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==Reception== *In book four of [[Apollonius Rhodius]]'s ''[[Argonautica]]'', the goddess Hera reveals that [[Achilles]] is destined to marry [[Medea]] in the Elysian Fields (''Argonautica'' 4.811β15). A [[scholiast]] on the passage comments that this account was first put forward by Ibycus, and that it was also taken up by [[Simonides of Ceos]]. In another scholium, it is said that the Argonautica's account of [[Ganymede (mythology)|Ganymede]]'s abduction by an amorous Zeus (''Argonautica'' 3.114β17) was also modelled on a version by Ibycus (in Homer's earlier account, Zeus abducted the youth to be his wine-pourer: ''Iliad'' 20.234), and that Ibycus, moreover, described the abduction of [[Tithonus]] by Dawn ([[Eos]]).<ref>fr. 289 and 291, D. Cambell, ''Greek Lyric'' III, Loeb Classical Library (1991) page 259</ref> Apollonius Rhodius represented Eros as a child of Aphrodite (''Argonautica'' 3.25β6) and there is a relevant scholium on that passage too, according to which [[Sappho]] made Eros the son of Earth and Heaven, Simonides made him the son of Aphrodite and Ares, and Ibycus made him the son of ...? The section is lost, but it has been suggested that he made Eros the son of Aphrodite and [[Hephaestus]]<ref>fr. 324, D. Campbell, ''Greek Lyric'' III, Loeb Classical Library (1991), page 279</ref> *[[Parmenides]] seems to have admired Ibycus's work because he cites him in [[Plato]]'s [[Parmenides (dialogue)|dialogue of the same name]]. *[[Friedrich Schiller]] based his 1797 ballad [[Die Kraniche des Ibykus]] (The Cranes Of Ibycus) on the rendition of the poet's murder.
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