Bk VI:1-47 The Phaeacians once lived near them. Bk IV:220-289 He was with Helen, by the Wooden Horse. Oedipus Abandoned at birth and raised by the king of Corinth, he unwittingly killed his father and married his mother.
Cave sites near Amnisos have yielded evidence of Neolithic habitation, and Homer is possibly evoking memories of worship of the Great Goddess of Neolithic times through into the later Bronze Age. Bk IX:256-306 They have no reverence for Zeus. Argos here, a region in the northeastern Peloponnesus.
(Possibly intended ironically since ‘all Cretans are liars’ as the old proverb has it.). According to Herodotus it took its name from Cydon, the son of Apollo and Akakallis daughter of Minos. Bk XI:1-50 Mentioned.
Bk XVII:290-327 He tells Odysseus about the dog, Argus. Bk V:92-147 She agrees reluctantly to release Odysseus. Bk XII:1-35 Odysseus and his men return to cremate him. Messene a city in Menelaus' kingdom of Lacedaemon in the southern Peloponnesus.
An island sacred to the Goddess in the Aegean. Bk XIV:293-359 Bk XIX:220-307 Odysseus pretends he has been there. Bribed by Polyneices, Oedipus’ son, with the famous necklace of Harmonia (Given to Harmonia on her marriage to Cadmus, by Aphrodite) she persuaded her husband to join the war of the Seven against Thebes. There are daily flights to Athens from the island. Bk VIII:416-468 She had taught Odysseus a subtle knot. The divine son of Zeus and Leda, brother of Pollux. The daughter of Clymenus, and wife to Nestor. The goddess of harvests, sister of Zeus, and mother of Persephone.
Zeus king of the gods in ancient Greek mythology.
Bk XVII:328-395 He bandies words with Antinous. Bk VIII:367-415 He apologises to Odysseus for the provocation and makes him a lavish gift. Bk VIII:416-468 Odysseus had been well cared for on her island. A goddess of childbirth, possibly an epithet of Artemis. Phoenician a person from ancient Phoenicia, a region along the eastern shores of the Mediterranean. I have taken ‘swift’ in the OED sense of ‘soon coming/not long delayed’, i.e. The ‘twice-born’, god of the vine. Bk XXI:359-403 She locks the doors of the hall. Bk XV:1-55 Penelope’s father and brothers urge her to marry him, because his are the most generous gifts. The capital, Kíthira (or Khóra), is on the southern coast. Bk XVI:321-39 He advises the Suitors to send word to their ship at sea.
Bk XIX:164-219 Homer mentions it in connection with Amnisos. The island in the eastern Mediterranean. The mother of Scylla. Creon king of Thebes, successor to Oedipus. King Priam's craggy city Troy; "craggy" refers to a steep incline of rocks, a barrier. Bk XV:222-270 He was carried off by Eos, the Dawn, who fell in love with his beauty.
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