Eurydice/Definition: Difference between revisions

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From [[Ancient Greece|Greek]] [[mythology]], the [[wife]] of [[Orpheus]] who [[death|died]], but her husband journeyed to [[Tartaros]] to retrieve her. Because of her beautiful [[singing]], [[Hades]] and [[Persephone]] agreed to let her live again on condition that her [[husband]] not look back at her until they reached the upper world, but he forgot, and she vanished into Tartaros. Source: [[Elizabeth Vandiver]], [[Classics]] [[scholarship|scholar]], authority on Greek mythology and [[Greek tragedy]], including the ''[[Iliad]]'', ''[[Odyssey]]'', ''[[Aeneid]]'', [[Homer]], and [[Virgil]]. This definition is based on her course ''Classical Mythology'' for [[The Teaching Company]].
From [[Ancient Greece|Greek]] [[mythology]], the [[wife]] of [[Orpheus]] who [[death|died]], but her husband journeyed to [[Tartaros]] to retrieve her. Because of her beautiful [[singing]], [[Hades]] and [[Persephone]] agreed to let her live again on condition that her [[husband]] not look back at her until they reached the upper world, but he forgot, and she vanished into Tartaros.

Latest revision as of 23:34, 29 April 2012

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Eurydice [r]: From Greek mythology, the wife of Orpheus who died, but her husband journeyed to Tartaros to retrieve her. Because of her beautiful singing, Hades and Persephone agreed to let her live again on condition that her husband not look back at her until they reached the upper world, but he forgot, and she vanished into Tartaros.