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Browsing named entities in a specific section of Pausanias, Description of Greece. Search the whole document.
Found 111 total hits in 19 results.
Delphi (Greece) (search for this): book 8, chapter 24
Miletus (Turkey) (search for this): book 8, chapter 24
Thelpusa (search for this): book 8, chapter 24
Zacynthus (Greece) (search for this): book 8, chapter 24
Cumae (Italy) (search for this): book 8, chapter 24
Priene (Turkey) (search for this): book 8, chapter 24
Aetolia (Greece) (search for this): book 8, chapter 24
Argos (Greece) (search for this): book 8, chapter 24
Xanthus (Turkey) (search for this): book 8, chapter 24
The founder of Psophis, according to some, was Psophis, the son of Arrhon, the son of Erymanthus, the son of Aristas, the son of Parthaon, the son of Periphetes, the son of Nyctimus. Others say that Psophis was the daughter of Xanthus, the son of Erymanthus, the son of Arcas. Such are the Arcadian traditions concerning their kings,
but the most accurate version is that Eryx, the despot of Sicania, had a daughter named Psophis, whom Heracles, though he had intercourse with her, refused to take to his home, but left with child in the care of his friend Lycortas, who lived at Phegia, a city called Erymanthus before the reign of Phegeus. Having been brought up here, Echephron and Promachus, the sons of Heracles and the Sicanian woman, changed the name of Phegia to Psophis, the name of their mother.
Psophis is also the name of the Zacynthian acropolis, because the first man to sail across to the island was Zacynthus, the son of Dardanus, a Psophidian who became its founder. From Seirae it
Egypt (Egypt) (search for this): book 8, chapter 24