In Greek mythology, the Naiads (from the Greek νάειν, "to flow," and νἃμα, "running water") were a type of nymph who presided over fountains, wells, springs, streams, and brooks, as river gods embodied rivers, and some very ancient spirits inhabited the still waters of marshes, ponds and lagoon-lakes, such as pre-Mycenaean Lerna in the Argolid.
Types of Naiads
Crinaeae (fountains)
Eleionomae (marshes)
Limnades or Limnatides (lakes)
Pegaeae (springs)
Potameides (rivers)
Naiads were associated with fresh water, as the Oceanids were with saltwater and the Nereids specifically with the Mediterranean; but because the Greeks thought of the world's waters as all one system, which percolated in from the sea in deep cavernous spaces within the bosom of the earth, to rise freshened in seeps and springs, there was some overlap. Arethusa, the nymph of a spring, could make her way through subterranean flows from the Peloponnesus, to surface on the island of Sicily. Otherwise, the essence of a naiad was bound to her spring. If a naiad's body of water dried, she died. Though Walter Burkert points out, "When in the Iliad [xx.4 - 9] Zeus calls the gods into assembly on Mount Olympus, it is not only the well-known Olympians who come along, but also all the nymphs and all the rivers; Okeanos alone remains at his station," (Burkert 1985), Greek hearers recognized this impossibility as the poet's hyperbole, which proclaimed the universal power of Zeus over the ancient natural world: "the worship of these deities," Burkert confirms, "is limited only by the fact that they are inseparably identified with a specific locality."
They were often the object of archaic local cults, worshipped as essential to fertility and human life. Boys and girls at coming-of-age dedicated their childish locks to the local naiad of the spring. In places like Lerna their waters' ritual cleansings were credited with magical medical properties. Animals were ritually drowned there. Oracles might be sited by ancient springs.
When a mythic king is credited with marrying a naiad and founding a city, Robert Graves offers a sociopolitical reading: the new arriving Hellenes justify their presence by taking to wife the naiad of the spring, so, in the back-story of the myth of Aristaeus, Hypseus, a king of the Lapiths wed Chlidanope, a naiad, who bore him Cyrene. In parallels among the Immortals, the loves and rapes of Zeus, according to Graves' readings, record the supplanting of ancient local cults by Olympian ones (Graves 1955, passim). Aristaeus had more than ordinary mortal experience with the naiads: when his bees died in Thessaly, he went to consult the naiads. His aunt Arethusa invited him below the water's surface, where he was washed with water from a perpetual spring and given advice. A less well-connected mortal might have drowned, being sent as a messenger in this way to gain the advice and favor of the naiads for his people.
Hylas and the Water Nymphs (Naiads), J. W. Waterhouse
Naiads could be dangerous: Hylas of the Argo's crew was lost when he was taken by naiads fascinated by his beauty (illustration, above). The naiads were also known to exhibit jealous tendencies. Theocritus' story of naiad jealousy was that of a shepherd, Daphnis, who was the lover of Nomia, Daphnis had on several occasions been unfaithful to Nomia and as revenge she permanently blinded him.
The Naiads were either daughters of Zeus or various Oceanids, but a genealogy for such ancient, ageless creatures is easily overstated. The water nymph associated with particular springs was known all through Europe in places with no direct connection with Greece, surviving in the Celtic wells of northwest Europe that have been rededicated to Saints, and in the medieval Melusine.
References
Apollodorus. Library 2.95, 2.11, 2.21, 2.23, 1.61, 1.81, 1.7.6; Homer. Odyssey 13.355, 17.240, Iliad 14.440, 20.380; Ovid. Metamorphoses; Hesiod. Theogony
Some few Naiads (there are many more known)
Aegina a daughter of the river god Asopus and Metope, with Zeus mother of Aeacus the island Oenone after the visit of Aegina and Zeus renamed to Aegina.
Batia the wife of Oebalus, mother of Tyndareus, Hippocoon, and Icarius
Caliadne the wife of Egyptus (mother with him of twelve sons)
Cleocharia the wife of Lelex and mother of Eurotas
Creusa a daughter of Gaia and Erechtheus, mother of Cyrene
Cyrene the daughter of Creusa (or Chlidanope) and the King of the Lapiths Hypsaeus. The city Cyrene and the regions Cyrenaica named after her.
Lilaea - daughter of the Cephissus River town of Lilaea named after her.
Melite a daughter of the river god Aegaeus, mother of Hyllus by Heracles
Metope a daughter of the river god Ladon in Arcadia. She married the river god Asopus in Philius (mother of 20 daughters among which Aegina and another Metope).
Nomia related to the Arcadian shepherd Daphnis. The Nomian mountains named after her.
Nicaea (or Nikaia) who with Dionysus had the children Satyrus and Telete
Oenone a daughter of the river Cebren. Oenone island named after her.
Polyxo the wife of Danaus (her twelve daughters marry Caliadne's twelve sons)
Periboea the wife of Icarius bears him five sons
Praxithea the wife of Erichthonius, mother of Pandion
Amphion and Naiads, Elisabeth Louise Vigée Le Brun
Naiad, Henri Fantin-Latour
Naiad, Charles-Andre van Loo
Naiads and Centaurs in the Waves, Georges Jules Victor Clairin
Naiad. Domenico Marchetti
Greek Religion, Walter Burkert
The Greek Myths: The Complete And Definitive Edition, Robert Graves
See also : Greek Mythology. Paintings, Drawings
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