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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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INDEXES 1-27<br />

Periclymenus (per-i-klï' men-us), Argonaut who could<br />

change shape, and Neleus' son, killed by Heracles, 533<br />

Periphetes (per-i-fê' tëz), brigand, son of Hephaestus,<br />

armed with a club (called Corynetes ["Club Man"]),<br />

and killed by Theseus, 555<br />

Pero (për' ô), daughter of Neleus, and wooed by Bias,<br />

574<br />

Persephone (per-sef ' ô-në), or Kore, goddess of the budding<br />

grain, Demeter's daughter, abducted by Hades to<br />

be his wife; her Roman names were Proserpina and<br />

Proserpine, 20-21,104,179, 293, 307-309, 309, 314-317,<br />

315, 320, 332<br />

Perses (per' sëz), son of Perseus and Andromeda, 520<br />

Perseus (per' se-us), son of Zeus and Danaë; he beheaded<br />

the Gorgon Medusa and married Andromeda,<br />

whom he rescued from a sea monster, 505-506,507,508,<br />

510, 512, 513, 515, 520, 697<br />

Petasus (pet' a-sus), traveler's hat, especially the winged<br />

hat of Hermes, 270<br />

Phaeacians (fë-â' shi-anz), people of Scheria, who receive<br />

Odysseus hospitably, 492-493, 583<br />

Phaedra (fë' dra), "Bright," daughter of Minos, wife of<br />

Theseus, and stepmother of Hippolytus, with whom<br />

she falls in love, 210-211, 213-218, 549, 564-565<br />

Phaëthon (fa' e-thon), "Shining," son of Helius and Clymene,<br />

he drove the chariot of the sun-god disastrously<br />

and was struck down by Zeus, 57-58<br />

Phanes (fa' nëz), epithet of Eros, 53, 362<br />

Phemius (fë' mi-us), bard spared by Odysseus, 495<br />

Pheres (fe' rëz), founder of Pherae and father of Admetus,<br />

574<br />

Philemon (fï-lë' mon), husband of Baucis, 618<br />

Philoctetes (fi-lok-të' tëz), received Heracles' bow and arrows<br />

from his father Poeas, abandoned on Lemnos because<br />

of a snake bite, and at Troy killer of Paris, 453^454,<br />

473, 483<br />

Philomela (fil-ô-më' la), daughter of Pandion, sister of<br />

Procne, violated by Tereus, and turned into a swallow<br />

or nightingale, 549, 552-553<br />

Philyra (fil' i-ra), mother of the centaur Chiron, 575<br />

Phineus (fi' ne-us), blind prophet plagued by the<br />

Harpies and rescued by the Argonauts, 549, 577-578<br />

Phlegethon (fleg' e-thon), river of "Fire" in the Underworld,<br />

349<br />

Phoebe (fë' bë), "Bright," a Titan moon goddess, and an<br />

epithet for Artemis, 60<br />

Phoenix, (fë' niks), tutor and companion of Achilles, 451,<br />

467<br />

Pholus, (fô' lus), centaur encountered by Heracles, 525<br />

Phorcys (for' sis), son of Pontus and Ge, mate of Ceto<br />

and Hecate and father of the Graeae, Gorgons, Ladon,<br />

and Scylla, 153<br />

Phrixus (frik' sus), son of Athamas and Nephele; a<br />

golden-fleeced ram took him to Colchis, 573-574<br />

Phylacus (fï' la-kus), owner of cattle won by Melampus<br />

as a bride-price for Pero, 606-607<br />

Phyleus (fî' le-us), Augeas' son who sided with Heracles,<br />

525<br />

Phyllis (fil' lis), beloved of the Athenian Demophon, she<br />

committed suicide and turned into an almond tree, 567<br />

Pillars of Heracles, flanking the Straits of Gibraltar, 527<br />

Pirithous (pi-rith' 6-us), son of Ixion and leader of the<br />

Lapiths and husband of Hippodamia or Dei'damia; he<br />

defeated the centaurs at his wedding; Theseus' friend,<br />

who got left behind in Hades, 113-114, 529, 564, 603<br />

Pittheus (pit' the-us), king of Troezen, host of Aegeus,<br />

and father of Aethra, 549, 555<br />

Pityocamptes (pit-i-o-kamp' tëz), "Pine Bender," name<br />

of the robber Sinis, encountered by Theseus, 555<br />

Planctae (plank' të or plank-tï), two wandering rocks, a<br />

threat to Odysseus and Jason, 492<br />

Pollux (pol' luks) or Polydeuces, boxer, 436-437, 642. See<br />

also Dioscuri<br />

Polybus (pol' i-bus), king of Corinth and husband of<br />

Merope who brought up Oedipus, 382, 383<br />

Polydectes (pol-i-dek' tëz), king of Seriphos, brother of<br />

Dictys, lover of Danaë and killed by Perseus, 506, 514<br />

Polydeuces (pol-i-dû' sëz), 577. See also Pollux<br />

Polydorus (pol-i-dor' us), son of Hecuba who took<br />

vengeance on Polymestor for his murder, 381, 477<br />

Polyhymnia (pol-i-him' ni-a), Muse of sacred music or<br />

dancing, 73, 125<br />

Polymede (pol-i-mê' de), mother of Jason, 574<br />

Polymestor (pol-i-me' de), king in Thrace, upon whom<br />

Hecuba took vengeance for the murder of her son Polydorus,<br />

477<br />

Polynices (pol-i-nï' sëz), killed by his brother Eteocles,<br />

while attacking Thebes, and later buried by his sister<br />

Antigone, 23, 381, 389-390, 395-399<br />

Polypemon (pol-i-pë' mon), "Troubler," another name<br />

for Procrustes, 557<br />

Polyphemus (po-li-fë' mus), Cyclops, son of Poseidon<br />

and blinded by Odysseus; also the wooer of Galatea,<br />

147-150, 487, 488<br />

Polyxena (po-lik' se-na), daughter of Priam and Hecuba,<br />

sacrificed on Achilles' tomb, 442, 444, 471-472, 611<br />

Pomona (po-mô' na), Roman goddess of fruit that can<br />

be picked from trees, who married Vertumnus, 634<br />

Pontifex Maximus (pon' ti-feks maks' i-mus), head of Roman<br />

state religion, 628; pontifices (pon-ti' fi-s's), priests,<br />

537<br />

Pontus (pon' tus), god of the "Sea," offspring and husband<br />

of Gaia, 153<br />

Poros (pô' ros), "Resourcefulness," father of Eros in the<br />

Symposium, 191<br />

Portunus (por-tû' nus), Roman god of gates and harbors,<br />

626, 637<br />

Poseidon (po-sï' don), son of Cronus and Rhea, and<br />

supreme god of the sea, 109,122,128,150,152,154,155,<br />

469, 482, 549, 550, 551, 574, 606<br />

Priam (pri' am), son of Laomedon, king of Troy during<br />

the Trojan War, and husband of Hecuba, 442, 443, 447,<br />

449^50, 464-A67, 473, 475, 476, 611<br />

"Priam's Treasure," also called "The Gold of Troy," 43<br />

Priapus (prï-â' pus), phallic god of gardens, son of<br />

Aphrodite, 174-175, 631, 636-637<br />

Procne (prok' ne), daughter of Pandion and wife of<br />

Tereus; she murdered their son Itys and was turned<br />

into a nightingale or swallow, 549, 552-553<br />

Procoptes (pro-kop' tëz), "Slicer," another name for Procrustes,<br />

557<br />

Procris (prok' ris), daughter of Erechtheus accidently<br />

killed by her husband, 549, 551-552<br />

Procrustes (pro-krûs' tëz), Procrustean, "Stretcher,"<br />

brigand who, with his hammer and saw, fitted people<br />

to his bed; killed by Theseus, 556, 557

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