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Acantha

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Significant other
  
Apollo

Similar
  
Dryope, Marpessa, Cyrene, Aello, Aethra

Acantha (Greek: Ἀκάνθα, English translation: "thorny") is often claimed to be a minor character in Greek mythology whose metamorphosis was the origin of the Acanthus plant. The tale goes that Acantha was a nymph loved by the god Apollo. Acantha however rebuffed Apollo's advances and scratched his face when he tried to rape her. As a result, Apollo transformed her into the Acanthus, a plant with spiny leaves.

Origin of the myth

The story has, over the years, been retold in books, encyclopedias, and journals. Compilers have, however, often omitted reference to classical sources. For instance the first edition of John Lemprière's Bibliotheca Classica, an early encyclopaedia of mythological figures, provides no reference for the story. In the updated 1839 edition three references are given. These are to Pliny the Elder’s Natural History, Pedanius Dioscorides’ De Materia Medica and Hesychius of Alexandria’s Lexicon. On inspection, however, Pliny makes absolutely no reference to Acantha, Dioscorides refers only to the plant and Hesychius simply explains what the word means. A number of latter compilers have similarly not cited classical references when retelling the myth.

The myth does not appear in the Thesaurus Linguae Latinae, a volume which includes every Latin word, including proper names. The Thesaurus Linguae Graecae, a similarly comprehensive source containing a complete repository of Ancient Greek texts from Homer through to A.D. 200, is also absent the myth. The story is not present in either the Lexicon Iconographicum Mythologiae Classicae, a work praised for its breadth and quality, or Der Neue Pauly, an encyclopaedia considered an unparalleled masterpiece of classical German scholarship.

References

Acantha Wikipedia