Electra
(2)
Parentage: Daughter of Atlas (1) and Pleione
Parentage: Daughter of Atlas (1) and Pleione
Alternative parentage: Atlas (1) and Hesperis;
Atlas
(1) and Aethra (1);
Erechtheus;
Cadmus;
Queen of the
Amazons
Biographical
Along with Celaeno (1),
Maia, Merope
(1), Sterope
(1), Alcyone
(2), and Taygete,
Electra was one of the seven Pleiades, and became by Zeus the mother of
Jasion and Dardanus. According to a tradition preserved in Servius she
was the wife of the Italian king Corythus, by whom she had a son Jasion;
whereas by Zeus she was the mother of Dardanus. Diodorus calls Harmonia
her daughter by Zeus. She is connected also with the legend about the
Palladium. When Electra, it is said, had come as a suppliant to the Palladium,
which Athena had established, Zeus or Athena herself threw it into the
territory of Ilium, because it had been sullied by the hands of a woman
who was no longer a pure maiden, and king Ilus then built a temple to
Zeus. According to others it was Electra herself that brought the Palladium
to Ilium, and gave it to her son Dardanus. When she saw the city of her
son perishing in flames, she tore out her hair for grief, and was thus
placed among the stars as a comet. According to others, Electra and her
six sisters were placed among the stars as the seven Pleiades, and lost
their brilliancy on seeing the destruction of Ilium. The fabulous island
of Electris was believed to have received its name from her.
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Sources
1. Sir W. Smith, ed. Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology,
vol. 1. Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1870.
2. Sir W. Smith, ed. Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology,
vol. 3. Boston: Little, Brown & Co., 1870.
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