enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Chryses of Troy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chryses_of_Troy

    Chryses attempting to ransom his daughter Chryseis from Agamemnon, Apulian red-figure crater by the Athens 1714 Painter, ca. 360 BC–350 BC, Louvre.. In Greek mythology, Chryses (/ ˈ k r aɪ s iː z /; Greek, Χρύσης Khrýsēs, meaning "golden") was a Trojan priest of Apollo at Chryse, near the city of Troy.

  3. Chryseis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chryseis

    Chryses, afraid, went apart and prayed on the beach for revenge. Apollo heard his prayer and, by means of his silver arrows, sent a plague sweeping through the Greek armies, so that Agamemnon was forced to give Astynome back in order to save his men from the disease. He sent Odysseus to return the maiden to Chryses.

  4. Chryses (mythology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chryses_(mythology)

    Chryses or Chrysen, son of Zeus and Isonoe, and one of the Danaides. [1] Chryses, the successor of Phlegyas, as king of Orchomenus. He was the son of Poseidon and Chrysogeneia, daughter of King Almus of Halmones, and the possible father of the eponym Minyas. [2] Chryses, one of the four sons of Minos and Pareia.

  5. Chryseis (mythology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Chryseis_(mythology)

    Chryseis, a Thespian princess as one of the 50 daughters of King Thespius and Megamede [4] or by one of his many wives. [5] When Heracles hunted and ultimately slayed the Cithaeronian lion , [ 6 ] Chryseis with her other sisters, except for one, [ 7 ] all laid with the hero in a night, [ 8 ] a week [ 9 ] or for 50 days [ 10 ] as what their ...

  6. 4707 Khryses - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/4707_Khryses

    This minor planet was named after Trojan Chryses (Khryseis), a priest of Apollo.His daughter Chryseis (Khryseis) was abducted by Agamemnon during the Trojan War.Apollo then sent a plague sweeping through the Greek camp, forcing Agamemnon to give back the priest's daughter. [1]

  7. Helios - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Helios

    [379] Apollo was associated with the Sun as early as the fifth century BC, though widespread conflation between him and the Sun god was a later phaenomenon. [380] The earliest certain reference to Apollo being identified with Helios appears in the surviving fragments of Euripides' play Phaethon in a speech near the end. [101]

  8. Jean-Baptiste Pérès - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Jean-Baptiste_Pérès

    Jean-Baptiste Pérès (1752–1840) was a French physicist best known for his 1827 pamphlet Grand Erratum, a polemical satire, translated into many European languages, that attempted "in the interest of conservative theology, to reduce to an absurdity the purely negative tendencies of the rationalistic criticism of the Scriptures then in vogue" (as Frederick W. Loetscher described what he ...

  9. Circe - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Circe

    Circe (/ ˈ s ər s iː /; [1] Ancient Greek: Κίρκη, romanized: Kírkē) is an enchantress and a minor goddess in ancient Greek mythology and religion. [2] In most accounts, Circe is described as the daughter of the sun god Helios and the Oceanid nymph Perse.