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Leucothea and with
transformed into the " white goddess " Leucothea ; Melicertes was carried more dead than alive to the shores where the Isthmian Games were celebrated in his honour, as he was transformed to the hero Palaimon, who was placated with a noctunal chthonic rite, and the whose winners were crowned with a barren wreath of spruce.
with images in it of Poseidon, Leucothea and Palaemon himself.
In company with Leucothea, Melicertes / Palaemon was widely invoked for protection from dangers at sea.
She leapt into the sea with her son Melicertes in her arms, and out of pity, the Hellenes asserted, the Olympian gods turned them both into sea-gods, transforming Melicertes into Palaemon, the patron of the Isthmian games, and Ino into Leucothea.
The canto, and sequence, then closes with an extended treatment of the passage from the fifth book of the Odyssey in which a drowning Odysseus / Pound is rescued by Leucothea.

Leucothea and by
Ino, pursued by her husband, who had been driven mad by Hera because Ino had brought up the infant Dionysus, threw herself and Melicertes into the sea from a high rock between Megara and Corinth, Both were changed into marine deities: Ino as Leucothea, noted by Homer, Melicertes as Palaemon.
Leucothea by Jean Jules Allasseur ( 1862 ), Cour Carrée of the Palais du Louvre.
Leucothea is mentioned by Robert Graves in The White Goddess.
The mention of the goddess of the sanctuary as being named locally Eileitheia and Leucothea by different Greek authors narrating its destruction by the Syracusean fleet in 384 BC, made the picture even more complex.
Since Helios had defiled Leucothea, Orchamus had her put to death by burial alive in the sands.
Cassiodorus, in a letter written in A. D. 527, described a fair held at a former pagan shrine of Leucothea, in the still culturally Greek region of south Italy, which had been Christianized by converting it to a baptistery ( Variae 8. 33 ).
Towards the close of the canto, the reader is returned to the world of Odysseus ; a line from Book Five of the Odyssey tells of the winds breaking up the hero's boat and is followed shortly by Leucothea, " Kadamon thugater " or Cadmon's daughter ) offering him her veil to carry him to shore (" my bikini is worth yr raft ").
The second location Moschice ( Moschikê )in which was a temple of Leucothea, once famous for its wealth, but plundered by Pharnaces and Mithridates – was divided between the Colchians, Armenians, and Iberians ( cf.
In it " lies the temple of Leucothea, founded by Phrixus, and the oracle of Phrixus, where a ram is never sacrificed ; it was once rich, but it was robbed in our time by Pharnaces, and a little later by Mithridates of Pergamum.
* Infant Bacchus Nurtured by the Nymph Leucothea ( 1830 ; Semur-en-Auxois, Musée Municipal )

Leucothea and .
Leucothea was daughter of Orchamus and sister of Clytia.
Enraged, Orchamus ordered Leucothea to be buried alive.
Both were afterwards worshipped as marine divinities, Ino as Leucothea, Melicertes as Palaemon.
In Greek mythology Ino ( ) was a mortal queen of Thebes, who after her death and transfiguration was worshiped as a goddess under her epithet Leucothea, the " white goddess.
Both were afterwards worshipped as marine divinities, Ino as Leucothea (" the white goddess "), Melicertes as Palaemon.
A sympathetic Zeus didn't want Ino to die, and transfigured her and Melicertes as Leucothea and Palaemon.
Transformed into the goddess Leucothea, Ino also represents one of the many sources of divine aid to Odysseus in the Odyssey ( 5: 333ff ), her earliest appearance in literature.
In Greek mythology, Leucothea ( ( Λευκοθέα ), " white goddess ") was one of the aspects under which an ancient sea goddess was recognized, in this case as a transformed nymph.
In the version sited at Rhodes, a much earlier mythic level is reflected in the genealogy: there, the woman who plunged into the sea and became Leucothea was Halia (" of the sea ", a personification of the saltiness of the sea ) whose parents were from the ancient generation, Thalassa and Pontus or Uranus.
) Leucothea makes a dramatic appearance as a gannet who tells the shipwrecked Odysseus to discard his cloak and raft and offers him a veil ( κρήδεμνον, kredemnon ) to wind round himself to save his life and reach land.
Said Leucothae ... Then Leucothea had pity ,/' mortal once / Who now is a sea-god ...'"), and reappears at the beginning of Canto 96, the first of the Thrones section (" Κρήδεμνον .../ κρήδεμνον .../ and the wave concealed her ,/ dark mass of great water.
He had two daughters: Leucothea and Clytia.
Leucothea loved Apollo, the sun god.
Enraged, Orchamus ordered Leucothea buried alive.
* An alternate spelling for Leucothea, the name of several goddesses and women in Greek mythology.
Rhode was worshipped on Rhodes in her own name, as well as Halia, the embodiment of the " salt sea " or as the " white goddess ", Leucothea.
He drowned but was transfigured as the marine deity Palaemon, while his mother became Leucothea.

appears and twice
Milk appears twice a day.
In fact it appears to have happened at least twice, following different paths in protostomes and deuterostomes.
* Inverted nun ( only appears twice in the Book of Numbers and seven times in the Book of Psalms )
The Greek word Messias appears only twice in the Greek Old Testament of the promised prince ( Daniel 9: 26 ; Psalm 2: 2 ); yet, when a name was wanted for the promised one, who was to be at once King and Savior, this title was used.
The information appears in three lines ( twice ):
" Fenrir " appears twice in verse as a common noun for a " wolf " or " warg " in chapter 58 of Skáldskaparmál, and in chapter 56 of the book Háttatal.
The quote from Heraclitus appears in Plato's Cratylus twice ; in 401, d as:
The text appears in a large number of Patristic quotations and twice in the Clementine Homilies ( Hom.
However, Calvinball appears to have a permanent rule that the same rules may never be used twice ; a nomic, at least in its initial state, has no truly permanent rules.
In the Prose Edda, her role in helping her husband through his time spent in bondage is stated again, she appears in various kennings, and her status as a goddess is twice stated.
In chapter 75, Víðarr's name appears twice in a list of Æsir.
performance appears to be about twice that of W. The
Relative to the Earth's surface it has twice this period, and hence appears to go around the Earth twice every day.
It may be noted that in a paper on the proportion of the gases or elastic fluids constituting the atmosphere, read by him in November 1802, the law of multiple proportions appears to be anticipated in the words: " The elements of oxygen may combine with a certain portion of nitrous gas or with twice that portion, but with no intermediate quantity ", but there is reason to suspect that this sentence may have been added some time after the reading of the paper, which was not published until 1805.
As a result, from the surface of Mars it appears to rise in the west, move across the sky in 4 h 15 min or less, and set in the east twice in each Martian day.
In The Two Towers ( 2002 ), Boromir appears in the theatrical version only briefly during the beginning flashback sequence of Gandalf's fight with the Balrog in Moria, and he appears twice in the Extended Edition, both times as flashbacks that were not shown previously in the films.
Later during a three-part episode, Qui-Gon appears as a Force ghost twice ; first to Obi-Wan and later to Anakin when they, along with Anakin's Padawan Ahsoka Tano, are trapped on the mysterious planet Mortis.
Gibarian ’ s visitor was a “ giant Negress ” who twice appears to Kelvin ; first in a hallway soon after his arrival, and then while he is examining Gibarian ’ s cadaver.
However he appears only twice in the third series, these being his final appearances.
The " Pyramus and Thisbe " plot appears twice in Shakespeare's works.
Povidone-iodine solution is often used for such cleaning, but chlorhexidine appears to be twice as effective as iodine.
The phrase nuptae genibus nixae (" brides laboring on their knees ") appears twice in this invocation.

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