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Later, Apollo entrusted his son to Chiron, the wise centaur, who trained him more in medicine and hunting. [16] [10] Apollo kills Coronis, 1590 engraving by Hendrick Goltzius. According to a different version, Coronis gave birth to her son in Apollo's temple in the presence of the Moirai. Lachesis acted as the midwife. Apollo named their son ...
Corone, a daughter of King Coronaeus of Phocis who fled from Poseidon and was changed into a crow by Athena. [2] Coronis, a Maenad who was raped by Butes of Thrace. Dionysus made the offender throw himself down a well. [3] Coronis, who was in one version the mother of the Graces by Dionysus. [4] She may be the same with the above character.
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Coronis (lover of Apollo) Coronis (textual symbol) USS Coronis (ARL-10), a repair ship that served in World War II; Coronis, a zarzuela by Spanish composer Sebastián Durón; A genus of butterfly, for species such as Coronis hyphasis
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Phlegyas was the son of Ares and Chryse, daughter of Halmus, [1] or of Dotis. [2] In one account, he was mentioned as an autochthon. [3] Phlegyas was the brother of Ixion, another king of the Lapiths, [4] and Gyrton, eponym of a Thessalian town. [5] Phlegyas was the father of Ixion, in some accounts, as well as Coronis, one of Apollo's lovers.
Apollonis (/ ˌ æ p ə ˈ l oʊ n ə s /; Ancient Greek: Ἀπoλλωνίς means "of Apollo") [citation needed] was one of the three younger Mousai Apollonides (Muses) in Greek mythology and daughters of Apollo, [1] who were worshipped in Delphi where the Temple of Apollo and the Oracle were located.
White ground, Attic, c. 460, Apollo pours a libation, detail. [1] The few pottery exhibits of the Delphi Archaeological Museum include a famous shallow bowl with an unusual depiction of the god Apollo. In the white-ground red-figure technique, it was found in a grave underneath the museum.