Chronos (/ˈkrnɒs, -s/; Ancient Greek: Χρόνος, romanizedKhronos, lit.'Time' , [kʰrónos]), also spelled Chronus, is a personification of time in pre-Socratic philosophy and later literature.[1]

Chronos
Time Clipping Cupid's Wings (1694), by Pierre Mignard
Symbolzodiac wheel
OffspringAether, Phanes, Chaos

Chronos is frequently confused with, or perhaps consciously identified with, the Titan, Cronus, in antiquity, due to the similarity in names.[2] The identification became more widespread during the Renaissance, giving rise to the iconography of Father Time wielding the harvesting scythe.[3]

Greco-Roman mosaics depicted Chronos as a man turning the zodiac wheel.[4] He is comparable to the deity Aion as a symbol of cyclical time.[5] He is usually portrayed as an old callous man with a thick grey beard, personifying the destructive and stifling aspects of time.[6]

Name

edit
 
Chronos and His Child by Giovanni Francesco Romanelli, National Museum in Warsaw, a 17th-century depiction of Chronos as Father Time, wielding a harvesting scythe

During antiquity, Chronos was occasionally interpreted as Cronus.[7] According to Plutarch, the Greeks believed that Cronus was an allegorical name for Chronos.[8]

Mythology

edit

In the Orphic tradition, the unaging Chronos was "engendered" by "earth and water", and produced Aether, Chaos, and an egg.[9] The egg produced the hermaphroditic god Phanes who gave birth to the first generation of gods and is the ultimate creator of the cosmos.

Pherecydes of Syros in his lost Heptamychos ("The seven recesses"), around 6th century BC, claimed that there were three eternal principles: Chronos, Zas (Zeus) and Chthonie (the chthonic). The semen of Chronos was placed in the recesses of the Earth and produced the first generation of gods.[10]

See also

edit

Notes

edit
  1. ^ LSJ s.v. Κρόνος.
  2. ^ LSJ s.v. Κρόνος; Meisner, p. 145.
  3. ^ Macey, p. 209.
  4. ^ Delaere, p. 97.
  5. ^ Levi, p. 274.
  6. ^ Marcus Tullius, Cicero. "De Natura Deorum, § 2.64".
  7. ^ LSJ s.v. Κρόνος.
  8. ^ Plutarch, On Isis and Osiris, 32.
  9. ^ West, p. 178.
  10. ^ Kirk, Raven, and Schofield, pp. 24, 56.

References

edit
edit
Listen to this article (3 minutes)
 
This audio file was created from a revision of this article dated 4 December 2023 (2023-12-04), and does not reflect subsequent edits.