Crater (Crt)
"The Cup"


Location:  R.A. = 11h 30m, Dec. = 15 S

Mythology:  The Cup Crater was used by the Roman God of Wine, Bacchus, and by the Greek God Apollo.  It is associated with Corvus and Hydra, the story of which is presented in part below.  Corvus, or the Crow, rides on the serpent Hydra in the night sky.
    Classically, Corvus the Crow is associated with Apollo, God of Prophecy and Wisdom, Music and Poetry, and often associated with the arts, philosophy, law, and medicine (consider the first line of the Hippocratic Oath taken by physicians:  "I swear by Apollo the physician . . .").  During the battle for control of Olympus, Earth (Gaea) sent the monster Typhon upon the Olympian Gods.  Pan was the first to spot the monster, and shouted a warning to have everyone transform into animals to hide.  Aphrodite, Eros, and Pan became fish, although Pan was unsuccessful and could only half change (which is why his depiction, Capricornus, is half-goat and half-fish).  To also hide from Typhon, Apollo changed into a crow.  Apollo then became associated with his sacred Crow, Corvus.
    Interestingly, Apollo's Crow was originally white, but one day the Crow brought to Apollo the awful news that his lover, Coronis, was being unfaithful.  Apollo was so distraught that in his mourning he turned the Crow black.  Since that day, crows are all black to express the sorrow of Apollo.
    As the story continues, one day Apollo was set to give tribute to Zeus, so he sent the Crow with a Cup (the constellation Crater) to fetch water from a spring.  During the journey to the spring, the Crow noticed a fig tree bearing fruit.  The Crow forgot his mission and waited several days for the fruit on the tree to get ripe enough to eat.  Apollo got tired of waiting for his Crow to return and fetched the water himself.  When the Crow finally did return, with the water and a full belly, he told Apollo that a watersnake had been blocking the spring.  Apollo was not impressed and knew the Crow was lying since he had fetched water himself.  As punishment, Apollo changed the once beautiful singing voice of the bird to the squawk it is today.  (One version of the story states that it is here that the bird's feathers are turned black.)  Finally, Apollo set the Crow Corvus into the stars next to the Cup Crater on the Watersnake Hydra.  Apollo ordered the snake to never let Corvus get near Crater to get a drink.