Πόλεμος

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Κακὸν φέρουσι καρπὸν οἱ κακοὶ φίλοι → Evil friends bear evil fruit → Malo ex amico fructus oritur pessimusErtrag, den schlechte Freunde bringen, der ist schlecht

Menander, Monostichoi, 293

Wikipedia EN

In Greek mythology, Polemos /ˈpɒlɪˌmɒs/ or Polemus /ˈpɒlɪməs/ (Greek: Πόλεμος Pólemos; "war") was a daemon; a divine personification or embodiment of war. No cult practices or myths are known for him, and as an abstract representation he figures mainly in allegory and philosophical discourse. The Roman counterpart of this figure was Bellum.

Pindar says that Polemos is the father of Alala, goddess of the war-cry. According to Quintus Smyrnaeus, Polemos was the brother of the war goddess Enyo. Other Greek personifications of war and the battlefield include Ares, Eris, the Makhai, the Hysminai, the Androktasiai, the Phonoi and the Keres. In Aesop's fable of "War and his Bride", told by Babrius and numbered 367 in the Perry Index, it is related how Polemos drew Hubris (insolent arrogance) as his wife in a marriage lottery. So fond has he become of her that the two are now inseparable. Therefore, Babrius warns, "Let not Insolence ever come among the nations or cities of men, finding favour with the crowd; for after her straightway War will be at hand".

In Aristophanes' Acharnians, it is reported that Polemos is banned from parties for burning vineyards, emptying the wine and disrupting the singing. He is set in opposition to Dicaeopolis, who profitably champions peace and longs for marriage with Diallage, "Reconciliation". Dionysos, god of the life force, uses a vine stake as a weapon to wound the soldier Lamachus for neglecting him in favor of Polemos, but overall Aristophanes seem to be advocating a balance between Dionysos and Polemos, since the interests of the polis are served at times by peace and other times by war.

Polemos even makes a brief speaking appearance at the end of the prologue to Aristophanes' Peace. With Tumult (Kudoimos) as his henchman, he has buried Peace under stones in a cave. Now he makes a speech in which he announces that he is going to grind all the cities of Greece in a mortar, having plagued them for ten years. However, a series of puns on the names of the cities undermines his fearsome threat, making it appear as if he is preparing a relish for a feast. Sending Tumult to obtain a pestle sufficient for the task, he withdraws to the "house of Zeus" and does not reappear, though his potential return is a threat throughout the play. The scenario seems to be an original invention of Aristophanes.

The pre-Socratic philosopher Heraclitus described Polemos as "both the king and father of all", with the capacity to bring all into existence and to annihilate. For Heraclitus, Polemos "reveals the gods on the one hand and humans on the other, makes slaves on the one hand, the free on the other". The fragment leaves it unclear as to whether Heraclitus thought of Polemos as an abstraction, a god, or a generalization of war, and this ambiguity is perhaps intentional. Heidegger interpreted the polemos of Heraclitus as the principle of differentiation or "setting apart" (German Auseinandersetzung).

Wikipedia DE

Polemos (altgriechisch Πόλεμος Pólemos „Kampf, Krieg“; latinisiert Bellum) ist in der griechischen Mythologie die Personifikation des Krieges.

Bei Pindar, der frühesten Quelle für eine personifizierte Auffassung des Krieges, ist er Vater der Alala, die das Kampfgeschrei verkörperte. Im Frieden des Aristophanes tritt er auf und sperrt den Frieden in Gestalt der Friedensgöttin Eirene ein. Dort ist er auch Vater des Kydoimos, des Daimon des Nahkampfes, der seinem Vater als Diener hilft. Die Suda, ein byzantinisches Lexikon aus dem 10. Jahrhundert, kennt als weitere Söhne Deimos und Phobos. Quintus von Smyrna nennt ihn Bruder der Enyo. Laut einer bei Babrios überlieferten Fabel des Äsop war Polemos mit Hybris verheiratet, der er überallhin folgte. Deswegen solle man der Hybris („Übermut, Anmaßung“) keinen Platz geben, weil sonst auch der Krieg käme. In Vergils Beschreibung des Eingangs zur Unterwelt wird er unter den Gestalten, die dort ihren Platz haben, als Bellum genannt: der todbringende Krieg, der die Schwelle zur Unterwelt drohend besetzt hält.

Wikipedia ES

En la mitología griega, Pólemo (en griego antiguo Πολεμος y en latín Bellum) fue la personificación de la guerra y la batalla.1​ No se le conocen prácticas asociadas a cultos o mitos en los que se le adore, y, como representación abstracta de un concepto que es, figura principalmente en el discurso alegórico y filosófico.2​

Pólemo es semejante al dios Ares (el dios olímpico de la guerra) en alguna de sus funciones y atributos y suele ser confundido con él (tal vez Pólemo pueda ser usado como uno de los epítetos de Ares). El concepto opuesto a Pólemo viene representado por Irene (la Paz).

Wikipedia IT

Polemos (in greco antico: Πόλεμος), nella mitologia greca, era il demone della guerra - e probabilmente della guerra civile, padre di Alalà, personificazione del grido di battaglia. Faceva parte del gruppo di entità guerresche che infestavano i campi di battaglia, tra le quali, oltre alla figlia Alala, c'erano il dio della guerra Ares, le Makhai, gli Hysminai, le Androctasie, Enio, Eris e le Chere.

Secondo alcuni studiosi, Polemos non sarebbe un'entità a sé stante, ma si tratterebbe di uno degli epiteti di Ares.

Da polemos deriva la parola italiana "polemica".