of Lower Egypt.[citation needed]
In
Indus civilization are pictures of the Chimera in many seals. There are different kinds of Chimera composed of animals from the
Indian subcontinent. It is not known what the Indus people called the Chimera. [citation needed]
Although the Chimera of antiquity was forgotten in Medieval art, chimerical figures appear as embodiments of the deceptive, even
satanic forces of raw nature. They were depicted with a human face and a scaly tail, as in
Dante's vision of
Geryon in Inferno xvii.7–17, 25–27, hybrid monsters, more akin to the
Manticore of
Pliny's Natural History (viii.90), provided iconic representations of hypocrisy and fraud well into the seventeenth century through a symbolic representation in
Cesare Ripa's Iconological.[20]
Virgil, in the Aeneid (book 5) employs Chimaera for the name of a gigantic ship of Gyas in the ship-race, with possible allegorical significance in contemporary Roman politics.[21]
Pliny the Elder cited
Ctesias and quoted
Photius identifying the Chimera with an area of permanent gas vents that still may be found by hikers on the
Lycian Way in southwest
Turkey. Called in Turkish, Yanartaş (flaming rock), the area contains some two dozen vents in the ground, grouped in two patches on the hillside above the Temple of
Hephaestus approximately 3 km north of
Çıralı, near ancient
Olympos, in
Lycia. The vents emit burning
methane thought to be of
metamorphic origin. The fires of these were landmarks in ancient times and were used for navigation by sailors.
The Neo-Hittite Chimera from
Carchemish, dated 850–750 BC, which is now housed in the
Museum of Anatolian Civilizations, is believed to be a basis for the Greek legend. It differs, however, from the Greek version in that a winged body of a lioness also has a human head rising from her shoulders.
Use for Chinese mythological creatures
This section needs expansion. You can help by
adding to it. (April 2018)
Some western scholars of Chinese art, starting with
Victor Segalen, use the word "chimera" generically to refer to winged leonine or mixed species quadrupeds, such as bixie, tianlu, and even qilin.[22]
^The referent of "she" in Theogony319 is uncertain, see Clay,
p. 159, with n. 34; Gantz, p. 22 ("Echidna ... the Hydra ... or even less probably Keto"); Most,
p. 29 n. 18 ("probably Echidna"); Caldwell, p. 47 lines 319-325 ("probably Echidna, not Hydra"); West, pp. 254–255 line 319 ἡ δὲ ("Echidna or Hydra?").
^The referent of "she" at
Hesiod, Theogony326 is uncertain, see Clay,
pp. 159–160, with n. 34; Most,
p. 29 n. 20 ("Probably Chimaera"); Hard,
p. 63 ("Chimaira (or conceivably with his mother Echidna)"); Gantz, p. 23 ("[Chimera] ... or just possibly Echidna"); Caldwell, p. 47 lines 326 ("either Echidna or Chimaira"); West 1966, p. 356 line 326 ἡ δ' ἄρα ("much more likely ... Chimaera" than Echidna).
^Hesiod Theogony319–324 (Evelyn-White): "a creature fearful, great, swift-footed and strong, who had three heads, one of a grim-eyed
lion; in her hinderpart, a
dragon; and in her middle, a
goat, breathing forth a fearful blast of blazing fire.";
Apollodorus,
2.3.1: it had the fore part of a lion, the tail of a dragon, and its third head, the middle one, was that of a goat, through which it belched fire ... a single creature with the power of three beasts".
^Homer, Iliad16.328–329, links her breeding to the non-Trojan ally Amisodarus of Lycia, as a plague for humans.
^Anne Roes "The Representation of the Chimaera" The Journal of Hellenic Studies54.1 (1934), pp. 21–25, adduces Ancient Near Eastern conventions of winged animals whose wings end in animal heads.
^This outline of Chimera motifs follows Marilyn Low Schmitt, "Bellerophon and the Chimaera in Archaic Greek Art" American Journal of Archaeology70.4 (October 1966), pp. 341–347.
^Later coins struck at
Sicyon, near Corinth, bear the chimera-motif. (Schmitt 1966:344 note.
^John F. Moffitt, "An Exemplary Humanist Hybrid: Vasari's 'Fraude' with Reference to Bronzino's 'Sphinx'" Renaissance Quarterly49.2 (Summer 1996), pp. 303–333, traces the chimeric image of Fraud backward from
Bronzino.
^W.S.M. Nicoll, "Chasing Chimaeras" The Classical Quarterly New Series, 35.1 (1985), pp. 134–139.
^Barry Till (1980), "Some Observations on Stone Winged Chimeras at Ancient Chinese Tomb Sites", Artibus Asiae, 42 (4): 261–281,
doi:
10.2307/3250032,
JSTOR3250032
Hard, Robin, The Routledge Handbook of Greek Mythology: Based on H.J. Rose's "Handbook of Greek Mythology", Psychology Press, 2004,
ISBN9780415186360.
Google Books.
Hyginus, Gaius Julius, Fabulae in Apollodorus' Library and Hyginus' Fabulae: Two Handbooks of Greek Mythology, Translated, with Introductions by R. Scott Smith and Stephen M. Trzaskoma, Hackett Publishing Company, 2007.
ISBN978-0-87220-821-6.