Euripides hydria, c. 415–410 BCE (
Bari, Museo archeologico di S. Scholastica). Canace lies on the bed, the sword in her hand; to the left stands Macareus, head lowered; to the right stands Aeolus, gesturing toward Macareus with his staff. In the later Greek and Roman tradition, Canace was known chiefly for her incestuous relationship with her brother Macareus and her subsequent suicide. The story was made famous by
Euripides in a tragedy entitled
Aeolus, produced in Athens in the 420s BCE. The play is lost, but a general outline of its plot can be reconstructed from other sources, including an ancient
hypothesis (summary) partially preserved on papyrus. Euripides conflated the Thessalian king Aeolus, son of
Hellen, with the Homeric Aeolus, son of
Hippotes and ruler of the winds; the latter is said in the
Odyssey to have married his six sons to his six daughters, and this may have been the inspiration for the tragedy. In Euripides' version, Canace is raped by her brother Macareus. She becomes pregnant but hides her condition by feigning illness. Macareus, hoping to cover up the deed, persuades his father to allow his six sons to marry his six daughters. Aeolus agrees, but assigns each sister to a brother by lot, and Macareus's plan fails when Canace is allotted not to him but a different brother. When Aeolus discovers the truth, he sends Canace a sword, which she uses to kill herself; on hearing the news, Macareus does the same. Euripides' tragedy was well-known: it was parodied in comedies by
Aristophanes and
Antiphanes, and a scene from the play may be depicted in a south Italian vase painting created about a decade after the first performance (see below). The Euripidean narrative became the definitive version, influencing the treatments by all later authors.
Plato in the mid-4th century BCE mentioned "Macareus secretly having intercourse with a sister" as a notable example of vice on the stage, and a version of the story that followed the Euripidean narrative closely appeared in the
Tyrrhenika of the ethnographer and historian Sostratus of
Nysa in the first half of the 1st century BCE. The story remained popular in the Roman period: a satirical epigram by the poet
Lucillius, who wrote during the reign of
Nero, mocks a dancer who portrayed Canace in a mime for failing to kill herself onstage, and "Canace giving birth" was said to be among the tragic roles performed by the emperor Nero himself.
Ovid MS Francais 874, fol. 47v) The longest surviving ancient treatment of the story is that of the Latin poet
Ovid, who made Canace the subject of one of the
Heroides, a collection of poems composed in the late 1st century BCE in the form of letters written by mythological women to their lovers. Ovid was clearly indebted to Euripides, but his version differs in tone and detail. He emphasizes the romantic and pathetic elements of the story: Ovid's Canace is not raped or seduced, but falls in love with Macareus; the two are mutual victims of their own passion. The incestuous element of the story is acknowledged, but is not prominent; instead the relationship is treated in the manner of a normal love affair, albeit with a tragic ending. Canace writes her letter to Macareus in the final moments before her death, holding the sword sent by Aeolus in her lap. She recalls the steps she took to conceal her pregnancy, her attempted abortion, the painful birth, and the discovery and subsequent
exposure of the child by her father, and concludes by asking Macareus to gather the bones of her son and inter them with her. ==In ancient art==