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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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GLOSSARY/INDEX OF MYTHOLOGICAL AND HISTORICAL PERSONS,<br />

PLACES, AND SUBJECTS<br />

A simple guide to pronunciation follows most words in this index. The long vowels are to be pronounced<br />

as follows: à (cape), ë (bee), ï (ice), ô (boat), and û (too). Syllabification is marked by a<br />

prime mark (') and a hyphen (-). Syllables that precede the prime are stressed. Note: Pictorial representations<br />

are in bold-face type.<br />

Abas (a' bas), son of Lynceus and Hypermnestra and Aegina (e-ji' na), Asopus' daughter, carried off by Zeus,<br />

grandfather of Perseus, 508<br />

613<br />

Acamas (ak' a-mas), son of Theseus and Phaedra, 549 Aegis (ë' jis), "goatskin," shield, especially that of Zeus<br />

Acca Larentia (ak' ka lar-en' shi-a), wife of Faustulus and Athena, 111, 166<br />

who raised Romulus and Remus, 657<br />

Aegisthus (ë-jis' thus or e-jis' thus), son of Thyestes and<br />

Acestes (a-ses' têz), Trojan, king of Egesta, 647<br />

lover of Clytemnestra, 406, 408, 408-411, 410<br />

Achaemenides (ak-e-men' i-dëz), one of Odysseus' men, Aegyptus (ë-jip ' tus), king of Egypt, brother of Danaiis,<br />

encountered by Aeneas, 647<br />

and father of fifty sons, 508, 517<br />

Achaeus (ak-ê' us), eponymous ancestor of the Achaeans, Aeneas (ë-në' as or e-nê' as), Trojan warrior, son of<br />

78<br />

Acheloùs (ak-e-lô' us), river in western Greece and its<br />

god, with whom Heracles wrestled for De'ianira, 534<br />

Acheron (ak' e-ron), river of "Woe" in the Underworld,<br />

341, 349<br />

Achilles (a-kil' lêz), son of Peleus and Thetis and the<br />

greatest Greek hero in the Trojan war, 23, 46, 123-134,<br />

129, 330-331, 450-451, 452, 454, 455^56, 459^68, 465,<br />

467, 471^72, 490, 605, 611, 687-688, 689<br />

Acis (â' sis), Galatea's beloved, changed into a river-god,<br />

147-150<br />

Acrisius (ak-ris' i-us), Danaë's father, accidently killed<br />

by Perseus, 505, 506, 507, 508, 514-516<br />

Acropolis (a-kro' po-lis), hill of Athens on which the<br />

Parthenon and Erechtheum were built, 550<br />

Actaeon (ak-tê' on), son of Aristaeus and Autonoë whom<br />

Artemis turned into a stag because he saw her naked,<br />

203-206, 205, 381, 680<br />

Admetus (ad-më' tus), king of Pherae who accepts the offer<br />

of his wife Alcestis to die in his place, 242, 527, 574,<br />

606<br />

Adonis (a-do' nis), son of Cinyras and Myrrha and<br />

Aphrodite's beloved, fatally wounded by a boar's tusk,<br />

and a resurrection god, from whose blood sprang the<br />

anemone, 177-179,178<br />

Adrasteia (ad-ra-stë' a or ad-ra-stî' a), Necessity, a concept<br />

or goddess, 362<br />

Adrastus (a-dras' tus), the sole survivor of the Seven<br />

Aphrodite (Venus) and Anchises, husband of Creusa<br />

and Lavinia, father of Ascanius (lulus), and the hero of<br />

Virgil's Aeneid, 185-186, 339-345, 344, 442, 444, 475,<br />

476, 477-480, 478, 479, 629, 636, 644-650, 651<br />

Aeolus (ë' ô-lus), keeper of the winds, encountered by<br />

Odysseus, 488-489; son of Hellen, father of Sisyphus, and<br />

eponymous ancestor of the Aeolians (ë-ô' li-anz), 78, 574<br />

Aër, the lower atmosphere, 53<br />

Aërope (a-er' o-pë), Atreus's wife, seduced by Thyestes,<br />

406, 407<br />

Aesculapius (ës-ku-lâ' pi-us or es-ku-lâ' pi-us), Latin<br />

name for Asclepius, 63<br />

Aeson (ë' son), son of Cretheus and Tyro, and Jason's<br />

father, rejuvenated by Medea, 574, 575, 583-584<br />

Aether (ë' ther), upper atmosphere, offspring of Night<br />

and Erebus, 52-53<br />

Aethra (ë' thra), daughter of Pittheus and mother of Theseus,<br />

476, 549, 555, 564<br />

Aetolia (ë-tô' li-a), Aetolian(s), region in central Greece,<br />

608-612<br />

Agamemnon (ag-a-mem' non), king of Mycenae, leader<br />

of the Greeks against Troy, and murdered by his wife<br />

Clytemnestra, 337, 406, 408-411, 410, 428, 447, 452,<br />

455^56, 467, 475, 482, 501<br />

Agathyrsus (ag-a-thir' sus), son of Geryon and Echidna, 528<br />

Agave (a-gâ' vë), daughter of Cadmus and Harmonia<br />

and mother of Pentheus, 275, 284, 288-289, 381<br />

Ager Laurens (ag' er law' renz), territory in Italy, where<br />

against Thebes,. 398, 565; son of Gor<strong>dia</strong>s, accidental Aeneas founded Lavinium, 646<br />

murderer of Croesus' son, Atys, 138-140<br />

Ages of mortals, 81<br />

Aea (ë' a), "Land," for Homer, the place to which the Aglauros (a-glaw' ros), "Bright," daughter of Cecrops,<br />

Argonauts sailed, 573<br />

549, 551<br />

Aeacus (ë' a-kus), a judge in the Underworld and father Agyrtes (a-jir' tëz), trumpeter who tricked Achilles on<br />

of Peleus, 349<br />

Scyros, 451<br />

Aeaea (ê-ë' a), island, home of Circe, 489<br />

Aias (T as). See Ajax<br />

Aeëtes (ê-ë' tëz), "Man of the Land," son of Helius, king Ajax (â' jax), Greek spelling, Aias: the Great or Greater,<br />

of Colchis, and father of Medea, 575, 584<br />

Aegeus (ë' je-us), son of Pandion and Theseus' father (as<br />

Poseidon) who gives his name to the Aegean sea, 549,<br />

555, 561, 588, 594<br />

Aegialia (ê-ji-a-lï' a), unfaithful wife of Diomedes, 482<br />

Aegimius (ë-jim' i-us), king of the Dorians, helped by<br />

Telamon's son (Telamonius) who committed suicide,<br />

331, 337, 448^49, 460, 471-472, 491; the Less or Lesser,<br />

Oïleus' son who raped Cassandra, 449, 475, 476, 482<br />

Akka<strong>dia</strong>n (ak-ka' di-an), pertaining to the area of Akkad<br />

in Mesopotamia, 98, 103-104<br />

Alba, Alba Longa (al' ba Ion' ga), Latin city, founded by<br />

Heracles, 533<br />

lulus, 644-646<br />

I-14

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