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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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INDEXES 1-25<br />

Melpomene (mel-pom' e-ne), Muse of tragedy or lyre<br />

playing, 73, 125<br />

Memnon (mem' non), son of Eos and Tithonus,<br />

Ethiopian leader, killed by Achilles, 471<br />

Menelaûs (men-e-lâ' us), king of Sparta, husband of Helen,<br />

and father of Hermione, 406, 411, 437, 447,456, 482<br />

Menestheus (me-nes' the-us), usurper of Theseus' power<br />

and leader of the Athenians at Troy, 565<br />

Menoeceus (me-në' se-us), father of Creon, 381; son of<br />

Creon, 381, 397<br />

Mercury, Mercurius (mer' kur' -i-us), Roman god of<br />

commerce and profit, 628, 638<br />

Merope (mer' ô-pë), wife of Heraclid Cresphontes, 545;<br />

wife of Polybus who brought up Oedipus, 382; wife of<br />

Sisyphus, 574<br />

Messene (mes-së' ne), region in the southwestern Peloponnesus,<br />

545<br />

Messina (mes-sï' na), Straits of, between Italy and Sicily,<br />

152-153<br />

Metaneira (met-a-nï' ra), wife of Celeus and mother of<br />

Demophoôn, 311-313<br />

Metion (më' ti-on), brother of Cecrops, uncle of Pandion,<br />

and father or grandfather of Daedalus, 549, 554<br />

Metis (më' tis), "Wisdom," swallowed by her lover Zeus,<br />

after she became pregnant, 109, 157<br />

Mezentius (me-zen' shi-us or me-zen' ti-us), Etruscan, 647,<br />

652<br />

Midas (mï' das), king of Phrygia cursed with the golden<br />

touch, whose ears were turned into those of an ass,<br />

243-244, 294-295; of Akragas, winner at the Pythian<br />

Games, 410<br />

Milanion (mi-la' ni-on), he (or Hippomenes) beat Atalanta<br />

in a footrace, 610, 612<br />

Miletus (mï-lë' tus), city in Ionia in Asia Minor, named<br />

after the father of Byblis and Caunus, 573<br />

Milky Way, a band of light caused by myriads of stars, 670<br />

Minerva (mi-ner' va), Italian goddess whom the Romans<br />

equated with Athena, 164-166, 628, 630, 718-719<br />

Minos (mï' nos): Minoan-Mycenaean, 40^41; son of Zeus<br />

and Europa, husband of Pasiphaë, king of Cnossus, and<br />

judge in the Underworld, Minoan (mi-nô' an), Minoans,<br />

39, 331, 342, 349, 377, 558, 567-570<br />

Minotaur (min' o-tawr), half bull and half man, offspring<br />

of Pasiphaë and a bull, 40, 556, 558, 560, 567<br />

Minyae (min' i-ë or min' i-ï), another name for the Argonauts;<br />

Minyans (min' yans), 522, 573<br />

Minyas (min' i-as), his daughters (Minyads) resisted<br />

Dionysus, were driven mad, and turned into bats, 607<br />

Mithras (mith' ras) or Mithra: Persian god of light and<br />

truth, Mithraism (mith' ra-ism), 365<br />

Mnemosyne (në-mos' i-në), "Memory," Titaness mate of<br />

Zeus and mother of the Muses, 54, 73, 124-125<br />

Moira (moy' ra), plural Moirai (moy' rï) or Moirae (moy'<br />

rë), Fate, Fates (Roman Fatum, Fata), 336; daughters of<br />

Zeus and Themis or Erebus and Night or (in Plato) of<br />

Necessity (See also Ananke)<br />

Moly (mo' li), magic antidote against Circe, given by<br />

Hermes to Odysseus, 490<br />

Mopsus (mop' sus), seer and an Argonaut, 583<br />

Muse (muz), Muses, "Reminders," the nine daughters of<br />

Zeus and Mnemosyne, patrons of the arts, who inspire<br />

and inform artists, 51-52, 72-74, 124-125, 471<br />

Mycenae (mï-së' ne), city of the family of Atreus, first<br />

excavated by Schliemann, Mycenaean (mi-se-ne' an),<br />

40, 41, 372-373, 404-434, 516, 519<br />

Myrmidons (mir' mi-donz), tribe of Phthia, led by<br />

Achilles at Troy, 450, 455<br />

Myrrha (mir' ra), "Myrrh Tree," daughter and mate of<br />

Cinyras and mother of Adonis, 177<br />

Narcissus (nar-sis' sus), son of Liriope and Cephisus, he<br />

rejected the love of many (including Echo), died of unrequited<br />

love for his own reflection, and was turned<br />

into a flower, 300<br />

Nauplius (naw' pli-us), father of Palamedes, 482<br />

Nausicaâ (naw-sik' a-a), Alcinoiis' daughter in Phaeacia<br />

who helps Odysseus, 493<br />

Naxos (naks' os), island in the Aegean where Theseus<br />

abandoned Ariadne, 558-561<br />

Necessity. See Adrasteia; Ananke<br />

Nectar (nek' tar), the drink of the gods, 128<br />

Neleus (nil' e-us), son of Poseidon and Tyro, father of<br />

Nestor, and king of Pylos, 533, 574, 606<br />

Nemea (nem' e-a), city in the northern Peloponnesus;<br />

Nemean Games, founded in honor of Opheltes, 396;<br />

Nemean (nem' e-an) Lion, offspring of Echidna and Orthus<br />

and first Labor of Heracles, 154, 523, 530<br />

Nemesis (nem' e-sis), goddess of retribution, 83<br />

Neoptolemus (në-op-tol' e-mus), also called Pyrrhus,<br />

son of Achilles and Dei'damia, 406, 415-416, 450-451,<br />

473, 475, 476, 483<br />

Nephele (nef e-lë), "Cloud," wife of Athamas and<br />

mother of Phrixus and Helle, 573-574; mother of Centaurus,<br />

602-603<br />

Neptune (nep' tune), Neptunus, Roman god equated<br />

with Poseidon, 151, 637<br />

Nereus (nër' e-us), Nereid(s) (n" re-id), sea nymphs,<br />

daughters of Nereus and Doris, 148,150,153; son of Pontus<br />

and Ge, and a prophetic old man of the sea, 153, 528<br />

Nergal (ner' gal), chief god of the Sumerian Underworld,<br />

102<br />

Nerio (ne' i-ô), Sabine fertility goddess, associated with<br />

Minerva and consort of Mars, 626, 630<br />

Nessus (nés' sus), centaur killed by Heracles for trying<br />

to rape Deîanira, 534, 536<br />

Nestor (nes' tor), son of Neleus, king of Pylos, and wise<br />

orator in the Trojan War, 42, 448, 467, 482, 533, 574<br />

Night, sprung from Chaos or a daughter of Phanes,<br />

52-53<br />

Ninurta (nin-ur' ta), son of Enlil, Summerian warriorgod<br />

and hero, 102<br />

Niobe (nî' ô-bë), Amphion's wife; hubris against Leto<br />

caused Apollo and Artemis to kill her seven sons and<br />

seven daughters, 203, 380, 406, 508<br />

Nisus (nï' sus), lover of Euryalus, 652; son of Pandion,<br />

king of Megara, and father of Scylla who cut off his<br />

purple lock of hair; he was turned into a sea-eagle, 549<br />

Noah (no' ah), the Biblical equivalent of Deucalian,<br />

saved from the flood, 99<br />

Nobody, Ou tis (û' tis), name Odysseus gives to the Cyclops<br />

Polyphemus, 487<br />

Numa (nû' ma), Roman king, responsible for religious<br />

innovations, 627, 631, 638<br />

Nycteus (nik' te-us), brother of Lycus and father of Antiope,<br />

380<br />

Nymph(s): supernatural women, 129

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