![]() ![]() This fleece now hung from a tree in the grove of the Colchian Ares, guarded night and day by a dragon that never slept. According to an oracle, Iolcus would never prosper unless his ghost was taken back in a ship, together with the golden ram's fleece. Phrixus had fled from Orchomenus riding on a divine ram to avoid being sacrificed and took refuge in Colchis where he was later denied proper burial. Jason learned later that Pelias was being haunted by the ghost of Phrixus. Instead, he asked Jason: "What would you do if an oracle announced that one of your fellow-citizens were destined to kill you?" Jason replied that he would send him to go and fetch the Golden Fleece, not knowing that Hera had put those words in his mouth. He could not kill him because prominent kings of the Aeolian family were present. Pelias recognized that Jason was his nephew. Among the crowd stood a tall youth in leopard skin with only one sandal. Pelias was presiding over a sacrifice to Poseidon with several neighboring kings in attendance. The goddess was angry with King Pelias for killing his stepgrandmother Sidero after she had sought refuge in Hera's temple.Īnother oracle warned Pelias to be on his guard against a man with one shoe. While traveling Jason lost his sandal crossing the muddy Anavros river while helping an old woman ( Hera in disguise). When Jason was 20 years old, an oracle ordered him to dress as a Magnesian and head to the Iolcan court. He was raised by the centaur Chiron, the trainer of heroes. ![]() She faked a burial and smuggled the baby to Mount Pelion. Pelias intended to kill the baby at once, but Alcimede summoned her kinswomen to weep over him as if he were stillborn. Aeson married Alcimede, who bore him a son named Jason. Instead, Pelias kept Aeson prisoner and forced him to renounce his inheritance. Pelias put to death every prominent descendant of Aeolus he could, but spared Aeson because of the pleas of their mother Tyro. Because of this unlawful act, an oracle warned him that a descendant of Aeolus would seek revenge. Pelias, king of Iolcos, stops on the steps of a temple as he recognises young Jason by his missing sandal Roman fresco from Pompeii, 1st century AD.Īfter the death of King Cretheus, the Aeolian Pelias usurped the throne from his half-brother Aeson and became king of Iolcus in Thessaly (near the modern city of Volos). ![]()
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