enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Pleiades (Greek mythology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pleiades_(Greek_mythology)

    The Pleiades' parents were the Titan Atlas [5] and the Oceanid Pleione [6] born on Mount Cyllene. In some accounts, their mother was called Aethra, another Oceanid. [7] Aside from the above-mentioned sisters (the Hyades), the Pleiades' other siblings were Hyas and the nymph Calypso who was famous in the tale of Odysseus.

  3. Seven Sisters (magazines) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Seven_Sisters_(magazines)

    The Seven Sisters is a group of magazines which traditionally have been aimed at married women who are homemakers with husbands and children rather than single and working women. [1] The name is derived from the Greek myth of the "seven sisters", also known as the Pleiades. Only three of the magazines are still published as physical magazines.

  4. Peleiades - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Peleiades

    Peleiades (Greek: Πελειάδες, "doves") were the sacred women of Zeus and the Mother Goddess, Dione, at the Oracle at Dodona. Pindar made a reference to the Pleiades as the "peleiades" a flock of doves, but the connection seems witty and poetical, rather than mythic.

  5. Merope (Pleiad) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Merope_(Pleiad)

    The Pleiades were nymphs, and along with their half sisters, were called Atlantides, Modonodes, or Nysiades and were the caretakers of the infant Bacchus. [4] Orion pursued the Pleiades named Maia, Electra, Taygete, Celaeno, Alcyone, Sterope, and Merope after he fell in love with their beauty and grace. Artemis asked Zeus to protect the ...

  6. Electra (Pleiad) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Electra_(Pleiad)

    Electra, along with the rest of the Pleiades, were transformed into stars by Zeus. By some accounts she was the one star among seven of the constellation not easily seen because, since she could not bear to look upon the destruction of Troy, she hid her eyes, or turned away; or in her grief, she abandoned her sisters and became a comet.

  7. Pleiades - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pleiades

    The Pleiades (/ ˈ p l iː. ə d iː z, ˈ p l eɪ-, ˈ p l aɪ-/), [8] [9] also known as Seven Sisters and Messier 45, is an asterism of an open star cluster containing young B-type stars in the northwest of the constellation Taurus.

  8. Pleiades in folklore and literature - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pleiades_in_folklore_and...

    The astrological Pleiades were described in Three Books of Occult Philosophy by Heinrich Cornelius Agrippa (Köln, 1533, but published manuscript as early as 1510). In Western astrology they represent coping with sorrow [19] and were considered a single one of the medieval fixed stars. As such, they are associated with quartz [citation needed ...

  9. Maia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Maia

    The story of Callisto and Arcas, like that of the Pleiades, is an aition for a stellar formation, the constellations Ursa Major and Ursa Minor, the Great and Little Bear. Her name is related to μαῖα (maia), an honorific term for older women related to μήτηρ (mētēr) 'mother', [citation needed] also meaning "midwife" in Greek. [12]