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  2. Tyrant - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyrant

    The word derives from Latin tyrannus, meaning "illegitimate ruler", and this in turn from the Greek τύραννος tyrannos "monarch, ruler of a polis"; tyrannos in its turn has a Pre-Greek origin, perhaps from Lydian. [10] [11] The final -t arises in Old French by association with the present participles in -ant. [12]

  3. Tyrannosaurus - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyrannosaurus

    The generic name is derived from the Greek words τύραννος (tyrannos, meaning "tyrant") and σαῦρος (sauros, meaning "lizard"). Osborn used the Latin word rex, meaning "king", for the specific name.

  4. Odontotyrannos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Odontotyrannos

    Odontotyrannos (Greek: όδοντοτύραννος), also odontotyrannus or dentityrannus [a] ("tooth-tyrant") is a mythical three-horned beast said to have attacked Alexander the Great and his men at their camp in India, according to the apocryphal Letter from Alexander to Aristotle and other medieval romantic retellings of Alexandrian legend.

  5. Oedipus Rex - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Oedipus_Rex

    A Greek amphora depicting Oedipus and the Sphinx, c. 450 BC. Fate is a motif that often occurs in Greek writing, tragedies in particular. Likewise, where the attempt to avoid an oracle is the very thing that enables it to happen is common to many Greek myths. For example, similarities to Oedipus can be seen in the myth of Perseus' birth.

  6. List of ancient Greek tyrants - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_ancient_Greek_tyrants

    Melas the Elder, 7th century BC, brother-in-law to king Gyges; Miletus, grandson of Melas, son-in-law of king Ardys; Pythagoras, son of Miletus, 6th century BC

  7. Archaic Greece - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Archaic_Greece

    Archaic Greece from the mid-seventh century BC has sometimes been called an "Age of Tyrants". The word τύραννος (tyrannos, whence the English 'tyrant') first appeared in Greek literature in a poem of Archilochus, to describe the Lydian ruler Gyges. [50] The earliest Greek tyrant was Cypselus, who seized power in Corinth in a coup in 655 ...

  8. Prytaneis - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prytaneis

    The term (like basileus or tyrannos) is probably of Pre-Greek etymology [1] (possibly cognate to Etruscan (e)prθni). When Cleisthenes reorganized the Athenian government in 508/7 BCE, he replaced the old Solonian boule, or council, of 400 with a new boule of 500. The old boule consisted of 100 members of each of the four ancestral tribes.

  9. Tyrannosauroidea - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyrannosauroidea

    Tyrannosauroidea (meaning 'tyrant lizard forms') is a superfamily (or clade) of coelurosaurian theropod dinosaurs that includes the family Tyrannosauridae as well as more basal relatives. Tyrannosauroids lived on the Laurasian supercontinent beginning in the Jurassic Period.