>ahro^n = Mides; <atni^->el = Kamesos
>ahro^n = Mides
Gordios tied the knot (GM 83.e) of marriage with his priestess-wife. |
<am-ram "celebrated for a second time his wedding with his wife, who, |
Mides was told of fruit which when eaten "renews the youth" (GM 83.b) of mortals. |
though one hundred and thirty years old, had under the nuptial canopy become like a young maiden." (JE, s.v. "Amram") |
Gordios was father of Mides (GM 83.f). |
<am-ram was the father of >ahro^n |
Mides was king of (GM 83.a) the Moskhoi (‘calf-folk’ – GM 83.1); and transformed objects into gold (GM 83.c). |
>ahro^n instituted worship of the Golden Calf |
Mides dissented from the opinion of Tmolos (GM 83.g). |
>ahro^n dissented from the opinion of Mos^eh |
JE = Jewish Encyclopaedia http://www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp?artid=1427&letter=A&search=Amram#1
<atni^->el = Kamesos
Phokos ‘seal’ was named for his mother’s (Psamathe – Th 1103sq) having become (PS, p. 22, fn. 50) one |
seal-skin may have been used as wrapping for the Ark of the Covenant |
Phokos was father of (CDCM, s.v. "Phocos 1") heroine Kalli-rrhoe |
Kaleb was father of woman >aksah |
Kalli-rrhoe (‘beautifully flowing’) became, at Kaludon, a water-spring for the sake of her prospective husband Kamesos (P 7:21) |
for the sake of her husband (S^PT.YM 1:13) <atni^->el, >aksah obtained (S^PT.YM 1:15) 2 water-s |
Phokos was son of (DS 4:72:6 – cited in PS, p. 21, fn. 47) ORNUtion (< [H^ittite & Samskr.ta] /ARNaWa/ ‘sea’)
Th = Hesiodos : Theogonia http://www.theoi.com/Pontios/NereisPsamathe.html
PS = Anne Pippin Burnett : Pindar’s Songs. Oxford U Pr, 2005.
CDCM = Pierre Grimal : A Concise Dictionary of Classical Mythology. 1990.
P = Pausanias (cited in Thomas Keightley : Mythology of Ancient Greece and Italy. 1888. p. 401)
DS = Diodoros Sikelos