Crowell's Handbook of Classical Mythology |
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Page 267
I ELENUS HELIUS own invention , but it became widely familiar and formed the basis of Euripides ' romantic comedy Helen . According to this extraordinary tale , Helen never went to Troy at all . In Helen ( 31-48 ) , the heroine explains ...
I ELENUS HELIUS own invention , but it became widely familiar and formed the basis of Euripides ' romantic comedy Helen . According to this extraordinary tale , Helen never went to Troy at all . In Helen ( 31-48 ) , the heroine explains ...
Page 303
Hermes appears as a character in Aeschylus ' Prometheus Bound and ( without speaking ) in his Eumenides ; in Euripides ' lon ; and in several Greek and Roman comedies . References to the god in Classical works are too numerous to cite ...
Hermes appears as a character in Aeschylus ' Prometheus Bound and ( without speaking ) in his Eumenides ; in Euripides ' lon ; and in several Greek and Roman comedies . References to the god in Classical works are too numerous to cite ...
Page 603
Xuthus , however , remains happy in the belief that he is the young man's father - a belief that all writers but Euripides seem to have shared . ( Apollodorus 1.7.3 ; Pausanias 7.1.2-3 . ) Х Xanthippe . See PLEURON .
Xuthus , however , remains happy in the belief that he is the young man's father - a belief that all writers but Euripides seem to have shared . ( Apollodorus 1.7.3 ; Pausanias 7.1.2-3 . ) Х Xanthippe . See PLEURON .
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According accounts Achilles Adrastus Aeschylus Aetolia ancient Aphrodite Apollo Apollodorus Apollonius Rhodius appeared Argonauts Argos Artemis Athens became bore brother brought called carried caused child claimed Crete daughter death descendants died Dionysus earth eponym Eteocles Euripides Fabulae father fell followed force gave Giants give given goddess gods Greek Hades hand head Helen Hera Heracles Hermes Hesiod Homer honor horse husband Hyginus identified Iliad island Italy Jason killed king known land later leader lived married Medea Messenia Metamorphoses Minos mother Mount murder myths nymph Odysseus offered once oracle originally Ovid Pausanias perhaps Perseus Poseidon punished refused region remained returned river Roman rule sailed seems sent ships sister sons story Thebes Theseus Thestius throne told took Trojan Troy turned wife women worshiped writers young youth Zeus