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Πληροφορίες τοπωνυμίου

Εμφανίζονται 21 τίτλοι με αναζήτηση: Μυθολογία για το τοπωνύμιο: "ΚΑΛΥΔΩΝ Αρχαία πόλη ΙΕΡΑ ΠΟΛΙΣ ΜΕΣΟΛΟΓΓΙΟΥ".


Μυθολογία (21)

Επώνυμοι ιδρυτές ή οικιστές

Καλυδών

Γιος του Αιτωλού και της Προνόης.

Θεοί & ημίθεοι

Dionysus Caledonius

Caledonius Kaludonios), a surname of Dionysus, whose image was carried from Calydon to Patrae (Paus. vii. 21.1), and of Meleager, the hero in the Calydonian hunt. (Ov. Met. viii. 231.)

Apollo Laphraeus

Laphraeus (Laphraios), a surname of Apollo at Calydon. (Strab. x., where, however, some read Lathrios.)

Artemis Laphria

Laphria (Laphraia), a surname of Artemis among the Calydonians, from whom the worship of the goddess was introduced at Naupactus and Patrae, in Achaia. At the latter place it was not established till the time of Augustus, but it became the occasion of a great annual festival. (Paus. iv. 31. 6, vii. 18. 6. &c.; Schol. ad Eurip. Orest. 1087). The name Laphria was traced back to a hero, Laphrius, son of Castalius, who was said to have instituted her worship at Calydon. Laphria was also a surname of Athena. (Lycoph. 356.)

Αρχαίοι μύθοι

Ηρακλής & Δηιάνειρα

Hercules married a second wife, Deianira. He won her hand in marriage by wrestling with the river-god Acheloos, who took the form of a centaur. During the fight, Hercules broke off one of Acheloos' horns.
Once, when Deianira and Hercules were traveling, they came to the Evenus River. A centaur, Nessos, had been appointed ferryman there. As he carried Deianira across, he tried to assault her, and Hercules, hearing her screams, ran to rescue his damsel in distress. Hercules shot the centaur in the heart with one of his arrows.
Just before he died, Nessos set up his revenge by telling Deianira that the blood spilling from his wound could be used as a love potion, if need be. Deianira picked up some of the centaur's blood and saved it. Later, she put it onto a cloak she'd woven for Hercules, hoping it would renew his love for her.
The blood, of course, was not a love potion, but a deadly poison instead, and its touch burned Hercules' skin. His eventual death is described in the biography section (see ancient Argos).
The story of Deianira and Hercules became the subject of one of Sophocles' tragic plays, Trachiniae (The Women of Trachis). Like many Greek tragedies. this play explored the disruptive and horrible consequences when gods and mortals interacted.

This text is cited July 2004 from Perseus Project URL bellow, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Deianeira. The daughter of king Oeneus of Calydon and Althaea, but sometimes it was whispered that Dionysus was her real father. Deianeira had many sisters and brothers: Toxeus, Agelaus, Thyreus, Clymenus (or Periphas), Meleager, Gorge, Eurymede and Melanippe.
  Althaea died of grief when Meleager died, still a young boy, and his sisters turned into guinea hens out of sorrow. Dionysus then intervened and spared Deianeira and Gorge.
  Deianeira was very beautiful, and both Heracles and the river god Achelous wanted to marry her. A fight broke out between the two, and Achelous transformed himself into a snake and then a bull. Heracles managed to break off one of the bull's horn, and so won the battle.
  The couple lived in Calydon for a few years, but when Heracles killed a local boy by mistake, they were forced to leave. When they reached the Euenus river they met the Centaur Nessus. When he saw the beautiful Deianeiera he tried to rape her after he had carried her across the river, but Heracles killed him with an arrow, its tip had been dipped in the blood of the Hydra. The dying Centaur gave Deianeira a piece of cloth soaked with his blood, and told her to keep it. With it, he said, she would have Heracles' love if she ever came near to losing it.
  Heracles and Deianeira settled in Trachis where they had several children: Hyllus, Ctesippus, Glenus, Hodites and Macaria. Heracles often went away on various adventures, but he always came back.
  After many years, Deianeira was horrified to hear that her husband had taken a young wife, and that he was coming back with her. The young bride, Iole, was also rumoured to be very beautiful, and Deianeira was at her wits end. When she had made sure her husband was really coming with Iole through a servant, she put the Centaur's cloth in a barrel of water, and then put a shirt in it that she sent to Heracles.
  When Heracles put the shirt on it stuck on his skin and caused him great pain. When he tried to take it off, pieces of his own flesh came with it. He made it to Trachis, only to find that Deianeira had hung herself when she had realised what she had done.
  Heracles made a funeral pyre for himself by Mt. Oeta, and then ascended it.

This text is cited Sept 2003 from the In2Greece URL below.


Καλλιρρόη και Κόρεσος

Ο Κόρεσος ήταν ένας ιερέας του Διονύσου ο οποίος ερωτεύτηκε μια κοπέλα, την Καλλιρόη. Επειδή όμως δε μπορούσε να την κάνει να τον αγαπήσει προσευχήθηκε στο Διόνυσο και εκείνος έστειλε θανατηφόρο επιδημία στους Καλυδώνιους. Το μαντείο της Δωδώνης, το οποίο συμβουλεύτηκαν, έδωσε χρησμό ότι για να σωθούν έπρεπε να θυσιάσουν στο Διόνυσο είτε την ίδια την Καλλιρόη είτε κάποιον άλλο που θα είχε το θάρρος να πεθάνει. Κανείς δε δεχόταν να πάρει τη θέση της Καλλιρόης κι έτσι οδηγήθηκε εκείνη στο μέρος όπου περίμενε ο Κόρεσος για τη θυσία. Την τελευταία όμως στιγμή αντί να σκοτώσει την κοπέλα σκοτώθηκε ο ίδιος. Οταν η Καλλιρόη τον είδε νεκρό κατάλαβε πόσο την αγαπούσε και από λύπη και ντροπή αυτοκτόνησε στην πηγή της Καλυδώνας , η οποία πήρε το όνομά της (Παυσ. 7,21,1-5).

Callirrhoe, a maiden of Calydon, who, when she was loved by Coresus, a priest of Dionysus, rejected all the offers he made to her. At length, he implored his god to punish the cruel maid. Dionysus now visited the people of Calydon with a general madness, which raged there like a plague. The Dodonaean oracle, which was consulted about the mode of averting the calamity, answered, that Dionysus must be propitiated, and that Callirrhoe must be sacrificed to him, or some one else in her stead. The maiden endeavoured in vain to escape her fate; but when she was led to the altar, Coresus, instead of performing the sacrifice, felt his love for her revive so strongly, that he sacrificed himself in her stead. But she also now put an end to her life near a well which derived its name from her (Paus. vii. 21.1). There are two more mythical personages of this name. (Steph. Byz. s. v. Alabanda; Plut. Parallel. Gr. et Rom. 23)

This text is from: A dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, 1873 (ed. William Smith). Cited Nov 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks


Επικά ποιήματα

Lists of the heroes who hunted the Calydonian boar

Apollodorus, Library and Epitome 1.8.2 & P. Ovidius Naso, Metamorphoses 8.260

Ηρωες

Αρχιτέλης

Architeles, father of the boy Eunomus, whom Heracles killed by accident on his visit to Architeles. The father forgave Heracles, but Heracles nevertheless went into voluntary exile. (Apollod. ii. 7. 6; Diod. iv. 36, who calls the boy Eurynomus; Athen. ix.)

Εύνομος, γιος του Αρχιτέλη

Eunomus (Eunomos), a son of Architeles, was killed by Heracles (Apollod. ii. 7.6). Eustathius (ad Hom.) calls him Archias or Chaerias.

Αλκάθους

Γιος του Πορθάονα

Αντίοχος

Son of Melas, killed by Tydeus.

Λεοντόφονος

..that Ulysses went to Aetolia, to Thoas, son of Andraemon, married the daughter of Thoas, and leaving a son Leontophonus, whom he had by her, died in old age.

Θέρμιος

There were ties of kindred between the Heracleidae and the kings of Aetolia; in particular the mothers of Thoas, the son of Andraemon, and of Hyllus, the son of Heracles, were sisters. It fell to the lot of Oxylus to be an outlaw from Aetolia. The story goes that as he was throwing the quoit he missed the mark and committed unintentional homicide. The man killed by the quoit, according to one account, was Thermius, the brother of Oxylus; according to another it was Alcidocus, the son of Scopius.
(Perseus Project - Pausanias, Description of Greece 5.3.7)

Αλκιδόκος

Ηταν γιος του Σκοπίου. Σύμφωνα με κάποια παράδοση τον σκότωσε κατά λάθος ο Οξυλος ρίχνοντας δίσκο και γι' αυτό εξορίστηκε από την Αιτωλία (Παυσ. 5,3,7).

Andraemon

Andraemon. A son of the Oxylus mentioned above, and husband of Dryope, who was mother of Amphissus by Apollo. (Ov. Met. ix. 363; Anton. Lib. 32.) There are two other mythical personages of this name, the one a son of Codrus (Paus. vii. 3.2), and the other a Pylian, and founder of Colophon. (Strab, xiv.)

Ηρωίδες

Τέρατα της μυθολογίας

Calydonian boar

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