Nonnus' account Nicaea was a huntress, devoted to the goddess
Artemis from Astacia, a sworn virgin unacquainted with
Aphrodite, the goddess of love.
Eros made a young shepherd named
Hymnus ("hymn") fall in love with her with a single arrow. One day, Hymnus stole Nicaea's hunting gear, her arrows, her nets, her lance, and quiver, lamenting his misfortune. Nicaea found him, and he pressured her to shoot him in the heart, so that he might be freed from the soreness of unrequited love. Angered, Nicaea obliged and fulfilled his wish. Hymnus was greatly mourned;
Adrasteia alerted
Aphrodite and Eros of Nicaea's deeds. Eros then found
Dionysus, and shot him with one of his love arrows; the moment Dionysus saw Nicaea bathing not too far from where he stood, he instantly fell in love, and had nothing else in mind but her. He tried to court her, but to no avail: One day Nicaea, thirsty, drunk from a sweet spring, not knowing Dionysus had previously filled it with
wine, and was instantly intoxicated. Seeing double, Nicaea lay down to rest. Eros then pointed her whereabouts to Dionysus, who proceeded to rape the unconscious nymph. When she woke up and realised what had happened, she was distraught; crying, she contemplated suicide, and sought Dionysus out, wishing to harm him, but she never found him. Nicaea conceived Telete from this union; after her daughter's birth, Nicaea attempted to hang herself. Although surviving stories do not tell if she made any further suicide attempts, she did live to see
Aura, another nymph raped and impregnated by Dionysus in the same manner, going into labor and giving birth to
Iacchus, as described in
Nonnus’s
Dionysiaca. After Dionysus raped Aura, Nicaea expressed her condolences to the unfortunate goddess, having herself suffered the same, and lamented the fact that she could no longer roam the woods with her bow and arrows due to her ill fate. After Aura gave birth to twins, in her frenzy she killed one infant; Artemis saved the other,
Iacchus, and Dionysus gave him to Nicaea to nurse. Dionysus named the city
Nicaea after her.
Memnon's account According to
Memnon of Heraclea, Nicaea was a
Naiad nymph daughter of
Cybele and the
river god Sangarius who preferred her virginity to relationships with men. Dionysus courted her, but she kept rejecting his advances; so Dionysus replaced the water in the spring she used to drink from with wine. Nicaea, not suspecting a thing, drank from there. Thus drunkenness and sleep took over her, and Dionysus took advantage of her, against her will. By Dionysus she had Satyrus and (after reconciling with him?) other sons. The city of
Nicaea, nowadays known as
İznik in
Turkey, was thus named after her. In other classical authors the city was actually named such by
Lysimachus after his recently deceased wife
Nicaea of Macedon. == See also ==