-
Josephus Flavius Minyans Hammond and Scullard, "
OGYGUS" p. 748; Pausanias, 9.5.1.
Hammond and Scullard, "
OGYGUS", p. 748. Fontenrose, p. 236.
Liddell & Scott...
-
Library on
pages 21, 22 and 23.
Entry Ωγύγιος at
Liddell &
Scott Entry "
Ogygus" in N. G. L.
Hammond and H. H. Scullard, The
Oxford classical Dictionary...
- point: 'and defeated,
Ogygus fled to Tartessus.
While at that time that
region was
famous as Akte, now it is
called Attica,
which Ogygus then took over.' (Theophilus...
- Oeneus, a king of
Calydon Oenomaus, a king of Pisa Oenopion, a king of
Chios Ogygus, a king of
Thebes Oicles, a king of
Argos Oileus, a king of
Locris Orestes...
- justice. Praxidice,
according to Steph**** of Byzantium, a
daughter of
Ogygus named Praxi****,
married to
Tremiles (after whom
Lycia had been previously...
- town of Eleusis.
Eleusis was a son of
Hermes and the
Oceanid Daeira, or of
Ogygus. Pany****is
wrote of him as
father of Triptolemus,
adding that "Demeter came...
-
occupy the land of
Thebes are said to have been the Ectenes,
whose king was
Ogygus, an aboriginal."
Entry "Ogyges" in
Oskar Seyffert, A
Dictionary of classical...
-
sometimes referred to as the "citadel of Calydnus".
Calydnus was
succeeded by
Ogygus. A
certain Calydnus was also the
mythical eponym of the
island Calydna near...
- was
called the
daughter of Zeus and
Iodame and was
given in
marriage to
Ogygus by her
father after Deucalion’s flood. She was the
sister of
another Deucalion...
-
Tremiles (eponym of Tremile=Lycia) and the
nymph Praxi****,
daughter of
Ogygus. His
three brothers were Tloos,
Pinarus and Cragus. This
Xanthus was probably...