Matches in DBpedia 2016-04 for { <http://wikidata.dbpedia.org/resource/Q1061782> ?p ?o }
Showing triples 1 to 56 of
56
with 100 triples per page.
- Q1061782 subject Q7214271.
- Q1061782 subject Q7236901.
- Q1061782 subject Q7349267.
- Q1061782 subject Q8356489.
- Q1061782 subject Q8372282.
- Q1061782 subject Q8655745.
- Q1061782 abstract "Rhesus (Greek: Ῥῆσος, Rhêsos) was a Thracian king who fought on the side of Trojans in Iliad, Book X, where Diomedes and Odysseus stole his team of fine horses during a night raid on the Trojan camp. According to Homer, his father was Eioneus— a name otherwise given to the father of Dia, whom Ixion threw into the firepit rather than pay him her bride price. The name may be connected to the historic Eion in western Thrace, at the mouth of the Strymon, and the port of the later Amphipolis. The event portrayed in the Iliad also provides the action of the play Rhesus, transmitted among the plays of Euripides. Scholia to the Iliad episode and the Rhesus agree in giving Rhesus a more heroic stature, incompatible with Homer's version.Rhesus died without engaging in battle.Later writers provide Rhesus with a more exotic parentage, claiming that his mother was one of the Muses (Calliope, Euterpe, or Terpsichore), his father the river god Strymon, and he was raised by fountain nymphs. Rhesus arrived late to Troy, because his country was attacked by Scythia, right after he received word that the Greeks had attacked Troy. He was killed in his tent, and his famous steeds were stolen by Diomedes and Odysseus. The mother of Rhesus, one of the nine muses, then arrives and lays blame on all those responsible: Odysseus, Diomedes, and Athena. She also announces the imminent resurrection of Rhesus, who will become immortal but will be sent to live in an underground cave.His name (a Thracian anthroponym) probably derives from PIE *reg-, 'to rule', showing a satem-sound change. There was also a river in Bithynia named Rhesus, with Greek myth providing an attendant river god of the same name. Rhesus the Thracian king was himself associated with Bithynia through his love with the Bithynian huntress Arganthone, in the Erotika Pathemata ["Sufferings for Love"] by Parthenius of Nicaea, chapter 36.Stephanus of Byzantium mentions the name of Rhesus' sister Sete, who had a son Bithys with Ares.Rhesus Glacier on Anvers Island in Antarctica is named after Rhesus of Thrace.In the motion picture Hercules, Tobias Santelmann plays a character named Rhesus, who lives in the vicinity of Thrace but has little else in common with the traditional character.".
- Q1061782 thumbnail Rhesos_MNA_Naples.jpg?width=300.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q103975.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q104012.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q104042.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q10856962.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q11424.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q12006553.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q1268859.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q1358144.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q144964.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q14522493.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q204127.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q208256.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q217414.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q22647.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q271891.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q3043296.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q3625559.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q37178.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q373189.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q373916.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q380881.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q4068782.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q40901.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q41741.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q47231.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q48305.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q51.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q511250.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q612965.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q66016.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q667750.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q6691.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q7214271.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q7236901.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q729109.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q7320434.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q7349267.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q765157.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q783685.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q8275.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q8356489.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q8372282.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q845909.
- Q1061782 wikiPageWikiLink Q8655745.
- Q1061782 type Thing.
- Q1061782 comment "Rhesus (Greek: Ῥῆσος, Rhêsos) was a Thracian king who fought on the side of Trojans in Iliad, Book X, where Diomedes and Odysseus stole his team of fine horses during a night raid on the Trojan camp. According to Homer, his father was Eioneus— a name otherwise given to the father of Dia, whom Ixion threw into the firepit rather than pay him her bride price. The name may be connected to the historic Eion in western Thrace, at the mouth of the Strymon, and the port of the later Amphipolis.".
- Q1061782 label "Rhesus of Thrace".
- Q1061782 depiction Rhesos_MNA_Naples.jpg.