Ab ovo

Leda and the Swan, a painting depicting Helen's unconventional birth, by Cesare da Sesto (c. 1506–1510, Wilton) after a lost painting by Leonardo da Vinci. Helen and Clytemnestra are shown emerging from one egg; Castor and Pollux from another.

Ab ovo is Latin for "from the beginning, the origin, the egg". The term is a reference to one of the twin eggs from which Helen of Troy was born. The eggs were laid by Leda after Zeus, disguised as a swan, either seduced and mated with or raped her, according to different versions. Had Leda not laid the egg, Helen would not have been born, so Paris could not have eloped with her, so there would have been no Trojan War.[1]

  1. ^ Helen of Troy: From Homer to Hollywood. John Wiley & Sons, Ltd. Chichester, West Sussex, U.K.

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