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406:; once revived he refused to forgive Theseus and went to Italy and became the king of the Aricians and named a city after Artemis. He ruled as "Virbius" from inside the shrine of Diana. (The sanctuary forbade horses from entering, which is why it is believed he lived there.) This story of Hippolytus differs from Euripides' version, in that it brings Hippolytus back from the dead to live his life in Italy, while Euripides permanently connects him to his tomb. Virbius was also identified with the sun god
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to terrorize
Hippolytus' chariot horses, which become uncontrollable and hurl their master out of the vehicle. Entangled in the reins, Hippolytus is dragged to death. Artemis reconciles father and son by telling Theseus that Phaedra's accusation against Hippolytus was not true. Artemis comforts the
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dying
Hippolytus with a promise to make him the subject of religious practice so that his memory will live forever. She assigns a band of Trozenian maidens the task of preserving the story of Phaedra and Hippolytus in a ritual song.
709:. Daniel-Hughes, Carly, 1974–, Tappenden, Frederick S,, Rice, Bradley N,, Coming Back to Life: Performance, Memory, and Cognition in the Ancient Mediterranean (Conference) (2014 : Montréal, Québec). Montréal, QC. 2017.
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to resurrect the young man since he had vowed chastity to her. Followers of
Hippolytus' cult cut off a piece of their hair to dedicate their chastity to him before marriage.
833:. The Permeability of Past and Present, Mortality and Immortality, Death and Life in the Ancient Mediterranean (2 ed.). McGill University Library. pp. 345–374.
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The meaning of
Hippolytus' name is ironically ambiguous. Ἱππό translates to 'horse', and the element -λυτος (from λύω 'loosen, destroy') suggests the adjective
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Coming back to life : the permeability of past and present, mortality and immortality, death and life in the ancient
Mediterranean
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Coming Back to Life: The
Permeability of Past and Present, Mortality and Immortality, Death and Life in the Ancient Mediterranean
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Waldner, Katharina; Rice, Bradley N. (2017). "Hippolytus and
Virbius". In Tappenden, Frederick S.; Daniel-Hughes, Carly (eds.).
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Hippolytus is a hunter and sportsman who is disgusted by sex and marriage. In consequence, he scrupulously worships
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for details on the figure of
Hippolytus and a classicist's philological study of the evolution of Hippolytus as a
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Hippolytus and
Virbius:: Narratives of "Coming Back to Life" and Religious Discourses in Greco-Roman Literature
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Rice, Bradley N. (2017-03-31). Tappenden, Frederick S.; Daniel-Hughes, Carly (eds.).
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As a result, a cult grew up around
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Diana returning to Aricia Hippolytus resuscitated by Aesculapius
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802:. p.
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