[Opinions] Re: Polydora and Polycaste
in reply to a message by jumper117
1. Polycaste was Nestor and Eurydice's daughter. (Note: there were many women named Eurydice in Greek myth. This Eurydice is not the same as Orpheus's wife.) Nestor appears in both The Iliad and The Odyssey; he was a king of Pylos.
Being Nestor's daughter also made Polycaste the granddaughter of Chloris (or, rather, a Chloris, because there were several women with that name in Greek myth). She was one of seven sons and seven daughters of Niobe and Amphion, collectively known as the Niobids; her birth name was Meliboea.
The Niobids were all slaughtered for their mother's impiety to the gods, save for Meliboea. (In some versions, Meliboea doesn't survive the massacre, however.) Meliboea changed her name to Chloris after the ordeal.
Niobe's foolishness was her boastfulness and pride. She bragged that though Leto, mother of the twin deities Apollo and Artemis, had borne two gods, Niobe had given birth to 14 children. Therefore, Niobe reasoned, she was an even greater mother than Leto. Needless to say, Apollo and Artemis were none to happy about this slight against their mother, and avenged her in the way the Olympian deities often performed revenge.
2. Polydora was borne by five separate women in myth. Among them were a daughter of Antigone (in turn the daughter of Oedipus and his mother Jocasta), an Oceanid, and an Amazon.
I was lazy and didn't include the genealogies of those I didn't know off the top of my head. I had to look up the info above.
I took my (very long, but not nearly complete) list of mythological names from various sources, and haven't yet put in namesakes. I just have the names themselves listed for now.
Miranda
Being Nestor's daughter also made Polycaste the granddaughter of Chloris (or, rather, a Chloris, because there were several women with that name in Greek myth). She was one of seven sons and seven daughters of Niobe and Amphion, collectively known as the Niobids; her birth name was Meliboea.
The Niobids were all slaughtered for their mother's impiety to the gods, save for Meliboea. (In some versions, Meliboea doesn't survive the massacre, however.) Meliboea changed her name to Chloris after the ordeal.
Niobe's foolishness was her boastfulness and pride. She bragged that though Leto, mother of the twin deities Apollo and Artemis, had borne two gods, Niobe had given birth to 14 children. Therefore, Niobe reasoned, she was an even greater mother than Leto. Needless to say, Apollo and Artemis were none to happy about this slight against their mother, and avenged her in the way the Olympian deities often performed revenge.
2. Polydora was borne by five separate women in myth. Among them were a daughter of Antigone (in turn the daughter of Oedipus and his mother Jocasta), an Oceanid, and an Amazon.
I was lazy and didn't include the genealogies of those I didn't know off the top of my head. I had to look up the info above.
I took my (very long, but not nearly complete) list of mythological names from various sources, and haven't yet put in namesakes. I just have the names themselves listed for now.
Miranda
Replies
well I'm impressed :) I know the Antigone story w/ Oedipus etc..
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