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From this incestuous union sprang the child Adonis. Cinyras was said to have committed suicide over the matter. [25] Other authors equate Cinyras and Myrrha with king Theias of Assyria and his daughter Smyrna, and relate the same story of them. [26] Hyginus uses the name Cinyras for the father, but Smyrna for the daughter. [27]
Myrrha's nurse told King Cinyras of a girl deeply in love with him, giving a false name. The affair lasted several nights in complete darkness to conceal Myrrha's identity, [e] until Cinyras wanted to know the identity of his paramour. Upon bringing in a lamp, and seeing his daughter, the king attempted to kill her on the spot, but Myrrha escaped.
Cinyras, a King: Father to Myrrha who eventually sleeps with her after being tricked by the Nursemaid while being drunk and blindfolded. Myrrha: Daughter of King Cinyras who denied Aphrodite so many times that Myrrha was seized with a passion for her father. She eventually has three sexual encounters with her father, the third of which he ...
Libythea labdaca laius Trimen, 1879 (= Libythea labdaca cinyras Trimen, 1866; = Libythea labdaca lepitoides Moore, 1901) Libythea ancoata Grose-Smith, 1891; Libythea tsiandava Grose-Smith, 1891; Libythea myrrha Godart, 1819. Libythea myrrha myrrha Godart, 1819; Libythea myrrha borneensis Fruhstorfer, 1914; Libythea myrrha carma Fruhstorfer, 1914
Created Date: 8/30/2012 4:52:52 PM
Cinyras: Son of Pygmalion's daughter Paphos, husband of Cenchreis, father of Myrrha and Adonis, and king of Cyprus. He was deceived and seduced by Myrrha from which the result was Adonis. X: 298-472 [65] Cipus: Roman legendary commander. XV: 565-621 [66] Circe: Daughter of Sol and Perse. Circe was a goddess skilled in magic.
Cinyras's daughters: Kingfishers: The gods After their father Cinyras, king of Cyprus, challenged the god Apollo in a music contest, lost to him, and was then killed by him as well as punishment, his fifty daughters all mourned him so much that they threw themselves off a cliff and died, and were then transformed into halcyons. Clinis: Hypaietos
Cinna's literary fame was established by his magnum opus "Zmyrna", a mythological epic poem focused on the incestuous love of Smyrna (or Myrrha) for her father Cinyras, treated after the erudite and allusive manner of the Alexandrian poets. [2] He was a friend of Catullus (poem 10, 29–30: meus sodalis / Cinna est Gaius).