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The aegis ( ; aigís), as stated in the , is a device carried by and , variously interpreted as an animal skin or a and sometimes featuring the head of a . There may be a connection with a deity named Aex, a daughter of and a nurse of Zeus or alternatively a mistress of Zeus (Hyginus, Astronomica 2. 13).

The modern concept of doing something "under someone's aegis means doing something under the protection of a powerful, knowledgeable, or benevolent source. The word aegis is identified with protection by a strong force with its roots in and adopted by the ; there are parallels in and in Egyptian mythology as well, where the Greek word aegis is applied by extension.


Etymology
The αἰγίς aigis has many meanings, including:.
  1. "violent windstorm", from the verb ἀίσσω aïssō"to quickly move, to shoot, dart, to put in motion": . ( ἀιγ- aïg-) = "I rush or move violently". Akin to καταιγίς kataigis, "thunderstorm".
  2. The shield of a deity as described above.
  3. "goatskin coat", from treating the word as meaning "something grammatically feminine pertaining to ": Greek αἴξ aix (stem αἰγ- aig-) = "goat" + suffix -ίς -is (stem -ίδ- -id-).

The original meaning may have been the first, and Ζεὺς Αἰγίοχος Zeus Aigiokhos = "Zeus who holds the aegis" may have originally meant "Sky/Heaven, who holds the thunderstorm". The transition to the meaning "shield" or "goatskin" may have come by among a people familiar with draping an animal skin over the left arm as a shield.


In Greek mythology
)]]The aegis of Athena is referred to in several places in the Iliad. "It produced a sound as from roaring dragons ( Iliad, 4.17) and was borne by Athena in battle ... and among them went bright-eyed Athene, holding the precious aegis which is ageless and immortal: a hundred tassels of pure gold hang fluttering from it, tight-woven each of them, and each the worth of a hundred oxen."
(1987). 9780140444445, Penguin Classics.

Virgil imagines the in 's forge, who "busily burnished the aegis Athena wears in her angry moods—a fearsome thing with a surface of gold like scaly snake-skin, and the linked serpents and the herself upon the goddess's breast—a severed head rolling its eyes", 8.435–8, (Day-Lewie's translation). furnished with golden tassels and bearing the ('s head) in the central boss. Some of the vase-painters retained an archaic tradition that the tassels had originally been serpents in their representations of the aegis. When the Olympian deities overtook the older deities of Greece and she was born of Metis (inside Zeus who had swallowed the goddess) and "re-born" through the head of Zeus fully clothed, Athena already wore her typical garments.

When the Olympian shakes the aegis, is wrapped in clouds, the thunder rolls and men are struck down with fear. "Aegis-bearing Zeus", as he is in the Iliad, sometimes lends the fearsome aegis to . In the Iliad when Zeus sends to revive the wounded , Apollo, holding the aegis, charges the Achaeans, pushing them back to their ships drawn up on the shore. According to 's Mythology: Timeless Tales of Gods and Heroes,Part I, section I (Warner Books' United States Paperback Edition) the Aegis is the of Zeus, and was "awful to behold". However, Zeus is normally portrayed in classical sculpture holding a thunderbolt or lightning, bearing neither a shield nor a breastplate.

In some versions, Zeus watched Athena and Triton's daughter, Pallas, compete in a friendly involving spears. Not wanting his daughter to lose, Zeus flapped his aegis to distract Pallas, whom Athena accidentally impaled. Zeus apologized to Athena by giving her the aegis; Athena then named herself Pallas Athena in tribute to her late friend.


In classical poetry and art
interpreted the Homeric aegis usually as a cover of some kind borne by Athena. It was supposed by ( Ion, 995) that the aegis borne by Athena was the skin of the slain ,Noted by Graves 1960, 9.a; Károly Kerényi, The Gods of the Greeks 1951, p 50. yet the usual understandingAs in Kerenyi 1951:50 is that the Gorgoneion was added to the aegis, a from a grateful .

In a similar interpretation, Aex, a daughter of , represented as a great fire-breathing serpent similar to the Chimera, was slain and flayed by , who afterwards wore its skin, the aegis, as a ( iii. 70), or as a . The Douris cup shows that the aegis was represented exactly as the skin of the great serpent, with its scales clearly delineated.

says, On Lycophron, 355. that aegis was the skin of the monstrous giant Pallas whom Athena overcame and whose name she attached to her own.

In a late rendering by Gaius Julius Hyginus ( Poetical Astronomy ii. 13), Zeus is said to have used the skin of a pet owned by his nurse Amalthea ( aigis "goat-skin") which suckled him in , as a shield when he went forth to do battle against the Titans.

The aegis appears in works of art sometimes as an animal's skin thrown over Athena's shoulders and arms, occasionally with a border of snakes, usually also bearing the Gorgon head, the gorgoneion. In some pottery it appears as a tasselled cover over Athena's dress. It is sometimes represented on the statues of emperors, heroes, and warriors, and on coins, cameos and vases. A vestige of that appears in a portrait of Alexander the Great in a fresco from Pompeii dated to the first century BC, which shows the image of the head of a woman on his armor that resembles the Gorgon.


Interpretations
thought he had identified the source of the aegis in , which was always a distant territory of ancient magic for the Greeks. "Athene's garments and aegis were borrowed by the Greeks from the Libyan women, who are dressed in exactly the same way, except that their leather garments are fringed with thongs, not serpents."( Histories iv.189)

in The Greek Myths (1955) asserts that the aegis in its Libyan sense had been a shamanic pouch containing various ritual objects, bearing the device of a monstrous serpent-haired visage with tusk-like teeth and a protruding tongue which was meant to frighten away the uninitiated. In this context, Graves identifies the aegis as clearly belonging first to Athena.

One current interpretation is that the sacral hieratic hunting bag ( kursas), a rough and shaggy goatskin that has been firmly established in literary texts and iconography by H. G. Güterbock,Güterbock, Perspectives on Hittite Civilization: Selected Writings (Chicago 1997). was a source of the aegis.


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