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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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1-26 INDEXES<br />

Ocean, Oceanus (ô-së' a-nus), a Titan, god of the stream<br />

of water encircling the earth, husband of Tethys, 54, 56<br />

Oceanid(s) (ô-së' a-nid), children of Oceanus and Tethys,<br />

56<br />

Odysseus (6-dis' se-us), called by the Romans Ulysses,<br />

son of Laertes (or Sisyphus) and Anticlea, husband of<br />

Penelope, father of Telemachus, and a hero in the Trojan<br />

War; his journey home to regain his kingdom in<br />

Ithaca is the theme of Homer's Odyssey, 328-334, 338,<br />

448^50, 459, 472^73, 483-503, 485, 486, 488, 491, 494,<br />

497<br />

Oedipus (ê' di-pus or e' di-pus), "Swellfoot," son of<br />

Laius and Jocasta, who murdered his father, married<br />

his mother, and found redemption at Colonus, 23, 24,<br />

379, 380-395, 381, 382, 384, 393,401-402; Oedipus complex,<br />

7-8, 392-395<br />

Oeneus (ë' ne-us), king of Calydon and father of Meleager<br />

and Dei'anira, 608<br />

Oenone (ë-nô' ne), nymph with the gift of healing who<br />

loved Paris, 443<br />

Ogygia (o-ji' ji-a), the island of Calypso, 484, 492<br />

Olympia (ô-lim' pi-a), Olympiads, 113, 525; the Panhellenic<br />

sanctuary of Zeus, in the western Peloponnesus,<br />

site of the Olympic Games, 113-115, 114-115, 115<br />

Olympus (6-lim' pus), mountain in Mysia, 138; mountain<br />

in northern Greece, home of the Olympian deities,<br />

the Olympians, 76<br />

Omphale (om' fa-lë), Ly<strong>dia</strong>n queen, whom Heracles<br />

served as a slave, 535, 635<br />

Omphalos (om' fa-los), "navel," egg-shaped stone marking<br />

Delphi as the center of the earth, 231<br />

Opheltes (ô-fel' tëz), "Snake Child," whose name was<br />

changed to Archemorus, "Beginner of Death," 396, 577<br />

Ops, Roman fertility goddess, linked with Saturn,<br />

equated with Rhea, and cult partner of Consus, 632<br />

Oracle, at Delphi, 247-250<br />

Orchomenus (or-ko' men-us), city of Boeotia, 607<br />

Orestes (o-res' tëz), son of Agamemnon and Clytemnestra;<br />

he murdered his mother and was tried and acquitted<br />

by the Areopagus, 406, 412-434, 413, 713<br />

Orion (ô-rï' on), a hunter and lover who was turned into<br />

a constellation with his dog Sirius; also seen by<br />

Odysseus in the Underworld, 207<br />

Orithyia (or-ï-thï' ya), wife of Boreas and mother of<br />

Zetes, Calais, Cleopatra, and Chione, 554<br />

Orpheus (or' fe-us), son of Apollo or Oeagrus and an archetypal<br />

poet, musician, and religious teacher who won<br />

his wife Eurydice back from Hades, only to lose her<br />

again because he looked back too soon, 332, 337, 355,<br />

357, 359,359-362; Orphism (orf ' ism), mystery religion,<br />

founded by Orpheus, 362-363<br />

Orthus (or' thus), or Orthrus, the two-headed hound of<br />

Geryon, offspring of Echidna and Typhon, 154, 527<br />

Othrys (ôtiY ris), the mountain from which Cronus and<br />

the Titans fought against Zeus and his allies on Olympus,<br />

76<br />

Otus (ô' tus), a giant who stormed heaven, 80, 345. See<br />

Aloadae<br />

Pactolus (pac' to-lus), a river near Sardis, into which Midas<br />

washed the power of his golden touch, 210-212<br />

Pales (pâ' lëz), Roman deities of livestock, with a festival<br />

called Parilia or Palilia, 634<br />

Palladium (pal-là' di-um), statue of Pallas that was<br />

linked to Troy's destiny, 448, 631<br />

Pallas Athena. See Athena<br />

Pallas (pal' las), girlfriend and epithet of Athena,<br />

163-164; son of Evander and Aeneas' friend, killed by<br />

Turnus, 647,649; son of Pandion and brother of Aegeus,<br />

549, 557<br />

Pan, "All," goatlike god of the forests who invented the<br />

pan-pipe(s) and lost in a contest with Apollo, 243-244,<br />

297-299, 298, 408, 562<br />

Pan<strong>dia</strong> (pan-dî' a), daughter of Zeus and Selene, 58<br />

Pandion (pan-dï' on), king of Attica and father of Procne,<br />

Aegeus, Pallas, Nisus, and Lycus, 549, 554<br />

Pandora (pan-dôr' a), woman or the first woman, she<br />

brought to mankind a jar of evils, 85-88<br />

Paradise. See Elysium; Islands of the Blessed<br />

Parentalia (par-en-tâ' li-a), Italian festival propitiating<br />

the spirits of dead ancestors, 640<br />

Parergon (par-er' gon), pi. parerga, incidental adventures<br />

of Heracles, 525, 527<br />

Paris (par' is), also called Alexander, son of Priam and<br />

Hecuba who won Helen from Menelaus, 20, 438—143,<br />

439, 442, 443, 456-157, 471, 473<br />

Parnassus (par-nas' sus), mountain near Delphi, 95<br />

Parthenon (par' the-non), the temple of Athena<br />

Parthenos on the Acropolis of Athens, 158-161,159,160<br />

Parthenopaeus (par-then-ô-pë' us), Atalanta's son, one<br />

of the Seven agaist Thebes, 397<br />

Pasiphaë (pa-sif' a-ë), "All Shining," daughter of Helius<br />

and Minos' wife who mated with a bull and bore the<br />

Minotaur, 567<br />

Patroclus (pa-tro' klus), Achilles' companion, killed by<br />

Hector, 23, 446, 452, 461, 467, 610<br />

Pegasus (peg' a-sus), winged horse, offspring of Poseidon<br />

and Medusa, 154, 508, 510, 614<br />

Peleus (pë' le-us), Aeacus' son, husband of Thetis, and<br />

father of Achilles, 147, 450, 603-605, 610, 611<br />

Pelias (pë' li-as), son of Poseidon and Tyro, he usurped<br />

the throne of Iolcus from Aeson and Jason and was<br />

killed by Medea, 574, 575, 584, 606<br />

Pelopia (pe-lô-pï' a), daughter of Thyestes by whom<br />

Thyestes had a son Aegisthus, 406, 408<br />

Pelops (pë' lops), king of Elis who won Hippodamia in a<br />

chariot race, and father of Chrysippus, 113-114,404-407,<br />

406<br />

Penates (pe-nâ' tëz), Roman household spirits of the<br />

store cupboard (penus), family and the state, 631<br />

Penelope (pe-nel' ô-pë), faithful wife of Odysseus, 373,<br />

484, 493^95, 494, 496, 496-501<br />

Peneus (pe-në' us), river in the Peloponnesus and its<br />

god, father of Daphne, 236-237, 245; river in Thessaly,<br />

525, 530<br />

Penia (pen' i-a), "Poverty," mother of Eros in the Symposium,<br />

191<br />

Penthesilea (pen-thes-i-lë' a), queen of the Amazons,<br />

killed by Achilles, 471<br />

Pentheus (pen' the-us), "Sorrow," king of Thebes who<br />

opposes Dionysus and is killed by his mother Agave,<br />

275, 278-288, 361, 379, 381<br />

Perdix (per' diks), "Partridge," nephew and assistant of<br />

Daedalus, who killed him; he was turned into a partridge,<br />

549, 567<br />

Periander (per-i-an' der), tyrant of Corinth, 615

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