Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://dbpedia.org/resource/Tithonus> ?p ?o }
- Tithonus abstract "In Greek mythology, Tithonos (latinised Tithonus, pronounced [tɪˈθoʊnəs] or [taɪ-]; Ancient Greek: Τιθωνός) was the lover of Eos, Titan of the dawn, who was known in Roman mythology as Aurora. Tithonus was a Trojan by birth, the son of King Laomedon of Troy by a water nymph named Strymo (Στρυμώ). The mythology reflected by the fifth-century vase-painters of Athens envisaged Tithonus as a rhapsode, as the lyre in his hand, on an oinochoe (wine jug) of the Achilles Painter, ca. 470 BC–460 BCE (illustration) attests. Competitive singing, as in the Contest of Homer and Hesiod, is also depicted vividly in the Homeric Hymn to Apollo and mentioned in the two Hymns to Aphrodite.Eos kidnapped Ganymede and Tithonus, both from the royal house of Troy, to be her lovers. The mytheme of the goddess's mortal lover is an archaic one; when a role for Zeus was inserted, a bitter new twist appeared: according to the Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite, when Eos asked Zeus to make Tithonus immortal, she forgot to ask for eternal youth (218-38). Tithonus indeed lived foreverbut when loathsome old age pressed full upon him, and he could not move nor lift his limbs, this seemed to her in her heart the best counsel: she laid him in a room and put to the shining doors. There he babbles endlessly, and no more has strength at all, such as once he had in his supple limbs. (Homeric Hymn to Aphrodite)In later tellings he eventually turned into a cicada, eternally living, but begging for death to overcome him. In the Olympian system, the \"queenly\" and \"golden-throned\" Eos can no longer grant immortality to her lover as Selene had done, but must ask it of Zeus, as a boon.Eos bore Tithonus two sons, Memnon and Emathion. In the Epic Cycle that revolved around the Trojan War Memnon wearing armor made by Hephaestus, came to help the Trojans and a battle took place with Memnon killing Antilochus and Achilles killing Memnon, but the God Zeus grants Memnon immortality at the request of Memnon's mother Eos (Dawn), while Achilles was killed by the God Apollo & Paris when he rushed towards the gates of Troy, and according to the Greek historian Diodorus Siculus, Tithonus, who has travelled east from Troy into Assyria and founded Susa, is bribed to send his son Memnon to fight at Troy with a golden grapevine. Memnon was called \"son of Dawn\" by Hesiod. According to Quintus Smyrnaeus, Memnon was not from the east, but said himself he was raised by the Hesperides on the coast of Oceanus. This would make Memnon king of the west and son (colony) of the east, being that his father Tithonus was a Trojan by birth and from the western Ocean Troy lies towards the Dawn (the east), the true homeland of Memnon's father. Also his mother Eos was the mother of her other 1st born the west-wind Zephyrus, which according to Homer blows from the Ocean to give cool air to men. And the Goddess Dawn along with her father Hyperion (the sun) travels from the east to the extreme west to bring light to the whole earth.One of the poems on Tithonus is the fourth extant complete poem by ancient Greek lyrical poet Sappho.Eos and Tithonus (inscribed Tinthu or Tinthun) provided a pictorial motif that was inscribed on Etruscan bronze hand-mirrorbacks, or cast in low relief.".
- Tithonus thumbnail Tithonos_Eos_Louvre_G438_detail.jpg?width=300.
- Tithonus wikiPageExternalLink TITHONUS.HTML.
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- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink A._E._Stallings.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Achilles_Painter.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink After_Many_a_Summer.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Aldous_Huxley.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Alec_Waugh.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Alfred,_Lord_Tennyson.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Allen_Shearer.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Anemoi.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Aubrey_de_Grey.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Aurora_(mythology).
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Aurora_(planet).
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Blank_verse.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Category:Greek_mythology.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Central_City_(DC_Comics).
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Cicada.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Contest_of_Homer_and_Hesiod.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Death_(personification).
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Doctor_Who.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Edward_Plunkett,_18th_Baron_of_Dunsany.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Emathion.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Eos.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Epic_Cycle.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Eternal_youth.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Etruscan_civilization.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Ganymede_(mythology).
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Greek_mythology.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Gullivers_Travels.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Hesiod.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Hesperides.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Homeric_Hymns.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Immortality.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Isaac_Asimov.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Jack_Harkness.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Johann_Gottfried_Herder.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Joseph_Jorkens.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Laomedon.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Memnon.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Memnon_(mythology).
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Mytheme.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Naiad.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Oceanus.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Oenochoe.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Paul_Muldoon.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Phillis_Wheatley.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Rhapsode.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Robot_series_(Asimov).
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink SENS_Research_Foundation.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Sappho.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Selene.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Struldbrug.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Susa.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Television.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink The_Flash_(2014_TV_series).
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink The_New_Yorker.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink The_X-Files.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Titan_(mythology).
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Tithonus_(The_X-Files).
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Tithonus_(poem).
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Torchwood.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Trojan_War.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Troy.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Twelve_Olympians.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Vandal_Savage.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink Wikt:boon.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLink File:Tithonos_Eos_Louvre_G438_detail.jpg.
- Tithonus wikiPageWikiLinkText "Tithonus".
- Tithonus wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Cite_web.
- Tithonus wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Clear.
- Tithonus wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Commons_category.
- Tithonus wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Lang-grc.
- Tithonus wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Other_uses.
- Tithonus wikiPageUsesTemplate Template:Reflist.
- Tithonus subject Category:Greek_mythology.
- Tithonus hypernym Lover.
- Tithonus type Person.
- Tithonus type Study.
- Tithonus comment "In Greek mythology, Tithonos (latinised Tithonus, pronounced [tɪˈθoʊnəs] or [taɪ-]; Ancient Greek: Τιθωνός) was the lover of Eos, Titan of the dawn, who was known in Roman mythology as Aurora. Tithonus was a Trojan by birth, the son of King Laomedon of Troy by a water nymph named Strymo (Στρυμώ). The mythology reflected by the fifth-century vase-painters of Athens envisaged Tithonus as a rhapsode, as the lyre in his hand, on an oinochoe (wine jug) of the Achilles Painter, ca.".
- Tithonus label "Tithonus".
- Tithonus sameAs Q737306.
- Tithonus sameAs Титон.
- Tithonus sameAs Titonos.
- Tithonus sameAs Tithónos.
- Tithonus sameAs Tithonos.
- Tithonus sameAs Τιθωνός.
- Tithonus sameAs Titono.
- Tithonus sameAs Titono.
- Tithonus sameAs Titono.
- Tithonus sameAs تیتون.
- Tithonus sameAs Tithonos.
- Tithonus sameAs Tithon.
- Tithonus sameAs טיתונוס.
- Tithonus sameAs Tithónosz.