Meleagrids

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In Greek mythology, the Meleagrids (Ancient Greek: Μελεαγρίδες) were Calydonian princesses as the daughters of Queen Althaea and King Oeneus, and sisters of the hero Meleager.

Mythology

When their brother died, the Meleagrides cried incessantly until Artemis changed them into guineafowl and transferred them to the island of Leros.[1] According to an alternate version cited in the dictionary of Suda, the Meleagrids were companions of Iocallis, a maiden of Leros who was honored as a deity.[2] Guinea fowl were kept in the shrine of The Maiden (likely Artemis) on Leros,[3] and the inhabitants of the island, as well as other worshippers of Artemis, abstained from eating the bird.[4]

Hence the names of some species of guineafowl refer to the Meleagrids:

Meleagrididae
.

The Meleagrids included

Deianeira, were not transformed, since the former was married off to Andraemon, and the latter to Heracles
.

Notes

  1. Hyginus, Fabulae 174; Suda
    s.v. Meleagrides
  2. ^ Suda s.v. Meleagrides
  3. ^ Athenaeus, 14.71 p. 655C
  4. ^ Aelian, De Natura Animalium 4.42
  5. ^ Antoninus Liberalis, 2
  6. ^ Pausanias, 4.35.1
  7. ^ Pausanias, 7.4.1
  8. ^ Scholia on Homer, Iliad 9.584

References