- mythology,
Epaphus (/ˈɛpəfəs/;
Ancient Gr****: Ἔπᾰφος), also
called Apis or Munantius, was a son of the Gr**** God Zeus and king of Egypt.
Epaphus was the...
-
Libya (Ancient Gr****: Λιβύη, romanized: Libýē) is the
daughter of
Epaphus, King of Egypt, in both Gr**** and
Roman mythology. She
personified the land...
-
daughter of river-god Nilus,
accordingly a
Naiad Nymph, was the wife to
Epaphus, and
mother of
Libya and
possibly Lysian****a. She and her
husband were...
- was
restored to
human form by Zeus. There, she gave
birth to Zeus's son
Epaphus, and a
daughter as well, Keroessa. She
later married Egyptian king Telegonus...
-
three recognized subspecies: S.
epaphus epaphus (widespread) S.
epaphus gadoui (described from Venezuela) S.
epaphus trayja (described from Brazil, Paraguay)...
-
Xylophanes epaphus is a moth of the
family Sphingidae first described by Jean
Baptiste Boisduval in 1875. It is
found from
French Guiana possibly as far...
- Parn****ius
epaphus, the
common red Apollo, is a high
altitude butterfly which is
found in
India and Nepal. It is a
member of the snow
Apollo genus (Parn****ius)...
- Aethiopians." In The
Catalogues of Women, he
stated that the
Egyptian king
Epaphus was the
progenitor of the
Aethiopians and
other dark-skinned
tribes of...
- myth of Byzantium. She was the
daughter of Io and Zeus;
elder sister of
Epaphus; and
mother of Byzas,
founder of Byzantium, with her uncle, Poseidon. According...
- freedom.
Hyginus relates the
Titanomachy differently: "After Hera saw that
Epaphus, born of a concubine,
ruled such a
great kingdom (Egypt), she saw to it...