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See also: Greek See also: mythology
.
(1) One of the seven See also: Pleiades, daughter of See also: Atlas and Plelone
.
She is closely connected with the old See also: constellation worship and the See also: religion of See also: Samothrace, the chief seat of the Cabeiri (q.v.), where she was generally supposed to dwell
.
By See also: Zeus she was the See also: mother of See also: Dardanus, Iasion (or Eetion), and See also: Harmonia; but in the See also: Italian tradition, which represented See also: Italy as the See also: original home of the Trojans, Dardanus was her son by a See also: king of Italy named Corythus
.
After her amour with Zeus,
See also: Electra fled to the Palladium as a suppliant, but Athena, enraged that it had been touched by one who was no longer a See also: maiden, flung Electra and the image from heaven to See also: earth, where it was found by Ilus, and taken by him to Ilium; according to another tradition, Electra herself took it to Ilium, and gave it to her son Dardanus (Schol
.
Eurip
.
Phoen
.
1136)
.
In her grief at the destruction of the city she plucked out her hair and was changed into a See also: comet; in another version Electra and her six sisters had been placed among the stars as the Pleiades, and the See also: star which she represented lost its brilliancy after the fall of Troy
.
Electra's connexion with Samothrace (where she was also called Electryone and Strategis) is shown by the localization of the carrying off of her reputed daughter Harmonia by See also: Cadmus, and by the fact that, according to Athenicon (the author of a See also: work on Samothrace quoted by the scholiast on See also: Apollonius Rhodius i
.
917), the Cabeiri were Dardanus and Iasion
.
The See also: gate Electra at See also: Thebes and the fabulous See also: island Electris were said to have been called after her (See also: Apollodorus iii
.
10 . 12; Servius on Aen. iii . 167, vii . 207, X . 272, Georg. i . 138) . (2) Daughter of See also: Agamemnon and Clytaemnestra, See also: sister of See also: Orestes and See also: Iphigeneia
.
She does not appear in See also: Homer, although according to See also: Xanthus (regarded by some as a fictitious personage), to whom See also: Stesichorus was indebted for much in his Oresteia, she was identical with the Homeric Laodice, and was called Electra because she remained so long unmarried ('A-Merpa)
.
She was said to have played an important See also: part in the poem of Stesichorus, and subsequently became a favourite figure in tragedy
.
After the See also: murder of her See also: father on his return from Troy by her mother and See also: Aegisthus, she saved the See also: life of her See also: brother Orestes by sending him out of the country to Strophius, king of Phanote in See also: Phocis, who had him brought up with his own son Pylades
.
Electra, cruelly See also: ill-treated by Clytaemnestra and her paramour, never loses hope that her brother will return to avenge his father
.
When grown up, Orestes, in response to frequent messages from his sister, secretly repairs with Pylades to See also: Argos, where he pretends to be a messenger from Strophius bringing the See also: news of the See also: death of Orestes
.
Being admitted to the palace, he slays both Aegisthus and Clytaemnestra . According to anotherSee also: story (See also: Hyginus, Fab
.
122), Electra, having received a false report that Orestes and Pylades had been sacrificed to See also: Artemis in Tauris, went to consult the See also: oracle at See also: Delphi
.
In the meantime Aletes, the son of Aegisthus, seized the See also: throne of See also: Mycenae
.
Her arrival at Delphi coincided with that of Orestes and Iphigeneia
.
The same messenger, who had already communicated the false report of the death of Orestes, informed her that he had been slain by Iphigeneia
.
Electra in her rage seized a burning brand from the altar, intending to See also: blind her sister; but at the critical moment Orestes appeared, recognition took place, and the brother and sister returned to Mycenae
.
Aletes was slain by Orestes, and
Electra became the wife of Pylades
.
The story of Electra is the subject of the Choephori of See also: Aeschylus, the Electra of See also: Sophocles and the Electra of See also: Euripides
.
It is in the Sophoclean See also: play that Electra is most prominent
.
There are many variations in the treatment of the See also: legend, for which, as also for a discussion of the See also: modern plays on the subject by Voltaire and See also: Alfieri, see Jebb's Introduction to his edition of the Electra of Sophocles
.
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