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Classical Mythology, 7th Edition - obinfonet: dia logou

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1-28 INDEXES<br />

Proetus (prô-ë' tus), son of Abas, husband of Sthenboea,<br />

and king of Tiryns; his daughters resisted Dionysus and<br />

were driven mad, 290, 506, 508, 614<br />

Prometheus (prô-më' the-us), son of the Titan Iapetus,<br />

creator of mankind, and its benefactor against Zeus, 76,<br />

78, 83-85, 84, 87-93, 89, 91-93, 528<br />

Protesilaùs (prô-te-si-lâ' us), Laodamia's husband, first<br />

Greek to land at Troy, 454<br />

Proteus (pro' te-us), wise old man of the sea who can<br />

change his shape, 150<br />

Protogonus (pro-to' gô-nus), "First Born," epithet of<br />

Eros, 53<br />

Psyche (sï' kë), "Soul," the wife of Cupid (Eros), 193-197,<br />

194<br />

Psychopompos (sï-ko-pom' pos), or psychopompus,<br />

"Leader of the Soul," epithet of Hermes as the god who<br />

brings the souls of the dead to Hades, 349, 357<br />

Pygmalion (pig-mâ' li-on), brother of Dido and Anna,<br />

who killed Sychaeus, husband of Dido, 650, 652; sculptor<br />

who created and fell in love with his statue of<br />

Galatea, which Aphrodite brought to life, 175-177<br />

Pylades (pi' la-dêz or pï' la-dëz), son of Strophius, companion<br />

of Orestes, and husband of Electra, 415, 416,<br />

417-^18, 420, 428, 434<br />

Pylos (pï' los), kingdom of Neleus and Nestor on the<br />

west coast of the Peloponnesus; excavated by Blegen,<br />

42<br />

Pyramus (pir' a-mus), Thisbe's lover who committed suicide<br />

when he mistakenly thought Thisbe was dead, 619,<br />

620<br />

Pyriphlegethon or Phlegethon (pï-ri-fleg' -e-thon), river<br />

of "Fire" in the Underworld, 349<br />

Pyrrha (pir' ra), daughter of Epimetheus and wife of<br />

Deucalion, 78, 95-97<br />

Pythia (pith' i-a), prophetess (sibyl) of Apollo at Delphi,<br />

Pythian, 232-233, 413; Pythian Games, 232<br />

Pytho (pï' thô) or Python (pï' thon), another name for<br />

Delphi, 249<br />

Remus (rë' mus or râ' mus), son of Mars and Rhea Silvia<br />

and twin brother of Romulus, 635, 653-655, 655<br />

Rhadamanthys (rad-a-man' this) or Rhadamanthus, Cretan<br />

judge in the Underworld, 349, 545<br />

Rhea (rë' a), mother-goddess of the earth and fertility,<br />

wife of Cronus, 54, 64-65, 109, 317, 632<br />

Rhea Silvia (rë' a sil' vi-a) or Ilia, Numitor's daughter<br />

loved by Mars and mother of Romulus and Remus, 653,<br />

654<br />

Rhesus (rë' sus), Thracian ally of Troy, killed by<br />

Diomedes and Odysseus, 446-447<br />

Rhodes (rô' dz), Aegean island, sacred to Helius, 616-617<br />

Robigo (rô' bï' gô), Italian goddess of blight; her festival<br />

was the Robigalia (rô-bi-gâ' lia), 636<br />

Romulus (rom' ù-lus), twin brother of Remus and<br />

founder of Rome, 635, 641, 644-650, 648, 653-657, 655<br />

Sabine, Sabines (sa' bïnz), Sabine women, people living<br />

near Rome, 626, 655-657<br />

Sacred or holy marriage. See hieros gamos<br />

Salmacis (sal' ma-sis), nymph of a fountain at Halicarnassus<br />

who loved Hermaphroditus and become one<br />

with him, 20, 270-272<br />

Salmoneus (sal-mô' ne-us), son of Aeolus and sinner in<br />

Tartarus; also founder of Salmone (sal-mo' ne) in Elis,<br />

574, 605<br />

Salmydessus (sal-mi-des' sus), King Phineus' city on the<br />

Euxine shore of Thrace, 577-578<br />

Samothrace (sam' o-thr'se), island in the Aegean, 577<br />

Santorini (san-to-rë' ni). See Thera<br />

Sarpedon (sar-pë' don), Lycian ally of Troy, son of Zeus<br />

and Laodamia, and killed by Patroclus, 445, 445^46<br />

Saturn (sat' urn), Saturnus (sat-ur' nus), Roman agricultural<br />

god (equated with Cronus), whose festival was<br />

the Saturnalia (sa-tur-na' li-a), 62, 632-633<br />

Satyr (sa' ter), satyrs, male spirits of nature, part man,<br />

part goat, who follow Dionysus, 293, 295<br />

Scamander (ska-man' der), river-god and river of Troy,<br />

464<br />

Sciron (skï' ron), "Limestone," brigand who kicked people<br />

over the Cliffs of Sciron; killed by Theseus, 555-556, 556<br />

Scylla (sil' la): daughter of Nisus who fell in love with<br />

Minos, betrayed her father, and was changed into a sea<br />

bird, 570; monstrous daughter of Phorcys and Hecate<br />

and a deadly terror, with Charybdis, in the straits of<br />

Messina, 152-153, 492<br />

Scythes (sï' thëz), son of Heracles and Echidna and<br />

eponymous ancestor of the Scythians, 528<br />

Seasons. See Horae<br />

Selene (se-lë' ne), moon goddess, daughter of Hyperion<br />

and Theia, 57, 58-59. See also Artemis<br />

Semele (sem' e-lë), daughter of Cadmus and Harmonia,<br />

loved by Zeus and destroyed by his lightning and fire;<br />

Zeus saved their unborn child, Dionysus, 109, 275, 275,<br />

293, 381, 680<br />

Semo Sancus (se' mô or san' kus), Latin god, identified<br />

with Dius Fidius and Jupiter, 629<br />

Serapis (se-râ' pis), Egyptian god linked to Isis, 366<br />

Seriphos (se' rif-os), island in the Aegean, 506<br />

Servius Tullius (ser' vi-us tul' li-us), king of Rome,<br />

658-659<br />

Sibylline (sib' il-lïn), oracles and books, collections of<br />

Sibyls' prophecies, 642-643<br />

Sibyl (sib' il), Sibylla (sib-il' la): a prophetess, 340, 344<br />

Sicyon (sik' i-on), city in the northern Peloponnesus, 408<br />

Silenus (si-lë' nus), Sileni (sï-lë' nï or sï-lë' ne): another<br />

name for satyrs, particularly old ones, 293<br />

Silvanus (sil-vâ' nus), "Forester," Roman god of forests,<br />

626, 634-635<br />

Silver Age, second of the legendary four Ages, 81<br />

Sinis (sï' nis), 555, 557<br />

Sinon (sï' non), treacherous Greek who convinced the<br />

Trojans to accept the wooden horse, 475<br />

Siren (sï' ren), Sirens, cosmic figures, in Plato, 335-336;<br />

mythological women who, by their song, enticed<br />

sailors to their deaths, 491, 491<br />

Sisyphus (sis' i-fus), Aeolus' son who outwitted Death<br />

and, for telling Zeus' secret, was punished in the Underworld<br />

by rolling a huge stone up a hill forever; he,<br />

not Laertes, was reputed by some to be father of<br />

Odysseus, 332, 333, 574, 612-613<br />

Socrates (sok' ra-tëz), Athenian philosopher of the fifth<br />

century B.c. and speaker in Plato, Symposium, 186-191<br />

Solon (sô' Ion), Athenian statesman and poet of the sixth<br />

century, 136-138<br />

Spartoi (spar' toy), five men sprung from the serpent's<br />

teeth sown by Cadmus, 378, 397

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