• Anicetus (Ancient Greek: Ἀνίκητος, romanized: Aníkētos, meaning "Unconquerable") and Alexiares (Ancient Greek: Ἀλεξιάρης, romanized: Alexiárēs, meaning...
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  • Look up Anicetus in Wiktionary, the free dictionary. Anicetus is a Latin given name, from Greek Ανίκητος (Aníkētos, lit. 'invincible'), and may refer...
    662 bytes (91 words) - 01:54, 15 June 2023
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    Heracles (category Articles having different image on Wikidata and Wikipedia)
    and having finally reconciled with Hera, he got her daughter Hebe as his fourth and final wife. They had two sons together, Alexiares and Anicetus. When...
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  • Thumbnail for Hebe (mythology)
    Hebe (mythology) (category Articles having same image on Wikidata and Wikipedia)
    after ascending to divinity. Hebe had two children with Heracles: Alexiares and Anicetus. Although nothing is known about these deities beyond their names...
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  • Roman authors Cicero and Hyginus, "Miseria" (Misery) is one of the offspring of the Nox (Night, the Roman equivalent of Nyx) and Erebus. Oizys has no...
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    Zeus and the Oceanid Eurynome. The mythographer Apollodorus, in contrast, calls them the children of Zeus by Eunomia, the goddess of good order and lawful...
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  • Freese, as the Familia gods of the dwarf Dormul and the elf Luvis respectively. Alexiares and Anicetus Simek 1987. Lindow 2001. Lindow, John (2001). Norse...
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  • of the goat Amalthea and honey. Callimachus appears to make the Theban nymph Melia, who was, by Apollo, the mother of Tenerus and Ismenus, one of the "earth-born"...
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    Taiwan. Statue of Horse-face, Fengdu Ghost City. Alexiares and Anicetus, twin-sons of Heracles/Hercules and Hebe/Juventas; alongside their father, they are...
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    Thanatos (category Articles having different image on Wikidata and Wikipedia)
    no father, but is the son of Nyx (Night) and brother of Hypnos (Sleep). Homer earlier described Hypnos and Thanatos as twin brothers in his epic poem...
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  • Ἀεργία, 'inactivity') is the personification of sloth, idleness, indolence and laziness. She is the translation of the Latin Socordia, or Ignavia: the name...
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  • pursuing because of his father. This figure exists in Roman mythology as well and is known as Pomona,[citation needed] in which Porus is the personification...
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    between Homer and Hesiod, with Uranus and Gaia as the parents of Oceanus and Tethys, and Oceanus and Tethys as the parents of Cronus and Rhea "and all that...
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  • with her father, and in her affliction she makes supplication to the nether-world Arai (Curses), poor wretch, that he complete a bitter and accursed old age...
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  • Thumbnail for Echidna (mythology)
    [ékʰidna]) was a monster, half-woman and half-snake, who lived alone in a cave. She was the mate of the fearsome monster Typhon and was the mother of many of the...
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  • Thumbnail for Thalia (Grace)
    Thalia (Grace) (category Articles having different image on Wikidata and Wikipedia)
    daughters of Zeus and Oceanid Eurynome. Alternative parentage may be Zeus and Eurydome, Eurymedousa, or Euanthe; Dionysus and Kronois; or Helios and the Naiad...
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  • offspring of Chaos, and the father of Aether and Hemera (Day) by Nyx (Night); in other Greek cosmogonies, he is the father of Aether, Eros, and Metis, or the...
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  • Thumbnail for Pasithea
    was one of the Graces. She is obscure, and the primary sources of information about her are limited to Homer and Nonnus. In book 14 the Iliad, Pasithea...
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  • Titan Crius and Eurybia, and thus brother to Astraeus and Pallas. Ancient tradition records very little of Perses other than his marriage and offspring...
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  • Epiales (Ancient Greek: Ἠπιάλης, romanized: Epiálēs) was the spirit (daemon) and personification of nightmares. Alternate spellings of the name were Epialos...
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  • Ἔλεος m.) or Elea was the personification of mercy, clemency, compassion and pity – the counterpart of the Roman goddess Clementia.[citation needed] Pausanias...
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  • alternatively spelled Graiai and Graiae) were three sisters who had gray hair from their birth and shared one eye and one tooth among them. They were...
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  • Thumbnail for Kakia
    (meaning bad and evil), the Greek goddess of vice and moral badness, abominations (presumably, sin or crime), was depicted as a vain, plump, and heavily made-up...
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  • Philotes (category Greek love and lust goddesses)
    personifying affection, friendship, and sexual intercourse. Philotes was a daughter of the primordial deities Erebus (Darkness) and Nyx (Night). According to Hesiod's...
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    god of beauty and desire who spent part of his time in the underworld, and part on earth before his tragic death Alexiares and Anicetus Charon, a psychopomp...
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    Charites, or Graces, in Greek mythology and the goddess of swamps and flowery wreaths. She is the daughter of Zeus and Eurynome. She was depicted in Athenian...
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    Epimetheus (category Articles having same image on Wikidata and Wikipedia)
    Prometheus ("foresight") is ingeniously clever, Epimetheus ("hindsight") is inept and foolish. In some accounts of the myth, Epimetheus unleashes the unforeseen...
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  • delusion, ruin, and blind folly, rash action and reckless impulse who led men down the path of ruin. She also led both gods and men to rash and inconsiderate...
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  • Thumbnail for Erinyes
    Cronus castrated his father, Uranus, and threw his genitalia into the sea, the Erinyes (along with the Giants and the Meliae) emerged from the drops of...
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  • Horkos, Ponos and many other daemons. "And hateful Eris bore painful Ponos ("Hardship"), Lethe ("Forgetfulness") and Limos ("Starvation") and the tearful...
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