- In Gr**** mythology,
Cisseus (Ancient Gr****: Κισσεὺς
means "wreathe with ivy") may
refer to the
following personages:
Cisseus, an
Egyptian prince as one...
-
daughter of
Cisseus is also discussed. A
scholiast on
Homer relates that Hecuba's
parents were
either Dymas and the
nymph Eunoe or
Cisseus and Telecleia;...
-
Priam had
several wives, the
primary one Hecuba,
daughter of
Dymas or
Cisseus, and
several concubines, who bore his children.
There is no exhaustive...
-
fashion for a
victory against Cisseus: "The
Macedonians say that Car****, king of Macedonia,
overcame in
battle Cisseus, a
chieftain in a
bordering country...
- Heraclid, who, when
expelled by his brothers, fled to king
Cisseus in Macedonia.
Cisseus promised him the
succession to his
throne and the hand of his...
-
Later in the Iliad, Rhesus,
another Thracian king,
makes an appearance.
Cisseus, father-in-law to the
Trojan elder Antenor, is also
given as a Thracian...
-
against Cisseus: "The
Macedonians say that Car****, king of Macedonia,
overcame a
chieftain in a
bordering country in the
battle of
Cisseus. For his...
- and thus full
brother of Phantes, Peristhenes, Hermus, Dryas, Potamon,
Cisseus, Lixus, Imbrus, Bromius,
Polyctor and Chthonius. In some accounts, he could...
- Phantes, Peristhenes, Hermus, Potamon, Dryas, Lixus, Imbrus, Bromius,
Cisseus and Polyctor. In some accounts, he
could be a son of
Aegyptus either by...
- dynasty—set up a
trophy after the
Argive fashion for a
victory against Cisseus.
Isocrates defended Philip's Gr****
origins but
perhaps did not
think the...