Ἀρσινόα

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αὐτὸν κέκρουκας τὸν βατῆρα τοῦ λόγου → you have struck the very threshold of the argument, you have struck the most important and chiefmost point

Source

English (Slater)

Ἀρσῐνόα nurse of Orestes. Ὀρέστα· τὸν δὴ φονευομένου πατρὸς Ἀρσινόα Κλυταιμήστρας χειρῶν ὕπο κρατερᾶν ἐκ δόλου τροφὸς ἄνελε δυσπενθέος (P. 11.17)

Russian (Dvoretsky)

Ἀρσινόα: ἡ дор. = Ἀρσινόη.

Wikipedia EN

Arsinoe Ancient Greek: Ἀρσινόη, romanized: Arsinoë, pronounced Arsinoi in modern Greek, may refer to:

People

  • Arsinoe of Macedon, mother of Ptolemy I Soter
  • Apama II or Arsinoe (c. 292 BC–after 249 BC), wife of Magas of Cyrene and mother of Berenice II
  • Arsinoe, probable mother of Lysimachus or his first wife Nicaea of Macedon
  • Arsinoe I (305 BC–247 BC) of Egypt
  • Arsinoe II (316 BC–270 BC) of Egypt
  • Arsinoe III of Egypt (c. 246 BC–204 BC)
  • Arsinoe IV of Egypt (died 41 BC), half-sister of Cleopatra VII
  • Arsinoe (mythology), name of multiple mythological figures

Places

  • Arsinoe (Cilicia)
  • Arsinoe (Crete)
  • Arsinoe (Northwest Cyprus)
  • Arsinoe (Southwest Cyprus)
  • Arsinoe (Gulf of Suez), a port of Egypt
  • Arsinoe (Eritrea)
  • Conope (Greece) or Arsinoe
  • Ephesus, also called Arsinoe
  • Faiyum (Egypt), also called Arsinoe or Crocodilopolis, seat of the Roman Catholic titular bishopric Arsinoë in Arcadia
  • Famagusta (Cyprus) or Arsinoe
  • Coressia (Greece), called Arsinoe in the Hellenistic period
  • Methana (Greece), called Arsinoe in the Ptolemaic period
  • Olbia (Egypt) or Arsinoe
  • Patara (Lycia) or Arsinoe
  • Taucheira (Libya) or Arsinoe
  • Arsinoes Chaos, located in the Margaritifer Sinus quadrangle on Mars