Nectar

Flaxman, Hebe pouring nectar for the gods, The Iliad, 1793-1795
Flaxman, Hebe pouring nectar for the gods, The Iliad, 1793-1795

AMBROSIA and NECTAR, the food and drink respectively (but the reverse occasionally) of the gods. Their effect is to make those who take them immortal (Pindar, Olympian Odes I. 60 ff, cf. Iliad 5. 341-2). They will keep a corpse from decay (Iliad 19. 38-39). The smell of ambrosia is extraordinarily sweet and will overpower bad odours (Odyssey 4. 445 - 6). Various things connected with the gods are 'ambrosial'; mortals of high rank wear 'nectarean' garments (Iliad 3. 385; 18. 25), perhaps 'sweet-smelling'. That nectar is originally some kind of honey-drink (mead?), ambrosia idealized honey, is probable.

Herbert Jennings Rose, in N.G.L. Hammond and H.H. Scullard ed., The Oxford Classical Dictionary (second edition) 1970

Descendant of: 

FOOD AND DRINK   MYTHOLOGY AND THE CLASSICAL WORLD  


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