Chamber of Sisyphus

This cunning king of Corinth was punished in Hades by having repeatedly to roll a huge stone up a hill only to have it roll down again as soon as he had brought it to the summit. This fate is related in the Odyssey. In the Iliad Sisyphus, living at Ephyre (later Corinth), was the son of Aeolus (eponymous ancestor of the Aeolians) and the father of Glaucus. He was called the father of Odysseus, cunning obviously providing the link between them. Sisyphus was the reputed founder of the Isthmian Games. Later legend related that when Death came to fetch him, Sisyphus chained him up so that no one died until Ares came to aid Death, and Sisyphus had to submit. In the meantime, Sisyphus had told his wife, Merope, not to perform the usual sacrifices and to leave his body unburied. Thus, when he reached the underworld he was permitted to return to punish her for the omission. Once back at home, he continued to live to a ripe old age before dying a second time.

Sisyphus was, in fact, like Autolycus and Prometheus, a widely popular figure of folklore--the trickster, or master thief. He is everlastingly punished in Hades as the penalty for cheating Death, but why he is set to roll a great stone incessantly is a puzzle to which no convincing answer has yet been given. It appears to belong with other Greek imaginings of the world of the dead as the scene of fruitless labors.

This chamber contains a large boulder in the center of a circular room. The boulder is covered in intricate carvings depicting the various escpades of Sisyphus.

The bas-relief carvings on the walls are covered indeipctions of the benefits, and difficulties of cunning. There is an intricate labyrinth mosaic on the floor, resembling a complex multi-colored knot.

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Last modified: Sat Nov 6, 1999 / Jeremiah Genest