-
prehistoric man.
During the
Homeric era, in this
place there were two cities,
Hermion (in
place of
modern Ermioni) and
Masis (in
place of the
modern village...
-
Astronomical host
object Suffix Origin of the name Sun -helion
Helios Mercury -
hermion Hermes Venus -cythe
Cytherean Earth -gee Gaia Moon -lune -cynthion -selene...
- 47 (Harry, pp. 68–9;
English translation). Steph**** of
Byzantium s.v.
Hermion (II pp. 160, 161). Hard 2004, pp. 136–7;
Callimachus fr. 75 Clayman, pp...
-
Hermaphroditus "Hermes and Aphrodite"
Hermesianax "king Hermes" Hermione,
Hermion Hermippus "horse of Hermes"
Hermocrates "strength of Hermes" Hermogenes...
-
Eleusinian Demeter.
Major cults to
Demeter are
known at
Eleusis in Attica,
Hermion (in Crete), Megara, Celeae, Lerna, Aegila, Munychia, Corinth, Delos, Priene...
- nourishment,
whereas the
Bildungstrieb remains undamaged. (Gigantes) Almeida,
Hermion (1991).
Romantic Medicine and John Keats.
Oxford University Press. ISBN 9780195362640...
-
otherwise Phoroneus'
kingdom would not have p****ed to Argus. Europs' own son
Hermion was the
presumed eponym of Hermione, Argolis. Pausanias, 2.5.6 Eusebius...
-
Thomas Comer as Procles,
Charles Connor as
Lucullus and
Maria Foote as
Hermion. It was
widely performed in
Ireland and the
United States including at...
-
Hermione Hermione (Ancient Gr****: Ἑρμιόνη) or
Hermium or
Hermion (Ἑρμιών or Ἑρμιῶν) was a town at the
southern extremity of Argolis, in the
wider use...
-
merchant vessels (Pan Europe, Saidja, Herstein, Sunetta, Centaur, and
Hermion) were
instructed to p****
through that
location and keep a
lookout for survivors...