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         Classical Mythology:     more books (100)
  1. Classical Mythology: The Ancient Myths and Legends of Greece and Rome (The Mythology Library) by Arthur Cotterell, 1999-05
  2. Greek and Roman Mythology (Mythology Series) by Malcolm Couch, 1998-11-01
  3. Comparative Mythology by Jaan Puhvel, 1989-08-01
  4. Mycenaean Origins of Greek Mythology (Sather Classical Lectures) by Martin P. Nilsson, 1983-08
  5. Classical Mythology (Parts 1 and 2) by The Great Courses by The Teaching Company, 2000
  6. Stories of the Greeks & Romans: Introduction to Classical Mythology, Set by Donald Richardson, 1996-12
  7. A dictionary of classical mythology (Little blue book) by Lloyd Edwin Smith, 1924
  8. A Short Introduction to Classical Myth by Barry B. Powell, 2001-09-07
  9. A Short Guide to Classical Mythology by G.M. Kirkwood, 1966
  10. Greek and Roman Mythology A to Z (Mythology a to Z) by Kathleen N. Daly, Marian Rengel, 2003-11
  11. Mythology and You - Classical Mythology and its Relevance in Today's World by Donna Rosenberg, Sorelle Baker, 1983
  12. Bulfinch's Mythology: The Illustrated Age of Fable: The Illustrated Age of Fable - The Classic Retelling of Greek and Roman Myths Accompanied by the World's Greatest Paintings by Thomas Bulfinch, 1998-09-01
  13. Meridian Handbook of Classical Mythology by Edward Tripp, 1970
  14. A Short Guide to Classical Mythology by Gordon MacDonald Kirkwood, 1959

101. Powell Gateway
Welcome to the gateway for classical Myth, Third, and Fourth Editions. These sites are specifically designed to accompany these widely adopted texts.
http://www.prenhall.com/powell/
Welcome to the gateway for Classical Myth, Third, and Fourth Editions. These sites are specifically designed to accompany these widely adopted texts. Please select the cover of the edition that you are using to enter the appropriate Companion Website. This is the gateway to our education title, Classroom Management: Perspectives on the Social Curriculum. Please click the cover image above to find more information.
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102. Classical Myths And Legends
classical Myths and Legends. BASIC GREEK GODS AND GODDESSES. Gods; Goddesses MAJOR HEROES. Heracles; Jason; Theseus TALES OF TROY. The
http://www.uwp.edu/academic/english/canary/gods.htm
Classical Myths and Legends
BASIC GREEK GODS AND GODDESSES
  • Gods
  • Goddesses MAJOR HEROES
  • Heracles
  • Jason
  • Theseus TALES OF TROY
  • The Trojan War
  • Homer's Iliad
  • Homer's ... Odyssey ROMAN DEITIES AND EPIC
  • Roman Gods and Goddesses
  • Virgil's Aeneid OTHER
  • The House of Atreus
  • Tales of Thebes
  • Miscellaneous Greek Legends
  • The Greek Tragic Dramatists SOME NAMES
    [Note: Greek names are transliterated in different ways in different texts, and some figures are best known by their Roman names. The pages referenced in this index generally follow the usage in most recent translations except in some cases where earlier forms are much better known. The index gives some of the multiple forms.]
    Absyrtus
    Acamas Acestes Achelous ... Aeneas Aeolus (see Aiolos Aeschylus Aeson Agamemnon ... Agenor Aias (see Ajax Aiolos Ajax Alba Longa ... Alcestis Alcinous (see Alkinoos Alcmena Alecto Alkinoos ... Argo (boat) Argos (city) Argos (dog) Artemis Ariadne Aristaeus Arruns ... Calydonian Boar Calypso (see Kalypso Camilla Capaneus Carthage ... Chiron Circe (see Kirke Clio Cloacina Clytemnestra ... Eumenides Euridike (see Eurydice Euripides Europa Euros ... Ino Iokaste (see Jocasta Iolchus Iole Iolus ... Jurtunus Kalliope (see Callipe Kalypso Kharybdis (see Charybdis Kirke Klio (see Clio Kore Kronos Labyrinth ... Narcissus Nausicaa (see Nausikaa Nausikaa Nautes Nemean Lion ... Orpheus Ouranos: (see Uranus Ovid Pales Palirnus ... Patroclus Patrokles (see Patroclus Pegasus Peleus Pelias ... Perseus Phaeacea (see Phaiakia Phaedra Phaeton Pherae ... Proteus (uncle of Danae) Proteus (sea god) Pygmalion (brother of Dido Pylades Pyrrha Python ... Scylla Seilenes (see
  • 103. Www.hsa.brown.edu/~maicar/
    Apollo and Daphne by POUSSIN, Nicolas to dwell on themes of transformation, especially those found in stories from classical antiquity. The mythological story of Apollo and Daphne is the following.
    http://www.hsa.brown.edu/~maicar/

    104. Mythology - Greek Mythology Flood Myths Creation Myths
    Greece GreekAncient Rome - RomansANE Egypt Persia Israel Biographies / People - Who?mythology ReligionLanguages Latin GreekClassical LiteratureLaw
    http://ancienthistory.about.com/library/bl/bl_myth_index.htm
    zJs=10 zJs=11 zJs=12 zJs=13 zc(5,'jsc',zJs,9999999,'') About History Ancient / Classical History Write / Research / Teach ... Trojan War Hero Achilles - Troy zau(256,152,145,'gob','http://z.about.com/5/ad/go.htm?gs='+gs,''); Atlas and Places - Where? Ancient Greece - Greek Ancient Rome - Romans ANE Egypt Persia Israel... ... Help zau(256,138,125,'el','http://z.about.com/0/ip/417/0.htm','');w(xb+xb);
    Stay Current
    Subscribe to the About Ancient / Classical History newsletter. Search Ancient / Classical History Mythology
    A resource page by N.S. Gill , Ancient/Classical History Guide
    Mythology - Stories

    Major Gods and Goddesses

    Africa
    America ... Myth Index
    The job of mythology is to provide explanations that make sense within one's culture. Frequently mythology explains where a people came from. Was it a cosmic egg? Chaos? Ginnungagap? In addition to providing explanations of events, mythology tells colorful tales about the supernatural creatures who can control human lives. In this directory of mythology, you'll find the names of the deities, their attributes, some of the principal legends, creation and flood stories. For more on the purpose of mythology, see

    105. Classical Myth 2
    Home. Gallery of classical Myth Mysteries 2.
    http://www.prs.org/gallery-classic2.htm
    A Greek form of Hermes From Bryant’s Mythology The name Hermes is derived from "Herm," a form of CHiram, the personified Universal Life Principle, generally represented by fire. The Scandinavians worshiped Hermes under the name of Odin; the Teutons as Wotan, and certain of the Oriental peoples as Buddha, or Fo. There are two theories concerning his demise. The first declares that Hermes was translated like Enoch and carried without death into the presence of God; the second states that he was buried in the Valley of Ebron and a great treasure placed in his tomb—not a treasure of gold but of books and sacred learning. The Egyptians likened humanity to a flock of sheep. The Supreme and Inconceivable Father was the Shepherd, and Hermes was the shepherd dog. The origin of the shepherd’s crook in religious symbolism may be traced to the Egyptian rituals. The three scepters of Egypt include the shepherd’s crook, symbolizing that by virtue of the power reposing in that symbolic staff the initiated Pharaohs guided the destinies of their people. MPH The Sphinx From Levi’s Les Mystères de la Kaballe MPH The Sistrum

    106. Classical Myth 1
    Home. Gallery of classical Myth Mysteries 1.
    http://www.prs.org/gallery-classic.htm
    Plato From Thomassin's Recueil des Figures, Groupes, Thermes, Fontaines, Vases et autres Ornements Plato's real name was Aristocles. When his father brought him to study with Socrates, the great Skeptic declared that on the previous night he had dreamed of a white swan, which was an omen that his new disciple was to become one of the world's illumined. There is [also] a tradition that the immortal Plato was sold as a slave by the King of Sicily. MPH Æneas at the Gate of Hell From Virgil's Aeneid (Dryden's translation) MPH The Ptolemaic Scheme of the Universe From an old print, courtesy of Carl Oscar Borg In ridiculing the geocentric system of astronomy expounded by Claudius Ptolemy, modern astronomers have overlooked the philosophic key to the Ptolemaic system. The universe of Ptolemy is a diagram of the relationships existing between the various divine and elemental parts of every creature, and is not concerned with astronomy as that science is now comprehended. In the above figure, special attention is called to the three circles of zodiacs surrounding the orbits of the planets. These zodiacs represent the threefold spiritual constitution of the universe. The orbits of the planets are the Governors of the World and the four elemental spheres in the center represent the physical constitution of both man and the universe. Ptolemy's scheme of the universe is a cross section of the universal aura, the planets and elements to which he refers having no relation to those recognized by modern astronomers.

    107. CLAS 215 Classical Myth
    CLAS 215 classical Myth TTh 1222 pm Biology Bldng 101. 31-46 with notes in back); Art and Myth p. 72btm-73top w/ illus. 4/8. class cancelled due to illness.
    http://www.facstaff.bucknell.edu/gretaham/Teaching/mythclass/myth.htm
    CLAS 215
    Classical Myth
    TTh 1-2:22 pm
    Biology Bldng 101
    • Office Hours
      • EXAM WEEK OFFICE HOURS: Mon 2:30-3:30; Wed. 10-11, Th. 11-12
      Course Objectives Course Requirements
      • Attendance Participation ... Syllabus (including reading assignments, lecture topics, and links to study guides) Objectives: The myths of the Greeks and Romans were expressed in many contexts: in song, drama, written literature, and visual arts. CLAS 215 will explore the original myths which have so influenced western cultures. The course is geared both to students who have little familiarity with the gods, heroes and myths of the Greek and Romans and those who have studied these in high school or earlier. We will move beyond the basic story lines to consider interpretations of the myths and how they address central concerns of Greek culture and have influenced our own culture. This course will focus mainly on the Greek telling of the myths, but consideration will be given to the Near Eastern influences and origins of these myths as well as their Roman counterparts. We will use a variety of methodologies to examine the myths, e.g.: anthropological, psycho-analytical, comparative, structuralist, and ritual interpretation of myth. By the end of this term, you will have accomplished the following goals:

    108. UVM Ambrose: Classics 42; Slide Lectures
    Classics 42 mythology Slide Lectures. Slides Lecture 1 Cosmogony and Succession of Divine Rulers Slides Lecture II The Tantalids in Archaeology and Art.
    http://www.uvm.edu/~classics/ambrose/clas42_slides.html
    Classics 42: Mythology
    Slide Lectures
    Slides Lecture 1 : Cosmogony and Succession of Divine Rulers Slides Lecture II : The Tantalids in Archaeology and Art Slides Lecture III : Athens and the Family of Aegeus Slides Lecture IV : Perseus in Art Slides Lecture V : Woodcuts and Engravings of Ovid's Metamorphoses (from UVM Rare Book Collection, continued in Art Lecture VII) Slides Lecture VI Slides Lecture VII : Woodcuts and Engravings of Ovid's Metamorphoses (from UVM Rare Book Collection, continued in Art Lecture V) Supplementary Slides Last updated: 28 December 1998
    Send Comments to: Eleanor Rodgers, erodgers@uclink4.berkeley.edu
    Classics Home
    Faculty Course Listing ... University of Vermont

    109. Index

    http://ccwf.cc.utexas.edu/~perlman/myth/
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    110. Main Frame - Classics 150 - Beloit College Classics
    Beloit College Classics 150 Art Museum. Don t have frames? I am really sorry. Please get a browser that supports frames! We reccomend
    http://www.beloit.edu/~classics/main/courses/classics150/museum150/main0.html
    Beloit College Classics 150 - Art Museum
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    111. Dictionary

    http://www.beazley.ox.ac.uk/CGPrograms/Dict/ASP/OpenDictionary.asp

    112. Host Name Www-lib.haifa.ac.il No Longer Valid As Of 24.7.2003 - Use Lib.haifa.ac
    http//lib.haifa.ac.il/www/art/MYTHOLOGY_WESTART.HTML.
    http://www-lib.haifa.ac.il/www/art/MYTHOLOGY_WESTART.HTML
    http://lib.haifa.ac.il/www/art/MYTHOLOGY_WESTART.HTML http://lib.haifa.ac.il/www/art/MYTHOLOGY_WESTART.HTML

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