Danaos
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.54172/1ng1tc30Keywords:
Danaus, linguistic studies, Greek sourcesAbstract
This research relates to an important topic connected to the history of Libya, Egypt, and Greece. It sheds light on the oldest relationships between these three peoples, focusing primarily on the legendary figure mentioned in Greek literary sources, namely "Danaus" or "Danaos." Danaus was a Libyan king of Egyptian origin, and fate led him to migrate with his fifty daughters, known as the "Danaids," to the land of Greece, where he became the ruler of its important region, Argos. He became the ancestor of a people known as the "Danaans" and played a role, along with his daughters, in transferring significant religious practices from Egypt and Libya to Greece and its associated islands. The aim of this research is to uncover the truth about this man and clarify his actual history, separate from the myths associated with him. The study primarily relies on literary material and linguistic studies rather than archaeological evidence, due to the scarcity, and almost absence, of the latter regarding Danaus and his story. Although the information provided in Greek literary sources about Danaus is often brief and concise, what remains suggests the existence of a realistic foundation for the character of the man and that the Greek accounts of him were not merely products of imagination.
Downloads
Published
Issue
Section
License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 4.0 International License.
Copyright of the articles Published by Almukhtar Journal of Social Science (MJSSc) is retained by the author(s), who grant MJSc a license to publish the article. Authors also grant any third party the right to use the article freely as long as its integrity is maintained and its original authors and cite MJSSc as the original publisher. Also, they accept the article remains published by the MJSSc website (except in the occasion of a retraction of the article).





