Listed 48 sub titles with search on: Mythology for wider area of: "SIKYON Municipality CORINTHIA" .
SIKYON (Ancient city) CORINTHIA
Aegialeus. A son of Inachus and the Oceanid Melia, from whom the part of Peloponnesus
afterwards called Achaia
derived its name of Aegialeia
(Apollod. ii. 1.1). According to a Sicyonian tradition he was an autochthon, brother
of Phoroneus and first king of Sicyon,
to whom the foundation of the town of Aegialeia
was ascribed (Paus. ii. 5.5, vii. 1.1).
Acroreites (Akroreites), a surname of Dionysus, under which he was worshipped at Sicyon, and which is synonymous with Eriphius, under which name he was worshipped at Metapontum in southern Italy. (Steph. Byz. s. v. Akroreia.)
Alexander (Alexandros), the defender of men, a surname of Hera under which she was worshipped at Sicyon. A temple had been built there to Hera Alexandros by Adrastus after his flight from Argos. (Schol. ad Pind. Nem. ix. 30 ; comp. Apollod. iii. 12.5)
Apotropaei (Apotropaioi), certain divinities, by whose assistance the Greeks believed that they were able to avert any threatening danger or calamity. Their statues stood at Sicyon near the tomb of Epopeus (Paus. ii. 11.2). The Romans likewise worshipped gods of this kind, and called them dii averrunci, derived from averruncare. (Varro, de L. L. vii. 102; Gellius, v. 12)
Son of Nicagora.
A Theban, brings image of Dionysus to Sicyon.
TITANI (Ancient city) SIKYON
Son of Machaon, makes sanctuary of Aesculapius at Titane, worshipped by Sicyonians at Titane, brother of Polemocrates.
SIKYON (Ancient city) CORINTHIA
Daughter of Leucippus, mother of Peratus by Poseidon.
Daughter of Orthopolis, mother of Coronus by Apollo.
Daughter of Sicyon, mother of Polybus by Hermes, wife of Phlias.
Daughter of Polybus, wife of Talaus.
Aristodeme, a Sicyonian woman, who, according to a local tradition of Sicyon, became the mother of Aratus by Asclepius, in the form of a dragon (serpent). A painting of her and the dragon existed at Sicyon in the temple of Asclepius. (Paus. ii. 10.3, iv. 14.5). A daughter of Priam of this name occurs in Apollod. iii. 12.5.
Sicyonian woman, wife of Echetimus, brings Aesculapius to Sicyon.
Echetimus, (Echetimos), of Sicyon, was the husband of Nicagora, who was believed to have brought the image of Asclepius, in the form of a dragon, from Epidaurus to Sicyon, on a car drawn by mules. (Paus. ii. 10.3.)
Sicyon; Son of Metion or Erechtheus or Marathon or Pelops, gives his name to the city. Zeuxippe; Daughter of Lamedon, wife of Sicyon.
TITANI (Ancient city) SIKYON
Brother of the Sun, dwelt at Titane.
ASSOPIA (Ancient area) SIKYON
Son of the Sun and Antiope
Iphimedeia or Iphimede, a daughter of Triops, and the wife of Aloeus. Being in love with Poseidon, she often walked to the sea, and collected its waters in her lap, whence she became, by Poseidon, the mother of the Aloadae, Otus and Ephialtes. When Iphimedeia and her daughter, Pancratis, celebrated the orgies of Dionysus on Mount Drius, they were carried off by Thracian pirates to Naxos or Strongyle; but both were delivered by the Aloadae. The tomb of Iphimedeia and her sons was shown at Anthedon. She was worshipped as a heroine at Mylasia in Caria, and was represented by Polygnotus in the Lesche at Delphi (Hom. Od. xi. 304; Apollod. i. 7. Β 4; Diod. v. 50; Hygin. Fab. 28; Paus. ix. 22. Β 5, x. 28. in fin.; Pind. Pyth. vii. 89).
This text is from: A dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, 1873 (ed. William Smith). Cited Oct 2006 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
SIKYON (Ancient city) CORINTHIA
Son of Phlias and Chthonophyle, sets up image of Dionysus.
Son of Telchis, Peloponnese originally called Apia after him.
Apis. A son of Telchis, and father of Thelxion. He was king at Sicyon, and is said to have been such a powerful prince, that previous to the arrival of Pelops, Peloponnesus was called after him Apia. (Paus. ii. 5.5..)
Antiope. In Homer a daughter of the Boeotian river-god Asopus, mother by Zeus
of Amphion and Zethus. In later legend her father is Nycteus of Hyria or Hysiae.
As he threatened to punish her for yielding to the approaches of Zeus under the
form of a satyr, she fled to Epopeus of Sicyon. This king her uncle Lycus killed
by order of his brother Nycteus, now dead, and led her back in chains. Arrived
on Mount Cithaeron, she gave birth to twins--Amphion by Zeus, Zethus by Epopeus--whom
Lycus left exposed upon the mountain. After being long imprisoned and ill-treated
by Dirce, the wife of Lycus , she escaped to Cithaeron, and made acquaintance
with her sons, whom a shepherd had brought up. She made them take a frightful
vengeance upon Dirce by tying her to a furious bull, for doing which Dionysus
drove her mad, and she wandered through Greece until Phocus, king of Phocis, healed
her and made her his wife.
Epopeus. Son of Poseidon and Canace, the daughter of Aeolus, brother of Aloeus.
He migrated from Thessaly to Sicyon, where he became king. He was killed by Lycus
for the sake of Antiope, who, it was alleged, was by him mother of Zethus.
These texts are from: Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities
Cited Sept. 2002 from Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks.
Epopeus, a son of Poseidon and Canace. He came from Thessaly to Sicyon, were he succeeded in the kingdom, as Corax died without leaving any heir to his throne. He carried away from Thebes the beautiful Antiope, the daughter of Nycteus, who therefore made war upon Epopeus. The two hostile kings died of the wounds which they received in the war; but previous to his death Epopeus dedicated a temple to Athena. (Paus. ii. 6.1; Apollod. i. 7.4). Pausanias (ii. 1.1) calls him a son of Aloeus, whereas he is commonly described as a brother of Aloeus. The temple of Athena which he had built at Sicyon was destroyed by lightning, but his tomb was preserved and shewn there to a very late period. (Paus. ii. 11.1) Another mythical being of this name occurs in Ovid. (Met. iii. 618, &c.)
This text is from: A dictionary of Greek and Roman biography and mythology, 1873 (ed. William Smith). Cited Oct 2005 from The Perseus Project URL below, which contains interesting hyperlinks
Son of Aegialeus. (Paus. ii. 5.5, 34.5)
Son of Aegyrus.
Leukippus. A son of Thurimachus, and father of Calchinia, was king of Sicyon. (Paus. ii. 5.5.)
Son of Poseidon and Calchinia.
Son of Peratus, founds sanctuary of Demeter, for bringing up his son.
Son of Plemnaeus, nursed by Demeter.
Coronus, a son of Apollo by Chrysorthe, father of Corax and Lamedon, king of Sicyon. (Paus. ii. 5.5)
Lamedon: Son of Coronus, king of Aegialus, fetches Sicyon from Attica. Pheno: Daughter of Clytius, wife of Lamedon.
Polybus : Persus Project index
Descendant of Clytius, king of Sicyon.
Son of Herakles, king of Sicyon, sacrifices to Herakles, migrates to Crete.
Son of Apollo and Syllis, king of Sicyon.
Son of Rhopalus, king of Sicyon, submits to Agamemnon.
Son of Hippolytus, shares kingdom of Sicyon with Phalces.
Son of Temenus, seizes Sicyon, founds temple of Hera at Sicyon, with his brother Cerynes carries off his sister Hyrnetho, kills Hyrnetho.
Receive our daily Newsletter with all the latest updates on the Greek Travel industry.
Subscribe now!