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Meleagrids

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In Greek mythology, the Meleagrids (Ancient Greek: Template:Lang) are the sisters of the hero Meleager, and daughters of Althaea and Oeneus.

Mythology

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When their brother died, the Meleagrides cried incessantly until Artemis changed them into guineafowl and transferred them to the island of Leros.<ref>Antoninus Liberalis, 2; Ovid, Metamorphoses 8.532-545; Hyginus, Fabulae 174; Suda s.v. Meleagrides</ref> 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.<ref name="Suda">Suda, s.v. Meleagrides</ref> Guinea fowl were kept in the shrine of The Maiden (likely Artemis) on Leros,<ref>Athenaeus, 14.71 p. 655C</ref> and the inhabitants of the island, as well as other worshippers of Artemis, abstained from eating the bird.<ref>Aelian, De Natura Animalium 4.42</ref>

The Meleagrids included Melanippe and Eurymede,<ref name="Antoninus Liberalis, Metamorphoses, 2">Antoninus Liberalis, 2</ref> possibly also Mothone,<ref>Pausanias, 4.35.1</ref> Perimede<ref>Pausanias, 7.4.1</ref> and Polyxo.<ref>Scholia on Homer, Iliad 9.584</ref> Two other daughters of Oeneus, Gorge and Deianeira, were not transformed, since the former was married off to Andraemon, and the latter to Heracles.

Notes

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References

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Template:Metamorphoses in Greek mythology