Ovid's account relates that Hermaphroditus was nursed by naiads in the caves of
Mount Ida, a sacred mountain in
Phrygia (present day
Turkey). At the age of fifteen, he grew bored with his surroundings and traveled to the cities of
Lycia and
Caria. It was in the woods of Caria, near
Halicarnassus (modern
Bodrum, Turkey) that he encountered the
nymph Salmacis, in her pool. She was overcome by lust for the boy, who was very beautiful but still young, and tried to flirt with him, but was rejected. When he thought she had left, Hermaphroditus undressed and entered the waters of the empty pool.
Salmacis sprang out from behind a tree and jumped into the pool. She wrapped herself around the youth, forcibly kissing him and touching his breast, attempting to rape him. While he struggled, she called out to the gods that they should never part. Her wish was granted, and their bodies blended into one form, "a creature of both sexes". Hermaphroditus prayed to Hermes and Aphrodite that anyone else who bathed in the pool would be similarly transformed, and his wish was granted. Hungarian
classical philologist Károly Kerényi wrote: "In this form the story was certainly not ancient". He related it to the Greek myths involving male youths (
ephebes), noting the legends of
Narcissus and
Hyacinth, who had archaic hero-cults, and also those involving
Hymen (Hymenaios).
Diodorus Siculus, in his work
Library of History, mentions that some say that Hermaphroditus is a god and appears at certain times among men, but there are some who declare that such creatures of two sexes are monstrosities, and coming rarely into the world as they do have the quality of presaging the future, sometimes for evil and sometimes for good. In a description found on the remains of a wall in
Halicarnassus dated to around 2nd century BC, Hermaphroditus' mother, Aphrodite, names Salmacis as the nymph who nursed and took care of an infant Hermaphroditus after being placed in her care, a very different version than the one presented by
Ovid. The satirical author
Lucian of
Samosata also implies that Hermaphroditus was born like that, rather than becoming later in life against his will, and blames it on the identity of the child's father, Hermes. ==Cult and worship==