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Hermione
The only daughter of Menelaus and Helena, and beautiful, like the golden
Aphrodite. As she was a grand-daughter of Leda, the mother of Helena, Virgil
calls her Ledaea. During the war against Troy, Menelaus promised her in
marriage to Neoptolemus (Pyrrhus); and after his return he fulfilled his
promise. This Homeric tradition differs from those of later writers.
According to Euripides, Menelaus, previous to his expedition against Troy,
had promised Hermione to Orestes. After the return of Neoptolemus, Orestes
informed him of this, and claimed Hermione for himself; but Neoptolemus
haughtily refused to give her up. Orestes, in revenge, incited the Delphians
against him, and Neoptolemus was slain. In the meantime, Orestes carried off Hermione from the house of Peleus, and she, in
remembrance of her former love for Orestes, followed him. She had also
reason to fear the revenge of Neoptolemus, for she had made an attempt to
murder Andromache, whom Neoptolemus seemed to love more than her, but had
been prevented from committing the crime. According to others, Menelaus
betrothed her at Troy to Neoptolemus; but in the meantime her grandfather,
Tyndareus, promised her to Orestes, and actually gave her in marriage to
him. Neoptolemus, on his return, took possession of her by force, but was
slain soon after either at Delphi or in his own home at Phthia. Hermione had
no children by Neoptolemus but by Orestes, whose wife she ultimately became,
she was the mother of Tisamenus. The Lacedaemonians dedicated a statue of
her, the work of Calamis, at Delphi. A scholiast on Pindar calls her the
wife of Diomedes, and Hesychius states that Hermione was a surname of
Persephone at Syracuse.[15A] |