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  2. Selene - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Selene

    Selene's head is sometimes surrounded by a nimbus, and from the Hellenistic period onwards, she is sometimes pictured with a torch. [124] In later second and third century AD Roman funerary art, the love of Selene for Endymion and his eternal sleep was a popular subject for artists. [125]

  3. Endymion (mythology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Endymion_(mythology)

    Whatever the case, Zeus granted Selene's wish and put Endymion into an eternal sleep. Every night, Selene visited him where he slept, and by him had fifty daughters [8] who are equated by some scholars (such as James George Frazer or H. J. Rose) with the fifty months of the Olympiad. [9] [need quotation to verify]. [10] [11]

  4. Diana and Endymion (Solimena) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Diana_and_Endymion_(Solimena)

    In Greek mythology, the moon goddess, Selene, drives her moon chariot across the heavens, although she was also regarded as the personification of the Moon itself.Selene is best known for her affair with the beautiful mortal Endymion, the young shepherd who used to sleep on a mountain, and with whom she had fifty daughters. [2]

  5. Pandia - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pandia

    From the Homeric Hymn to Selene, we have: "Once the Son of Cronos [Zeus] was joined with her [Selene] in love; and she conceived and bare a daughter Pandia, exceeding lovely amongst the deathless gods." [3] An Athenian tradition perhaps made Pandia the wife of Antiochus, the eponymous hero of Antiochis, one of the ten Athenian tribes . [4]

  6. Myia (mythology) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Myia_(mythology)

    An ancient Greek proverb connected to this story was μυίης θάρσος (literally 'the fly's boldness'), said for those who were of excessive boldness. [1]Similarly to the myth of the boy-turned-rooster Alectryon (also surviving in the works of Lucian) Myia's story is an aetiological myth which nonetheless does not link its protagonist to a specific Greek place or lineage, with a ...

  7. Ampelos - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ampelos

    According to Nonnus, Ampelos was gored to death by a wild bull after he mocked the goddess Selene, a scene described as follows: "[Ampelos, love of Dionysos, rode upon the back of a wild bull:] He shouted boldly to the fullfaced Moon (Mene)—'Give me best, Selene, horned driver of cattle! Now I am both—I have horns and I ride a bull!'

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  9. Category:Mythological lovers - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Category:Mythological_lovers

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