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From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
In Greek mythology, Thyia (/ˈθaɪə/; Ancient Greek: Θυία Thuia derived from the verb θύω "to sacrifice") was a Phthian princess as the daughter of King Deucalion of Thessaly.
Thyia | |
---|---|
Princess of Phthia | |
Member of the Deucalionids | |
Abode | Phthia, Thessaly |
Genealogy | |
Parents | Deucalion and Pyrrha |
Siblings | Hellen and Pandora; and possibly: Protogeneia, Amphictyon, Melantho and Candybus |
Consort | Zeus |
Children | Magnes and Makednos |
Thyia's mother was Pyrrha, daughter of Epimetheus and Pandora. She was the sister of Hellen and Pandora II, and possibly of Amphictyon, Protogeneia, Melantho (Melanthea) and Candybus.
Like her other sisters, Thyia bore to Zeus sons namely, Magnes and Makednos (the claimed ancestor of the Macedonians).[1] Her account was according to a quotation from Hesiod's lost work the Catalogue of Women, preserved in the De Thematibus of Constantine Porphyrogenitus and in Stephanus of Byzantium's Ethnika.[2]
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