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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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INDEXES<br />

Alcaeus (al-së' us), father of Amphitryon and grandfather<br />

of Heracles, 520<br />

Alcestis (al-ses' tis), wife of Admetus who offered to die<br />

in his place, 242, 574<br />

Alcibiades (al-si-bï' a-dëz), Athenian statesman accused<br />

of mutilation of the herms and desecration of the mysteries,<br />

269<br />

Alcides (al-sî' dëz), name of Heracles as grandson of Alcaeus,<br />

522<br />

Alcinous (al-sin' o-us), king of the Phaeacians and father<br />

of Nausicaà, 493, 583<br />

Alcmaeon (alk-më' on), Amphiaraùs' son who led the<br />

Epigoni against Thebes and murdered his mother,<br />

399-100<br />

Alcmena (alk-më' na) or Alcmene (alk-më' ne), seduced<br />

by Zeus to become the mother of Heracles, 519-521,<br />

520, 522, 541, 544<br />

Alcyone (al-si' ô-në), wife of Ceyx, turned into a sea-bird<br />

(alcyone, "halcyon"), 574, 605-606<br />

Alcyoneus (al-si-ôn' e-us or al-si-ôn' ùs), brigand killed<br />

by Heracles, 527; giant killed by Heracles in the Gigantomachy,<br />

533<br />

Alexander. See Paris<br />

Alexander the Great, 356-323 B.C., king of Macedonia,<br />

who conquered Greece and then the Persian empire, in<br />

campaigns that extended as far as In<strong>dia</strong>, 668-669<br />

Allecto (a-lek' tô), a Fury, 350, 647<br />

Aloeus (a-lô' e-us or a-lô' us), father of Otus and<br />

Ephialtes, the Aloadae (al-6' a-dë), 345; brother of<br />

Aeëtes, 584<br />

Althaea (al-thë' a), mother of Meleager, 608-612<br />

Amalthea (am-al-thë' a), the goat whose milk nurtured<br />

the infant Zeus, 534<br />

Amazon(s) (a' ma-zon), warlike women from the northern<br />

limits of the world, 373, 471, 527, 530, 564<br />

Ambrosia (am-brô' si-a), ambrosial, divine, fragrant; the<br />

food of the gods, 128<br />

Amor (a' mor), "Love," another name for Cupid, 52<br />

Amphanaea (am-fa-në' a), town in Thessaly, 530<br />

Amphiaraùs (am-fi-a-râ' us), one of the Seven against<br />

Thebes and a prophet, swallowed up in the earth,<br />

397-398, 607; Amphiaraiim, shrine to Amphiaraùs at<br />

Oropus, 398<br />

Amphimedon (am-fi' me-don), one of Penelope's suitors,<br />

501<br />

Amphion (am-fT on), musician, king of Thebes, son of<br />

Zeus and Antiope, 379, 380<br />

Amphitrite (am-fi-trï' te), Nereid, wife of Poseidon, 150,<br />

150, 559, 560<br />

Amphitryon (am-fi' tri-on), the husband of Alcmena,<br />

519-522<br />

Amulius (a-mu' li-us), king of Alba Longa who usurped<br />

power from his brother Numitor and opposed Rhea Silvia<br />

and her twins, 653<br />

Amycus (am' i-kus), Poseidon's son and a boxer, killed<br />

by Polydeuces, 577<br />

Amymone (a-mi' mô-në), Danaïd changed into a spring<br />

near Argos, 517<br />

Amythaon (am-i-thâ' on), son of Cretheus and Tyro, and<br />

father of Bias and Melampus, 574, 606<br />

Ananke (a-nan' kë), Necessity, a concept or goddess, 125,<br />

335-336<br />

Anaxarete (a-nax-ar' e-të), scorned her lover Iphis and<br />

was turned into stone, 617<br />

1-15<br />

Ancaeus (an-se' us), helmsman of the Argo, replacing<br />

Tiphys, 578<br />

Anchises (an-kï' sëz), a Trojan prince, seduced by<br />

Aphrodite, and father of Aeneas, 20,180-186, 346-348,<br />

442, 475, 476, 478, 479, 647, 649<br />

Ancile (an' si-le), "shield," (pi. ancilia, an-si' li-a), sent<br />

by Jupiter to be a talisman of Roman power, 628-629<br />

Androgeos (an-droj' e-os), son of Minos and Pasiphaë<br />

killed in Attica, 558, 570<br />

Andromache (an-dro' ma-kë), wife of Hector, mother of<br />

Astyanax, and captive of Neoptolemus, 442, 444, 457,<br />

470, 475, 605<br />

Andromeda (an-dro' me-da), daughter of Cepheus and<br />

Cassiepea, and the wife of Perseus, 508, 512-514, 513,<br />

515, 520<br />

Anemone (a-nem' ô-në), flower that Aphrodite made<br />

grow from Adonis' blood, 178<br />

Anius (an' i-us), son of Apollo and king of Delos whose<br />

three daughters were turned into doves, sacrosanct at<br />

Delos, 616<br />

Anna Perenna (per-en' na), Italian goddess of the New<br />

Year, identified with Anna, Dido's sister, 626, 651,<br />

652-653<br />

Antaeus (an-të' us), son of Poseidon and Ge and an opponent<br />

of Heracles, 528<br />

Antea (an-të' a), Homer's name for Stheneboea, the wife<br />

of Proetus, 614<br />

Antenor (an-të' nor), brother of Hecuba and father of<br />

Laocoôn, 445, 450, 475, 611<br />

Anticlea (an-ti-klë' a), daughter of Autolycus and<br />

mother of Odysseus whom Odysseus meets in the Underworld,<br />

329-330, 613<br />

Antigone (an-tig' o-në), Oedipus' faithful daughter who<br />

buries Polynices in defiance of Creon, 23, 373, 381,<br />

391-392, 398-399<br />

Antilochus (an-ti' lo-kus), son of Nestor, 461<br />

Antinous (an-ti' no-us), one of Penelope's suitors, 494<br />

Antiope (an-tï' o-pë), Amazon won by Theseus and the<br />

mother of Hippolytus, 549, 564; the mother of Aeëtes<br />

and Aloeus, 584; Nycteus' daughter, seduced by Zeus,<br />

and mother of Amphion and Zethus, 379-380<br />

Anu (a' nu), Babylonian-Hittite sky-god, 97, 99, 103<br />

Apemosyne (ap-e-mos' i-në), daughter of Catreus and<br />

sister of Althaemenes, who killed her, 569<br />

Aphrodite (af-rô-dî' të), daughter of Uranus alone<br />

(Aphrodite Urania) or daughter of Zeus and Dione<br />

(Aphrodite Pandemos), goddess of love and beauty,<br />

equated by the Romans with Venus, 20,22,63,109,110,<br />

120-122, 128, 171-186, 172, 197-198, 210-224, 309, 438,<br />

439, 440^43, 442, 456, 468^69, 482, 485, 617; Pandemos,<br />

171; Urania, 171<br />

Apis (a' pis), Egyptian bull-god, 508, 516<br />

Apollo (a-pol' 16), son of Zeus and Leto (Latona), the<br />

Greek and Roman god of reason and intelligence, music<br />

(the lyre), prophecy, medicine, and the sun, Apollonian,<br />

19-20, 59, 67, 109, 158, 187-188, 201-203, 202,<br />

226-254, 228, 238, 239, 246, 250, 260-267, 408, 413, 455,<br />

469, 471, 534, 535, 604, 628, 643; Delphinius (del-fin' ius),<br />

a title of Apollo, 231<br />

Appaliunas (ap-pa-li-ûn's), name for Apollo found in<br />

Hittite inscription, 45<br />

Apples of the Hesperides (hes-per' i-dëz), the eleventh<br />

Labor of Heracles, 528<br />

Apsu (ap' su), fresh water; husband of Tiamat, 99

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