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ANTIOPE . (1) In See also: Greek See also: legend, the See also: mother of See also: Amphion and Zethus, and, according to See also: Homer (Od. xi
.
26o), a daughter of the Boeotian See also: river-See also: god Asopus
.
In later poems she is called the daughter of Nycteus or Lycurgus
.
Her beauty attracted See also: Zeus, who, assuming the See also: form of a satyr, took her by force (See also: Apollodorus iii
.
5)
.
After this she was carried off by Epopeus, See also: king of Sicyon, who would not give her up till compelled by her
See also: uncle Lycus
.
On the way home she gave See also: birth, in the neighbour-See also: hood of Eleutherae on See also: Mount See also: Cithaeron, to the twins Amphion and Zethus, of whom Amphion was the son of the god, and Zethus the son of Epopeus
.
Both were See also: left to be brought up by herdsmen
.
At See also: Thebes Antiope now suffered from the persecution of See also: Dirce, the wife of Lycus, but at last escaped towards Eleutherae, and there found shelter, unknowingly, in the See also: house where her two sons were living as herdsmen
.
Here she was discovered by Dirce, who ordered the two See also: young men to tie her to the horns of a See also: wild bull
.
They were about to obey, when the old herdsman, who had brought them up, revealed his secret, and they carried out the punishment on Dirce instead (See also: Hyginus; Fab
.
8) . For this, it is said, Dionysus, to whose worship Dirce had been devoted, visited Antiope with madness, which caused her to wander restlessly all overSee also: Greece till she was cured, and married by Phocus of Tithorea, on Mount See also: Parnassus, where both were buried in one See also: grave (See also: Pausanias ix
.
17, X
.
32)
.
(2) A second Antiope, daughter of See also: Ares, and See also: sister of Hippolyte; See also: queen of the See also: Amazons, was the wife of See also: Theseus
.
There are various accounts of the manner in which Theseus became possessed of her, and of her subsequent fortunes
.
Either she gave herself up to him out of love, when with Heracles he captured Themiscyra, the seat of the Amazons, or she See also: fell' to his See also: lot as a See also: captive (Dipdorus iv
.
16)
.
Or again, Theseus himself
invaded the dominion of the Amazons and carried her off, the consequence of which was a See also: counter-invasion of See also: Attica by the Amazons
.
After four months of war See also: peace was made, and Antiope left with Theseus as a peace-offering
.
According to another account, she had joined the Amazons against him because he had been untrue to her in desiring to marry See also: Phaedra
.
She is said to have been killed by another See also: Amazon, Molpadia, a See also: rival in her affection for Theseus
.
Elsewhere it was believed that he had himself killed her, and fulfilled an See also: oracle to that effect (Hyginus, Fab
.
241)
.
By Theseus she had a son, the well-known See also: Hippolytus (Plutarch, Theseus)
.
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