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Alcimedon
Multiple Greek mythological figures
Multiple Greek mythological figures
Alcimedon (; Ancient Greek: Ἀλκιμέδων) can refer to a number of people in Greek mythology and history:
- Alcimedon, one of the Tyrrhenian sailors, who wanted to carry off the infant Dionysus from Naxos, but was metamorphosed, with his companions, into a dolphin.
- Alcimedon, an Arcadian hero, from whom the Arcadian plain Alcimedon derived its name. He lived in a place near Mount Ostracina and had a daughter named Phialo, by whom Heracles had a son, Aechmagoras. Alcimedon exposed the latter but Heracles saved him.
- Alcimedon, a son of Laerceus, and one of the commanders of the Myrmidons under Patroclus.
- Alcimedon, a craftsman, mentioned or imagined by the Latin poet Virgil in his Eclogue 3, who had made two pairs of cups, one pair decorated with pictures of Conon of Samos and another astronomer, and the other pair with a picture of Orpheus.
Notes
References
- [[Ovid]], ''[[Metamorphoses]]'' 3.581-691; [[Hyginus (Fabulae). Hyginus]], ''Fabulae'' [https://topostext.org/work/206#134 134]
- [[Pausanias (geographer). Pausanias]], 8.12.2
- [[Homer]], ''[[Iliad]]'' 16.197; [[Quintus Smyrnaeus]], 11.448 ff.
- Virgil, ''Eclogue'' 3.37 and 44.
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