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Enyalius and Ares
Enyalius, rather than another name for Ares, in at least one tradition was his son by Enyo.
She is also accredited as the mother of Enyalius, a minor war god, by Ares.
However, the name Enyalius can also be used as a title for Ares himself.
Enyalius or Enyalio ( Greek: Ενυάλιος ) in Greek mythology is generally a byname of Ares the god of war but in Mycenaean times is differentiated as a separate deity.
A scholiast on Homer declares that the poet Alcman sometimes identified Ares with Enyalius and sometimes differentiated him, and that Enyalius was sometimes made the son of Ares by Enyo and sometimes the son of Cronus and Rhea.
:' But Jason called to mind the counsels of Medea full of craft, and seized from the plain a huge round boulder, a terrible quoit of Ares Enyalius ; four stalwart youths could not have raised it from the ground even a little.
The survivors erected a temple to Ares Enyalius by the road where they fell:
:' After the city was saved, they buried the women who had fallen in battle by the Argive road, and as a memorial to the achievements of the women who were spared they dedicated a temple to Ares Enyalius ... Up to the present day they celebrate the Festival of Impudence ( Hybristika ) on the anniversary the battle, putting the women into men's tunics and cloaks and the men in women's dresses and head-coverings.
Polybius ' history renders the Roman god Mars by Greek Ares but the Roman god Quirinus by Enyalius, and the same identifications are made by later writers such as Dionysius of Halicarnassus, perhaps only because it made sense that a Roman god who was sometimes confounded with Mars and sometimes differentiated should be represented in Greek by a name that was similarly sometimes equated with Ares ( who definitely corresponded with Mars ) and was sometimes differentiated.
gl: Ares Enyalius
Witnesses to this shall be the gods Agraulus, Hestia, Enyo, Enyalius, Ares, Athena the Warrior, Zeus, Thallo, Auxo, Hegemone, Heracles, and the boundaries of my native land, wheat, barley, vines, olive-trees, fig-trees ...

Enyalius and .
According to Pausanias ( 3. 15. 7 ) the Lacedaemonians believed that by chaining up Enyalius they would prevent the god from deserting Sparta.
Pausanias also mentions at 3. 14. 9 and 3. 20. 2 that puppies were sacrificed to Enyalius in Sparta.
: But as to the plan of Shinar, in the country of Babylonia, Hestiaeus mentions it, when he says thus: " Such of the priests as were saved, took the sacred vessels of Zeus Enyalius, and came to Shinar of Babylonia.

epithet and Ares
Ares may also be accompanied by Kydoimos, the demon of the din of battle ; the Makhai (" Battles "); thev " Hysminai " (" Acts of manslaughter "); Polemos, a minor spirit of war, or only an epithet of Ares, since it has no specific dominion ; and Polemos's daughter, Alala, the goddess or personification of the Greek war-cry, whose name Ares uses as his own war-cry.
Homer gives him the epithet " the peer of murderous Ares ".
Others are not: Ares, for example, is represented only as " Enyalios " which was retained as an epithet.
The Chorus bids Trygaeus not to use this epithet in an invocation to the gods because Ares has nothing to do with peace ( line 457 ).

epithet and is
the prolusion in which the autobiographic statement about the epithet occurs is such a mass of intentionally buried allusions that almost nothing in it can be accepted as true -- or discarded as false.
The earliest attested name is the Hittite Assuwa a region in central-western Anatolia which seems to be connected with the Mycenean Greek epithet a-si-wi-ja in Linear B inscriptions found at Pylos.
He is the only English monarch to be accorded the epithet " the Great ".
" Anaxarchus is said to have possessed " fortitude and contentment in life ," which earned him the epithet eudaimonikos (" fortunate "), which may imply that he held the end of life to be eudaimonia.
He is commonly referred to in popular culture by the epithet, " King of the Wild Frontier ".
However, the name Artemis ( variants Arktemis, Arktemisa ) is most likely related to Greek árktos ‘ bear ’ ( from PIE * h₂ŕ ̥ tḱos ), supported by the bear cult that the goddess had in Attica ( Brauronia ) and the Neolithic remains at the Arkouditessa, as well as the story about Callisto, which was originally about Artemis ( Arcadian epithet kallisto ).
The word " Bluetooth " is an anglicised version of the Scandinavian Blåtand / Blåtann, the epithet of the tenth-century king Harald I of Denmark and parts of Norway who united dissonant Danish tribes into a single kingdom.
Lilium is the genus, and columbianum the specific epithet.
When writing the scientific name of an organism, it is proper to capitalize the first letter in the genus and put all of the specific epithet in lowercase.
Donald's reputation is suggested by the epithet dasachtach, a word used of violent madmen and mad bulls, attached to him in the 11th-century writings of Flann Mainistrech, echoed by the his description in the Prophecy of Berchan as " the rough one who will think relics and psalms of little worth ".
In this line of interpretation, Cernach is taken as an epithet with a wide semantic field — " angular ; victorious ; bearing a prominent growth " — and Conall is seen as " the same figure " as the ancient Cernunnos.
Apollo is connected with the site by his epithet Δελφίνιος Delphinios, " the Delphinian ".
The epithet is connected with dolphins ( Greek δελφίς ,- ῖνος ) in the Homeric Hymn to Apollo ( line 400 ), recounting the legend of how Apollo first came to Delphi in the shape of a dolphin, carrying Cretan priests on his back.
Tauropolos is an ancient epithet attached to Hecate, Artemis and even Athena.
This word has often been employed as an epithet in Eastern European legends ( Sabya Damaskinya or Sablja Dimiskija meaning " Damascene saber "), including the Serbian and Bulgarian legends of Prince Marko, a historical figure of the late 14th century in what is currently the Republic of Macedonia.
She is compared with Penthesilea, mythical queen of the Amazons, by the Greek historian Nicetas Choniates ; he adds that she gained the epithet chrysopous ( golden-foot ) from the cloth of gold that decorated and fringed her robe.
She is most often associated with her Homeric epithet " rosy-fingered " ( rhododactylos ), but Homer also calls her Eos Erigeneia:
The theonym Freyja was thus an epithet in origin, replacing a personal name that is now unattested.
Héktōr, or Éktōr as found in Aeolic poetry, is also an epithet of Zeus in his capacity as " he who holds together ".
van Windekens, offers " young cow, heifer ", which is consonant with Hera's common epithet βοῶπις ( boōpis, cow-eyed ).
Her familiar Homeric epithet Boôpis, is always translated " cow-eyed ", for, like the Greeks of Classical times, its other natural translation " cow-faced " or at least " of cow aspect " is rejected.
The earliest Mahāyāna texts often use the term Mahāyāna as an epithet and synonym for Bodhisattvayāna, but the term Hīnayāna is comparatively rare in early texts, and is usually not found at all in the earliest translations.

epithet and often
The epithet Amathusia in Roman poetry often means little more than " Cypriote ," attesting to the fame of the city.
Lovecraft's style has often been criticised by unsympathetic critics, yet scholars such as S. T. Joshi have shown that Lovecraft consciously utilised a variety of literary devices to form a unique style of his own-these include conscious archaism, prose-poetic techniques combined with essay-form techniques, alliteration, anaphora, crescendo, transferred epithet, metaphor, symbolism and colloquialism.
Odysseus often receives the patronymic epithet Laertiades ( Greek: ), son of Laërtes.
Being an early pioneer next to Rodolphe Töpffer in the art of combining words and pictures to tell often humorous stories in sequential panels, throughout the latter half of the 20th century Busch has become posthumously known in German by the honorary epithet of Großvater der Comics (" Grandfather of Comics ").
Nevertheless, it is significant that, despite the apparently positive description of a Prophet blessing the Israelites, given in Numbers 22 – 24, in rabbinical literature the epithet rasha, translating as the wicked one, is often attached to the name of Balaam ( Talmud Berachot l. c.
Although Shub-Niggurath is often associated with the epithet " The Black Goat of the Woods with a Thousand Young ", it is possible that this Black Goat is a separate entity.
It was the distinguishing virtue of the founding hero Aeneas, who is often given the adjectival epithet pius throughout Vergil's epic Aeneid.
Monthu was an ancient god, his name meaning nomad, originally a manifestation of the scorching effect of the sun, Ra, and as such often appeared under the epithet Monthu-Ra.
Śrī is also frequently used as an epithet of some Hindu gods, in which case it is often translated into English as Holy.
Thus the diagnosis " often says more about the clinician's negative reaction to the patient than it does about the patient ... as an expression of counter transference hate, borderline explains away the breakdown in empathy between the therapist and the patient and becomes an institutional epithet in the guise of pseudoscientific jargon ".
As a celebrated scholastic philosopher and doctor of theology, he is often called Doctor Profundus, ( medieval epithet, meaning " the Profound Doctor ").
Schilling and Capdeville counter that it is his function of presiding over the return to peace that gave Janus this epithet, as confirmed by his association on March 30 with Pax, Concordia and Salus, even though it is true that Janus as god of all beginnings presides also over that of war and is thus often called belliger bringer of war as well as pacificus.
Vitalism is now considered an obsolete term in the philosophy of science, most often used as a pejorative epithet.
The area around the large traffic roundabout to the east of where the gate stood is also often referred to as Aldgate ( although strictly, this is Aldgate High Street, and extends a short distance into Whitechapel ; it is also known occasionally by the epithet ' Gardiners ' Corner ', in honour of a long-disappeared department store ).
Though the preferred term by scuba users is " diver ", the " frogman " epithet persists in informal usage by non-divers, especially in the media and often in reference to professional scuba divers such as in a police role.
A common name of a taxon or organism ( also known as a vernacular name, English name, colloquial name, trivial name, trivial epithet, country name, popular name, or farmer's name ) is a name in general use within a community ; it is often contrasted with the scientific name for the same organism.
The tree is often confused with the much taller ' Horizontalis ' ( Weeping Wych Elm ) owing to both being given the epithet ' Pendula ' at some stage.
Rhodopechys means " rosy forearm " in Ancient Greek and as a term goes all the way back to Homer, who used it often as an epithet to describe women and goddesses.
Historian Mark Noble wrote in 1805, that these fights often involve the use of " every epithet that was disgraceful to themselves and their opponents.
Bandua or Bandi is another with numerous dedications: the name is male in most inscriptions and yet the only depiction being female, it seems the name referred to numerous deities, especially since Bandi / Bandue often carries an epithet associating the name with that of a town or other location such as Bandua Roudaeco, Etobrico or Brealiacui.
As Earle ( 1998 ) finds, Newfoundland girls married American personnel by the thousands, " the Yanks ' jaunty manner and easy social ways making an often stark contrast to the Canadian servicemen who at this time began to coin the epithet ' Newfie.
The word Agonistes (), found as an epithet following a person's name, means “ the struggler ” or “ the combatant .” It is most often an allusion to John Milton ’ s, " himself a Christian agonist ", 1671 verse tragedy Samson Agonistes, which recounts the end of Samson's life, when he is a blind captive of the Philistines, described as being “ Eyeless in Gaza at the mill with slaves ”.

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