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HERO AND LEANDER
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Source
Encyclopaedia Britannica (1911) / britannica_1911
License
public_domain
Chunk ID
1911:hero and leander:5ed81b3e3e83
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sha256
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c06ecb8a618c7a36a3be28d583f5a5dc61de95f5c9d66a698b69e989589c93b0
Computed Hash
c06ecb8a618c7a36a3be28d583f5a5dc61de95f5c9d66a698b69e989589c93b0
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ggnorm 1.0
Observed
2026-02-08 18:43:06
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Verified Text
hero and leander, two lovers celebrated in antiquity. hero, the beautiful priestess of aphrodite at sestos, was seen by leander, a youth of abydos, at the celebration of the festival of aphrodite and adonis. he became deeply enamoured of her; but, as her position as priestess and the opposition of her parents rendered their marriage impossible they agreed to carry on a clandestine intercourse. every night hero placed a lamp in the top of the tower where she dwelt by the sea, and leander, guided by it, swam across the dangerous hellespont. one stormy night the lamp was blown out and leander perished. on finding his body next morning on the shore, hero flung herself into the waves. the story is referred to by virgil (_georg._ iii. 258), statius (_theb._ vi. 535) and ovid (_her._ xviii. and xix.). the beautiful little epic of musaeus has been frequently translated, and is expanded in the _hero and leander_ of c. marlowe and g. chapman. it is also the subject of a ballad by schiller and a drama by f. grillparzer. see m. h. jellinek, _die sage von hero und leander in der dichtung_ (1890), and g. knaack "hero und leander" in _festgabe fur franz susemihl_ (1898). a careful collection of materials will be found in f. koppner, _die sage von hero und leander in der literatur und kunst des altertums_ (1894).