Aegiale (wife of Diomedes)

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Not to be confused with Aegiale (daughter of Helios).

Aegiale or Aegialeia (Greek Αιγιάλη or Αιγιάλεια) was, in Greek mythology, a daughter of Adrastus and Amphithea, or of Aegialeus the son of Adrastus, whence she bears the surname of Adrastine.[1][2] She was married to Diomedes, who, on his return from Troy, found her living in adultery with Cometes.[3] The hero attributed this misfortune to the anger of Aphrodite, whom he had wounded in the war against Troy, but when Aegiale went so far as to threaten his life, he fled to Italy.[4][5] According to Dictys Cretensis,[6] Aegiale, like Clytemnestra, had been seduced to her criminal conduct by a treacherous report, that Diomedes was returning with a Trojan woman who lived with him as his wife, and on his arrival at Argos Aegiale expelled him. In Ovid she is described as the type of a bad wife.[7][8]

[edit] References

  1. ^ Homer, Iliad v. 412
  2. ^ Apollodorus, i. 8. § 6, 9. § 13
  3. ^ Eustath, ad Il. v. p. 566
  4. ^ Schol. ad Lycophr. 610
  5. ^ Ovid, Metamorphoses xiv. 476, &c.
  6. ^ Dictys Cretensis, vi. 2
  7. ^ Ovid, Ibis, 349
  8. ^ Schmitz, Leonhard (1867), “Aegiale”, in Smith, William, Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology, vol. 1, Boston, pp. 25 

This article incorporates text from the public domain Dictionary of Greek and Roman Biography and Mythology by William Smith (1870).