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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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1-20<br />

Dius Fidius (di' us fi' di-us), Sabine god of Good Faith<br />

(Fides), identified with Jupiter, 629 t<br />

Dodona (do-dô' na), sanctuary and oracle of Zeus, in<br />

northern Greece, 114-115<br />

Dorus (dôr' us), son of Hellen and eponymous ancestor<br />

of the Dorians, 78<br />

Ea (ë' a), Babylonian god, 103<br />

Earth, Gaia, Gaea, and Ge, sprung from Chaos, great<br />

mother-goddess of earth and fertility and wife of<br />

Uranus, 52-55, 61-63, 153, 528<br />

Echidna (e-kid' na), half nymph and half snake, mate of<br />

Typhon and her son Orthus, and mother of monsters,<br />

154; Snake Woman who bore Heracles' three sons, 527<br />

Echo, nymph who became only a voice; she was pursued<br />

by Pan and rejected by Narcissus, 298, 300<br />

Egeria (e-jë' ri-a), water-nymph helpful to pregnant<br />

women and counselor to King Numa, 638<br />

Eileithyia (ï-lï-thï' ya or ë-lë-thï'-ya), goddess of childbirth<br />

and daughter of Zeus and Hera, 109,115,158,228,<br />

521<br />

Eïoneus (e-i-ô' ne-us), father of Dia, murdered by her<br />

husband Ixion, 603<br />

Eirene, "Peace," daughter of Zeus and Themis, 126<br />

Electra (e-lek' tra), an Oceanid, wife of Thaumas and<br />

mother of Iris and the Harpies, 153; Clytemnestra's<br />

daughter, who hated her mother for the murder of her<br />

father Agamemnon and waited for the return of her<br />

brother Orestes to seek vengeance, 406, 412-434, 713;<br />

Electra complex, 8<br />

Electryon (e-lek' tri-on), king of Mycenae, uncle of Amphitryon,<br />

who married his daughter Alcmena, 519, 520<br />

Eleusis (e-lù' sis), a town west of Athens, center for the<br />

Mysteries of Demeter, Eleusinians, 310-313, 565;<br />

Eleusinian (el-ù-sin' i-an) Mysteries, 313, 317-324<br />

Elis (ë' lis), region of Olympia in the western Peloponnesus,<br />

404-405, 525<br />

Elissa (e-lis' sa), another name of Dido, 650<br />

Elpenor (el-pë' nor), Odysseus' comrade who fell off<br />

Circe's roof, died, and in the Underworld asks<br />

Odysseus for burial, 329<br />

Elysium (e-liz' i-um), the Elysian Fields, paradise in the<br />

realm of Hades, the Elysian Fields, 343-348<br />

Enceladus (en-sel' a-dus), defeated giant under Mt.<br />

Aetna, 79<br />

Endymion (en-dim' i-on), the beloved of Selene, Artemis<br />

(Diana), 58-59, 59<br />

Enipeus (e-nip' e-us), river and its god in Thessaly, in<br />

whose disguise Poseidon loved Tyro, 606<br />

Enki (en' ki), Sumerian God of fresh water and wisdom,<br />

99-102, 104<br />

Enkidu (en' kid-u), primitive hunter and friend of Gilgamesh,<br />

102, 103<br />

Enlil (en' lil), chief of the younger Sumerian gods, 102<br />

Enyo (en'-yo), Greek personification of war, 626<br />

Eos (ë' os), daughter of Hyperion and Theia and<br />

amorous goddess of the "Dawn," 20, 57, 60-61. See also<br />

Aurora<br />

Epaphus (ep' a-fus), "He of the Touch," the son of Zeus<br />

and Io, 20, 92, 93, 508, 516<br />

Epeus (e-pë' us), builder of the Trojan horse, 337<br />

Ephialtes (ef-i-al' tëz), a giant who stormed heaven, 80,<br />

345. See also Aloadae<br />

INDEXES<br />

Epigoni (e-pig' o-ni), sons of the Seven against Thebes led<br />

by Alcmaeon, who made a second and successful attack,<br />

399-401<br />

Epimetheus (ep-i-më' the-us), "Afterthinker,"<br />

Prometheus' brother, who accepted Pandora from<br />

Zeus, 78, 83, 87<br />

Epops (ep' ops), Hoopoe, the bird into which Tereus was<br />

transformed, 553<br />

Er, son of Armenius who died and came back to life to<br />

present the vision of the Afterlife recorded by Plato,<br />

334-339<br />

Erato (er' a-tô), Muse of love poetry or hymns to the gods<br />

and lyre playing, 73<br />

Erebus (er' e-bus), the darkness of Tartarus or Tartarus<br />

itself, 52-53<br />

Erechtheum (e-rek-thë' um), Ionic temple on the Acropolis<br />

of Athens, dedicated to Poseidon-Erechtheus and<br />

Athena Polias, 548-550<br />

Erechtheus (e-rek' the-us), early king of Athens, associated<br />

with Poseidon and father of Procris, Orithyia, and<br />

Creusa, 548-550, 549, 554<br />

Ereshkigal (er-esh' kee-gal), "Mistress of Earth," Sumerian<br />

goddess, spouse of underworld god, Nergal, 102,<br />

104<br />

Erichthonius (er-ik-thon' i-us), early Athenian king, confused<br />

with Erectheus, sprung from the earth, and raised<br />

by Athena, 548, 549<br />

Erigone (e-rig' ô-në), daughter of Icarius who hanged<br />

herself upon finding her father dead, 294<br />

Erinyes (e-rin' i-ëz), the Furies or Eumenides, dread<br />

daughters of Earth or Night, avengers of blood guilt,<br />

and punishers of sinners in the Underworld, 63<br />

Eriphyle (e-ri-fï' le), Amphiaraùs' wife, bribed by Polynices<br />

to persuade her husband to go to his death, and<br />

murdered by her son Alcmaeon, 399^400<br />

Eris (er' is), goddess of "Discord," 438, 605<br />

Eros (er' os), god of love, sprung from Chaos or the son<br />

of Ares and Aphrodite; his Roman name is Cupid or<br />

Amor, 52, 186-193<br />

Erymanthus (er-i-man' thus), mountain in Arca<strong>dia</strong>, 525;<br />

Erymanthian (er-i-man' thi-an) Boar, fourth Labor of<br />

Heracles, 525<br />

Eryx (er' iks), king of Mt. Eryx in western Sicily whom<br />

Heracles wrestled and killed, 527; the site of a temple<br />

to Astarte, who was linked to Aphrodite and Venus;<br />

Erycina (er-i-sï' na), an epithet of Venus, 635<br />

Eteocles (e-të' ô-klëz), son of Oedipus who killed his<br />

brother Polyneices in the attack of the Seven against<br />

Thebes, 23, 381, 395-398<br />

Eumaeus (ù-më' us), faithful swineherd of Odysseus,<br />

493, 494, 497<br />

Eumenides (ù-men' i-dëz), "Kindly Ones," another<br />

name for the Erinyes or Furies, 388-389, 412<br />

Eumolpus (ù-mol' pus), son of Poseidon and Chione,<br />

prince in Eleusis, 549, 551, 554<br />

Euneos (û-në' os), son of Jason and Hypsipyle, 577<br />

Eunomia (û-nô-mi' a), "Good Order," daughter of Zeus<br />

and Themis, 126<br />

Europa (ù-rô' pa), daughter of Agenor and sister of Cadmus,<br />

taken by Zeus in the form of a bull from Tyre to<br />

Crete where she bore Minos, 375-378, 376, 377, 508<br />

Euryalus (ù-rï' a-lus), ally of Aeneas who with his lover<br />

Nisus dies in a night patrol, 652

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