|
Ajax, or Aīas (Of the earth) son of Telamon, king of Salamis, a
legendary hero of ancient Greece. To distinguish him from Ajax, son of Oileus, he was called "Ajax the Great" or "Telamonian Ajax". In
Homer's Iliad he is
described as of great stature and colossal frame, second only to Achilles in
strength and bravery, and the 'bulwark of the Achaeans'. He is not wounded in any of the battles described in the Iliad,
and he is the only principal character on either side who does not receive personal assistance from any of the gods who take part
in the battles.
During the Trojan War, Ajax fought Hector while Achilles sulked over an argument with Agamemnon. Ajax
wounded but did not kill him. He did kill Phorcys. During the fight over the body of
Patroclus, his prayer to the gods to clear the fog which has descended over the
battle is promptly granted by Zeus. In Homer's Odyssey, with the aid of Athena, Ajax rescued the body of Achilles
from the hands of the Trojans. In the competition between him and Odysseus for the
armour of Achilles, Agamemnon, at the instigation of Athena, awarded the prize to
Odysseus. This so enraged Ajax that it caused his death (Odyssey, xi. 541).
According to a later and more detailed story, his disappointment drove him mad; he rushed out of his tent and fell upon the
flocks of sheep in the camp under the impression that they were the Trojan enemy; on coming to his senses, in shame he killed
himself with the sword which he had received as a present from Hector. This is the account of his death given in the
Ajax of Sophocles; in Pindar's
"Nemea", 7; and in Ovid, Metamorphoses, xiii. 1). From his blood sprang
a red flower, as at the death of Hyacinthus, which bore
on its leaves the initial letters of his name Ai, also expressive of lament (Pausanias i. 35. 4). His ashes were deposited in a golden urn on the Rhoetean promontory at
the entrance of the Hellespont.
Like Achilles; he is represented as living after his death in the island of Leuke at the mouth of the Danube (Pausanias iii. 19. 11). Ajax, who in the post-Homeric legend is described as the grandson of Aeacus
and the great-grandson of Zeus, was the tutelary hero of the island of Salamis, where he had a temple and an image, and where a festival called
Aianteia was celebrated in his honour (Pausanias i. 35). At this festival a couch was set up, on which the panoply of
the hero was placed, a practice which recalls the Roman lectisternium. The identification of Ajax with the family of
Aeacus was chiefly a matter which concerned the Athenians, after Salamis had come into their possession, on which occasion
Solon is said to have inserted a line in the Iliad (book ii. 557 or 558), for the purpose of supporting the Athenian claim to the island. Ajax then became an
Attic hero; he was worshipped at Athens, where he had a statue in the market-place, and
the tribe Aiantis was called after his name.
Many illustrious Athenians -- Cimon, Miltiades, Alcibiades, the historian Thucydides -- traced their descent from Ajax.
Homer. Iliad VII, 181-312;
Homer. Odyssey XI, 543-67;
Apollodorus. Epitome III, 11-V, 7; Ovid. Metamorphoses XII, 620-XIII, 398.
This article incorporates text from the public domain 1911 Encyclopędia Britannica.
The laundry
detergent brand Ajax's slogan is "Stronger than dirt", presumably in the mythological reference.
|