In Lucian of Samosata's works, Myia ( Greek: Μυῖα, translit. Muîa, lit. "fly") is a young girl who fell in love with Endymion and was transformed by the lunar goddess Selene into a fly, a small insect bearing her name.
The ancient Greek noun μυῖα translates to 'fly', [1] and is derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *mus-ih2, thus being cognate with the Latin musca. [2]
In his satirical second-century work Praising a Fly ( Latin: Muscae Encomium, Ancient Greek: Μυίας ἐγκώμιον), author Lucian of Samosata (modern Samsat) related the—otherwise unattested—myth of Myia, an exceedingly fair but also very chatty young maiden who fell in love with Endymion, a very handsome mortal man who had been granted immortality via eternal slumber. [3] With her endless chatter Myia would wake up Endymion, irritating him and enraging the moon goddess Selene, his lover. [4] Selene then transformed the talkative girl into a fly, who annoys sleeping people to this day, in memory of her love and her deeds in her previous life. [5] [6] [7] [8] An ancient Greek proverb was μυίης θάρσος (literally 'the fly's boldness'), said for those who were of excessive boldness. [1]
Similarly to the myth of the boy Alectryon (also surviving in the works of Lucian) Myia's story is an aetiological myth which nonetheless does not link its protagonist to a specific Greek place or lineage, with a starting point in another, more popular myth, rather than an animal-based cult. [7] Likewise, it is impossible to say whether the myth is just an invention of Lucian's or a genuine popular fable about animals. [7]
In Lucian of Samosata's works, Myia ( Greek: Μυῖα, translit. Muîa, lit. "fly") is a young girl who fell in love with Endymion and was transformed by the lunar goddess Selene into a fly, a small insect bearing her name.
The ancient Greek noun μυῖα translates to 'fly', [1] and is derived from the Proto-Indo-European root *mus-ih2, thus being cognate with the Latin musca. [2]
In his satirical second-century work Praising a Fly ( Latin: Muscae Encomium, Ancient Greek: Μυίας ἐγκώμιον), author Lucian of Samosata (modern Samsat) related the—otherwise unattested—myth of Myia, an exceedingly fair but also very chatty young maiden who fell in love with Endymion, a very handsome mortal man who had been granted immortality via eternal slumber. [3] With her endless chatter Myia would wake up Endymion, irritating him and enraging the moon goddess Selene, his lover. [4] Selene then transformed the talkative girl into a fly, who annoys sleeping people to this day, in memory of her love and her deeds in her previous life. [5] [6] [7] [8] An ancient Greek proverb was μυίης θάρσος (literally 'the fly's boldness'), said for those who were of excessive boldness. [1]
Similarly to the myth of the boy Alectryon (also surviving in the works of Lucian) Myia's story is an aetiological myth which nonetheless does not link its protagonist to a specific Greek place or lineage, with a starting point in another, more popular myth, rather than an animal-based cult. [7] Likewise, it is impossible to say whether the myth is just an invention of Lucian's or a genuine popular fable about animals. [7]