|  | Goddesses of Ancient Greece - M
 
   
      | Macaria Macaria was the daughter of Heracles and appears in Euripides's play Heraclidae 
        (The Children of Heracles). When she and her siblings took refuge from 
        Eurystheus with Demophon, king of Athens, Eurystheus prepared to take 
        them from the kingdom by force. Oracles told Demophon that his city would 
        win the battle over Heracles's descendants only if a highborn maiden was 
        offered as a sacrifice to Persephone. On hearing this, Macaria offered 
        to die for her siblings. The spring where she died was named the Macarian 
        spring in her honor.
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      | Maenads The female devotees of the wine-god Dionysus, thus also called Bacchae 
        and Bacchantes. Inspired by him to ecstatic frenzy, they accompany him 
        in his wanderings and as his priestesses carry out his orgiastic rites. 
        In their wild frenzy they tear animals apart and devour the raw flesh. 
        They are represented crowned with vine leaves, clothes in fawnskins and 
        carrying the thyrsus, and dancing with the wild abandonment of complete 
        union with primeval nature.
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      | Maera The daughter of Proetus, and companion of the goddess Artemis. Zeus pursued 
        her with his love, so that the jealous Artemis killed her. A daughter 
        of Atlas.
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      | Maia The eldest and most beautiful of the Pleiades, the seven daughters of 
        Atlas and Pleione. Mistress of Zeus and mother of Hermes.
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      | Makara The Makara are seven sisters who became the constellation Pleiades.
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      | Mania ("madness") The Greek personification of madness.
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Medusa In some traditions she was the serpent goddess of the Libyan Amazons and 
        represented female wisdom. In others she was an Anatolian Sun Goddess.
 
 Medusa is identical with the Crone or Destroyer aspect of the dark Egyptian 
        goddess Nieth; she was also one member of the triple personae of the North 
        African goddess An-Ath. When that goddess was imported by the Greeks as 
        patroness of Athens, Medusa's fierce visage was embossed on Athena's shield. 
        That her wrath turned men to stone may be a folk memory of the theft of 
        wise woman culture by the patriarchy.
 
 Her blood was said to have the power to create life or bring death, symbolized 
        by the two black swans, facing opposite directions, which sometimes accompanied 
        her image. She was known as a full moon Goddess who brought rain for the 
        crops. In later myths, she was a beautiful Gorgon Queen who guarded the 
        Garden of the Hesperides containing the tree of golden apples in the land 
        of the setting sun. Athena put a curse on Medusa, turning her hair to 
        snakes and causing those who glimpsed her face to turn to stone, as punishment 
        for making love with Poseidon in Athena's temple. Patriarchal Greek myths 
        tell of Medusa's demise at the hands of Perseus who gave Athena, the Greek 
        Goddess of Wisdom, the former's head to wear on her shield. These myths 
        had also told of Zeus swallowing Metis, Athena's mother, and Athena springing 
        from Zeus' head, a clear example of the way the embodiment of wisdom was 
        changed from the earlier matrifocal myths. From Medusa's dead body the 
        giant Chrysaor and the winged horse Pegasus, her son by Poseidon, sprang 
        forth.
 
 Megaera
 ("grudge") One of the three Erinyes (Furies). They were created 
        by drops of Uranus' blood. The Erinyes are the three goddesses of revenge, 
        they punished those who escaped or defied public justice. The other two 
        sisters are Alecto, the unceasing, and Tisiphone, the avenging. The three 
        are women with fiery eyes, dogs' heads, and their head are wreathed with 
        serpents. Their whole appearance is terrific and appalling. The sisters 
        are sometimes called the daughters of night and are brought about by murder, 
        perjury, ingratitude, disrespect, harshness, and the laws of hospitality. 
        Megaera, Alecto, and Tisiphone are impartial and impersonal and they pursue 
        wrongdoers until they sinners are driven mad and die.
 
 Melete
 One of the original three Greek (Boeotian) Muses (their number was later 
        increased to nine) and the Muse of Meditation. She is the sister of Aoide 
        and Mneme.
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      | Meliboa The daughter of Oceanus and the mother of Lycaon. The only daughter of 
        Niobe, who was spared by Artemis. She was so upset by the death of her 
        brothers and sisters that she was from that moment on called Chloris ("the 
        pale one").
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      | Melissa A nymph, the daughter of King Melisseus. She is thought to have fed the 
        infant Zeus with goat milk and thought humans the use of honey ('melitta', 
        bee). 'Melissa' was also a title for the priestesses of Demeter and Artemis.
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      | Melpomene ("choir") One of the nine Muses. Her realm was that of Tragedy. 
        The Muses are daughters of Zeus by Mnemosyne, and between them inspire 
        creative workings. She is usually represented with a tragic mask and wearing 
        the cothurnus (the boots traditionally worn by tragic actors). Sometimes 
        she holds a knife of club in one hand, and the mask in the other.
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      | Menippe The daughter of Orion, and sister of Metioche. Both sisters were endowed 
        by Aphrodite with great beauty, and equaled Artemis in the womanly crafts. 
        When the region where they were born, Aonia, at the base of the Helicon, 
        was struck by the plague, they voluntarily sacrificed themselves to the 
        gods of the underworld in order to avert the plague. After their deaths 
        they were given a place among the stars.
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      | Menthe A nymph, loved by Hades. A jealous Persephone turned her into a plant.
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      | Merope A Greek mythological figure, Merope is one of the seven Pleiades, daughters 
        of Atlas and Pleione. The Pleiades were virgin companions of Artemis. 
        Merope lived on Chios, and was often pursued by Orion. Merope did not 
        love Orion and married a mortal, Sisyphus. Orion also pursued Alcyone, 
        Electra, Celaeno, Sterope, and Taygete, the other Pleiades and their mother. 
        One time they prayed to the gods for rescue. The gods answered by turning 
        them into doves and later into stars. Zeus placed them in the sky where 
        they now form part of the constellation, Taurus. Since Merope married 
        a mortal, she became the faintest star.
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      | Metioche One of the two daughters of Orion, sister of Menippe. She voluntarily 
        sacrificed herself to avert a plague.
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      | Metis ("wisdom") One of the Titans, child of Uranus and Gaea (Heaven 
        and Earth). Among them, she was considered the most wise, and is said 
        to have provided the young Zeus with good advice when he began the battle 
        against his father. By Zeus, she is the mother of Athene, who may fairly 
        be considered her successor: Zeus was given a prophecy that any male child 
        of Metis would supplant him, as he had supplanted his sire, and he his. 
        Zeus therefore repeated after a fashion his forefather, and swallowed 
        the pregnant Metis whole, whereupon Athene sprang forth fully armed from 
        his forehead.
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      | Mneme One of the original three Greek Muses (their number was later increased 
        to nine). Mneme is the Muse of Memory. She is the sister of Aoide and 
        Melete.
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      | Mnemosyne ("memory") One of the Titans, child of Uranus and Gaea (Heaven 
        and Earth). By Zeus, she is the mother of the Muses.
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      | Moira The Greek goddess of fate or necessity, supreme even over the Olympian 
        gods.
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      | Momus She is the Daughter of Nyx, and the Spirit of Derision, Sarcasm, and Irony.
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      | Mormo Mormo was a minor Greek goddess. She bit naughty children in order to 
        frighten them.
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      | Muses The Greek goddesses who presided over the arts and sciences. They were 
        believed to inspire all artists, especially poets, philosophers, and musicians. 
        The Muses were the daughters of Zeus and Mnemosyne, the goddess of memory. 
        The number of Muses varies over time; initially there was but one, and 
        later there is mention of three: Melete, Mneme, and Aoede - they were 
        originally nymphs in Pieria, western Thrace, and the Aloadae brought their 
        cult to Helicon in Boeotia. Usually there is mention of nine muses: Calliope, 
        Clio, Erato, Euterpe, Melpomene, Polyhymnia, Terpsichore, Thalia, and 
        Urania. The Muses sat near the throne of Zeus, king of the gods, and sang 
        of his greatness and of the origin of the world and its inhabitants and 
        the glorious deeds of the great heroes. From their name words such as 
        music, museum, and mosaic are derived.
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      | Myrrha The daughter of Cinyras, and by him the mother of Adonis. She was turned 
        into a myrrh tree.
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