MYTHOLOGY
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Title: Hebe servs Nectar
to the Gods
Artist: Tommaso Piroli
Date: 1793
Medium: Wood carving
Location: Used in one edition of the Iliad of 1795
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In Greek mythology, the ambrosia (ἀμβροσία) is a substance usually associated with gods,
generally being considered their food and drink.
The word derives from Greek ἀμ- (an-,
‘no’) y βροτός (brotόs, ‘mortal’) and literally
means «immortality», although not everyone agrees with this theory or
definition.
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Title: The Food of the
Gods on Olympus
Artist:
Nicola de Urbino
Date: 1530
Medium: Majolica Dish
Location: Museum Boijmans Van Beuningen
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In the Homeric anthem to Apollo (verse 123) the
ambrosia, although liquid, was eaten; in the anthem to Demeter, she greases
Demofonte with ambrosia and this way he gets fed (in the Greek mythology he was
the twelfth king of Athens. He was Theseus and Ferda’s son and brother to
Acamante. He took part in the Trojan wars together with his predecessor
Menestheus and was one of the warriors hidden in the Trojan horse.)
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Title: King Lycurgus of
Thrace killing Ambrosia,
which is changed into a grapevine
Date: End of the
2nd century BC
Medium: Mosaic
Location: Archaeological Museum of Delos
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According to Pindar, one of the profanities that
Tantalo committed was giving to his guests the ambrosia of the immortals,
something similar to what Prometheus did, as Karl Kerenyi states in Héroes de los griegos. Circe mentions to
Odysseus that a flock of doves took ambrosia to mount Olympus
By extension, people named “ambrosia” to certain
festivities to honor Dionysus or Bacchus – the god of wine – probably because
of its predominance in the festivities related.
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Title: Ganymede pores a
Cup of Nectar
Artist: Bertel Thorvaldsen
Medium: Marble Statue
Location: Hermitage Museum, St. Petersburg
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MEANING
The word “nectar” is often used in ¨esto es néctar
para mis oídos¨ (“this is nectar to my ears”) to express a pleasurable or enjoyable feeling. For example, it
refers to the description of a song or to thank someone “Gracias, tus palabras
son néctar para mis oidos” (Thank you, your words are nectar to my ears) which
is a reply to a nice remark about someone.
It is encountered in “este plato o comida es ambrosia” (“this meal is ambrosia”) it describes
an extremely good food
“Ambrosía”, is also a noun to express extreme craving
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Néctar, ambrosía y unas gotitas de humor by
Javier Gómez Molero
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Fabio Patronelli (Writer)
Nectar, ambrosia and the food of the gods.
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