Ardalus
Ardalus (Ancient Greek: Ἄρδαλος) was in Greek mythology a son of the god Hephaestus who was said to have invented the flute, and to have built a sanctuary of the Muses at Troezen, who derived from him the surname Ardalides or Ardaliotides.
This story is recorded in the works of Pausanias,[1] and in some obscure fragments of Hesychius of Alexandria.[2][3]
Notes
- Pausanias, Description of Greece 2.31.3
- Hesychius of Alexandria, Alphabetical Collection of All Words s.v. Ἀρδαλίδες
- Hollis, Adrian S. (1998). "Some Neglected Verse Citations in Hesychius". Zeitschrift für Papyrologie und Epigraphik. Verlag Rudolf Habelt. 123: 67. ISSN 0084-5388. JSTOR 20190292.
gollark: Yep!
gollark: I imagine we'll get an increase in "no-code" tools, and thus also problems.
gollark: HAHAHAHAHAHAHA
gollark: Well, if you extrapolate from current trends, probably JS will be gone and replaced with some even weirder thing.
gollark: ++delete communist revolutions
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