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Antinoe

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
This article is about the mythological figures. For the ancient Egyptian city, seeAntinopolis.

InGreek mythology, the nameAntinoe (/ænˈtɪn./;Ancient Greek: Ἀντινόη) may refer to:

  • Antinoe, mother ofAncaeus andEpochus by KingLycurgus ofArcadia.[1] The latter's wife was otherwise known asCleophyle orEurynome.[2]
  • Antinoe, daughter of KingCepheus ofTegea. Instructed by an oracle, she removed the inhabitants ofMantinea from the old settlement founded byMantineus, son ofLycaon, to a new one. She was guided to the new site by a snake, and from that circumstance the river on the banks of which the new city was founded received the name Ophis (Greek for "snake").[3] The tomb of Antinoe, known as "The Common Hearth", was shown in Mantinea.[4]
  • Antinoe, daughter ofPelias, King ofIolcus. She was a sister ofAsteropeia. After the sisters had been tricked byMedea into killing their own father, they had to flee fromIolcus toArcadia, where they ended their days and were buried.[5]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^Scholia onApollonius of Rhodes,Argonautica 1.164
  2. ^Apollodorus,3.9.2
  3. ^Pausanias, 8.8.4
  4. ^Pausanias, 8.9.5
  5. ^Pausanias, 8.11.3; note the contradiction to the account of theBibliotheca (1. 9. 10), which informs that Pelias' daughters were four,Alcestis, Hippothoe, Pelopia and Peisidice. Pausanias refers to the painterMicon for the names, and notes that the sisters were never mentioned by names in any poetic works known to him.

References

[edit]
This article includes a list of Greek mythological figures with the same or similar names. If aninternal link for a specific Greek mythology article referred you to this page, you may wish to change the link to point directly to the intended Greek mythology article, if one exists.
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