Mycene (mythology) (English Wikipedia)

Analysis of information sources in references of the Wikipedia article "Mycene (mythology)" in English language version.

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  • Pausanias, 2.16.4
  • Fowler, pp. 236, 259; Tripp, s.v. Mycene, p. 387; Smith, s.v. Mycene.
  • Homer, Odyssey 2.120
  • Fowler, p. 236; Pausanias, 2.16.4 = Hesiod fr. 185 Most, pp. 262, 263.
  • Pausanias, 2.16.4. According to Pausanias, 2.16.3, Perseus was also said to have named the city after myces, the Greek word for mushroom, which also referred to the cap on the end of a scabbard (see Fowler p. 259); this was because, on the spot where he founded the city, either "the cap (myces) fell from his scabbard, and he regarded this as a sign to found a city" or upon pulling a "mushroom (myces) from the ground" a wonderous spring gushed forth from which he "drank with joy". Pausainas, 2.16.4, also mentions (but discounts) the story that the eponym of the city was Myceneus the son of Sparton, son of Phoroneus. For other stories explaining the name of the city, see Fowler, p. 259.