Alca'thoeor ALCI'THOE (Ἀλκαθόη or Ἀλκιθόη), a daughter of Minyas, and sister of Leucippe and Arsippe. Instead of
Arsippe, Aelian (Ael. VH 3.42) calls the latter Aristippa, and
Plutarch (Quaest. Gr. 38) Arsinoe. At the time when the worship of
Dionysus was introduced into Boeotia, and while the other women and maidens were revelling and
ranging over the mountains in Bacchic joy, these two sisters alone remained at home, devoting
themselves to their usual occupations, and thus profaning the days sacred to the god. Dionysus
punished them by changing them into bats, and their work into vines. (Ov. Met. 4.1-140, 390-415.) Plutarch, Aelian, and Antoninus Liberalis,
though with some differences in the detail, relate that Dionysus appeared to the sisters in
the form of a maiden, and invited them to partake in the Dionysiac mysteries. When this
request was not complied with, the god metamorphosed himself successively into a bull, a lion,
and a panther, and the sisters were seized with madness. In this state they were eager to
honour the god, and Leucippe, who was chosen by lot to offer a sacrifice to Dionysus, gave up
her own son Hippasus to be torn to pieces. In extreme Bacchic frenzy the sisters now roamed
over the mountains, until at last Hermes changed them into birds. Plutarch adds that down to
his time the men of Orchomenos descended from that family were called ψολόεις, that is, mourners, and the women ὀλεῖαι or αἰολεῖαι, that
is, the destroyers. In what manner the neglect of the Dionysiac worship on the part of
Alcathoe and her sister was atoned for every year at the festival of the Agrionia, see Dict. of Ant. s. v.
Ἀγριώνια; comp. Buttmatnn, Mytholog. ii. p. 201, &c.
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