Bk XII:429-535. A centaur.
A monster half-woman, half-snake mother of Cerberus, Chimacra, the Hydra,
and the Sphinx.
Bk IV:464-511. Her venom is part of Tisiphone’s poisonous brew.
Bk VII:404-424. Mother of Cerberus.
A group of islands off the mouth of the River Acheloüs, in Acarnania, opposite the island of Cephallenia.
Bk VIII:547-610. They were nymphs turned into islands by the river-god.
Bk III:115-137. One of the five surviving heroes sprung from the dragon’s teeth sown by Cadmus. He married Agave, the daughter of Cadmus.
Bk III:511-527. Bk III:692-733. He was the father of Pentheus.
Bk X:681-707. He built a temple to Cybele.
Son of Mercury. The swiftest runner.
Bk VIII:260-328. He is present at the Calydonian Boar Hunt.
Bk VIII:329-375. He throws his spear ineffectually at the boar.
Bk III:511-527. Bk III:692-733. An epithet of Pentheus as son of Echion.
Bk III:339-358. A nymph whose voice gave rise to the name for a reverberating sound.
Bk III:359-401. Juno limits her powers of speech. She falls in love with Narcissus and is rejected. She dwindles to sound alone.
Bk III:474-510. She pities Narcissus and echoes his farewells and mourns for him and echoes his sister’s lamentations.
(See John William Waterhouse’s painting – Echo and Narcissus – Walker Art Gallery, Merseyside, England)
Bk XI:67-84. The Edonians were
a Thracian people, ruled at one time by Lycurgus
who was destroyed by Bacchus for opposing
his worship. The Edonides, the women of the Edoni, and worshippers of Bacchus,
murdered Orpheus, and were turned into oak
trees.
Bk XII:64-145. The king of Thebes, in Mysia, and father of Andromache the wife of Hector.
Bk XV:479-546. An Italian nymph, wife of Numa. Unconsoled at his death she is turned into a fountain, and its attendant streams (at Le Mole, by Nemi in Aricia). She was worshipped as a minor deity of childbirth at Aricia, and later in Rome. (outside the Porta Capena: see Frazer’s ‘The Golden Bough’ Chapter I.)
Bk XII:146-209. Bk XII:429-535. A prince of the Lapithae, father of Caenis.
A city in Attica, famous for the worship of Ceres-Demeter.
Bk V:642-678. Triptolemus is the son of the king there, though Eleusis is not mentioned by name at this point in the Latin text.
Bk VII:425-452. Sacred to Ceres, the Mother, and Persephone, the Maiden. The place where Theseus defeated Cercyon.
Bk II:676-701. A city and country in the western Peloponnese.
Bk V:487-532. The native country of Arethusa.
Bk V:572-641. Land of the river-god Alpheus.
Bk V:572-641. The city reached by Arethusa in her flight.
Bk VIII:260-328. Sends Phyleus to the Calydonian Boar Hunt.
Bk IX:159-210. In the Fifth Labour Hercules cleanses the stables of King Augeas of Elis.
Bk XII:536-579. Hercules destroyed the city.
Bk XIV:320-396. Site of the quinquennial games.
Bk XIV:223-319. A comrade of Ulysses. The Odyssey describes his death when he tumbles from the roof of Circe’s house, the morning after a heavy bout of drinking. His ghost begs Ulysses for proper burial, and for the oar that he pulled with his comrades to be set up over his grave. His ashes were entombed on Mount Circeo.
Bk XII:429-535. A centaur.
Bk XIV:101-153. The Paradise of the afterlife, home of the blessed spirits in the Underworld.
Bk XIV:101-153. Of Elysium, the paradise of the Underworld.
The daughters of Pierus, king of Emathia in Macedonia.
Bk V:294-331. They challenge the Muses to a contest, and one sings of Typhoeus and the flight of the gods to Egypt.
Bk V:642-678. They are defeated and turned into magpies for their insolence.
Bk V:74-106. An old man killed by Chromis in the fight between Phineus and Perseus.
Bk XII:429-535. Bk XV:745-842. Of Emathia, a district of Macedonia.
Bk VIII:260-328. Bk VIII:329-375. Son of Hippocoön, killed at the Calydonian Boar Hunt.
Bk I:568-587. A river in Thessaly.
Bk VI:103-128. Disguised as the river-god, Neptune rapes Iphimedia and begets the Aloïdae.
Bk VII:179-233. Medea gathers magic herbs there.
Bk XIII:123-381. A Lycian, killed by Ulysses.
Bk II:752-786. She is sent by Minerva to punish Aglauros.
Bk II:150-177. One of the four horses of the Sun.
Bk I:747-764. The son of Io and Jupiter, grandson of Inachus, worshipped as a god in Egypt alongside his mother. Io is therefore synonymous with Isis (or Hathor the cow-headed goddess with whom she was often confused), and Epaphus with Horus.
Bk II:227-271. Bk VII:350-403. The city north of Mycenae, on the Isthmus between Attica and the Argolis. Ephyre is an ancient name for the city.
Bk III:273-315. A city in Argolis,
sacred to Aesculapius. The pre-Greek
god Maleas was later equated with Apollo, and he and his son Aesculapius were
worshipped there. There were games in honour of the god every four years, and
from 395BC a
drama festival. The impressive ancient theatre has been restored and plays are
performed there. From the end of the 5th c. BC the cult of Asklepios spread widely through
the ancient world reaching Athens in 420BC and Rome (as Aesculapius) in 293BC.
Bk VII:425-452. The scene of Theseus’s defeat of Periphetes.
Bk XV:622-745. Bk XV:622-745. The home of Aesculapius.
Bk I:381-415. A Titan, the brother of Prometheus. He was the father of Pyrrha, wife to Deucalion her cousin. He married Pandora
who opened the box that Prometheus had warned them to keep closed, releasing
illness, old age, work, passion, vice and madness into the world.
Bk I:381-415. Pyrrha, the daughter of Epimetheus, brother of Prometheus.
A region in northern Greece containing Dodona.
Bk VIII:260-328. Described as grassy. Noted for its massive bulls.
Bk XIII:705-737. Contains the city of Buthrotos.
Bk III:597-637. A seaman, companion of Acoetes.
Bk XIV:609-622. One of the Alban kings.
Bk XV:259-306. A river in Argolis. The river Stymphelos, in Arcadia, that reappears in the Argolis, on Mount Chaon, after running underground. (See Pausanias II 24, and VIII 22)
Bk V:533-571. Bk X:1-85. Bk XIV:397-434. A name for the underworld.
King of Athens, son of Pandion, father of Orithyia and Procris.
Book VI:675-721. He inherits the kingdom from Pandion, and is noted for his sound government and military effectiveness.
Bk VII:425-452. Used to signify Athens and the Athenians.
Bk VII:661-758. He married his daughter Procris to Cephalus.
Bk VIII:547-610. His kingship of Athens remembered.
Bk II:531-565. A son of Vulcan (Hephaestus), born without a mother (or born from the Earth after Hephaestus the victim of a deception had been repulsed by Athene). Legendary king of Athens and a skilled charioteer. He is represented by the constellation Auriga the charioteer, containing the star Capella. (Alternatively the constellation represents the she-goat Amaltheia that suckled the infant Jupiter, and the stars ζ (zeta) and η (eta) Aurigae are her Kids. It is a constellation visible in the winter months.)
Bk IX:418-438. His father Vulcan (Mulciber) wishes he might have a second life.
Bk II:301-328. God of the River Po in northern Italy. His river receives the body of Phaethon after the destruction of the sun chariot.
He is represented by the constellation Eridanus, south of Taurus, which meanders across the sky.
Bk XII:429-535. A centaur.
Bk VI:103-128. The daughter of Icarius, loved by Bacchus, and depicted by Arachne on her web. Her country is Panchaia.
Bk X:431-502. She was set in the sky as the constellation Virgo, after her suicide, by hanging, in despair at finding her father Icarius’s body. Icarius is identified with the constellation Boötes. Ovid is contrasting her piety and love for her father with Myrrha’s impiety and carnal desire for hers. In northern latitudes Boötes and Virgo, which are near to each other in the sky, would be declining from the zenith at midnight in late April. Virgo, the second largest constellation, is associated with the goddess of justice holding the scales, but she is also Ceres-Demeter and holds the ear of wheat, the star Spica. (See the Ceres entry). It would not make sense for Virgo to be in the sky at the time of the Greek harvest festival, the Thesmophoria, since that took place in autumn when the sun was in Virgo. However it does make sense for countries where the harvest time is different, as presumably in Panchaia. (The Egyptian harvest for example, geared to the Nile flood-cycle, was in March-April.)
Bk I:199-243. A Fury. The Furies, The Three Sisters, were Alecto, Tisiphone and Megaera, the daughters of Night and Uranus. They were the personified pangs of cruel conscience that pursued the guilty. (See Aeschylus – The Eumenides). Their abode is in Hades by the Styx.
Bk IV:416-463. Juno summons them at the gate of hell.
Bk IV:464-511. Tisiphone maddens Ino and Athamas.
Bk VI:401-438. They attend (invisibly) the wedding of Tereus and Procne.
Bk VI:653-674. Tereus calls on them in his grief and desire for revenge.
Bk VIII:451-514. Althaea calls on them to aid her vengeance.
Bk X:1-85. They weep for the first time at the sound of Orpheus’s song.
Bk X:298-355. They pursued Myrrha.
Bk XI:1-66. A synonym for the madness of the Maenads.
The wife of Amphiaraüs whom she betrayed to Polynices.
Bk VIII:260-328. Her husband is present at the Calydonian Boar Hunt.
Bk IX:394-417. Themis prophesies her murder by her son Alcmaeon in vengeance for his father’s death.
An epithet of Venus from Eryx, a mountain in Sicily sacred to her.
Bk V:332-384. She asks Cupid to make Dis fall in love with Proserpine.
Bk II:227-271. A river and mountain in Arcadia.
Bk II:496-507. Arcas meets his mother Callisto, who is transformed into a bear, while hunting in the woods of Erymanthus.
Bk V:572-641. Passed by Arethusa in her flight.
Bk IX:159-210. In the Fourth Labour, Hercules captured a giant wild boar that lived there.
The son of the Thessalian king Triopas. His daughter is Mestra.
Bk VIII:725-776. He violates the grove of Ceres.
Bk VIII:777-842. In punishment Ceres torments him with Hunger.
Bk VIII:843-884. After living off Mestra’s skills he ends by consuming himself.
Bk V:74-106. The son of Actor, companion of Phineus. There is possibly confusion here with Eurytus(3).
Bk II:201-226. A mountain on the north-western tip of Sicily sacred to Venus Aphrodite. Daedalus made a golden honeycomb for her shrine there, after fleeing from Crete via Cumae.
Bk XIV:75-100. Acestes. A son of Venus (Eryx), half-brother of Aeneas.
Bk V:149-199. An opponent of Perseus, petrified by the Gorgon’s head.
Bk IX:394-417. The son of Oedipus and Iocasta, brother of Polynices who fights against him in the war of the Seven against Thebes. The two brothers kill each other.
Bk V:149-199. A Nabatean opponent of Perseus, killed by him.
Bk I:765-779. The country in northeast Africa.
Bk II:227-271. The people acquire black skins.
Bk IV:663-705. The country of Cepheus.
Bk II:201-226. The volcanic mountain in eastern Sicily.
A country in Central Italy. Its people are the Etrurians or Etruscans. Hence Tuscany in modern Italy.
Bk XIV:445-482. The Tyrrhenians. They go to war with Aeneas and his Trojans.
Bk XV:552-621. Noted for their seers’ ability to tell the future.
Bk XII:290-326. One of the Lapithae.
The son of Carmentis, emigrated from Pallantium in Arcadia before the Trojan War and founded the city of Pallanteum in Latium, on the future site of Rome (The Palatine Hill).
Bk XIV:445-482. He gives help to Aeneas in the war.
Bk VII:179-233. Bk XIII:898-968. The large island close to eastern Greece
separated from it by the Euboean Gulf. It contains Eretria and Aegae. Anthedon is on the mainland across the Gulf
from Euboea.
Bk IX:89-158. Hercules conquers King Eurytus at Oechalia and sacrifices to Jupiter at Cenaeum in the north-west of the island.
Bk IX:211-272. Lichas becomes an island of that name in the Euboean Gulf.
Bk XIII:123-381. Aulis faces it.
Bk XIII:640-674. Two of Anius’s daughters flee there from Delos.
Bk XIV:1-74. Glaucus fishes its waters.
Bk XIV:154-222. Euboean colonists
founded Cumae in Italy.
Bk VIII:515-546. A river of Aetolia near Calydon.
Bk IX:89-158. The scene of the rape of Deianira.
Bk IV:1-30. An epithet for Bacchus from the cries of his followers.
Bk V:294-331. The wife of Pierus, and mother of the Pierides.
Bk VII:350-403. The father of Botres.
Bk VI:401-438. ‘The kindly Goddesses’, an ironic euphemism for the Furies or Erinyes.
Bk VIII:451-514. Althaea calls on them to aid her vengeance.
Bk IX:394-417. Themis prophesies that they will pursue Alcmaeon.
Bk X:1-85. They weep for the first time at the sound of Orpheus’s song.
A mythical Thracian singer, priest of Ceres-Demeter, who brought the Eleusinian mysteries to Attica.
Bk XI:85-145. He was taught the rites along with Midas by Orpheus.
Bk VIII:329-375. One of the heroes in the Calydonian Boar Hunt. Knocked down by the boar’s charge.
The son of Panthoüs, a Trojan killed by Menelaüs.
BkXV:143-175. A previous incarnation of Pythagoras.
Bk II:227-271. The river of ancient Babylon in modern Iraq.
Bk II:833-875. Daughter of Agenor, king of Phoenicia, and sister of Cadmus, abducted by Jupiter disguised as a white bull. ( See Paolo Veronese’s painting – The Rape of Europa – Palazzo Ducale, Venice)
Bk VI:103-128. Depicted by Arachne.
Bk VIII:1-80. Minos is her son.
Bk II:227-271. A river in Laconia in southern Greece.
Bk X:143-219. Phoebus haunts it when in love with Hyacinthus.
Bk I:52-68. Bk VIII:1-80. The East Wind. Auster is the South Wind, Zephyrus the West Wind, and Boreas is the North Wind.
Bk X:1-85. The wife of Orpheus, who died after being bitten by a snake. Orpheus went to the Underworld to ask for her life, but lost her when he broke the injunction not to look back at her. (See Rilke’s poem, ‘Orpheus, Eurydice, Hermes’, and his ‘Sonnets to Orpheus’, and Gluck’s Opera ‘Orphée’).
Bk XI:1-66. Orpheus finds her again after his death.
Bk XIV:223-319. A companion of Ulysses, who escapes Circe’s transformation of Ulysses’s crew.
Bk XIII:738-788. Telemus, son of Eurymus.
Bk IV:190-213. The primal Goddess, mother of the Graces (Charites). A goddess, with Thetis, of the sea. Ovid makes her the mother of Leucothoë, by Orchamus of Babylon and Persia. In all her manifestations she is the Great Goddess.
Bk IV:214-255. Sol disguises himself as her to approach Leucothoë.
Bk XII:290-326. A centaur.
Bk VII:350-403.A king of Cos, slain by Hercules. His city was Astypalaea.
A Thessalian hero at Troy.
Bk XIII:1-122. He does not compete for the arms of Achilles.
The king of Mycenae, son of Sthenelus.
Bk IX:159-210. Jupiter boasted that he had fathered a son who would be called Heracles (Hercules) the ‘glory of Hera (Juno)’ and rule the house of Perseus. Juno made him promise that any king born before nightfall would be High King. She then hastened the birth of Eurystheus to Nicippe wife of King Sthenelus. Eurystheus ruled Hercules and set him the Twelve Labours to perform. Hercules treats him and Juno as endlessly hostile to himself.
Bk IX:273-323. He pursues his hatred of Hercules through the generations.
Bk VIII:329-375. Hippasus, son of Eurytus, one of the heroes in the Calydonian Boar Hunt. His thigh is ripped open by the boar’s tusk.
Bk VIII:260-328. He is present at the Calydonian Boar Hunt.
Bk IX:394-417. Iole, daughter of Eurytus.
Bk IX:89-158. Bk IX:324-393.The father of Iole and Dryope. The king of Oechalia. He names his grandson, Dryope’s child, Amphissus.
Bk XII:210-244. The centaur. He precipitates the battle between the Lapithae and the Centaurs by attempting to carry off Hippodamia.
Bk VIII:260-328. The son of Actor, and the father of Hippasus and brother of Cleatus. Possibly there is confusion here with Eurytus(4).
Bk V:74-106. The son of Actor. A companion of Phineus. He is killed by Perseus, with a heavy mixing bowl. Possibly there is confusion here with Eurytus(3).
Bk XII:245-289. One of the Lapithae.
He killed Gryneus at the battle of the Lapiths and
Centaurs.
Bk IX:89-158.Rumour, personified. She comes to Deianira.
Bk XII:39-63. The House of Rumour described.
Bk XV:1-59. The harbinger of glory.
Bk VIII:777-842. Famine, a hag, the personification of hunger. Ceres sends her to torment Erysichthon.
Bk VIII:843-884. She leaves him with an incurable and growing hunger.
Bk XIV:320-396. A tributary of the Tiber.
Bk II:633-675. The three Fates were born of Erebus and Night. Clothed in white, they spin, measure out, and sever the thread of each human life. Clotho spins the thread. Lachesis measures it. Atropos wields the shears.
Bk XV:745-842. The gods cannot overrule
them, and prevent Caesar’s
assassination.
Bk XIV:445-482. Latinus, son of Faunus.
Bk I:177-198. The fauns. Demi-gods. Rural deities with horns and tails.
Bk XIII:738-788. Father of Acis. An ancient king of Latium.
Bk XIV:445-482. Father of Latinus.
Bk VI:313-381. A god of the fields and flocks, identified with Pan. Worshipped by country people.
Bk I:177-198. Bk VI:382-400 . Fauni, Demi-gods, ranked with Satyrs.
Bk IX:595-665. The west wind, bringer of warmth and spring.
Bk II:111-149. Bk XIII:1-122. Goddess of fortune, chance, fate. Her attributes are the wheel, the globe, the ship’s rudder and prow, and the cornucopia. She is sometimes winged, and blindfolded. (See Leonardo’s drawings.)
Bk IX:273-323. Handmaid to Alcmena. She deceives Lucina the goddess of childbirth, and is punished by being turned into a weasel, with the same tawny hair. (Weasels in England are reddish-brown. Ovid says ‘flava comus’ which suggests reddish-yellow. The birth of its young through its mouth has, of course, no biological validity, but Graves suggests it derives from the weasel’s habit of carrying its young in its mouth from place to place!)
A sea nymph, daughter of Nereus and Doris. ( See the fresco ‘Galatea’ by Raphael, Rome, Farnesina)
Bk XIII:738-788. She tells her story to Scylla. Loving Acis, she is pursued by Polyphemus.
Bk XIII:789-869. She hears Polyphemus’s complaint.
Bk XIII:870-897. When Acis is crushed by the rock, thrown at him by Polyphemus, she changes Acis into his ancestral form of a river.
Bk XIII:898-968. She ends her story to Scylla and departs.
Bk II:227-271. Bk IV:1-30. Bk V:30-73. The sacred river of northern India.
Bk VI:619-652. The area along its banks is
inhabited by tigers.
The son of Tros, brother of Ilus and Assaracus, loved by Jupiter because of his great beauty.
Bk X:143-219. Bk XI:749-795. Jupiter, in the form of an eagle, abducted him and made him his cup-bearer, against Juno’s will. Ganymede’s name was given to the largest moon of the planet Jupiter.
Bk III:138-164. A valley and sacred spring in Boeotia sacred to Diana, where Actaeon sees her bathing.
Bk I:525-552. The Roman province, in the region of modern France.
Bk IX:159-210. The monster with three bodies, killed by Hercules. In the Tenth Labour, Hercules brought back Geryon’s famous herd of cattle after shooting three arrows through the three bodies. Geryon was the son of Chrysaor and Callirhoë, and King of Tartessus in Spain.
Bk I:151-176. Bk I:177-198. Bk X:143-219. Monsters, sons of Tartarus and Earth, with many arms and serpent feet, who made war on the gods by piling up the mountains, and overthrown by Jupiter. They were buried under Sicily.
Bk X:143-219. Orpheus sang their war with the gods.
Bk VII:179-233. A fisherman of Anthedon in Boeotia.
Bk XIII:898-968. He is transformed into a sea god, and tells the story of his transformation to Scylla who rejects him.
Bk XIV:1-74. He asks Circe for a charm to make Scylla love him, but she transforms Scylla into a sea-monster instead.
The daughter of Oeneus, king of Calydon, sister of Meleager.
Bk VIII:515-546. She is spared by Diana from being turned into a bird.
The best known of the Three Gorgons, the daughters of Phorcys. A winged monster with snake locks, glaring eyes and brazen claws whose gaze turns men to stone. Her sisters were Stheino and Euryale.
Bk IV:604-662, Bk IV:663-705. Perseus has been helped by Athene and Hermes to overcome Medusa. He was not to look at her head directly but only in a brightly-polished shield. He cut off her head with an adamantine sickle, at which Pegasus the winged horse and the warrior Chrysaor sprang from her body. He now uses her head to petrify Atlas, and tells Cepheus and Cassiope of the exploit.
Bk IV:753-803. Perseus tells of how he took her severed head, and of how Minerva placed snakes on her head, because Medusa was violated by Neptune in Minerva’s temple.
Bk V:149-199 . Perseus uses the head against his enemies.
Bk VII:759-795. From Gortyn in Crete, hence Cretan. Its bows noted for the swiftness of the arrow in flight.
Bk VI:401-438. Bk XIV:805-828. An epithet of Mars.
Bk XV:843-870. Mars, the father of Romulus (Quirinus).
The three daughters of Ceto and Phorcys, sisters of the Gorgons, fair-faced and swanlike but with hair grey from birth and one eye and one tooth between them. Their names were Deino, Enyo and Pemphredo.
Bk IV:753-803. Perseus visits them in their cave under Mount Atlas and steals the single eye.
Bk XIII:123-381. The country in southern Europe, bordering on the Ionian, Cretan and Aegean Seas.
Bk XV:622-745 et.al. Grecian.
Bk XI:749-795. A river and river god of Asia Minor, father of Alexiroë. Site of a famous victory of Alexander the Great.
The three sisters, daughters of Jupiter and Eurynome, attendants to Venus, used collectively, Gratia. Often depicted with arms entwined in dance (See Botticelli’s ‘Primavera’) their names were Aglaia, Euphrosyne, and Thalia. They signified giving, receiving, and thanking, later the Platonic triad, love, beauty, truth.
Bk VI:401-438. Attendant on wedding ceremonies.
Bk XII:245-289. A centaur. He kills Broteas, and Orios the son of Mycale. He is killed by Exadius at the battle of Lapiths and Centaurs.
Bk V:250-293. An island of the Cyclades.
Bk VII:453-500. Not allied to Crete.
Bk IV:416-465. The underworld, the kingdom of Dis.
Bk XIV:698-771. The Kids, two stars in Auriga the Charioteer, treated as a constellation by the ancients. See Erichthonius.
Bk I: 568-587. Bk V:294-331. The ancient name for Thessaly from Haemon father of Thessalos.
Bk II:63-89. Used as an adjective for the constellation Sagittarius the Archer, the zodiacal sign formed when the Thessalian centaur Chiron was placed among the stars by Zeus.
Bk VII:159-178. The parents of the Argonauts are Haemonians.
Bk VIII:777-842. The land of Erysichthon.
Bk XI:221-265. Thetis’s cave is on its shores.
Bk XI:346-409. The land of Acastus, king of Iolchos.
Bk XI:650-709. Trachin in Haemonia.
Bk XII:210-244. The country of Caeneus and Pirithoüs.
Thessalian, from Haemonia.
Bk VII:100-158. Used of Jason.
Bk XII:64-145. Used of Achilles.
Bk II:201-226. A mountain in Thrace.
Bk VI:70-102. Supposed to be a mortal turned into a mountain for assuming the name of a great god.
Bk X:1-85. Orpheus flees there after losing Eurydice a second time.
Bk V:107-148. A companion of Phineus from Bactria, killed by Perseus.
Bk XII:429-535. One of the Lapithae.
Bk XIII:123-381. A Lycian, killed by Ulysses.
Bk I:689-722. A wood nymph.
See Ammon.
Bk III:115-137. The wife of Cadmus and daughter of Mars and Venus.
Bk IV:563-603. She is turned with him into a snake.
Bk IX:394-417. At her marriage to Cadmus, Venus gave her the fatal necklace that conferred irresistible beauty.
Bk VII:1-73. The ‘snatchers’, Aellopus and Ocypete, the fair-haired, loathsome, winged daughters of Thaumas and the ocean nymph Electra, who snatch up criminals for punishment by the Furies. They live in a cave in Cretan Dicte. They plagued Phineus of Salmydessus, the blind prophet, and were chased away by the winged sons of Boreas.
Bk XIII:705-737. An alternative myth
has Phineus drive them away to the Strophades
where Ovid has Aeneas meet the harpy Aëllo, and Virgil, Celaeno. They are
foul-bellied birds with girls’ faces, and clawed hands, and their faces are
pale with hunger. (See Virgil Aeneid III:190-220)
Bk IX:666-713. The infant Horus, the son of Isis and Osiris. The Egyptian god, misinterpreted as a god of silence by the Greeks, as he is represented sitting on his mother’s lap with his thumb in his mouth.
The daughter of Iuno, born without a father.
Bk IX:394-417. She is the wife of Hercules after his deification, and has the power to renew life.
Bk II:227-271. Bk XI:1-66.The river in Thrace down which Orpheus’s head was washed to the sea.
The daughter of the Titans Perses and Asterie,
Latona’s sister. A Thracian goddess of witches, her name is
a feminine form of Apollo’s title ‘the
far-darter’ . She was a lunar goddess, with shining Titans for parents. In Hades
she was Prytania of the dead, or the Invincible Queen. She gave riches, wisdom,
and victory, and presided over flocks and navigation. She had three bodies and
three heads, those of a lioness, a bitch, and a mare. Her ancient power was to
give to or withhold from mortals any gift. She was sometimes merged with the
lunar aspect of Diana-Artemis, and presided
over purifications and expiations. She was the goddess of enchantments and
magic charms, and sent demons to earth to torture mortals. At night she
appeared with her retinue of infernal dogs, haunting crossroads (as Trivia), tombs and the scenes of crimes.
At crossroads her columns or statues had three faces – the Triple Hecates – and
offerings were made at the full moon to propitiate her.
Bk VI:129-145. Goddess of magical herbs, used by Minerva.
Bk VII:74-99. Medea the Thracian witch makes Jason promise to marry her, taking his oath on the altar of Hecate, and gives him magic herbs to carry out his tasks.
Bk VII:159-178. Medea invokes her aid in her attempt to renew Aeson’s life.
Bk VII:179-233. Goddess of witchcraft.
Bk VII:234-293. Medea sacrifices to her.
Bk XIV:1-74. Bk XIV:397-434. Circe invokes her spells and her presence.
Bk XI:749-795. The Trojan hero, eldest son of Priam and Hecuba.
Bk XII:1-38. Sacrifices at the empty tomb of Aesacus his half-brother.
Bk XII:64-145. He killed Protesilaüs, the first Greek to fall in the Trojan War. His own fate is delayed till the end of the war.
Bk XII:429-535. Nestor compares himself in his prime with Hector.
Bk XII:536-579.Nestor cites him as a famous enemy of the Greeks.
Bk XII:579-628. Neptune reminds Apollo of Hector’s body dragged around the walls of Troy.
Bk XIII:1-122. He torched the Greek ships, and terrifies the Greeks in battle, bringing the gods with him to the battlefield.
Bk XIII:123-381. He promised Dolon the horses of Achilles.
Bk XIII:399-428. Hecuba takes his ashes with her from Troy. His son Astyanax is murdered as the city falls.
Bk XIII:481-575. The agony of his mother Hecuba.
Bk XIII:640-674. His presence had allowed Troy to hold out for so long.
The daughter of Dymas, and wife of Priam, king of Troy.
Bk VII:350-403. Bk XIII:399-428. Changed to a black bitch of Hecate, Maera, and spreading terror with her barking.
Bk XI:749-795. The mother of Hector.
Bk XIII:399-428. She gathers Hectors’s ashes as Ulysses takes her away from Troy.
Bk XIII:429-480. She sees her daughter Polyxena sacrificed to appease the ghost of Achilles.
Bk XIII:481-575. She laments Polyxena, finds and laments the body of Polydorus, kills Polymestor, and turns into the maddened dog, Maera. Her undeserved fate is pitied by the Trojan women, the Greeks, and all the gods, even Juno (who sought the downfall of Troy).
Bk XIII:576-622. Only Aurora’s thoughts are elsewhere.
The daughter of Leda and Jupiter (Tyndareus was her putative father), sister of Clytemnaestra, and the Dioscuri. The wife of Menelaüs.
Bk XIII:123-381. She was taken, by Paris, to Troy, instigating the Trojan War. Ulysses and Menelaüs demanded her return in front of the Trojan senate.
Bk XIV:623-697. Noted for her many suitors.
Bk XV:199-236. She bemoans old age, and the ravages of time.
Bk XIII:1-122. The son of Priam, an augur, captured by Ulysses and Diomede along with Pallas’s sacred image, the Palladium.
Bk XIII:705-737. Aeneas visits him at Buthrotos in Epirus where he has built a second Troy, and Helenus foretells his future.
Bk XV:418-452. He prophesied Aeneas’s future, and that of Rome.
Bk II:329-343. The seven daughters of the Sun god and Clymene.
Bk II 344-346.They mourn their brother Phaethon. Two of them are named. Lampetia and the eldest Phaethüsa. Turned into poplars as they mourn Phaethon their brother, their tears become drops of amber.
Bk X:86-105. The trees are among those gathering to hear Orpheus’s song.
Bk X:243-297. They shed amber tears, and amber adorns Pygmalion’s ivory statue.
Bk XV:259-306. A seaport of Achaea, near Aigion, on the Corinthian Gulf now submerged after an earthquake. Pausanias gives the background. (See Pausanias VII 24)
A name for the constellation of the Great Bear, Ursa Major.
Bk VIII:183-235. Icarus is warned not to fly too near the constellation.
Bk V:74-106. A companion of Phineus, killed by Perseus.
Bk II:201-226. The mountain in Boeotia near the Gulf of Corinth where the Muses lived. The sacred springs of Helicon were Aganippe and Hippocrene, both giving poetic inspiration. The Muses’ other favourite haunt was Mount Parnassus in Phocis with its Castalian Spring. They also guarded the oracle at Delphi.
Bk V:250-293. Minerva visits it to see the fountain of Hippocrene sprung from under the hoof of Pegasus, the winged horse.
Bk V:642-678. A haunt of the Muses.
Bk VIII:515-546. The domain of poetic genius.
Bk XI:194-220. The daughter of Athamas and Nephele, sister of Phrixus. Escaping from Ino on the golden ram, she fell into the sea and was drowned, giving her name to the Hellespont.
The straits that link the Propontis with
the Aegean Sea.
Bk XI:194-220. Named after Helle, and close to the site of Troy.
Bk XIII:399-428. The scene of Hecuba’s appearance as the black bitch Maera.
Bk XII:290-326. A centaur.
Bk V:385-424. Of Henna (Enna) a town in Sicily. The plains around it.
Bk XV:622-745. The Roman town near Naples on the slopes of Vesuvius, destroyed with Pompeii by the eruption of 79AD and rediscovered in 1709. It was a residential town surrounded by the villas of wealthy Romans, with a rich artistic life.
The Hero, son of Jupiter. He was set in the sky as the constellation Hercules between Lyra and Corona Borealis.
Bk VII:404-424. He drags the dog Cerberus out of the underworld.
Bk IX:1-88. The son of Jupiter and Alcmena, the wife of Amphitryon. Called Alcides from Amphitryon’s father Alceus. Called also Amphitryoniades. Called also Tyrinthius from Tiryns his home city in the Argolis. Jupiter predicted at his birth that a scion of Perseus would be born, greater than all other descendants. Juno delayed Hercules birth and hastened that of Eurystheus, grandson of Perseus, making Hercules subservient to him. Hercules was set twelve labours by Eurystheus at Juno’s instigation, Bk IX:159-210:
1. The killing of the Nemean lion.
2. The destruction of the Lernean Hydra. - Bk IX:1-88. He uses the poison from the Hydra for his arrows - Bk IX:89-158.
3. The capture of the stag with golden antlers.
4.