35:. One day, when he is very young, his mother scolds him for troubling her. This upsets him, and he runs away to live in another kingdom. After he grows up, he overthrows the king of that kingdom and takes the throne, but not before the king has cursed him. Not knowing his own parentage, he invades Gilingwesi in order to marry the reputedly beautiful wives of king Palindriya. He then marries his mother, Dewi Sinta, and his aunt/stepmother, Dewi Landep, and has 27 sons by them. The true identity of the incestuous parties is eventually uncovered. Watu Gunung, who is already virtually indestructible because of his godly nature, becomes more and more arrogant, and builds an iron city to live in. The other gods, resenting his pride, go to war with him. In some versions of the myth, he is betrayed by his kinfolk, who tell the enemy about his single vulnerability. Ultimately, peace is secured and Watu Gunung, his wives and children all ascend to heaven. Lessa describes the story as containing elements of Oedipal type.
123:
160:
63:
91:
189:
106:
Lessa, William A. “Oedipus-Type Tales in
Oceania.” The Journal of American Folklore, 69, no. 271 (1956), pp. 63–73, and note 3.
153:
53:
179:
184:
146:
87:
59:
130:
173:
28:
81:
31:. He is a descendant of the gods, the son of King Palindriya of Gilingwesi and
24:
20:
122:
107:
32:
129:
This article relating to a myth or legend from
Oceania is a
134:
52:Putten, Jan van der; Cody, Mary Kilcline (2009).
55:Lost Times and Untold Tales from the Malay World
154:
8:
83:Java and Modern Europe: Ambiguous Encounters
161:
147:
44:
7:
119:
117:
133:. You can help Knowledge (XXG) by
14:
121:
86:. Routledge. pp. 144–147.
108:https://doi.org/10.2307/536945
19:is a figure in the foundation
1:
206:
116:
190:Oceania mythology stubs
80:Kumar, Ann (1997).
180:Javanese mythology
185:Javanese folklore
142:
141:
65:978-9971-69-454-8
197:
163:
156:
149:
125:
118:
111:
104:
98:
97:
77:
71:
69:
49:
205:
204:
200:
199:
198:
196:
195:
194:
170:
169:
168:
167:
115:
114:
105:
101:
94:
79:
78:
74:
66:
51:
50:
46:
41:
12:
11:
5:
203:
201:
193:
192:
187:
182:
172:
171:
166:
165:
158:
151:
143:
140:
139:
126:
113:
112:
99:
92:
72:
64:
43:
42:
40:
37:
13:
10:
9:
6:
4:
3:
2:
202:
191:
188:
186:
183:
181:
178:
177:
175:
164:
159:
157:
152:
150:
145:
144:
138:
136:
132:
127:
124:
120:
109:
103:
100:
95:
93:9781136790850
89:
85:
84:
76:
73:
67:
61:
58:. NUS Press.
57:
56:
48:
45:
38:
36:
34:
30:
26:
22:
18:
135:expanding it
128:
102:
82:
75:
54:
47:
16:
15:
17:Watu Gunung
174:Categories
39:References
33:Dewi Sinta
27:island of
25:Indonesian
21:mythology
70:pp. 7-10
23:of the
90:
62:
131:stub
88:ISBN
60:ISBN
29:Java
176::
162:e
155:t
148:v
137:.
110:.
96:.
68:.
Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike License. Additional terms may apply.