|  | Goddesses of Ancient Greece - S
 
      
      | SalmacisThe nymph of the spring of that name near Halicarnassus in Asia Minor. 
          She loved Hermaphroditus and was granted her request to be united with 
          him, but the gods put the both of them in one body. Hence the dual sexuality 
          of Hermaphroditus and the legend that the spring Salmacis rendered effeminate 
          those who bathed or drank of its waters.
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      | ScyllaIn Greek mythology, a sea monster who lived underneath a dangerous rock 
          at one side of the Strait of Messia, opposite the whirlpool Charybdis. 
          She threatened passing ships and in the Odyssey ate six of Odysseus' 
          companions. Scylla was a nymph, daughter of Phorcys. The fisherman-turned-sea-god 
          Glaucus fell madly in love with her, but she fled from him onto the 
          land where he could not follow. Dispair filled his heart. He went to 
          the sorceress Circe to ask for a love potion to melt Scylla's heart. 
          As he told his tale of love to Circe, she herself fell in love with 
          him. She wooed him with her sweetest words and looks, but the sea-god 
          would have none of her. Circe was furiously angry, but with Scylla and 
          not with Glaucus. She prepared a vial of very powerful poison and poured 
          it in the pool where Scylla bathed. As soon as the nymph entered the 
          water she was transformed into a frightful monster with twelve feet 
          and six heads, each with three rows of teeth. Below the waist her body 
          was made up of hideous monsters, like dogs, who barked unceasingly. 
          She stood there in utter misery, unable to move, loathing and destroying 
          everything that came into her reach, a peril to all sailors who passed 
          near her. Whenever a ship passed, each of her heads would seize one 
          of the crew. Scylla in also the name of a daughter of King Nisus of 
          Megara.
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      | Selene Selene was an early Greek Moon Goddess, also known as Phoebe, who drove 
        a chariot drawn by two white horses across the sky at night with the moon 
        in tow (derived from a root meaning "light, gleam") Goddess 
        of the Moon, the Lunar Disc. Closely associated with Hekate, and often 
        conflated with her. The most famous of her loves is the shepard Endymion. 
        Other affairs of Selene's include involvement with Zeus with whom she 
        had three daughters, and Pan who gave her a herd of white oxen. Some sources 
        report that the Nemean lion, which fell to the earth from the moon was 
        the result of an affair of Zeus and Selene. She was involved in many love 
        affairs, however, not as many as her sister, Eos, the dawn. She resembles 
        a young woman with an extremely white face who travels on a silver chariot 
        drawn by two horses. She is often shown riding a horse or a bull. Selene 
        is said to wear robes, carry a torch, and wear a half moon on her head. 
        She was not one of the twelve great gods on Olympus, however she is the 
        moon goddess. After her brother Helios completes his journey across the 
        sky, she begins hers. Before Selene's journey across the night sky she 
        bathes in the sea.
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Semele Semele was the daughter of Cadmus and Harmonia, and the mother, by Zeus, 
        of the god Dionysus. Because Zeus slept with Semele secretly, Hera only 
        found out about the affair after the girl was pregnant. Bent on revenge, 
        Hera disguised herself and persuaded Semele to demand that Zeus come to 
        her in all the splendor with which he visited Hera. As a result, Semele 
        asked Zeus to grant an unspecified favor, and got him to swear by the 
        river Styx that he would grant it. Unable to break his oath, Zeus came 
        to her armed in his thunder and lightning, and Semele was destroyed. However, 
        Zeus rescued the unborn child from the mother's ashes and sewed it in 
        his thigh until it was ready to be born. Thus Dionysus is sometimes called 
        "the twice-born." Dionysus was raised at first by Semele's sister 
        and brother-in-law, Ino and Athamus, and later by the nymphs of Nysa. 
        As an adult, he retrieved his mother from Hades and made her a goddess; 
        she was called Thyone.
 
 Semnai
 "The venerable ones". A euphemistic Greek term for the Erinyes 
        (Furies).
 
 Sinope
 The daughter of Asopus and Metope. She was so beautiful that Apollo abducted 
        her and brought her to Paphlagonien where she bore a son, Syrus. The city 
        Syrus was named after him.
 
 Sirens
 In Greek mythology, the Sirens are creatures with the head of a female 
        and the body of a bird. They lived on an island (Sirenum scopuli; three 
        small rocky islands) and with the irresistible charm of their song they 
        lured mariners to their destruction on the rocks surrounding their island 
        (Virgil V, 846; Ovid XIV, 88).
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      | Sothis (Sopdet)Feminine Greek name for the star Sirius, which very early meshed 
        with Isis (being the consort of Sahu-Osiris, which was Orion). Also associated 
        with Hathor. The star Sirius, which appears above the horizon at just 
        the time of the summer inundation of the Nile. Thus, She is Herald and 
        Harbinger of this most vital seasonal occurance.
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      | Sthenno One of the three Gorgons. Literally, "forceful".
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      | Styx ("hate") The Greek goddess of the river of death in the underworld. 
        She was usually said to be the daughter of Erebus and Nyx. She was married 
        to Pallas by whom she had Zelus, Nike, Cratos and Bia. The gods swore 
        their oaths by this river, for violating such an oath would result in 
        the loss of their immortality.
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      | Suadela The goddess of persuasion, and especially in love. She is a follower of 
        Venus.
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      | Syrinx Syrinx was an Arcadian river-nymph who was pursued by Pan. To escape him 
        she fled into the waters of her river where she pleaded the gods for help, 
        and they changed her into a reed. Disappointed, Pan cut the reed into 
        pieces of gradually decreasing lengths, fastened them together with wax 
        and thus produced the shepherd's flute, or "pipes of Pan", upon 
        which he plays.
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