This tale, typical of the sort of Nicander's myths that
Antoninus Liberalis collected, explains how a particular animal came to be from a transformed human, but also how some of said animals' most prominent features mirror the behaviour exhibited by the humans before their eventual transformation. The main
aition of this story is the explanation for the old common belief that spiders eat their mothers. Unlike Ovid's telling, which places Arachne in
Asia Minor, in this version she is given a home in
Attica. This is probably because, while
phalangion was used everywhere to mean 'spider', the non-diminutive form
phalanx was applied to spiders only in Attica. In the story, Phalanx serves as a failed representative of Athenian young men, just as Arachne is a failed representative of Athenian maidens and their potential; weaving and military skills were seen as the proper pursuits for youth of each gender, as was a properly controlled sexual urge. Phalanx and Arachne fail not because of any lack of skill on their parts, but rather because they could not control themselves. The male sibling being taught about the craft of war provides an aetiological connection to the
phalanx (as in the military formation), while the female one being instructed in the art of weaving provides a similar connection to spiders weaving their webs. Salzman-Mitchell suggested that perhaps the moral of this myth is that masculine arts (war) should not be mixed with feminine ones (weaving). == See also ==