User:Paul August/Pallas (Titan)

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Pallas (Titan)

New Text[edit]

Notes[edit]

References[edit]

Sources[edit]

Related to the Titan[edit]

Daughter:

Frazer, p. 292
Here Ovid uses Pallantis as a synonym for Aurora, the goddess of Dawn. Elsewhere he employs the same expression,7 sometimes in the form of Pallantias.8 Apparently he regarded Aurora as a daughter of the Titan Pallas, but what authority he had for this genealogy does ...
York, p. 39
...son of the Titan Crios and husband of Styx. Likewise Ovid (Met. 9.420, 15.191, & 700) calls the Latin Dawn Pallantias and Pallantis - evidently referring to the same genealogy.
Murray 1829, p. 195
AURORA. ... She was considered to be a daughter of Hyperion and Thea; of Titan and Terra; or of Pallas, the son of Crius and husband of Styx
Shelmerdine 1981, p.132
In Hesiod Selene's parents are Hyperion and Theia, parents also of Helios and Eos. Pallas there is her cousin, the son of Kreios (a Titan) and Eurybia ... In Ovid Aurora is called the daughter of Pallas (Fasti 4.373) and is known as "Pallantis" and ...
Heinemann, p. 478
Pallantias and Pallantis, Aurora as daughter of the Titan, Pallas,

Related:

Stanford, p. 201
347. Pallantias. Aurora; so called from her having been the cousin of Pallas, the Titan, nephew of her father Hyperion

Related to the Giant?[edit]

Father:

Smith, "Pallantias"
A patronymic by which Aurora, the daughter of the giant Pallas, is sometimes designated. (Ov. Met. 4.373, 6.567, 9.420.) Pallantias also occurs as a variation for Pallas, the surname of Athena. (Anthol. Palat. 6.247.)
A Dictionary of Polite Literature p. 228 "PALLANTIAS"
A name of Aurora, as supposed by Hesiod, the daughter of the giant Pallas.

Related:

Lemprière, p. 61 "PALLANTIAS"
a patronymic of Aurora, as being related to the giant Pallas. Ovid Met 9. fab 12."

Other[edit]

Vergados, p. 313

At Ov. Met. 9.421, 15.191, 15.700 Aurora is called Pallantis or Pallantias.
(Add this cite to Selene!)

Keightley, p. 62

Like Selene she [EOS] was named by later poetsd from Pallas, and there reason for doing so is not easy to be discerned.
d Ovid, Met. 9.420; 15.191, 700, Fasti 4.373, The title Pallantias given here to Aurora is, we believe, only to be found in this poet, but we may be certain that he had Greek authority for it. In another place (Fasti, 4.943) he calls her Titania, unless the reading Tithonia is to be preferred.