Alastor

Wikipedia

Alastor (/əˈlæstər, -tɔːr/; Ancient Greek: Ἀλάστωρ, lit.'avenging spirit')[1] refers to a number of people and concepts in Greek mythology:[2]

See also

Notes

  1. Beekes, p. 61.
  2. Schmitz, Leonhard (1867), "Alastor", in Smith, William (ed.), Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, vol. 1, Boston: Little, Brown and Company, p. 89, archived from the original on 2010-12-13, retrieved 2008-06-10
  3. 1 2 Rose, Herbert Jennings (1996), "Alastor", in Hornblower, Simon (ed.), Oxford Classical Dictionary, Oxford: Oxford University Press
  4. Aeschylus, Agamemnon 1479, 1508 & The Persians 343; Euripides, Phoenician Women 1550; Sophocles, The Trachiniae 1092; Plutarch, De Defectu Oraculorum 13; Pausanias, 8.24.8
  5. Euripides, Electra 979
  6. Cole, Susan Guettel (1994), "Civic Cult and Civic Identity", in Herman Hansen, Mogens (ed.), Sources for the Ancient Greek City-State: Symposium August, 24-27 1994, Copenhagen: Royal Danish Academy of Sciences and Letters, p. 310, ISBN 978-87-7304-267-0
  7. Homer, Odyssey 11.284
  8. Apollodorus, 1.9.9
  9. Scholiast on Apollonius of Rhodes, 1.156; Apollodorus, 2.7.3
  10. Parthenius, 13 from the Thrax of Euphorion and from Dectadas
  11. Homer, Iliad 5.677; Ovid, Metamorphoses 13.257
  12. Homer, Iliad 10.463
  13. Homer, Iliad 4.295
  14. Homer, Iliad 8.333 & 13.422
  15. Claudian, De Raptu Proserpinae 1.286
  16. Harry Thurston Peck, Harpers Dictionary of Classical Antiquities (1898), Alastor
  17. Sorenson, Eric (2002), Possession and Exorcism in the New Testament and Early Christianity, Mohr Siebeck, p. 78, ISBN 3-16-147851-7

References