Anius was a figure in Greek mythology, renowned as the king and high priest of Apollo on the island of Delos, where he served as both monarch and diviner after being instructed in prophecy by his divine father.[1]Born to Apollo and the Naxian princess Rhoeo, daughter of King Staphylus, Anius's origins involved divine intervention: Rhoeo, impregnated by Apollo, was imprisoned in a chest by her father and cast adrift, only to wash ashore on Delos, where she gave birth to him under Apollo's protection.[1][2]He fathered three daughters—Oeno, Spermo, and Elais—known collectively as the Oenotropae or "wine-growers," whom Dionysus endowed with miraculous abilities: Oeno could produce wine by touching the soil, Spermo grain, and Elais olive oil. These gifts allowed them to provide abundance to the Greek fleet when it visited Delos en route to the Trojan War.[3][4]In Roman literature, Anius appears in Virgil's Aeneid as a hospitable ruler who welcomes Aeneas and his Trojans to Delos, guiding them to Apollo's oracle for guidance on their destined homeland.[5]These tales highlight Anius's pivotal role in connecting divine patronage with human prosperity and prophecy in the Cyclades.[6]
Identity and Role
Kingship of Delos
Anius served as the sovereign king of Delos, a small but pivotal island in the Cyclades renowned as the central sanctuary of Apollo, where the god was believed to have been born.[5] As basileus, or ruler, Anius governed the island's populace while upholding its sacred status.[7] His kingship blended secular authority with religious oversight, as he was also the high priest of Apollo, a dual role that reinforced Delos's autonomy from external powers.[4]Delos served as a pan-Hellenic sanctuary under Anius, functioning as a haven for travelers and heroes seeking divine guidance, such as Aeneas. During events associated with the Trojan War, the island hosted visitors and provided prophetic counsel and aid, including supplies from Anius's daughters for the Greek fleet.[4]Delos flourished as a prophetic center during Anius's reign, with the island's temples serving as oracular sites where Apollo's will was consulted on matters of fate and destiny.[5] Anius himself, empowered by his close ties to Apollo, facilitated divinations that informed key decisions, such as his prophecy that the Trojan War would last ten years.[8] His shrine, known as the Archegesion, underscored this prophetic prominence, where he was venerated not only as king but also as archegetes, or founder-hero, and occasionally as a god, symbolizing the island's enduring spiritual authority.[7]
Priesthood of Apollo
Anius held the esteemed position of high priest to Apollo on the sacred island of Delos, where he conducted rituals and maintained the god's cult as Apollo's chosen servant. This role positioned him at the heart of Delian religious life, blending sacred oversight with his authority as ruler to ensure the sanctity of Apollo's worship.[4]Apollo personally reared Anius after his birth and instructed him in the arts of divination and prophecy, granting him the skill to interpret omens and discern divine will through sacred signs such as bird flights and sacrificial entrails.[1] These abilities, bestowed directly by the god of prophecy, elevated Anius's priestly functions, allowing him to serve as a conduit for Apollo's oracular guidance in matters of ritual purity and communal welfare.Anius's priesthood was integral to Delos's status as a preeminent pan-Hellenic sanctuary, where annual festivals and pilgrimages drew devotees from across the Greek world to honor Apollo at his mythical birthplace.[9] Through his oversight of these rites, Anius facilitated the island's role as a unifying religious hub, fostering collective worship and reinforcing Apollo's dominion over prophecy and harmony among the Hellenes. His dual kingship provided the administrative foundation for these priestly duties, enabling seamless integration of sacred and secular governance on Delos.
Family
Parentage
In Greek mythology, Anius was the son of the god Apollo and the mortal princess Rhoeo.[10] Rhoeo was the daughter of Staphylus, a king associated with Naxos, and Chrysothemis.[10]The primary myth surrounding Anius's conception and birth recounts Rhoeo's pregnancy by Apollo, which her father Staphylus discovered and misinterpreted as the result of seduction by a mortal suitor.[10] Enraged, Staphylus enclosed the pregnant Rhoeo in a chest and cast it into the sea.[10] The chest drifted to the island of Delos, sacred to Apollo, where Rhoeo gave birth to her son Anius and dedicated him to the god at his altar, beseeching protection if the child was indeed Apollo's.[10] Apollo concealed the infant temporarily but later ensured his survival, rearing him and imparting the art of divination.[10]A variant tradition places the chest's landing on Euboea rather than Delos, where Rhoeo delivered Anius near a cave and named him after the anguish (ania) she endured during labor; Apollo subsequently transported the child to Delos.[11] This account, preserved in a scholion on Lycophron's Alexandra citing the early historian Pherecydes (FGrHist 3 F 140), similarly emphasizes Apollo's direct paternal role in Anius's upbringing.[11]Anius's divine parentage directly influenced his eventual position as a priest of Apollo on Delos.[10]
Marriage and Children
In one tradition, Anius married Dorippe, a Thracian woman whom he ransomed from pirates for the price of a horse; in another, their mother was Dryope.[12][3]With her, Anius fathered three daughters known collectively as the Oenotropae: Oeno, who could produce wine at will; Spermo, who could produce wheat; and Elais, who could produce olive oil.[13] These miraculous abilities were granted by Dionysus.[4]Anius also had three sons: Andros, Mykonos, and Thasos, each of whom became the eponymous founder of an island in the Aegean Sea.[7]Thasos met a tragic fate, being devoured by dogs on Delos, which led to a prohibition against keeping dogs on the island thereafter.[14]
Mythological Accounts
Birth and Early Life
In Greek mythology, Anius was the son of the god Apollo and Rhoeo, daughter of Staphylus, the king of Naxos. Rhoeo's pregnancy, conceived through her union with Apollo, enraged her father, who locked her in a chest and cast it into the sea in an attempt to dispose of her. The chest drifted to the sacred island of Delos, where Rhoeo gave birth to Anius.[1]Some ancient traditions place Anius's birth on Euboea instead, where the chest washed ashore, with Rhoeo naming the child after the troubles she endured during his conception and delivery.[15]Apollo took his infant son under his protection. The god raised Anius in secrecy on the island, instructing him in the arts of prophecy and the responsibilities of rulership from a young age.[1] This early upbringing forged Anius's deep connection to Delos, the heartland of Apollo's cult, where he spent his childhood immersed in the island's religious and royal traditions.[1]
Prophecy and Divination
Anius, as priest-king of Apollo on Delos, was renowned for his prophetic abilities, which he employed to advise the Greeks en route to Troy. According to the early historian Pherecydes, when the Greek fleet arrived at Delos, Anius used his divinatory skills to foretell the duration of the impending Trojan War, prophesying that the Greeks would sack Troy in the tenth year after their departure from Aulis. He urged the leaders to remain on the island for nine years, assuring them that divine fate decreed the sack of Troy only in the tenth year after their departure from Aulis.[11]This prophecy aligned with Anius' broader role in divination, where he interpreted omens and oracles for visitors to Delos based on the teachings imparted by Apollo. As detailed in Diodorus Siculus' account, Apollo had personally instructed Anius in the art of mantikē (divination), enabling him to provide guidance rooted in the god's prophetic wisdom. Such consultations typically involved interpreting signs or delivering messages from Apollo, serving as a key function of Delos as a sacred oracle site.[1]Anius' priesthood facilitated these oracular practices through rituals centered on Apollo's cult, including offerings and invocations at the god's temple to invoke divine insight. The Cypria, an epic from the Trojan cycle, describes how Anius integrated his prophetic pronouncements with ritual hospitality, such as provisioning the Greeks via the miraculous powers of his daughters, to underscore the prophecy's reliability. These acts reinforced his authority as Apollo's intermediary, blending mantic revelation with ceremonial elements to advise and sustain pilgrims.[11]
Interactions with Heroes
Anius extended hospitality to Aeneas, his father Anchises, and son Ascanius upon their arrival at Delos following the fall of Troy, offering refuge in a safe harbor and welcoming them into his home as old friends.[16] As king and high priest of Apollo, Anius guided the Trojans to the god's ancient temple, where Aeneas prayed for direction on their destined homeland; the oracle responded with tremors and a voice foretelling their return to ancestral lands, providing the prophecy and spiritual guidance that shaped their journey.[16]In recounting his family's misfortunes to the visitors during this stay, Anius described how his daughters—endowed with the miraculous ability to transform anything they touched into abundant wine, grain, or olive oil—had been exploited by the Greek forces en route to Troy.[17] Agamemnon, seeking endless supplies for the expedition, forcibly seized the unwilling daughters from Delos despite Anius's protests, compelling them to sustain the vast fleet with their gifts.[17] Two daughters fled to Euboea, while the others sought sanctuary on Andros with their brother, but fear of invasion led him to surrender them to the Greeks.[17]As chains were prepared for the captives, the daughters invoked Dionysus, the god who had originally bestowed their powers, and he intervened by metamorphosing them into white doves, enabling their escape from servitude and symbolizing divine protection amid human greed.[17] This transformation not only thwarted Agamemnon's demands but also highlighted the perils faced by Anius's blessed offspring during the Trojan conflict.[17]
Variants and Legacy
Alternative Traditions
In some lesser-known traditions, Anius is said to have had a daughter named Lavinia (or Launa), who possessed prophetic abilities like her father and was given to Aeneas as a wife after the Trojan War, bearing him a son also named Anius, thereby linking the Delian lineage to the Trojan founders of Rome.[18] According to the commentary of Servius Danielis on Virgil's Aeneid 3.80, however, this daughter—unnamed in the basic text but identified as Lavinia in the expanded version—was raped by Aeneas, resulting in the birth of their son, a narrative that contrasts with the more consensual unions in standard accounts.[19] This post-Trojan familial connection, preserved in fragmentary Roman mythological interpretations, emphasizes Anius's role in facilitating Aeneas's journey through prophetic marriage rather than mere hospitality.Discrepancies also appear in accounts of Anius's birth location and parentage, reflecting variant emphases in minor ancient sources. While the predominant tradition places his birth on Delos, where his mother Rhoeo's chest washed ashore after being cast into the sea by her father Staphylus, some versions locate the delivery on Euboea near a cave, with Apollo subsequently transporting the infant to Delos for rearing.[10][11] In these Euboean accounts, the etymology of Anius's name derives from the "pain" (ἀνία) Rhoeo endured during labor, underscoring themes of divine intervention and maternal suffering. Additionally, a minor variant attributes Anius's mother as Creusa rather than Rhoeo, altering the Naxian lineage to one tied more directly to Apollo's Cretan or other associations, though this receives limited attestation beyond brief mythological compendia.[20]Fragmentary accounts from ancient authors occasionally diverge on Anius's dual roles as king and priest of Apollo, with some emphasizing his priestly duties in isolation during early life before assuming kingship, or portraying him solely as a prophetic figure without explicit royal authority in Delos's governance. For instance, certain Hellenistic sources highlight his divinatory expertise as inherited directly from Apollo, downplaying temporal rule in favor of sacred mediation, which serves to contrast with the integrated kingship-priesthood in canonical narratives like those in Ovid's Metamorphoses.[21]
Descendants and Island Eponyms
The sons of Anius—Andros, Mykonos, and Thasos—served as eponymous founders of the eponymous Aegean islands, embodying the expansion of Delian influence in ancient Greek mythology. These figures, born to Anius and his wife Dorippe, are depicted as settlers who established rule over Andros, Mykonos, and Thasos, linking the sacred island of Delos to the Cyclades and northern Aegean through familial ties to Apollo's priesthood. This tradition, preserved in the lyric poetry of Simonides (PMG 537), underscores the mythological role of heroic kin in shaping geographic nomenclature and cultural identity across the region.[7]A poignant myth surrounds Thasos, who, after founding his island, returned to Delos only to be devoured by dogs, an event that resulted in the eternal banishment of dogs from the island to preserve its ritual purity. This tale, cataloged in Hyginus's Fabulae (247), illustrates the perils faced by Anius's lineage and reinforces Delos's status as a sanctum free from profane elements.[22]The Oenotropae, Anius's daughters, embody the enduring symbol of Delos's miraculous fertility and its profound Dionysian connections, representing the island's divine endowment with natural abundance in the face of scarcity. Their legacy, drawn from accounts in Apollodorus (Library Epitome 3.10) and Ovid (Metamorphoses 13.650–674), highlights how Delos served as a mythic hub of provisioning and transformation, intertwining Apollo's oracle with Dionysus's bountiful gifts.[3][4]In a Roman mythological variant, Anius's daughter Lavinia weds Aeneas upon his arrival at Delos, bearing him a son also named Anius, thereby forging a genealogical bridge from the Greek priest-king to the Trojan founders of Rome. This narrative, elaborated in Dionysius of Halicarnassus's Roman Antiquities (1.50–59), integrates Anius's lineage into the etiology of Roman origins, emphasizing prophetic continuity across cultural traditions.