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Greek Mythology > People, Places, & Things > Eretheis
Earth to Elysian Fields Emathia to Eretria Erginos to Eulimene Eumaios to Exomis
According to Apollonius of Rhodes, Eretheis was one of the daughters of Nyx (Night), known collectively as the Hesperides.
Eretheis and her sisters lived in the mythical West and guarded the Golden Apples which were a wedding gift to Hera from Gaia (Earth) upon her wedding to Zeus; the Eleventh Labor of Herakles (Heracles) was to retrieve the Golden Apples of the Hesperides.
The Hesperides are: Eretheis, Hespere and Aegle; when the Argonauts were stranded in the Libyan desert, they encountered the Hesperides; Aegle appeared as the trunk of a willow tree, Eretheis as an elm tree and Hespere as a poplar tree; Aegle told the story of how Herakles (Heracles) had killed the dragon that guarded the Golden Apples and had created a spring of fresh water by kicking a rock; she showed the Argonauts the spring that Herakles had created and the Argonauts drank their fill before they continued through the inhospitable desert.
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Stewart, Michael. "People, Places & Things: Eretheis", Greek Mythology: From the Iliad to the Fall of the Last Tyrant. http://messagenetcommresearch.com/myths/ppt/Eretheis_1.html |
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Earth to Elysian Fields Emathia to Eretria Erginos to Eulimene Eumaios to Exomis
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