Search: in
Cephalus
Cephalus in Encyclopedia Encyclopedia
  Tutorials     Encyclopedia     Videos     Books     Software     DVDs  
       
Encyclopedia results for Cephalus

Cephalus





Encyclopedia results for Cephalus

  1. Cephalus

    Image Nicolas Poussin 007.jpg thumb right Cephalus and Eos , by Nicolas Poussin circa 1630 Cephalus Greek ... used here because Cephalus was the founding head of a great family that includes Odysseus. It could be that Cephalus means the head of the sun who kills evaporates Procris dew with his unerring ray or javelin . Cephalus was one of the lovers of the dawn goddess Eos . Sumptuous sacrifices for Cephalus ..., The demes of Attica 1986 194 99 , noted by Fowler 1993. ref Cephalus son of Hermes and Herse According to pseudo Apollodorus, Bibliotheke ref Bibliotheke , 3.14.3. ref Cephalus was an Athens Athenian .... Cephalus husband of Procris Image Eos Kephalos MNA Inv11158.jpg thumb left upright Eos carries off Cephalus, on an Attica Attic Red figure pottery red figure lekythos , ca. 470 460 BCE Cephalus is also ... localised the myth by asserting that Cephalus was married to Procris , a daughter of Erechtheus , an ancient ... 170. ref The goddess of dawn, Eos, ref Aurora mythology Aurora in Roman mythology . ref kidnapped Cephalus when he was hunting. The resistant Cephalus and Eos became lovers, and she bore him a son named ... and Hesperus as children of Cephalus and Eos. However, Cephalus always pined for Procris, causing ... reunited with Procris after an interval of eight years, Cephalus tested her by returning from the hunt ... continued to be used by Cephalus, who was an avid hunter. Procris then conceived doubts about her .... She climbed to where he was to spy on him. Cephalus, hearing a stirring in the brush and thinking ... marry Eos . Cephalus was distraught at the death of his beloved Procris, and went into exile. The primary ... 97 1993 29 42 . ref Cephalus helped Amphitryon of Mycenae in a war against the Taphians and Teleboans ... . The people who lived on Cephallenia and nearby islands came to be known as Cephallenians. Cephalus ... named Clymene, according to some sources bore him a son named Arcesius . Arceisius succeeded Cephalus ... . Nevertheless, Cephalus never forgave himself over the death of Procris, and he committed suicide ...   more details



  1. Parnassius cephalus

    italictitle Taxobox name Parnassius cephalus image Parnassius cephalus ulster 1889.jpg image caption Parnassius cephalus sengei Pullow regnum Animal ia phylum Arthropod a classis Insect a ordo Lepidoptera familia Papilionidae genus Parnassius species P. cephalus binomial Parnassius cephalus binomial authority G. E. Grumm Grshimailo Grumm Grshimailo , 1891 Parnassius cephalus Grum Grshimailo, 1891 is a high altitude butterfly which is found in Tibet and West China . It is a member of the Snow Apollo genus Parnassius of the Swallowtail Papilionidae family. External links http goran.waldeck.se pcephal.html Distribution map from Waldeck Parrnassius of the World Category Parnassius cephalus Papilionidae stub pl Parnassius cephalus vi Parnassius cephalus ...   more details



  1. Procris

    against credulity. Cephalus quite innocently beseeches a cool breeze Zephyr ref name May or Aura ..., and hastened in fury to the valley, then crept silently to the forest where Cephalus hunted. When ..., Cephalus shot an arrow at what he thought would be a wild beast in the brush. Dying, the woman ... Aurora mythology Aurora to the Romans seizes Cephalus while he is hunting, but Cephalus begins to pine for Procris. A disgruntled Eos returns Cephalus to his wife, but offers to show Cephalus how easily ... word for breeze. Cephalus kills her by accident when she stirs in the bushes nearby, upset at his beeseching ...   more details



  1. Thomas Edwards (poet)

    Thomas Edwards floruit fl. 1587 1595 was an English poet who published two Ovidian epic poem s Cephalus and Procris and Narcissus . ref name MLR Charlotte Carmichael Stopes Thomas Edwards, Author of Cephalus and Procris, Narcissus The Modern Language Review, Vol. 16, No. 3 4 Jul. Oct., 1921 , pp. 209 223 ref Beyond his name, nothing is known with certainty of Edwards. He has been provisionally identified with a Shropshire law student of that name who transferred from Furnival s Inn to Lincoln s Inn in June 1587, where he shared a room with a known friend of John Donne . Edwards possibly contributed the Latin verse to Adriaan van Roomen s Parvum theatrum urbium which was published in 1595. ref name ODNB Matthew Steggle, Edwards, Thomas fl. 1587 1595 , Oxford Dictionary of National Biography , Oxford University Press, 2004 ref Cephalus and Procris and Narcissus Edward s two known poems concern characters who all feature in Ovid s poem Metamorphoses . Cephalus Cephalus the husband of Procris Cephalus and Procris are a romantic couple. Narcissus mythology Narcissus famously fell in love with his own reflection. Edward s poems were published as a single volume in 1595 Cephalus and Procris in couplet form, Narcissus in a seven line stanza . ref name ODNB In the first poem Edwards appears to be imitating Marlowe, and in the latter Shakespeare. ref Tucker Brooke et al. The Renaissance 1500 1660 Routledge, 1967 p406 ref The author concluded each work with a long postscript in Narcissus this includes, using aliases, references to other poets including Amintas Thomas Watson poet Thomas Watson Collyn Edmund Spenser Leander Christopher Marlowe Rosamond Samuel Daniel and Adon Shakespeare . ref Katherine Duncan Jones, Shakespeare, The Motley Player, in The Review of English Studies , NS ... Cephalus and Procris in the Pyramus and Thisbe episode in A Midsummer Night s Dream , supposedly ... Quince. ref W.E. Buckley Ed Cephalus and Procris Narcissus Roxburghe Club 1882 preface ref References ...   more details



  1. Tithonos

    Unreferenced date October 2008 In Greek mythology , Tithonos was a son of Eos and Cephalus . The name of Eos lover, Tithonus , is also sometimes spelled Tithonos. He is mentioned in Book Eleven of The Iliad as the haughty Tithonos, by whom Eos slept Richard Lattimore translation . In this instance, he is most likely Eos s lover and not her son. He is also mentioned in Book Five of The Odyssey as a lord, and Eos his lady. Greek myth stub Category Greek mythology ko uk ...   more details



  1. European chub

    FishBase species genus Leuciscus species cephalus year 2006 month 3 Category Squalius Category Fish of Europe be bg bs Klijen ca Squalius cephalus cs Jelec tlou de D bel et Turb myv es Squalius cephalus fr Chevesne hr Klen riba it Squalius cephalus ka kk lt Europinis ... Kle pt Squalius cephalus ro Clean ru sk Jalec hlavat sl Klen sr fi Turpa sv F rna ...   more details



  1. Gavrilo Martsenkovich

    Unreferenced auto yes date December 2009 Gavrilo Martsenkovich Lang ru known as Gavrilushka was a Russian opera actor and singer in the 18th century. He was a member of the group called the pevchie the singers of Count Andrey Kirillovich Razumovsky . He played the main role Cephalus in the opera by Francesco Araja Tsefal i Prokris Cephalus and Prokris written to a Russian libretto by Alexander Sumarokov after the Metamorphoses by Ovid , staged at St. Petersburg on March 7, OS February 27 , 1755. Martsenkovich was born in Ukraine and was likely educated at the Glukhov school of music. Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Martsenkovich, Gavrilo ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH Ukraine DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH DEFAULTSORT Martsenkovich, Gavrilo Category Year of birth missing Category Year of death missing Category Russian opera singers Category 18th century Russian people Russia opera singer stub ...   more details



  1. Arcesius

    In Greek mythology , Arcesius or Ark sios also spelled Arceisius or Arkeisios was the son of either Zeus or Cephalus , and king in Ithaca . According to scholia on the Odyssey , Arcesius parents were Zeus and Euryodeia ref Scholia and Eustathius of Thessalonica Eustathius on Odyssey 16. 118 ref Ovid also writes of Arcesius as a son of Zeus. ref Ovid , Metamorphoses , 13. 144 ref Other sources make him a son of Cephalus. Aristotle in his lost work The State of the Ithacians cited a myth according to which Cephalus was instructed by an oracle to mate with the first female being he should encounter if he wanted to have offspring Cephalus mated with a she bear, who then transformed into a human woman and bore him a son, Arcesius. ref Aristotle in Etymologicum Magnum 130. 21, under Arkeisios . ref Hyginus makes Arcesius a son of Cephalus and Procris , ref Hyginus , Fabulae , 189 ref while Eustathius mentions a version according to which Arcesius was a grandson of Cephalus through Cillus or Celeus. ref Eustathius on Iliad , 2. 631 ref Zeus made Arcesius line one of only child only sons his only son was Laertes , whose only son was Odysseus , whose only son was Telemachus . ref Homer , The Odyssey , 14. 182 16. 118 cf. also Bibliotheca Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca 1. 9. 16 Hyginus , Fabulae , 173 ref Arcesius s wife and thus mother of Laertes was Chalcomedusa, ref Scholia on Odyssey 16. 118 ref whose origins are not mentioned further, but whose very name, chalcos copper and Medusa mythology medousa guardian or protectress , identifies her as the protector of Bronze Age metal working technology. Of another Arcesius , an architect, Vitruvius vii, introduction notes Arcesius, on the Corinthian order proportions, and on the Ionic order temple of Aesculapius at Tralles , which it is said that he built with his own hands. References references Sources Homer. The Odyssey, Book XVI, in The Iliad & The Odyssey . Trans. Samuel Butler. p. 625. ISBN 9781435110434. Greek myth stub Ca ...   more details



  1. Tsefal i Prokris

    Image Valeriani Decoration Tsefal.jpg thumb 400px right Giuseppe Valeriani Sketch of sets for the opera Tsefal i Prokris by Francesco Araja, 1755 Tsefal i Prokris lang ru Cephalus and Prokris , is an opera seria in three acts by the Italy Italian composer Francesco Araja . Dating to 1755, it was the first opera written in the Russian language . Araja composed the opera to a Russian libretto by Alexander Sumarokov after the Metamorphoses of Ovid . Performance history It was staged at St. Petersburg in a wing of Zimniy Dvorets on March 7 , OS February 27 , 1755 with effective sets by Giuseppe Valeriani . It was the first opera performed with Russian singers. The main roles were performed by Elisaveta Belogradskaya Prokris and Gavrilo Martsenkovich known as Gavrilushka Cephalus . The other actors were pevchie the singers of Count Andrey Kirillovich Razumovsky Stefan Evstafiev Aurora mythology Aurora , Stefan Rzhevsky Erechtheus , the King of Athens , Nikolay Ktitarev Minos , the King of Crete , Ivan Tatishchev Tester, the nobleman of Minos and magician . This opera had a great success, and the composer received a luxurious sable coat valued at 500 rubles as a gift from Empress Elizaveta Petrovna . This opera was re staged at the Mariinsky Theatre in St. Petersburg on June 14, 2001. Plot The story of Cephalus and Prokris, who were ready to destroy their matrimonial vows and later happily forgive each other, thus far random tragic finale does not separate them hunting Cephalus mistakenly pierces his wife with the spear was transformed by Sumarokov into something quite different. His libretto is the story of devoted love and the tragic fate of two heroes. Being separated, they severely suffer and do not search for compromises. Cephalus, stolen directly from the wedding ceremony in the temple, rejects the love of the powerful goddess Aurora. But meanwhile Prokris, suffering from jealousy, is moving towards her inevitably death Cephalus, aimed supposedly at ...   more details



  1. Lollipop catshark

    Gilbert as Catulus cephalus , in the 1892 14th volume of Proceedings of the United States National Museum ..., Catulus cephalus Gilbert author Bigelow, H.B. and W.C. Schroeder journal Copeia volume 1941 ... appear to exist off Panama , Peru , and Chile , which differ slightly from C. cephalus in appearance .... ref name bigelow and schroeder ref name mathews and ruiz cite journal title Cephalurus cephalus ... until they hatch. ref cite journal title Notes on the biology of Cephalurus cephalus and Parmaturus ..., Lollipop Category Monotypic fish genera Category Animals described in 1892 ca Cephalurus cephalus de Kaulquappen Katzenhai es Cephalurus cephalus fr Cephalurus cephalus nl Cephalurus pl Cephalurus cephalus ...   more details



  1. Flathead mullet

    cephalus accessdate 18 April 2006 ref On the coast of Northwest Florida and Alabama, this mullet ... Mugil cephalus accessdate 18 April 2006 FishBase species genus Mugil species cephalus month January ... co Muzaru el es Mugil cephalus eu Korrokoi bizkarbeltz fr Mugil cephalus ko hr Cipal bata it Mugil cephalus he la Mugil cephalus lt Did iagalv kefal ms Ikan Andapong nl Mugil cephalus ja nap Mugil cephalus pl Cefal pospolity ru sq Barbun scn C falu tl ...   more details



  1. Polemarchus

    Distinguish Polemarch Polemarchus or Polemarch 5th century 404 BCE was an Classical Athens ancient Athenian philosopher from the Piraeus . Life The son of Cephalus Historical persons named Cephalus Cephalus of Syracuse, Italy Syracuse , Polemarchus had two brothers, the famous orator Lysias ref Plato, Phaedrus 257b ref and Euthydemus, and a sister who married Brachyllus. Polemarchus and Lysias traveled to Thurii when the latter was 15 years old. ref Lysias, 12.17 19 ref During the Athenian political upheaval in the late 5th century, Polemarchus was singled out by the Thirty Tyrants for being a wealthy metic . Unlike his brother, he did not manage to escape and was executed by being forced to drink hemlock. Melobius, one of the Thirty, snatched golden earrings from Polemarchus wife. After Polemarchus death, the Thirty forbade his family from holding a funeral in any of their houses. Plato s Republic Plato Republic is set at Polemarchus house in the Piraeus, which was located next to their shield manufacturing store that employed 120 skilled slaves. Polemarchus himself speaks briefly in Book 1 of the Republic . ref Plato, Republic , 1 ref References reflist See also List of speakers in Plato s dialogues Persondata Metadata see Wikipedia Persondata . NAME Polemarchus ALTERNATIVE NAMES SHORT DESCRIPTION DATE OF BIRTH PLACE OF BIRTH DATE OF DEATH PLACE OF DEATH Category Ancient Greek philosophers Category 5th century BC philosophers Category Ancient Syracusians Category Metic philosophers in Classical Athens Category 5th century BC Greek people Category 404 BC deaths Category Executed philosophers it Polemarco filosofo ...   more details



  1. Rhabdospora

    Taxobox color greenyellow name Rhabdospora domain Eukarya regnum Chromalveolata superphylum Alveolata phylum Apicomplexa classis Aconoidasida subclassis Haemosporidiasina ordo Achromatorida genus Rhabdospora subdivision ranks Species subdivision Rhabdospora thelohani br Rhabdospora is a genus of parasitic protozoa of the phylum Apicomplexia . Species in this genus have two hosts a vertebrate and an invertebrate in their life cycle for species in this genus the vertebrate host is a fish . History This genus was described by Laguesse in 1895. Description The exact nature and status of this genus remains an open question. Some authors consider the descriptions of this species to be an error while others have reported features consistent with its inclusion in the Apicomplexia . Host records spirlin Alburnoides bipunctatus Alburnoides bipunctatus ohridanus Antarctic snaggletooth Borostomias antarcticus European chub Leuciscus cephalus Leuciscus cephalus albus minnow Phoxinus phoxinus South European roach Rutilus rubilio Three spined Stickleback Gasterosteus aculeatus References Unreferenced date March 2011 1 J P Mourier Structure fine de Rhabdospora thelohani Henneguy, protiste parasite de Gasterosteus aculeatus L. in Zeitschrift f r Parasitenkunde, Volume 34, Number 3, 198 206 1970 Alveolata Protist stub Category Apicomplexa ...   more details



  1. Euthydemus

    Euthydemus may refer to People Euthydemus commander , late 5th century BC a fleet commander for Athens during the Sicilian Expedition, 415 to 413 BC Euthydemus, 5th 4th century BC son of Cephalus, mentioned in Republic Plato Plato s Republic Euthydemus I , 3rd century BC a ruler of the Greco Bactrian Kingdom Euthydemus II , 2nd century BC a ruler of the Greco Bactrian Kingdom Euthydemus tyrant , 3rd century BC a tyrant of Sicyon Dialogues Euthydemus dialogue , a dialogue by Plato Name Euthydemos disambig ca Eutidem de Euthydemos Begriffskl rung fr Euthyd me homonymie it Eutidemo ko nl Euthydemus ru ...   more details



  1. Pterelaus

    Taphian realm was handed over to Amphitryon s allies, including Cephalus . ref Pseudo Apollodorus of Athens Apollodorus , Bibliotheca Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca 2. 4. 6 7 ref Cephalus ruled over ... , 1. 37. 6 ref Odysseus was a descendant of Cephalus by the following lineage Cephalus Arcesius ...   more details



  1. Tithonus (disambiguation)

    Tithonus is a figure in Greek mythology known for being granted immortality without eternal youth. Tithonus may also refer to Tithonus poem Tithonus poem , a poem by Alfred, Lord Tennyson Tithonus The X Files Tithonus The X Files , an episode of the TV series The X Files 6998 Tithonus , a Trojan asteroid Tithonus Birdwing, Ornithoptera tithonus , a birdwing butterfly See also Tithonos , son of Eos and Cephalus in Greek mythology Tithonian , the final stage of the Late Jurassic epoch Titon et l Aurore , an opera by the French composer Jean Joseph de Mondonville disambig ...   more details



  1. Heleus

    In Greek mythology , Heleus was a son of Perseus and Andromeda mythology Andromeda . He was brother of Perses son of Andromeda and Perseus Perses , Alcaeus mythology Alcaeus , Perseides , Sthenelus , Electryon , Mestor , Cynurus , Gorgophone and Autochthoe . Heleius accompanied his nephew Amphitryon on the expedition to Taphos , and after the victory shared the sovereignty of their domain with Cephalus ref Grimal, Pierre. 1990. The Concise Dictionary of Classical Mythology. Basil Blackwell Ltd ref In popular culture Heleus is featured in the 2012 film Wrath of the Titans , a sequel to the film depicting the tale of Perseus and the Kraken, Clash of the Titans 2010 film References Reflist Category Greek mythology Greek myth stub ja pt Heleu filho de Perseu sr sh Helej ...   more details



  1. Pollard

    wiktionarypar pollard Pollard may refer to Pollard surname , a list of people named Pollard Pollard, Alabama , a town in the United States Pollard novel Pollard , a novel by Laura Beatty Pollard, a tree or animal which has been polled had its branches, horns or antlers removed Pollard, a tree affected by pollarding , a method for shaping trees, cropping the branches above head height Pollard or polled livestock , hornless livestock of normally horned species Pollard, a deer which has cast its antler s Pollard, the European chub Squalius cephalus , a freshwater fish of the family Cyprinidae Pollard, a mixture of fine bran and a small amount of flour Pollard script , a writing system devised in 1905 for the A Hmao language Several algorithms created by British mathematician John Pollard mathematician John Pollard Pollard s p &minus 1 algorithm Pollard s p &minus 1 algorithm Pollard s kangaroo algorithm Pollard s rho algorithm disambig de Pollard fr Pollard it Pollard nl Pollard pl Pollard pt Pollard ...   more details



  1. Clytus (mythology)

    distinguish Cleitus mythology In Greek mythology , Clytus is a name that may refer to Clytus, a Troy Trojan soldier who killed three Greeks in the Trojan War . ref Hyginus , Fabulae 115. ref Clytus, a warrior killed by Perseus in the battle against Phineus son of Belus Phineus . ref Ovid , Metamorphoses , 5. 87 ref Clytus, a son of Aegyptus who was killed by the Danaid Autodice. ref Hyginus, Fabulae , 170 ref Clytus, a son of Temenus and his successor as king of Argos . ref Hyginus , Fabulae , 124 ref Clytus, a son of the Athenian Pallas son of Pandion Pallas , who, together with his brother Butes , is sent alongside Cephalus to Aeacus to ask for assistance against Minos . ref Ovid , Metamorphoses , 7. 500 ref References Reflist DEFAULTSORT Clytus Mythology Category Greek mythology Category Trojans Category Mythology of Argos Greek myth stub ...   more details



  1. Phaethon (son of Eos)

    distinguish Pha thon In Greek mythology , Phaethon was a son of Eos by Cephalus or Tithonus , born in Syria . Aphrodite stole him away while he was no more than a child to be the night watchman at her most sacred shrines. ref Hesiod , Theogony , 986 990 ref ref name Apollodorus ref Pausanias , Description of Greece , 1. 3. 1 using the name Hemera for Eos ref The Minoans called him Adymus , by which they meant the morning and evening star. ref Solinus , 11 9 Nonnus , Dionysiaca , 11 131 and 12 217 ref Phaethon was the father of Astynous, who in his turn became father of Sandocus. The latter migrated from Syria to Cilicia where he founded a city Celenderis he then married Pharnace, daughter of King Megassares of Hyria , and had by her a son Cinyras . ref name Apollodorus Bibliotheca Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca 3. 14. 3 ref References reflist External links http www.theoi.com Titan AsterPhaethon.html Theoi Project Phaethon Category Greek mythology Greek myth stub fr Pha ton amant d Aphrodite ...   more details



  1. Brachyglene albicephala

    italic title Taxobox name Brachyglene albicephala image regnum Animal ia phylum Arthropod a classis Insect a ordo Lepidoptera familia Notodontidae subfamilia Dioptinae tribus Dioptini genus Brachyglene species B. albicephala binomial Brachyglene albicephala binomial authority Miller, 2008 synonyms Brachyglene albicephala is a moth of the Notodontidae family. It is endemic to the northern half of Costa Rica . The length of the forewings is 13 16 mm for males and 16.5 18 mm for females. The ground color of the forewings is evenly blackish brown, with a yellow orange transverse band of varying width, extending from inside the costa to immediately short of the tornus. The hindwings are blackish brown, but a slightly lighter shade than the forewings. The larvae feed on Bauhinia guianensis . Etymology The species name is derived from the Latin words albi and cephalus and refers to the white head region of this species. References aut Miller, J.S. 2009 Generic revision of the Dioptinae Lepidoptera Noctuoidea Notodontidae Part 1 Dioptini. Bulletin of the American Museum of Natural History , 321 1 674. Category Animals described in 2008 Category Notodontidae Notodontidae stub ...   more details



  1. Mugil

    top http www.fishbase.org Summary SpeciesSummary.php?id 785 Mugil cephalus Striped  mullet Mugil ..., 1836 Mugil cephalus ashanteensis Bleeker, 1863 Myxus caecutiens G nther, 1876 Myxus barnardi Gilchrist & Thompson, 1914 Mugil cephalus Linnaeus, 1758 valign top http www.fishbase.org Summary SpeciesSummary.php ...   more details



  1. Il rapimento di Cefalo

    Il rapimento di Cefalo The Abduction of Cephalus was one of the first Italian opera s. Most of the music was written by Giulio Caccini but Stefano Venturi del Nibbio , Luca Bati and Piero Strozzi composer Piero Strozzi also contributed. The libretto , by Gabriello Chiabrera , is in a prologue, five scenes and an epilogue and is based on the Classical myth of Cephalus and Aurora mythology Aurora . ref Viking p.175 ref The opera was the culmination of the celebrations for the proxy wedding of Henry IV of France King Henri IV of France and Marie de Medici in Florence in 1600 and was performed in the Sala delle Commedie in the Uffizi Uffizi Palace on 9 October in front of an audience of 3,000 gentlemen and 800 ladies. The performance lasted five hours and cost 60,000 scudo scudi , a huge sum. ref Pirotta p.237 and note ref ref Carter ref Among the singers were Melchior Palantrotti, Jacopo Peri , Francesco Rasi and five members of Caccini s own family, including his daughter Francesca Caccini Francesca and his son Pompeo. ref Carter ref Three days earlier, Caccini and Peri s opera Euridice opera Euridice had been staged in the Pitti palace . Unlike that work, Il rapimento soon fell into obscurity. ref Pirotta p.237 ref Caccini published the final chorus and an aria in his collection Le nuove musiche 1602 but the rest of the score is lost. Il rapimento di Cefalo contained many elements from the Florentine intermedi as well as making use of the new style of recitative . The Florentine audience admired the scenery of the production by Bernardo Buontalenti , but found the music tedious. ref Viking p.175 ref Roles This is a hypothetical cast list with probable voice types as reconstructed by Tim Carter. In his description of the performance, Michelangelo Buonarotti the Younger claimed that four female members of the Caccini family with angelic voices took part. Carter believes that the most ... soprano Female Caccini 2 Cefalo Cephalus tenor Pompeo Caccini Titone Tithonus Bass voice bass Melchior ...   more details



  1. Eos

    notably Cephalus , Tithonus , Orion mythology Orion and Cleitus mythology Cleitus . The good looking ... BCE, the so called Memnon Piet found at Capua Mus e du Louvre Louvre . The abduction of Cephalus had special appeal for an Athenian audience because Cephalus was a local boy, ref Mary R. Lefkowitz ... Metamorphoses vii. 703ff Hyginus Fabula 189. ref Eos kidnapped Cephalus when he was hunting and took him to Syria. The second century CE traveller Pausanias was informed that the abductor of Cephalus ... i.3.1 and on the throne of Apollo at Amyklai iii.18.10ff . ref Although Cephalus was already married .... in Hyginus report ref Hyginus, Fabula 189. ref telling Cephalus accidentally killed Procris some ... been identified as Eos and Cephalus . ref Goldberg 1987 605 614 casts doubt on the boy s identification ...   more details



  1. Deioneus

    for the shrimp genus Deioneus sandizelli In Greek mythology , Deioneus lang grc or Deion lang grc is a name attributed to the following individuals Son of Aeolus Son of Hellen Aeolus , king of Phocis , and father of Cephalus , Actor mythology Actor , Aenetus, Phylacus , Nisus and Asterodia . ref Bibliotheca Pseudo Apollodorus Bibliotheca 1. 7. 3 & 1. 9. 4 Hyginus , Fabulae 198 Catalogue of Women frr. 10 a and 58. ref Father of Dia mythology Dia and father in law of Ixion to be, Deioneus was pushed by him into a bed of flaming coals so that Ixion wouldn t have to pay the bride price . ref Pindar , Pythian ode 2, 39 ref Also known as Eioneus . Son of Eurytus the Oechalia n. He married Perigune , daughter of Sinis mythology Sinis , whose father was killed by Theseus . ref Plutarch , Theseus , 8 ref One of the sons of Heracles and Megara mythology Megara . ref Scholia on Pindar , Olympian Ode 5. 61 ref References reflist Category Greek mythology Category Mythological kings Category Kings of Phocis Category Aeolides Greek myth stub cs ioneus el pt Eioneu sr ...   more details




Articles 1 - 25 of 197          Next


Search   in  
Search for Cephalus in Tutorials
Search for Cephalus in Encyclopedia
Search for Cephalus in Videos
Search for Cephalus in Books
Search for Cephalus in Software
Search for Cephalus in DVDs
Search for Cephalus in Store


Advertisement




Cephalus in Encyclopedia
Cephalus top Cephalus

Home - Add TutorGig to Your Site - Disclaimer

©2011-2013 TutorGig.info All Rights Reserved. Privacy Statement