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Clymene

Clymene or Klymenê (from Greek name Κλυμένη "famous woman") may refer to:

  • Clymene (mythology), name of multiple figures in Greek mythology
  • 104 Klymene, an asteroid
  • Clymene dolphin (Stenella clymene), a dolphin endemic to the Atlantic Ocean
  • Clymene moth (Haploa clymene), a moth of eastern North America
Clymene (mythology)

In Greek mythology, the name Clymene or Klymene may refer to:

  • Clymene, an Oceanid, wife of the Titan Iapetus, and mother of Atlas, Epimetheus, Prometheus, and Menoetius; other authors relate the same of her sister Asia. A less common genealogy makes Clymene the mother of Deucalion by Prometheus. The Oceanid Clymene is also given as the wife to King Merops of Ethiopia and, by Helios, mother of Phaëton and the Heliades.
  • Clymene, a Nereid.
  • Clymene, an Amazon.
  • Clymene, an "ox-eyed" servant of Helen. She was a daughter of Aethra by Hippalces, thus half-sister to Theseus and a distant relative to Menelaus. She and her mother were taken by Helen to Troy as handmaidens, and were released by Acamas and Demophon after the fall of Troy.
  • Clymene, daughter of Catreus. She and her sister Aerope were given to Nauplius to be sold away, as Catreus feared the possibility of being killed by one of his children. Nauplius took Clymene to wife, and by him she became mother of Palamedes, Oeax and Nausimedon.
  • Clymene, daughter of Minyas, wife of either Cephalus or Phylacus, and mother of Iphiclus and Alcimede. Some sources call her Periclymene or Eteoclymene, while according to others, Periclymene and Eteoclymene were the names of her sisters. Alternately, this Clymene was the wife of Iasus and mother by him of Atalanta.
  • Clymene, wife of Merops of Miletus, and mother of Pandareus.
  • Clymene, possible mother of Myrtilus by Hermes.
  • Clymene, a nymph, mother of Tlesimenes by Parthenopaeus.
  • Clymene, one of the Trojan women taken captive at the end of the Trojan War. She might or might not be the same as the servant of Helen mentioned above.
  • Clymene and Dictys were honored in Athens as the saviors of Perseus and had an altar dedicated to them.