Memnon, in Greek
mythology, son of Tithonus (son of Laomedon, legendary king of Troy) and Eos
(Dawn) and king of the Ethiopians. He was a post-Homeric hero, who, after the
death of the Trojan warrior Hector, went to assist his uncle Priam, the last
king of Troy, against the Greeks. He performed prodigies of valour but was
slain by the Greek hero Achilles. According to tradition, Zeus, the king of the
gods, was moved by the tears of Eos and bestowed immortality upon Memnon. His
companions were changed into birds, called Memnonides, that came every year to
fight and lament over his grave. The combat between Achilles and Memnon was
often represented by Greek artists, and the story of Memnon was the subject of
the lost Aethiopis of Arctinus of Miletus (fl. c. 650 bc).
In Egypt the name of
Memnon was connected with the colossal (70-foot [21-metre]) stone statues of
Amenhotep III near Thebes, two of which still remain. The more northerly of
these was partly destroyed by an earthquake in 27 bc, resulting in a curious
phenomenon. Every morning, when the rays of the rising sun touched the statue,
it gave forth musical sounds like the twang of a harp string. This was supposed
to be the voice of Memnon responding to the greeting of his mother, Eos. After
the restoration of the statue by the Roman emperor Septimius Severus (ad 170)
the sounds ceased; they were attributed to the passage of air through the pores
of the stone, caused chiefly by the change of temperature at sunrise.
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