The name 'Pitone' means 'Putrescence' or 'Rotting' and it was said to refer to the putrid body after the creature had been killed.
Other
interpretations of the myth suggest that the name is merely the same as 'Typhon'
but rearranged.
Pitone guarded the sanctuary and oracle of Delphi and was
associated with another dragon, a female named Delphyne.
Some commentators have
made of this that there was a tradtion of a guardian male and female set of
dragons in the pre-Indo-European goddess-worshipping religion, and that the
dragons were Typhon and Echidna but with regional variations.
Apollo took over
the sanctuary by force and made the oracle his, by any reading of the myth.
The matter came up recently because of a discussion on the 'Ketos' dragons (The pair of 'Phorcys and
Ketos' is another analogous set of male and female sea monsters and also equated
to Typhon and Echidna by the same theorists) -- except that the rear flippers are
misinterpreted as feet with distinct digits (something that is fairly common)
but they are still splayed out at 180 degrees from each other.
We interpreted the
back as having two humps and the representation meant to be a fairly standard
long-necked lake monster (on land).
The section of the painting from the 1800s
below is even more obviously so, only with three humps on the back this time.
There are ancient portrayals of the Pitone of the myth that could be viewed as
prototypes of this, but changed in orientation vertically to horizontally.
Delacroix, Apollo uccide Pitone
detail - 1850-1851
[ Apollo -- uccide Pitone -- Dafne -- Regius Illustration for Ovid's Metamorphoses]
We did start to
wonder if there was some sort of a written description of the slain Pitone
because many of the illustrators tended to draw a plesiosaurian sort of creature
with a jumble of mismatched limbs wherein the flippers or 'wings' were more
oviously part of the body but the smaller and more conventional 'legs' were much
less clearly proper feet drawn where they actually belonged.
The depiction at
the bottom definitely opts for the limbs being webbed feet or flippers
(fins).
[Apollo uccide Pitone. A 1581 engraving by Virgil Solis for Ovid's Metamorphoses, Book I. From the Wikipedia
article on Pitone (Mythology)]
[Apollo e Pitone,
von Jan Boeckhorst, 1600s]
When all is said
and done what probably happened was that the priest or representative of Apollo
killed the then-resident Pythia (oracular-priestesss) at Delphi and then took
control of the shrine in Apollo's name.
However, the depictions of the dragon
show some consistencies that are evidently traditional and a little peculiar.
Artists were obviously
borrowing from 'monster' descriptions they were familiar with in their own day
and age - Delacroix's Pitone could even be mostly derived from 1800s reports of
sea serpents. Basking sharks are not to be found around Greece so presumably we
are not talking about 'pseudoplesiosaurs.'
All the same, if there is a written
description of the body somewhere, I should like very much to see it.
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