The Palici (
Ancient Greek: Παλικοί,
romanized: Palikoi), or Palaci, were a pair of indigenous
Sicilianchthonic deities in
Roman mythology, and to a lesser extent in
Greek mythology. They are mentioned in
Ovid's Metamorphoses V, 406, and in
Virgil's Aeneid IX, 585. Their cult centered on three small lakes that emitted
sulphurous vapors in the
Palagonia plain, and as a result these twin brothers were associated with
geysers and the
underworld. There was also a shrine to the Palaci in Palacia, where people could subject themselves or others to tests of reliability through divine judgement; passing meant that an oath could be trusted.[1]
Genealogy
The mythological lineage of the Palici is uncertain. One version of the legend attributes their parentage to sky god
Zeus and nymph
Aetna. Others associate their birth to a coupling between Aetna herself and smith deity
Hephaestus. The "Greek version" indicate they are sons of Zeus and another nymph, called
Thaleia.[2] A third account claimed that the Palici were the sons of the Sicilian deity
Adranus.
The medieval Vatican Mythographers book ascribed their lineage to Zeus and Aetna: Zeus (Jupiter) impregnated Aetna and she, fearing the wrath of Hera (Juno), was entrusted to Earth to protect her and her sons.[3][4]
Interpretations
The second book of the Vatican Mythographers translated their name as 'twice-born'.[4]
Scholar Marcel Meulder argues for a
Proto-Indo-European origin for their name, and relates it to a group of Greek compound names that belong to the semantic field of colours (e.g., leuko 'white'; melas 'black'). Thus, their name would mean 'of a white colour, of a grey colour, of a yellow colour' ("blanchâtre, jaunâtre, grisâtre”").[5][6] He also suggests it as evidence of the
Indo-European character of the
Siculian language.[5]
Polish historian Krzysztof Tomasz Witczak and Daria Zawiasa suggest the Palici may derive from the old
Indo-Europeanmytheme of the
divine twins.[7] They argue that the pair fit some of the common traits that scholar
Donald J. Ward ascribed to the mytheme, such as a
sky-god's paternity and a single designation for both twins.[8]
^
abMeulder, Marcel (1998). "Les dieux sicules paliques portent un nom indo-européen". Latomus. 57 (1): 33–37.
JSTOR41538205.
^Meulder, Marcel (1 December 2016). "Le vers 4 du fragment 115 d'Empédocle (FVS 31 D.-K.): proposition d'une correction" [Verse 4 of fragment 115 of Empedocles (FVS 31 D.-K.): proposed correction]. Elenchos (in French). 37 (1–2): 33–68.
doi:
10.1515/elen-2016-371-203.
S2CID192732795.
^Witczak, K. T.; Zawiasa, D. "The Sicilian Palici as representatives of the indo-european divine twins". In: ΜΥΘΟΣ, n. 12, 2004-2005. pp. 93-106.
Hammond, N.G.L. & Scullard, H.H. (eds.). The Oxford Classical Dictionary (Oxford; Oxford University Press. 1970).
Wilson, R.J.A. Sicily under the Roman Empire (Warminster: Aris and Phillips, 1990), p. 278.
Maniscalco, Laura (ed.). Il santuario dei Palici: un centro di culto nella Valle del Margi (Palermo: Regione Siciliana, 2008) (Collana d'Area. Quaderno n. 11).
Meulder, Marcel (1998). "Les dieux sicules paliques portent un nom indo-européen". Latomus. 57 (1): 33–37.
JSTOR41538205.
Cipolla, Paolo B. (2022). "(Re)writing a Sicilian Myth: The Palici and Aeschylus' Aitnaiai". Myth and History: Close Encounters. pp. 187–206.
doi:
10.1515/9783110780116-012.
ISBN978-3-11-078011-6.
Sampson, C. Michael (2018). "Macrobius, Aeschylus' Aetnaeae, and the Myth(s) of the Palici". In Sampson, Michael; Pratt, Louise (eds.). Engaging Classical Texts in the Contemporary World: From Narratology to Reception. University of Michigan Press. pp. 179–194.
doi:
10.3998/mpub.9905263.
ISBN978-0-472-13108-2.
JSTOR10.3998/mpub.9905263.13.
Maniscalco, Laura; McConnell, Brian E. (2003). "The Sanctuary of the Divine Palikoi (Rocchicella di Mineo, Sicily): Fieldwork from 1995 to 2001". American Journal of Archaeology. 107 (2): 145–180.
doi:
10.3764/aja.107.2.145.
JSTOR40026074.
S2CID155841895.
Maniscalco, Laura (2014). "The Sanctuary of the Palikoi at Rocchicella (Mineo): The Copper Age Structures and the 'Boiling Waters' Phenomenon". In Gullì, Domenica (ed.). From Cave to Dolmen: Ritual and symbolic aspects in the prehistory between Sciacca, Sicily and the central Mediterranean. Archaeopress. pp. 169–178.
doi:
10.2307/j.ctvqmp11h.22.
ISBN978-1-78491-038-9.
JSTORj.ctvqmp11h.22.