Background:
Her birthplace, the mediterranean island
of Lesbos, has since given its name to homosexual women,
as she herself has become synonymous with female love
and sexuality. She was the daughter of Scamander and Cleïs,
was married, it is thought, to a wealthy merchant, and
has a daughter named Cleïs. Sappho also had three
brothers. Her family was politically active, which caused
Sappho to travel a great deal.
Work:
She headed a group of female poets, to recite and compose
lyric poetry - a practice that was commonplace in Ancient
Greece. This group is also thought to have been a school
of sorts, her students being the main subjects of her
poems. Her work was made up of nine 'books', kept in the
Library of Alexandria, most of which have now been lost.
Fragments and incomplete poems were rediscovered through
the ages as copies on Egyptian papyri. It is said that
one of her poems was as long as 1320 lines. The largest
of the surviving poems is just 20 lines long, and none
of the works are complete.
Some of her love poems were addressed to women. Writing
in Aeolian, an ancient Greek dialect, she gives the names
of several women whom she loved; Atthis, Anactoria, Gongyla,
and Mnasadica.
Political
tension that occurred later in her lifetime forced Sappho
to be exiled to Syracuse. Little of this part of her life
seems to be known, except that she was able to return
from this exile (possibly to Eressos) in 581 BC, and died
of old age some time after. However, there were legends
in ancient and medieval eras of her throwing herself over
a cliff due to unrequited love for Phaon, a male sailor.
Greatest Achievements:
When she went to the city of Syracuse, a statue was built
to honor her. Despite her work being largely lost, her
reputation in her time was immense, and continues to this
day. One of her many styles of writing in Aeolian is now
known as 'Sapphic', after her. She was reputedly considered
by Plato to be the tenth Muse.
"Some say of nine Muses, how neglected!
Behold, Sappho, from Lesbos, is the tenth"
Email this Article to a Friend