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Makris/Nysa @/mak_nys
Daughter of Aristaeus, and presumably Autonöe. One of the nymphs who raised the infant Dionysus after Semele's death.
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Extra Profile:
Makris/Nysa @/mak_nys
Daughter of Aristaeus, and presumably Autonöe. One of the nymphs who raised the infant Dionysus after Semele's death.
I might be resigned to the fact that no caretakers of young Hera other than Tethys and Okeanos will ever get any meaningful attention (shout out to the second book in „Olympian Confessions” by Erin Kinsella though for giving Hera's Argive nurses a role in the story), but that doesn't mean I'm not upset about it.
Take Makris as an example and consider her potential.
According to Plutarch (Eusebios' Praeparatio evangelica Book 3 chapter 1), Hera was being raised on Euboia by Makris when Zeus kidnapped her and took her to mt. Kithairon in order to sleep with her. Makris came looking for Hera but Kithairon lied to her so that she would go away and not discover what was going on:
„This symbolical style is more common in the tales and legends. As for instance, they relate that Hera, being brought up in Euboea. was stolen away while yet a virgin by Zeus, and was carried across and hidden in this region, where Cithaeron afforded them a shady recess, nature's own bridal-chamber. And when Macris----she was Hera's nurse----came to seek her, and wished to make a search, Cithaeron would not let her pry about, or approach the spot, on pretence that Zeus was there resting and passing the time in company with Leto.”
According to Book 4 of Apollonios Rhodios' Argonautica, Hera banished Makris from Euboia for nursing the infant Dionysos:
„And straightway they mingled a bowl to the blessed ones, as is right, and reverently led sheep to the altar, and for that very night prepared for the maiden the bridal couch in the sacred cave, where once dwelt Macris, the daughter of Aristaeus, lord of honey, who discovered the works of bees and the fatness of the olive, the fruit of labour. She it was that first received in her bosom the Nysean son of Zeus in Abantian Euboea, and with honey moistened his parched lips when Hermes bore him out of the flame. And Hera beheld it, and in wrath drove her from the whole island. And she accordingly came to dwell far off, in the sacred cave of the Phaeacians, and granted boundless wealth to the inhabitants.”
And to make things even more interesting, Makris was also close to Demeter , again according to Book 4 of the Argonautica:
„Fronting the Ionian gulf there lies an island in the Ceraunian sea, rich in soil, with a harbour on both sides, beneath which lies the sickle, as legend saith -- grant me grace, O Muses, not willingly do I tell this tale of olden days -- wherewith Cronos pitilessly mutilated his father; but others call it the reaping-hook of Demeter, goddess of the nether world. For Demeter once dwelt in that island, and taught the Titans to reap the ears of corn, all for the love of Macris.”
How much fun is it to imagine Hera and Dionysos being raised by the same person? And these strange connections between them are not limited to this example: Rhea is Hera's biological mother and in some accounts she is Dionysos' foster one; Tethys was Hera's nurse according to the Iliad and in some vase paintings she appears in the entourage of Dionysos. These two are just bound to share mother figures, it seems.
Kris is always getting in trouble, but she never means it. Marth is a good boy so he would follow her (accidentally).
Jagen is going to be pretty mad…
A stract from one of the dialogues of the FE12. I just love how Kris validates and shares Marth's ideals and feelings.
I'm watching some Marth's supports in FE:Warriors for reference of his personality for a fic, and then I saw this:
I really like the idea of Marth being able to focus on other people's safely because Kris is there, he can watch over his allies in battle without worrying about being in danger because there is one person that looks out for his safety (well, the whole army is looking out for him, but it's actually Kris' focus to keep HIM safe).
I mean, Marth does need to take care of himself, and him acknowledging it is pretty good, but the idea of Kris complementing even this little part of him is so sweet for me.
This is one of my favorites ships, there's not too much about them out there so I'm gonna make my own food. (??
What really obscure Hera fact you know?
I don't know if it counts as particularly obscure, but what about the fact that Makris was nurse to both Hera and Dionysos? Of course, these two traditions are mentioned in different sources (Makris was Hera's nurse according to Plutarch cited in Eusebius' Praeparatio Evangelica 3.1 and apparently also according to schol. to Il. 2.535, while she is called the nurse of Dionysos in Book 4 of the Argonautica of Apollonios Rhodios and Book 21 of Nonnos' Dionysiaca),, so it's not necessary to assume that the woman who raised Hera went on to take care of the god she hated. I think it would be interesting if that was the case, though, and presumably would be seen by Hera as yet another betrayal.
Either way, Hera did take revenge on Makris, as related in Book 4 of the Argonautica: „On Abantian Euboia it was she [Makris] who first received in her lap the Nysaian son of Zeus, and who wet his dry lips with honey when Hermes had brought him from the flames; Hera saw and in her anger chased Makris out of the whole island.”
Άρης Μακρής & Μαρία Κοσμάτου - Καιρός Για Δύο